Apr 16, 2008

Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development Hearing

Update 2: Audio of this hearing is now available from the Senate Appropriations Committee website.

2:00 p.m., Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Energy and Water Development, hearing on National Nuclear Security Administration and the national nuclear weapons laboratories, with Thomas D'Agostino, National Nuclear Security Administration; George Miller, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; Mike Anastasio, Los Alamos National Laboratory; and Tom Hunter, Sandia National Laboratory. 138 Dirksen Senate Office Building, Washington. Webcast on CapitolHearings.org.

10 comments:

  1. I can't find information on that hearing in the link you provided. Could you provide more details and a more direct link?

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  2. The committee just posted it's schedule for the rest of this week, which included the following details. I will check again in the morning to see if it will be webcast.


    2:00 p.m. Energy and Water Development (Chairman Dorgan)

    Location SD-138

    Agenda: FY 2009 Department of Energy Budget Request

    Witnesses: Panel I

    The Honorable Tom D’Agostino
    Administrator
    National Nuclear Security Administration

    Panel II

    George Miller
    Director
    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

    Mike Anastasio
    Director
    Los Alamos National Laboratory

    Tom Hunter
    Director
    Sandia National Laboratory

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  3. Pull out the wading boots. The BS is sure to be waste high with this cast of characters.

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  4. It makes one gag "The Honorable D'Agostino"

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  5. Well, once he falls from grace even the suits in DC will be calling him a dirty D'Ag.

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  6. Very interesting audio, especially the last half. It appears the Senators are becoming angry with the costs of the LLCs. Too bad none of the Directors offered to tell them about the big executive salary boosts and upper level management bloat that took place when the LLCs moved in to take control of the labs.

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  7. www.insidebayarea.com/ci_8989164

    -----------------------------------------

    CONTRA COSTA EDITORIAL

    Livermore Lab Job Losses a Blow to Area Economy - Contra Costa Times

    04/19/2008 11:04:31 PM PDT

    The corporate management of the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, which began Oct. 1, is not working. For the third time this year, the staff is being reduced to the point that the future of the lab is in jeopardy.

    In May, the new lab management contract for a consortium of private businesses led by the University of California and Bechtel Corp. was announced amid much optimism.

    Lab director George Miller predicted a smooth transition. He said new efficiencies, attrition and other changes would save enough revenue to prevent layoffs.

    He was dead wrong. Slightly more than a month after the consortium took the helm of the lab, it announced 500 layoffs of temporary and support employees, which took place in January.

    In March, 215 permanent employees took buyouts. Others retired or left and were not replaced. In fact, 900 employees, most of them highly skilled, have left the lab this year. But it still isn't enough, according to Miller.

    The latest announcement of staff reductions was made Tuesday. As many as 535 more employees could be cut. This time the layoffs would be involuntary and would affect permanent career employees.

    What went wrong with predictions of no layoffs? The most benign answer is that the consortium simply underestimated the increased costs associated with corporate management.

    Originally, the corporation formed by UC, Bechtel and several other companies to run the lab expected about $80 million in increased costs. The actual cost increase is $280 million. So much for efficiency or accuracy in financial projections.

    Most of the additional costs — $200 million — is the result of the lab's loss of the tax-exempt status it had under UC management.

    The yearly management fee was increased from $8 million to $46 million. Also, retirement and health benefit costs have been higher than estimated.

    We are a bit skeptical that a supposedly skilled management team could be unintentionally so far off in estimating increased costs, especially considering the size of the cost of losing tax exemptions. It is also suspicious that so many staff reductions have come so quickly.

    We were supportive of the management changes in the wake of security lapses and financial errors at the Livermore and Los Alamos labs, which were run solely by UC.

    However, with such rapid shrinkage of the Livermore lab's staff, we now have cause to think the federal government made a mistake in seeking bids for new management instead of pushing for changes within UC's managers.

    The loss of so many skilled employees at the Livermore lab reduces its productivity and makes it a less desirable place to work.

    Lack of job security at a financially troubled facility is likely to make it far more difficult to attract the top talent that has been the foundation of the lab's success over the years.

    Making matters worse, the federal government has been less than generous in funding the lab in the past few years.

    With diminished funding, higher than forecast costs and a declining work force, the Livermore lab faces an uncertain future that could be a painful loss for the East Bay economy.

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  8. How come none of the Santa Fe or ABQ papers run editorials like the one in the local Livermore paper? Looks like the news media around Livermore show more support for their lab than the media in New Mexico.

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  9. 4/22 10:49 pm: "Looks like the news media around Livermore show more support for their lab than the media in New Mexico."

    Duh. What was your first clue? Northern NM would rather remain on the federal dole and have 3/4 of their kids drop out of high school than keep LANL around. And the liberal illuminati in Santa Fe would concur. Otherwise, they might lose their sense of noblesse oblige.

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  10. 8:21 - LANL = Federal Dole.

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