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Updates from the SRSCRO
March 2018
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Omnibus 2018

The Omnibus bill, signed by President Trump on March 23, 2018, includes $34.5 billion in funding for the Department of Energy (DOE). This is more than the President's Budget request of $28.0 billion for the DOE. These funds will be used to make key investments in science and technology innovation that support DOE's missions in nuclear security, basic scientific research, energy innovation and security, and environmental cleanup.

The Omnibus package also increases the President's vision of rebuilding and restoring the Nation's security through robust investments to modernize the nuclear security enterprise by requesting $13.9 billion for the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and a $6.5 billion request for Environmental Management.

Prior to the signing of the bill, DOE Secretary Rick Perry said in Congressional Testimony "As a former appropriator, I am keenly aware of the work that goes into the budget process, and I am grateful for the certainty that this FY 2018 Budget will bring our Department. This package funds our missions and will allow us to do great work for American energy. DOE will now be focused on executing our work under this budget in the most effective way possible."

Overall, DOE's energy programs receive $12.9 billion, up $1.6 billion from the fiscal 2017 levels and $5.4 billion more than the Trump administration requested. The Department of Energy's Office of Environmental Management (DOE-EM) would get just over $7 billion for 2018. That is better than a 10-percent year-over-year increase. The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) would take home the biggest increase for the current budget year. NNSA's budget would increase 13 percent above 2017 levels under the new budget.

The big loser in the bill was Yucca Mountain: the proposed nuclear waste repository in Nevada that the nuclear industry has been waiting for the government to build for about 30 years. The President's budget request sought $120 million for Yucca, which the DOE would have used to resume its application to license the repository with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Instead, the omnibus zeroes out funding for the project.

The omnibus continues to fund construction of the Mixed Oxide Fuel Fabrication Facility (MOX) at the Savannah River Site (SRS) in South Carolina until the end of FY2018. The funding for the facility stays flat at $335 million. That is 20 percent more than the President's request to close the project. However, language in the Bill includes a new provision that allows for the possibility that DOE could use those funds to actually move away from MOX. The new language borrows from the FY18 National Defense Authorization Act and stipulates that if the Secretary of Energy certifies and submits a plan for a suitable MOX alternative to Congress, complete with a life-cycle cost estimate that is less than half of MOX's, DOE can begin spending money to "eliminate" the project 30 days later. To do so, the Secretary would also have to ensure SRS has a "sustainable future," a key roadblock in past defunding efforts.

More to come from impacts from the Omnibus bill on SRS missions as site employees "scrub" the 2,232-page omnibus spending bill for specific impacts to site activities.

PILT - Good News

Related to the story above, there comes some good news for local governments regarding the status of Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) made by the Department of Energy (DOE). The 2018 omnibus bill will fully fund the Federal PILT program at an estimated $530 million, a $65 million increase over 2017 funding levels.
 
In a previous House Appropriations Committee report, the Committee directed DOE to undertake a "full overhaul" of the PILT program. The Committee instructed that "DOE shall terminate all existing PILT agreements and enter into new PILT agreements that are consistent across all eligible sites and are in compliance with the requirement that payments are not made in excess of the taxes that would have been payable for such property in the condition in which it was originally acquired."

PILT payments are an essential source of income that compensates communities which host DOE national defense facilities for the loss of tax revenues on properties condemned or acquired for DOE purposes, where such properties had previously been subject to state and local taxes. PILT payments are used to support schools, hospital districts, critical infrastructure, and to provide fire, police, and other vital municipal services in DOE-host communities.
 
New language accompanying the FY18 Omnibus reads:

Payments in Lieu of Taxes (PILT) - ln lieu of House direction, DOE shall conduct a review of its current PILT agreements and provide to the Committees on Appropriations of both Houses of Congress not later than 180 days after enactment of this Act a report that describes the following:
(1) the terms and costs of each PILT agreement;
(2) a description of how DOE determines site eligibility;
(3) an analysis of whether the current PILT agreements use methods of calculation that are consistent with current DOE policy guidelines, with guidance in the Atomic Energy Act that the Department shall be guided by the policy of not making payments in excess of the taxes which would have been payable for such property in the condition in which it was acquired, or with methods of calculation at other DOE sites;
(4) an explanation for any agreements with notable variances, including special burdens;
(5) a description of DOE procedures for negotiating and approving new agreements, including internal oversight mechanisms in place;
(6) recommendations for changes needed to ensure that agreements are consistent across sites.

The agreement includes direction in the House report for the Comptroller General to provide an update on any changes to DOE's PILT program since the issue was last examined by the Government Accountability Office.

It appears DOE can continue with current negotiated PILT payments to local governments while it prepares its report to Congress.

And the Winner Is...

It takes some innovative design work to communicate with impact.  That is why the SRS Community Reuse Organization (SRSCRO) teamed up with Phoenix Printing in Augusta, Georgia to develop the "Looking for a Career" Game Board design.  The image is intended to create awareness of nuclear industry career opportunities. The result is an award winning design that is helping students understand career pathways and local education options.

