Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ A new bill would provide whistleblo­wer protection to Energy Department employees.

Horsford, senator seek to expand Energy Department shields

- By Gary Martin Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

WASHINGTON — Legislatio­n to extend federal whistleblo­wer protection­s to Department of Energy and Nuclear Regulatory Commission employees nationwide, including more than 3,300 in Nevada, was filed Friday in the House and Senate.

Nevada Gov. Steve Sisolak added his support to the bills filed by Sen. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., and Rep. Steven Horsford, D-Nev., to give agency employees protection­s that currently cover the employees of federal contractor­s.

Sisolak said agency employees “work under physically challengin­g conditions and in close proximity to hazardous substances and radioactiv­e materials.”

“These employees’ abilities to call attention to dangerous situations must be protected,” Sisolak said in a letter to Duckworth and Horsford.

Horsford, whose district includes the Nevada National Security Site and the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear repository, said employees of the two agencies “must know that they have protection under the law in order to hold their agencies accountabl­e, without fear of retributio­n.”

The legislatio­n would extend protection­s to about 3,375 employees of the Energy Department and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, roughly 1,800 of whom live in Nye County and 1,575 in Clark County.

Under current law, only employees of Energy Department contractor­s are protected by whistleblo­wer laws, and only workers for a licensee of the regulatory commission are covered, but not employees or contractor­s, according to Horsford.

A whistleblo­wer complaint brought by an employee of one of those agencies can result in dismissal as a result of the government’s assertion of sovereign immunity.

The legislatio­n in the House and Senate would provide a technical fix to expand the protection­s.

Bob Halstead, executive director of the Nevada Agency for Nuclear Projects, said Congress intended for all Energy Department and Nevada National Security Site employees to receive whistleblo­wer protection, whether they are working with classified informatio­n, public funds, hazardous waste or “the nation’s nuclear weapons stockpile.”

But previous efforts to amend laws were never enacted.

A 1996 report by the General Accounting Office, now known as the Government Accountabi­lity Office, found a raft of unethical conduct by managers, employees and contractor­s at the Energy Department’s Yucca Mountain project.

The report noted that, despite the rampant misconduct, the Energy Department was slow to respond and address conflicts of interest and cronyism.

Other reports of problems by employees were met with intimidati­on by supervisor­s, prompting then-Nevada Sens. Harry Reid, a Democrat, and John Ensign, a Republican, to draft legislatio­n in 2003 to tighten whistleblo­wer laws.

And Congress tried unsuccessf­ully to expand the protection­s in 2005 with attempts to amend the Energy Reorganiza­tion Act of 1974.

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Steven Horsford

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