Morning Briefing - July 06, 2020
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July 06, 2020

NNSA Sites Confirmed 13 New COVID-19 Cases Before Holiday

By ExchangeMonitor

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) was tracking 13 new cases of COVID-19 across the civilian nuclear weapons enterprise last week ahead of the Independence Day holiday.

The weekly count of active cases rose to 46 from 33 as of Thursday, a spokesperson for the semiautonomous Department of Energy nuclear weapons agency told Weapons Complex Morning Briefing. That makes for a total of 109 confirmed positive COVID-19 cases, none fatal, among NNSA employees since the first confirmed U.S. case in January.

Per its standard practice, the NNSA did not specify the locations where the new cases were reported.

The agency has not publicly quantified the disease’s enterprise-wide effect on productivity, including the number of workers quarantining at home after displaying symptoms and the number of workers quarantining because of exposure to possibly symptomatic colleagues. Quarantine numbers are typically higher than confirmed cases.

As with the rest of the country, NNSA facilities have for weeks been ramping back up toward something like normal operations, even amid continuing increases in the number of confirmed cases of the respiratory disease around the nation.

Energy Department headquarters buildings in the Washington, D.C., region, where about 1,000 NNSA employees work, entered Phase 2 of its reopening plan last week, meaning personnel who are especially at risk to the disease may elect to return to their offices. Phase 1, in which essential employees returned to offices to do work that cannot easily be done from home, began June 8. Of the 7,000 or so DOE employees in the D.C. region, a few hundred were expected back in Phase 1, and around 1,400 were due to return in Phase 2. The process ends with Phase 3, in which offices return to something like normal operations.

With the rate of new cases rising nationwide, several states with NNSA nuclear-weapon operations have reported increases in confirmed infections during the early summer months, according to data from The Washington Post and other sources. These include: California, home of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Texas, host state for the Pantex weapons assembly and disassembly plant; Nevada, with the Nevada National Security Site; and South Carolina, with the Savannah River Site, where the NNSA harvests tritium for nuclear weapons and is working toward production of plutonium nuclear-warhead cores by 2030. 

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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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