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Making a Difference American Recovery and Reinvestment Act

Making a Difference American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Thomas Johnson, Jr. Deputy Director, EM Recovery Act Office of Environmental Management U.S. Department of Energy . Presented to: Morehouse College Entrepreneurship Conference. Thursday, February 25, 2010. EM Mission.

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Making a Difference American Recovery and Reinvestment Act

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  1. Making a DifferenceAmerican Recovery and Reinvestment Act Thomas Johnson, Jr. Deputy Director, EM Recovery Act Office of Environmental Management U.S. Department of Energy Presented to: Morehouse College Entrepreneurship Conference Thursday, February 25, 2010

  2. EM Mission “Complete the safe cleanup of the environmental legacy brought about from five decades of nuclear weapons development, production, and Government-sponsored nuclear energy research.” • Largest environmental cleanup effort in the world, originally involving two million acres at 108 sites in 35 states • Safely performing work • In challenging environments • Involving some of the most dangerous materials known to man • Solving highly complex technical problems with first-of-a-kind technologies • Operating in the world’s most complex regulatory environment • Supporting other continuing DOE missions and stakeholder partnerships

  3. EM Program Priorities • Essential activities to maintain a safe, secure, and compliant posture in the EM complex • Radioactive tank waste stabilization, treatment, and disposal • Spent nuclear fuel storage, receipt, and disposition • Special nuclear material consolidation, stabilization, and disposition • High priority groundwater remediation • Transuranic (TRU) and mixed/low-level waste disposition • Soil and groundwater remediation • Excess facilities deactivation and decommissioning (D&D)

  4. Secretary Chu’s Key Recovery Act Objectives • Start projects quickly • Ensure projects have lasting value • Provide public with unprecedented transparency • Make a significant down payment on the Nation’s energy and environmental future “We will turn this time of economic crisis into an opportunity to build a clean, secure, and prosperous energy future for America….” —Dr. Steven Chu, Secretary of Energy

  5. DOE Recovery Act Funding

  6. EM Received $6 Billion inRecovery Act Funding • Directed towards existing scope that can most readily be accelerated • Soil and groundwater remediation • Radioactive solid waste disposition • Facility decontamination & decommissioning • “Shovel-ready” projects • Fully-defined cost, scope, and schedule • Established regulatory framework • Proven technology • Proven performance • Existing contract vehicles • Focus on EM completion and footprint reduction • Recovery Act funding will accelerate approximately 48 compliance milestones

  7. $6 Billion: Making a Difference in Communities Across the Country Hanford SiteRichland$1.635 B Office of River Protection$326 M Idaho National Laboratory$468 M Mound$20 M Argonne National Laboratory$99 M Separations Process Research Unit$52 M West Valley Demonstration Project$74 M Brookhaven National Laboratory$42 M SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory$8 M Portsmouth Site$118 M Paducah Site$79 M Nevada Test Site$44 M Moab$108 M Energy Technology Engineering Center$54 M Savannah River Site$1.615 B Los Alamos National Laboratory$212 M Oak Ridge $755 M Waste Isolation Pilot Plant$172 M 12 States, 17 SitesUranium/Thorium$69 MManagement & Oversight$50 M

  8. Recovery Act Funding Obligationsat EM Sites Financial data are based on reporting as of February 16, 2010, and are subject to change.

  9. Getting The Job Done

  10. Over 14,400 Jobs Saved or Created Headcount - workers that have benefited from ARRA funding including full-time, part-time, and temporary workers Note that the job numbers reported in FederalReporting.gov only account for prime contractor workers

  11. Footprint Reduction Footprint Reduction means that the active DOE EM mission is complete within a particular area in terms of decontamination and decommissioning, waste disposition, ground water remediation, soil removal, etc. 900 sq. mi. EM footprint will be reduced from 900 sq. mi. to approximately 450 sq. mi. (approx. 40 to 50 percent) by Sept. 2011, and to about 90 sq. mi. (approx. 80 to 90 percent) of the initial footprint) by Sept. 2015. Approx. 450 sq. mi. Reduction 90 sq. mi.

  12. Project Management Oversight & Accountability Safety is the #1 priority for all EM Recovery Act projects. • Maintain regular communications with regulators, Tribal Nations and stakeholders • Fully implement DOE Order 413.3A • Phased release of funding based on performance • Integrates project, contract and funds management • Ensure projects stay on schedule and within cost • Conduct regular reviews to track and monitor performance • On-site Headquarters representatives will closely observe project performance • External oversight reviews by the IG and GAO

  13. Recovery Act Work Requires All Types of Skills Site Field Offices DOE Headquarters • Project Managers • Contracting Specialists • Project Engineers • Chemical Engineers • Safety and Quality Assurance Specialists • Budget • Administrative Assistants • Strategic Planners • Project Managers • Cost Estimators • Schedulers • Construction Engineers • Heavy Equipment Operators • Radiological Technologists • Nuclear Safety Engineers • Quality Assurance and Quality Control Engineers • Truck Drivers • Health Physics Technicians • Earth Drillers • Environmental Engineers • Nuclear Waste Processing Operators • Geologists

  14. Making Progress in Empowering Small Business • EM prime contracting small business goal for FY 2009 is was 4.8% • Each EM site is expected to meet or exceed EM’s corporate small business goal and maximize small business prime and subcontracting opportunities • EM Recovery Act program targeted more than 4.8%, or $288 million of the $6 billion in ARRA funds, for small business primes • Exceeded small business target goal—more than $396 million obligated as of Sept 30, 2009 for all small business categories EM Recovery Act Program has achieved 136% of its small business goals for FY 2009!

  15. Small Business Opportunities • Increase Small Business Participation through • Exploring new ways to facilitate small business participation • Developing mechanism to assist small business through State and Regional Finance Development Organizations For small business information and opportunities contact Ms. Brenda Degraffenreid at: brenda.degraffenreid@hq.doe.gov or (202) 586-4620 For stakeholder and regulator information contact Ms. Melissa Nielson at melissa.nielson@em.doe.gov or David Borak at david.borak@em.doe.gov

  16. Communicate. Communicate.Communicate. EM Headquarters and Field sites are striving to provide “unprecedented transparency” as to where the ARRA money is going and what is being accomplished. • Hot Link Jobs Button • EM Recovery Act newsletter • Weekly News Flash • EM Recovery Act website • Stakeholder conference calls • Public meetings • OMB/Congress • GAO/IG

  17. Summary • More than 99% of Recovery Act funds have been allocated to sites • $5.77 billion obligated to contracts for EM Recovery projects • 14,400 jobs created and preserved in 12 States • Over $1.3 billion spent on Recovery work • Achieved 136% of EM small business prime contracting goal • Monthly monitoring of project execution and performance • Active engagement with stakeholders and regulators EM Recovery Act Program is making progress in achieving the President’s goals of job creation and environmental cleanup through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

  18. Learn More About theEM Recovery Act Program EM Recovery Act Program Office http://www.em.doe.gov/emrecovery Email:EMRecovery@em.doe.gov Phone:202-586-2083 DOE Recovery Act Clearinghouse http://RecoveryClearinghouse.energy.gov Email:RecoveryClearinghouse@hq.doe.gov Phone:1-888-DOE-RCVY

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