You can pick out any selective set of facts to prove government sucks and we would all be better off if we had no centralized government.
Lawmakers Press for Smaller, More Efficient NRC
09/09/2015 | Aaron Larson
Some members of
the U.S. House of Representatives feel the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC)
needs to appropriately align its budget and staffing levels with the
organization’s workload.
That message
was delivered to the agency’s commissioners during the Subcommittee on Energy
and Power and the Subcommittee on Environment and the Economy joint oversight
hearing held on Sept. 9.
Rep. Bill
Flores (R-Texas) presented a slide (Figure 1) comparing the agency’s staffing
and budget in 2005 to 2016 projections. He suggested that the total decrease in
agency activity is “around 38% on a weighted-average basis, but the headcount
has grown by 21% over that time period and the budget has grown by a whopping
54%.”
1. Runaway regulatory growth? Although the number of reactors and licensing actions are down, NRC staffing and budget have increased. Source: Rep. Bill Flores
“This squarely
fits with what Reagan used to talk about when he talked about how the only
thing that continues to—to have eternal life—to continue growing is a federal
agency,” Flores said.
Flores wasn’t
the only one suggesting change was needed. Rep. Bill Johnson (R-Ohio) seemed to
suggest that retirements and resignations could get staffing to target levels
in fiscal year 2016 when he noted that the NRC’s annual attrition rate between
2004 and 2012 was 5.4%. Johnson said the percentage equated to nearly 200
employees leaving the organization each year and that the NRC target of 3,600
people was a reduction of less than 100 from the agency’s current levels.
NRC Chairman
Stephen Burns replied, “With respect to attrition, attrition is not always
where you necessarily want it to be.” Burns noted that key oversight positions
must be replaced. He said that the NRC was looking at “early outs and buy-outs”
as an option.
“As a fee-based
agency, your commission is statutorily required to recover 90% of your budget
through the annual collection of fees from licensees,” said Rep. Adam Kinzinger
(R-Ill.). “And referring back to the value of efficiency as one of the NRC’s
principles of good regulation, it’s pretty obvious that the need for an
established, credible process for developing a budget based on workload
projections is necessary to determine a responsible fee assessment.”
Commissioner
William Ostendorff agreed that there are some budget process areas that need
improvement. He noted that a new chief financial officer was brought into the
agency to make changes. When questioned by Kinzinger if the budget process
would be “good” by 2017, Burns replied, “I think we will be. I’m confident.”
—Aaron
Larson, associate editor (@AaronL_Power, @POWERmagazine)
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