Interim bill continues lab funds
By ROGER SNODGRASS, Los Alamos Monitor EditorAlmost unnoticed in the sound and fury surrounding the financial bailout legislation over the weekend, the Senate passed a continuing resolution to fund a number of federal agencies, including the Department of Energy and its national laboratories.
Los Alamos National Laboratory, facing some significant cuts in a House version of the energy appropriations bill, will continue operating for five months at roughly the same level as last year.
As usual, important details of how the status quo will affect individual programs will be worked out, as the fiscal year begins. The extension is effective until March 6.
The catch-all funding measure totaling $630 million was packaged in a cluster of spending measures for Veterans Affairs, Homeland Security, Defense (apart from the wars) and Military Construction.
But, along with those items, it also included $23 billion for hurricane relief and $25 billion in loan guarantees for automakers, among other extras.
Approved in the Senate by a 78-12 vote, the bill was sent to President George Bush to sign before funding runs out today for the current fiscal year.
The decisive issue in the energy area, was not about funding for the national labs, but rather whether to remove an offshore drilling ban that has been in effect since 1986, a matter that was effectively decided a few days earlier when the House removed the language from the bill.
“A CR puts off for today the divergent funding priorities between the Senate and House, when it comes to our labs. But stabilized FY2008 funding levels are acceptable when compared to alternatives that would impose arbitrary cuts to the labs’ national security work,” Domenici said after House voted and the plan was finalized. “Under this situation, the weapons activities numbers are better than if we had to split the difference with the House-passed level.”
Domenici said his request for the National Infrastructure Simulation and Analysis Center of $20 million had been included in the bill, $4 million over the budget request, but equal to current funding.
NISAC is a joint Sandia-Los Alamos labs program to protect the nation's critical infrastructure from manmade or natural disasters.
Domenici also requested $5 million for the High-Speed, High-Volume Laboratory Network for Infectious Diseases, a project involving both Los Alamos National Laboratory and UCLA.
The project aims to establish a network of high-throughput automated laboratories that can process and test deadly human and animal pathogens.
The proposal would give government officials faster access to critical information in the event of an infectious disease outbreak.
Ceremonial farewell
Tucked into the Senate’s business Saturday, Sen. Pete Domenici marked another milestone in his 36-year history of service to the state of New Mexico.
As reported by the Associated Press, Domenici said in his ceremonial “farewell speech” that the time had flown by and that it was hard to imagine and manage life after the Senate.
“The time in the Senate when you look at it day-by-day is wrenching, is difficult, is so hard. But when you look at it over 36 years, it’s like a hurricane. It just blew by, and all of a sudden it’s 36 years and you’re gone,” Domenici said.
He said he and his wife, Nancy, have not decided whether to live in the Washington area or in New Mexico and he wasn’t sure what he’d do without the daily debates in the chamber.
“If I don’t have any of that around, I don’t know what kind of person I’m going to be. There’s nothing to do that to me. Maybe I’ll just fade away, but I hope not,” Domenici said.
Domenici said his work with Sandia and Los Alamos national laboratories made him somewhat of an expert on nuclear power, helping him bring nuclear power back into the nation's energy mix.
He said there are 26 1,000-megawatt nuclear units pending before the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
“I’m proud to tell you that nuclear power is in a renaissance posture, and I take a little bit of credit for it,” he said.
As the last crisis of his Senate career was playing out, Domenici said he was certain the Senate will help solve the nation’s turmoil.
Domenici called his Senate career a “magnificent opportunity.”
Domenici decided not to seek re-election after being diagnosed with an incurable brain disease. Congressmen Tom Udall, a Democrat, and Steve Pearce, a Republican, are battling to replace him in the Nov. 4 election.
We are living on borrowed time. What do you think, another 6 month's before all hell breaks loose on the Hill? This one will make history, take a few pic's of the town before and after 2009, it will never be the same.
ReplyDeleteYou've been feeding off the federal troughs long enough!
ReplyDelete2:04 pm: "You've been feeding off the federal troughs long enough!"
ReplyDeleteSo, any organization that is federally funded needs to go away? You sound like a Fed yourself. Without us, there'd be no need for you...
2:04 is probably an outsider who lives off a trust fund.
ReplyDeleteGo away. There's nothing for you here. Go away....go away.
Los Alamos was never intended to be a permenant town. From the beganning it was set up for a very specific mission, and thanks to some short-sighted Directors (Sig Hecker) nothing changed, now its time to pay for those mistakes.
ReplyDelete10/1/08 12:04 PM
ReplyDeleteOink! Oink!
5:51 pm: "Los Alamos was never intended to be a permenant town."
ReplyDeleteTrue, initially, but not "never." That stopped being true in the late 1940's. Do your history homework. By 1950, plans and increasing construction were underway for a permanent community. I live in a Los Alamos home built in 1956 that would never have been constructed this way if it were not intended to be "permanent."
If there is any way you can swing it, consider getting out of LANL ASAP. We probably have, at most, one more year before some vicious budgetary storms hit the lab.
ReplyDeleteThis just prolongs the agony.
ReplyDeleteRegardless of who wins the election, the federal budget has too many demands on it and LANL has no supporters in Congress.
It's time to leave. Of course, housing prices in Los Alamos are due for futher decline.
True, initially, but not "never." That stopped being true in the late 1940's. Do your history homework.
ReplyDelete==========================
Correct. With the collapse of the
Baruch Plan for international control of
nuclear weapons, the US and the USSR
were in a Cold War.
The USA needed a permanent instanllation
to design / maintain the strategic nuclear
deterent force.
Los Alamos became a permanent lab site
back in the '40s; along with Argonne,
[formerly the Metallurgical Lab], and
Oak Ridge, Y-12....
The US Government established the
national lab system in the '40s.
Why do people spout what they want to
be true, instead of doing their
homework to find out what actually is
true?
NNSA has done a thorough job of destroying what's left of the morale at the US weapon labs. Couple that with the ominous beginning of the 'Post-Pete' era starting in Januray and it's easy to foresee some very serious difficulties for both LANL and LLNL.
ReplyDeleteIt's a testament to how bad things have gotten when we think of Nanos' tenure as the "good old days!"
ReplyDeleteLos Alamos has never been deemed a "permanent site" for anything. It has not been or will not be a permenant town, check it out next year. This is called the "Common Sense Plan)developed in 2009 by Congress, and NNSA.
ReplyDelete5:59 pm: "This is called the "Common Sense Plan)developed in 2009 by Congress, and NNSA."
ReplyDeleteDeveloped in 2009?? OK - just be a little (not a lot, I'm afraid of megaparanoids) about what you mean.
"Los Alamos has never been deemed a "permanent site" for anything. It has not been or will not be a permenant town, check it out next year. This is called the "Common Sense Plan)developed in 2009 by Congress, and NNSA.
ReplyDelete10/2/08 5:59 PM
Did you fail a recent drug test?