The decades-long struggle to find a permanent place to dispose of nuclear waste will continue, probably for many years to come.
Around the U.S., about 90,000 tons of nuclear waste is stored at over 100 sites in 39 states, in a range of different structures and containers.
Of particular note, most of that low level waste has a half-life of about 30 years. It is most often planned to be stored on site at the nuclear plant and included in the decommissioning plan made before the nuclear power plant is even built.
Similar low level waste comes from nuclear medicine, used at most hospitals worldwide. Radiotracers, PET/CT scans, etc all use nuclear radioactivity in your local hospital and produce low level nuclear waste. Hell they send people home while they’re still actively radioactive all the time.
Common understanding of radioactivity is ridiculously uneducated.
After how many half-lives, if any, can those materials be declared “cool”?