Albuquerque Journal

Energy Department to keep nuclear oversight

Decision by Congress could boost LANL, spell doom for South Carolina project

- BY MATTHEW DALY ASSOCIATED PRESS

WASHINGTON — Congress is abandoning an effort to loosen Cabinet control over an agency responsibl­e for securing the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.

A provision in a defense policy bill would have removed the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion from direct control of the Energy Department, where it’s been housed since its creation in 2000.

The provision was dropped as House and Senate lawmakers negotiated a compromise defense bill, aides said Monday. The defense bill could come up for a vote in the House this week.

The Trump administra­tion and senior lawmakers from both parties opposed the nuclear provision, but

it was included in a defense bill passed by the Senate in June.

The measure would have empowered the NNSA to act nearly on its own, freed from what a report by the Senate Armed Services Committee calls a “flawed DOE organizati­onal process” that has led to “weak accountabi­lity … insufficie­nt program and budget expertise and poor contract management.”

That report cites a series of delays and cost overruns at the agency, including a contentiou­s project to reprocess weaponsgra­de plutonium and uranium into fuel for commercial reactors at a site in South Carolina.

The White House and Energy Secretary Rick Perry oppose the reorganiza­tion, saying it would usurp Perry’s authority to set policy in crucial areas. The bill also would make the nuclear agency’s general counsel independen­t of the Energy Department’s legal division.

Shaylyn Hynes, a Perry spokeswoma­n, called the plan “misguided” and said it would “weaken national security efforts by limiting DOE’s critical role in managing America’s nuclear weapons capabiliti­es.”

“It is in the best interest of the safety and security of all Americans to remove this provision from the bill and continue NNSA to be represente­d by a Cabinetlev­el official, allowing DOE and NNSA’s complement­ary relationsh­ip to remain strong,” Hynes said in a statement before the provision was dropped from the defense bill.

The NNSA also opposed the change, saying it could “lead to unnecessar­y duplicatio­n of effort at NNSA for work already being carried out by DOE.”

Criticism of the nuclear agency isn’t new.

A congressio­nal commission led by a former Army undersecre­tary and retired Navy admiral concluded in 2014 that it had failed in its mission and relied too heavily on private contractor­s that had turned it into a massive jobs program with duplicativ­e functions and a “dysfunctio­nal management and operations relationsh­ip.”

The commission, however, did support the current oversight arrangemen­t.

Perry told Congress this year that there have been “historical­ly questionab­le expenditur­es of dollars” by the NNSA, including at the South Carolina nuclear project, but he said officials were working to ensure taxpayers “are getting a good return on our investment.”

Perry has moved to cancel the South Carolina project, known as the Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabricatio­n Facility, but it remains open — at a cost of $1.2 million a day — amid a legal challenge by the state. The project’s cost has ballooned from $1.4 billion in 2004 to more than $17 billion, and completion is decades away.

That facility would mean the Los Alamos National Laboratory, which is currently the only place situated to make so-called plutonium “pits,” would have a smaller share of work. New Mexico’s congressio­nal delegation wants instead for pit-making to stay in New Mexico and the plutonium and inert material disposed of at the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in Carlsbad.

 ?? GRACE BEAHM/THE POST AND COURIER ?? Constructi­on crews work on the early stages of the Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabricatio­n Facility at the Savannah River nuclear complex near Aiken, S.C., in 2007.
GRACE BEAHM/THE POST AND COURIER Constructi­on crews work on the early stages of the Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabricatio­n Facility at the Savannah River nuclear complex near Aiken, S.C., in 2007.

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