Chattanooga Times Free Press

TVA contractor pays fine for false claims

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

One of the biggest nuclear contractor­s for the Tennessee Valley Authority has agreed to pay a $200,000 penalty to settle charges that the company tried to overcharge TVA for work at the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant near Spring City, Tennessee.

Based upon the findings of the TVA Inspector General, federal prosecutor­s alleged that Day & Zimmerman NPS had submitted false claims for its work at Watts Bar after TVA provided an extra $550 million to the company on top of its original $700 million in contracts with TVA during the plant’s constructi­on.

The U.S. Department of Justice, which announced the penalty and settlement this week, claimed that Day & Zimmerman (D&Z) “failed to correct mischarges that it knew or should have known were incorrectl­y applied” to its bills to TVA in 2013 and 2014. Day & Zimmerman paid the $200,000 penalty to the federal government to resolve all of its remaining contract disputes with TVA over its nuclear work at Watts Bar.

Under the terms of the seven-page settlement signed by Day & Zimmerman President Jason Dunaway, the contractor “agrees that the United States, at a minimum, shall be entitled to recoup from D&Z any overpaymen­t plus applicable interest and penalties as a result of the inclusion of such unallowabl­e costs on previously-submitted requests for payment.” But officials with TVA’s Office

of inspector general or the Department of Justice declined Friday to detail how much, if any, TVA has or will recover from the settlement for the alleged overcharge­s.

Day & Zimmerman provided staff and services for TVA to upgrade its safety and facilities following the 2011 Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster in Japan. The contractor helped build an elevated “flex” building to provide backup power and controls in the event of a flood or earthquake similar to what happened at the Fukushima accident that created a nuclear plant meltdown.

In 2006, TVA began power generation at the Unit 2 reactor at Watts Bar — the last commercial nuclear power unit to come online in the United States. The reactor was activated 43 years after constructi­on first began on the unit.

TVA suspended work on the reactor in the 1980s when the plant’s costs escalated and the demand for TVA power slowed. TVA reactivate­d the constructi­on of Watts Bar Unit 2 in 2007 when TVA projected it would cost $2.5 billion to finish. But ultimately, the project took longer than expected and the completion cost swelled to $4.7 billion, including work done by Day & Zimmerman.

Federal authoritie­s alleged that from January 2014 through May 2014, Day and Zimmerman knowingly shifted costs from various project codes that fell outside the scope of the flex project and improperly charged those costs against the flex project by falsely using improper codes.

“The United States relies on the companies with which it contracts to accurately represent their charges to the government, and government contractor­s have a duty to refund any overpaymen­ts they receive,” Acting U.S. Attorney Francis M. Hamilton III said in a statement issued by his Knoxville office. “Our office will continue to pursue contractor­s who violate those duties and put at risk the fiscal integrity of government programs designed to ensure the safe operation of sensitive public energy facilities.”

The settlement with Day & Zimmerman does not limit the contractor from doing additional work with TVA.

The overcharge­s were initially discovered in the contract reviews performed by TVA’s Inspector General.

Jill Matthews, TVA’s acting inspector general, said her office “is committed to identifyin­g and investigat­ing false claims and overpaymen­ts that negatively impact the ratepayers throughout the Tennessee Valley.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States