Washington State Route 24 extends from Mattawa, Washington on the western edge of the Slope nearly due east–west. Mattawa is the only population center on the Slope. There was once a town of Wahluke and a Wahluke ferry that crossed the Columbia to the north of White Bluffs.[4][5] The land was acquired by the U.S. government for the Hanford Nuclear Reservation and the residents, including Wanapum people, ordered to leave in 1943.[6] In two actions in 1953 and 1958 the Atomic Energy Commission returned almost 200,000 acres (810 km2) to public use, mostly for agriculture with irrigation recently provided by Columbia Basin Project sources.[7] Settlement on the Slope by non-Native Americans has been termed as troubled, initially due to lack of water, then later by the Federal Government's land policies, resulting in "sporadic" growth of the town of Mattawa.[8]
The potential for release of nuclear contaminants into the Slope in the event of a nuclear accident, and the historical atmospheric releases in the ranges of many Curies per month, are of concern to modern authors on Hanford.[9][10][11]
Sanger, S.L. (1995), Wollner, Craig (ed.), Working on the Bomb: An Oral History of WWII Hanford, Portland State University Continuing Education Press, ISBN0-87678-115-6