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Welcome to the Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass
website. This site has been designed to provide information on the project
to our stakeholders, suppliers and potential employees.
Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass was selected by the Department of Defense’s
Assembled Chemical Weapons Alternatives program to design, build, systemize,
test, operate, and close a facility to destroy the chemical weapons
stockpile stored at the Blue Grass Army Depot in Kentucky. The Army and the
local community expect the contractor for the Blue Grass Chemical
Agent-Destruction Pilot Plant to meet the highest standards of safety,
performance, and corporate citizenship.
Members of the Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass team have successfully designed,
built, and operated all the chemical weapons destruction facilities in the
United States. The project’s key managers have experience in all aspects of
chemical demilitarization in the United States and the Russian Federation.
For decades, at work locations around the globe, the team has been actively
involved in local community, charitable, educational, and job creation
efforts.
The Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass Team draws upon the expertise of a wide range
of professionals — from scientists and engineers to operations and technical
support staff — to make chemical weapons in Kentucky history.
Safety is always first at Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass — a key value that is
fundamental to our culture.
Our companies have earned an industry-leading record of achieving zero
lost-time incidents on our projects worldwide, representing millions of
work hours per year. Year after year, our safety performance is right at the
top of our industry.
Every Bechtel Parsons Blue Grass partner is committed to safety and health.
The result is exceptional safety performance, even in exceptionally
hazardous work environments, severe weather, and remote locations.
Our team stands ready to address the critical challenge of these chemical
weapons — specifically their safe and efficient destruction. And we strive
to offer our employees a safe and flexible, and rewarding work environment
while we make Madison County a safer place to work, live and worship.
Mark Seely,
Project Manager
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