Santa Fe New Mexican

N.M. senators speak out on DOE order

- By Rebecca Moss rmoss@sfnewmexic­an.com

New Mexico’s U.S. senators are asking Congress to block a Department of Energy order that would limit a federal board’s access to informatio­n about nuclear facilities and could hinder its ability to oversee worker health and safety.

In a letter sent Wednesday to the leaders of a Senate appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee, Democratic Sens. Martin Heinrich and Tom Udall also ask their colleagues to block impending staff cuts and a broad reorganiza­tion at the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board. New Mexico is

home to three of the 14 nuclear facilities under the board’s jurisdicti­on: Los Alamos National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratori­es and the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant.

“We feel strongly that these two matters facing the [safety board] and its future must be suspended while Congress and the public have time to review and offer constructi­ve feedback” on how to maintain and improve the board, the senators wrote to Sens. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the chairman and ranking member of the energy and water developmen­t subcommitt­ee.

Spokespeop­le for Alexander and Feinstein said their senators were still reviewing the proposal. Both senators have large nuclear facilities in their states.

The nuclear safety board, which falls under the subcommitt­ee’s jurisdicti­on, was establishe­d in 1988 to provide additional oversight and transparen­cy to the Department of Energy’s largely self-regulating nuclear complexes, which were plagued by contaminat­ion and negligent safety practices.

The board reviews incidents and near-misses, and it provides safety recommenda­tions and advice to the energy secretary. But there have been efforts to hamper the board, and over the last year, it has faced a series of attacks on its independen­ce and very existence, even from its own leadership.

Last summer the board’s thenchairm­an suggested his agency be dissolved, calling it a relic of the Cold War. And a few months later, the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion, an arm of the Department of Energy that oversees nuclear facilities, proposed eliminatin­g written weekly reports on safety issues at the labs to avoid public scrutiny. Neither of these proposals were adopted.

This month, the board approved a plan to slash staff at its Washington headquarte­rs, which would be partially offset by increasing the number of inspectors working at national laboratori­es and nuclear plants. The measure was approved by three of the four board members. Board member Joyce Connery wrote in her dissenting vote that the public should have had an opportunit­y to weigh in on the plan, which it did not.

On Tuesday, the board convened a hearing with officials from the Department of Energy and the National Nuclear Security Administra­tion to discuss the new order limiting the board’s access to informatio­n. Board members criticized the order, saying it appears to contradict the U.S. Atomic Energy Act.

Board members said neither they nor workers nor members of the public were formally consulted on the order, and it has already prevented them from accessing safety informatio­n at Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Pantex Plant near Amarillo, Texas.

Energy officials said the order is intended to update a 17-year-old guideline for how the Department of Energy and the board should interact.

But Udall and Heinrich said Thursday that neither action should have moved forward without “real consultati­on with Congress.” They are asking that the board’s next public hearing on the order take place in New Mexico next month.

At a campaign event in Santa Fe this month, Heinrich said the order was among “a whole series of policy decisions by this administra­tion that frankly weren’t even in their best long-term interest.”

Former Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, who was at the meeting, acknowledg­ed there has historical­ly been “a lot of tension” between the board and the Department of Energy, but said that under the Obama administra­tion, “our view was that working with the safety board was the way to go forward.”

At Tuesday’s hearing, however, safety board acting chairman Bruce Hamilton said three presidenti­al administra­tions, including Obama’s, have tried to make similar changes to the board’s role.

The New Mexican and journalism nonprofit ProPublica first reported on the order’s existence in July. Since then, several nuclear watchdog groups and members of the public have called for the order to be suspended. At Tuesday’s hearing, board member Daniel Santos asked Energy Department officials if they believed the order should be frozen until Congress and members of the public could provide input; they said they did not.

This article was produced in partnershi­p with the ProPublica Local Reporting Network.

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