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POGO's letter to Secretary Bodman regarding the security implications of the Pantex Nuclear Weapons Facility strike |
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Secretary Samuel W. Bodman You recently testified that security at the nuclear weapons facilities is a top priority in the department. POGO agrees that security should be a top priority, which makes the current situation at the Pantex nuclear weapons plant an alarming one. Pantex is a hard site to defend under the best of conditions. Because it is our only nuclear weapons assembly plant, it houses some of the most sensitive nuclear materials in the nuclear weapons complex. These materials include nuclear warheads, high explosives, and tons of plutonium in metal form, all of which are prime targets for terrorists. Recently, the security situation there has become tenuous because, as you know, the guard force at Pantex has been on strike for several weeks trying to gain retirement benefits. The official guard force at Pantex is comprised of 537 officers. These officers have trained for years to protect the multiple and wide-spread storage facilities that house the materials that are so attractive to terrorists. This guard force has been performance-tested in self-assessments and by the Independent Oversight Office in DOE, and has generally proven up to the task of protecting the facility. Shockingly, since the strike, a force of only about 200 replacements have been guarding Pantexfar fewer than half the number of officers considered necessary to defend this sensitive site. This replacement force is made up of private security supervisors from various sites around the nuclear weapons complex, as well as federal nuclear transportation couriers. Unlike the private segment of the force, the couriers are federal employees and so cannot be supervised by Pantex contractor BWXT. As a result, we have been told, federal employees from the Pantex Site Office have been re-tasked to supervise the couriers. These supervisors are not trained for this type of work and, worse, are unarmed, making them ill-equipped to deal with a real security situation. In addition, the people newly detailed to Pantex undergo only one week of training on the weapons in use at Pantex, which in a number of cases are different from the weapons at their sites, as well as on Pantex’s unique tactics and response plans. We understand that DOE Office of Health, Safety and Security (HSS) inspectors recently visited Pantex to determine whether the replacement guards could defend the plant. HSS Director Glenn Podonsky articulated his concerns when he testified last week before the Senate Armed Services Committee. He stated that “at the 10, 11, 12-day period, when my inspectors were down there, I have every confidence to tell you that nuclear material is protected. But beyond that, we become very concerned.” (Emphasis added.) HSS could not performance-test the replacement force because that force was already working 72 hours per week (six 12-hour days per week). In addition, there were not enough guards to create a shadow force to secure the facility during a test. As you know, without verification through performance testing, any assurances of adequate security are questionable. At the Senate Armed Services hearing, Senators Bill Nelson and Jeff Sessions raised thoughtful questions about the implications of the strike. HSS Director Podonsky testified in response to the Senators’ concerns that in addition to the impact on Pantex, this strike is taking an enormous toll across the complex:
Guard forces around the complex were already stretched thin before the strike. For example, at Y-12 the guards were already working 60-plus hours per week. Then they were required to send 15 to 20 supervisors to Pantex to cover the strike. As a result, the remaining supervisors at Y-12 are now working over 80 hours per week.
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