Every year Phoenix enters a few projects into the local American Advertising Awards competition, and one recent submission was the "Looking for a Career" Game Board.  At the awards ceremony, the piece won SILVER for overall design. The piece will be moving on to the Regional competition.  If the piece wins at Regionals, it goes to Nationals.    
According to its website, "the American Advertising Awards, formerly the ADDYs, is the advertising industry's largest and most representative competition, attracting over 40,000 entries every year in local AAF Club (Ad Club) competitions. The mission of the American Advertising Awards competition is to recognize and reward the creative spirit of excellence in the art of advertising."

The Game Board design highlights the traits and skills needed by nuclear industry employers, including those at the Savannah River Site (SRS).  The SRSCRO developed the design as part of the Workforce Opportunities in Regional Careers (WORC) grant program.  WORC is administered by the SRSCRO and funded by the SRS Department of Energy Environmental Management and National Nuclear Security Administration organizations to advance nuclear workforce development.   Local colleges and universities are highlighted in the design because they are partners in the WORC grant program.     
In This Issue
 
Spotlight
Vahid Majidi  

Savannah River Nuclear Solutions, LLC (SRNS) has announced the appointment of
Dr. Vahid Majidi as SRNS Executive Vice President and the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) Director, effective March 15, 2018.

Dr. Majidi is a decorated former member of the senior executive service and senior intelligence service with direct reporting responsibilities to the Secretary of Defense, Director of National Intelligence and the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

He most recently served as a Senior Vice President for Strategic Initiatives at Stinger Ghaffarian Technologies, Inc., providing solutions in highly complex scientific, engineering, technical, and research and development environments, including spacecraft engineering, climate prediction/global climate modeling and analysis, cybersecurity, computing, modeling and simulation, and advanced software and artificial intelligence applications.
 
Dr. Majidi served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Matters from December 2013 through April 2017, where he was responsible for all aspects of nuclear weapon surety and the management, integration and coordination of activities relating to the acquisition and modernization of the nuclear weapons stockpile. 

Vahid received his bachelors degree in chemistry from Eastern Michigan University and his doctorate from Wayne State University. He was a Post Doctoral Fellow at the University of Texas at Austin.

Dr. Majidi will be replacing Dr.Terry Michalske, who recently announced his decision to step down.
During Dr, Michalske's seven-year tenure at SRS, the traditional roles of SRNL have vastly expanded across the DOE complex.  Advances in tritium processing and storage and the broader leadership role in the effectiveness of the tritium supply chain uniquely position SRNL as a world leader and set it apart in demonstrating the laboratory's value to our country.  

 
April Fools'     
Fun Facts   
        
1.    Some experts believe April Fools' Day began after the shift from the Julian calendar (with the new year starting around the March equinox) to the Gregorian calendar (which starts the new year Jan. 1) in the 1500s. Some people were mocked if they didn't know about the switch and followed the old calendar.

2.    The French call April 1 "Poisson d'Avril," or "April Fish." French children sometimes tape a picture of a fish on the back of their schoolmates, crying "Poisson d'Avril!" when the prank is discovered.

3.    In the 1960s there was only one TV channel in Sweden, which broadcast in black and white. As an April Fools' joke, it was announced that viewers could convert their sets to display color. They simply needed to pull a nylon stocking over the screen.

4.    In 1976, BBC announced that on that day the gravity of earth would be reduced by a certain level and whoever jumped in the air would lightly float in the air! People who hadn't noticed the date might have jumped to realize that mother earth cannot lose its attraction -  and that's where BBC's mission might have been accomplished.

5.    In 2008, BBC again telecast news saying penguins in Antarctica started flying. It's not just that! It stated that those penguins had flown to South America's tropical rainforests.
 
6.    In Scotland, people celebrate two days as fools' days! The second is called "Taily day," in which people play pranks only using one's back part. That is, they stick papers saying "Kick me" and so on to one's back and enjoy!

7.    In 1945, the weather broadcast department announced a tsunami in Pacific Island on April first and since many thought that it was a prank, they didn't mind the announcement and what to say next. The big tragedy hit!!

8.    Google launched Gmail on the eve of April Fools' Day, and everyone thought that it was a prank due to its unbelievably good features! But the company really launched the mail king of today!

9.    In some countries, people throw flour at each other as the part of festivities.

 
Upcoming Events

The 2018 SRSCRO meeting schedule is available at http://www.srscro.org/meetings/ 
  
Closing Thoughts

"You may delay, but time will not." -- Benjamin Franklin

"It's always too early to quit." -- Norman Vincent Peale

"Love the giver more than the gift." -- Brigham Young

"Power is like being a lady... if you have to tell people you are, you aren't." -- Margaret Thatcher

"Personally I'm always ready to learn, although I do not always like being taught."
 -- Winston Churchill

"God cannot alter the past, though historians can." -- Samuel Butler

"Begin to be now what you will be hereafter." -- William James

"The great advantage about telling the truth is that nobody ever believes it." -- Dorothy L. Sayers


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Mindy Mets - NWI® Program Manager - 803-508-7403
Amy Merry - Administrative & Business Manager - 803-508-7401
Kim Saxon - Assistant Coordinator - 803-508-7656
  
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