Morning Briefing - October 03, 2019
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October 03, 2019

Energy Secretary Advisory Board Briefed on ‘Staggering’ NNSA Hiring Goals

By ExchangeMonitor

The No. 2 official at the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) on Wednesday briefed members of the Secretary of Energy Advisory Board on the “staggering goal” of swelling the nuclear-weapon steward’s workforce by about 20,000 heads over the next six years.

Those hirings would be spread across the NNSA complex, including its national laboratories and other sites.

“[W]e’re going to have to go through a major infrastructure modernization process,” William Bookless, NNSA principal deputy administrator, told the 16-member board in a webcast presentation from Chicago. “For many of the things we do, there is no industrial base. We are the industrial base.”

In round numbers, Bookless said the semiautonomous Department of Energy agency has about 41,000 employees and contractors “working on the NNSA mission today.” As with the rest of the government, only a small fraction of those are federal employees.

“On the federal side, we only have about 1,800 federal employees that do oversight on this whole program,” Bookless said. “We’re going to have to add 400 more by 2025 to that federal workforce. Currently, 20% of our workforce is eligible to retire, and by 2025 40% will be eligible to retire.”

Bookless’ overall hiring headcount includes short-term contract employees, such as those needed for current and planned construction projects across the to-be-rebooted nuclear enterprise. Over the next 30 years, these will include upgrades and additions to NNSA facilities that process uranium, plutonium, tritium, and lithium. 

Within that window, in the mid-2040s, the NNSA also expects to need more unobligated low-enriched uranium — the sort that doesn’t carry peaceful-use restrictions as spot-market uranium does — to create tritium in nuclear reactors. That could mean construction a new domestic enrichment facility.

Bookless made comments about the NNSA’s “industrial base” only a week after Charles Verdon, head of the Defense Programs Office at NNSA headquarters in Washington, told lawmakers the agency is considering whether to reduce its reliance on outside vendors and manufacture more nuclear-weapon components in-house, as its parent and predecessor agencies did during the Cold War.

Verdon was testifying before a House Armed Services Committee panel about costly delays to a pair of weapon life-extension programs, the cause of which are commercial electrical components deemed not durable enough for decades of service in the deployed arsenal.

 

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NEW: Via public records request, I’ve been able to confirm reporting today that a warrant has been issued for DOE deputy asst. secretary of spent fuel and waste disposition Sam Brinton for another luggage theft, this time at Las Vegas’s Harry Reid airport. (cc: @EMPublications)

DOE spent fuel lead Brinton accused of second luggage theft.



by @BenjaminSWeiss, confirming today's reports with warrant from Las Vegas Metro PD.

Waste has been Emplaced! 🚮

We have finally begun emplacing defense-related transuranic (TRU) waste in Panel 8 of #WIPP.

Read more about the waste emplacement here: https://wipp.energy.gov/wipp_news_20221123-2.asp

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