I was one of the original 4 RST's on site at Studsvik. I'm from Johnson City, pretty much a local, so I was willing to overlook some things like pay and benefits to be able to work there. Been around a long time, well over 25 years in the business at that time, so I had seen good and bad ops vs radcon situations before. (I was there for the big ugly at Oak Ridge's Q-SEP facility.) Came from a navy background with zero contamination criteria (feel free AND obliged to LOL) and VC Summer's successful program. Operations ruled at Studsvik. And ops had plenty of bugs still in the system. Plant manager and RSO stayed at odds, eventually settled into a cold war standoff that made an RST's life miserable. Spills and high dose were every day occurances. I chose to leave there (home - where I could live rent/mortgage FREE) because I felt I was NOT allowed to practice/enforce acceptable radiological controls. For the fellow that wrote and bragged about the quick cask turnaround, I would be real suspicious about what condition the truckbay and facility were left in after the truck pulled out. Give you, that may have been long after I left and they may have "cleaned up their act" ...literally. I hope they have for the crew's sake, the neighborhood's and our industry's reputation. I know that they have had major personnel changes - call them shake-ups - at the plant, so maybe its better since 2000. Wish I knew it was..operationally and politically - I'd still like to work that close to home!