© 2025 Kansas City Public Radio
NPR in Kansas City
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Missouri bill makes it easier for residents to request radioactive waste investigation

Coldwater Creek in north St. Louis County has been linked to increased cancer risk because of radioactive waste that contaminated the creek bed. The Missouri House passed legislation Thursday that expands who can request investigations into radioactive waste.
Sarah Fentem
/
St. Louis Public Radio
Coldwater Creek in north St. Louis County has been linked to increased cancer risk because of radioactive waste that contaminated the creek bed. The Missouri House passed legislation Thursday that expands who can request investigations into radioactive waste.

The consequences of radioactive waste in Missouri, including in Coldwater Creek and Weldon Spring, have gotten more attention from state and federal lawmakers the past few years.

The Missouri House has passed legislation that would widen who can ask for an investigation into radioactive waste contamination.

The bill passed unanimously 152-0 and now goes to the Senate.

Currently, the Department of Natural Resources may use its Radioactive Waste Investigation fund to look into concerns of waste exposure submitted by a "local governing body."

The proposed law would also allow for community groups and individuals "in the jurisdiction of an area of concern" to submit requests for an investigation.

Rep. Mark Matthiesen, R-O'Fallon, who is the sponsor of the bill, said he won't stop pushing for this legislation.

"So people can be informed about the risks and we can compel the federal government to take responsibility and clean up the mess that they brought to our state," Matthiesen said.

In addition to widening who can ask for an investigation, the legislation allows the department to seek a warrant to access property owned by governmental agencies they believe is contaminated.

If the property is owned privately, the agency must have the owner's permission to test.

The bill also eliminates the cap on how much the Department of Natural Resources can spend on an investigation. Currently that cap is $150,000.

Rep. Raychel Proudie, D-Ferguson, had legislation of her own that removed the limit.

"My portion of this removes that cap completely to allow us, as the General Assembly, to appropriate as we see fit," Proudie said.

The consequences of radioactive waste in Missouri, including in Coldwater Creek and Weldon Spring, have gotten more attention from state and federal lawmakers the past few years.

Proudie recalled her personal history related to the Latty Avenue site.

"I am chronically sick, the only person in my family that has lupus. It's not a hereditary thing that I got, it just kind of happened. That's because we used to play on Latty, me and my cousins at my grandma's house in Hazelwood would run around and play all around that toxic area," Proudie said.

Missouri U.S. Sen. Josh Hawley has advocated for federal legislation compensating St. Louisans from exposure to radioactive waste from U.S. nuclear tests or uranium enrichment.

Lee Zeldin, director of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, has promised action on cleaning up the West Lake Landfill, located in north St. Louis County.

Copyright 2025 St. Louis Public Radio

Sarah Kellogg is St. Louis Public Radio’s Statehouse and Politics Reporter, taking on the position in August 2021. Sarah is from the St. Louis area and even served as a newsroom intern for St. Louis Public Radio back in 2015.
KCUR prides ourselves on bringing local journalism to the public without a paywall — ever.

Our reporting will always be free for you to read. But it's not free to produce.

As a nonprofit, we rely on your donations to keep operating and trying new things. If you value our work, consider becoming a member.