Albuquerque Journal

GAO: US nuclear agency not tracking some projects

Watchdogs concerned about NNSA having a blank check, little accountabi­lity

- BY SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

PHOENIX — The U.S. agency in charge of maintainin­g the nation’s nuclear arsenal is not consistent when it comes to tracking the progress of small constructi­on projects, making it difficult to prevent delays and cost overruns, congressio­nal investigat­ors said in a report released Thursday.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office warned in the report that even fewer projects will go under the microscope if officials raise the dollar limit for what qualifies as a small project. Congress has raised that threshold numerous times, reaching $30 million during the last fiscal year after having started at $5 million in 2003.

Without collecting and tracking informatio­n on minor projects in a consistent manner, National Nuclear Security Administra­tion officials may not have the informatio­n they need to manage and assess project performanc­e, the investigat­ors said.

“This is important because NNSA plans to initiate 437 minor constructi­on projects over the next five fiscal years totaling about $5 billion, and cost overruns could be significan­t in aggregate,” the investigat­ors stated in the report.

They went on to say NNSA offices use varying processes for managing smaller projects, some of which generally follow more rigid principles outlined by the U.S. Energy Department for large projects. However, these processes and other related requiremen­ts haven’t been documented in a formal or comprehens­ive way, the investigat­ors added.

The agency disagreed that any cost overruns for minor constructi­on projects would be significan­t and said small projects — like office buildings

or fire stations — generally have a track record of being completed at or under budget.

“Following a project management approach tailored to the lower risk nature of these types of projects saves time and money by avoiding unnecessar­y rigorous oversight,” agency spokespers­on Roger Bain said in an email.

The agency said it plans to use authority provided by Congress to increase the current threshold to keep up with inflation. Officials said doing so will maintain NNSA’s buying power for maintainin­g national security infrastruc­ture.

The NNSA agreed with recommenda­tions outlined in the report, saying it will determine what approach would be best for collecting and tracking informatio­n on costs and scheduling and how best to document its processes and requiremen­ts for minor constructi­on projects.

The agency aims to finish that work by the end of June.

Still, nuclear watchdogs are concerned about the NNSA having a blank check with little accountabi­lity. Those concerns have ramped up as billions of dollars more are being funneled toward efforts to modernize the nation’s nuclear warheads. Some of that work is being done at Los Alamos National Laboratory and at Savannah River in South Carolina.

Greg Mello of the Los Alamos Study Group said large projects often are split into two or more smaller ones as a way to avoid federal and congressio­nal oversight and accountabi­lity. He said better reporting after the fact won’t necessaril­y help NNSA do a better job of managing projects going forward.

“There are too many contractor­s and subcontrac­tors in the value chain, too many profit opportunit­ies and too few penalties for poor performanc­e to expect high-quality results,” he said.

Mello pointed to the contracts to run Los Alamos and other sites that are part of the complex, saying they are worth tens of billions of dollars and are among the largest contracts in the federal government.

The NNSA said it provides semi-annual status updates to Congress on all minor constructi­on projects valued at $10 million or more, including any changes to project costs or schedules. Agency officials also said the Energy Department’s more prescripti­ve management requiremen­ts are meant for more complex, nuclear and oneof-a-kind constructi­on projects with a total cost of $50 million or more.

Between 2019 and 2023, the congressio­nal investigat­ors documented 414 minor constructi­on projects worth more than $3 billion at NNSA sites across several states. Most of that spending was done at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California and at Sandia and Los Alamos labs in New Mexico.

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