February 2007 Citizens Watch Newsletter
Green Team Files Bid Protest
by Marylia Kelley and Bob Schaeffer
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
A team of organizations seeking to transform the Livermore nuclear weapons
lab into an environmental research facility today filed a formal protest
with the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) for denying its management
proposal. The fourteen-page document claims "improper and biased handling"
of the group's bid.
Livermore Lab GREEN, LLC charges that DOE's National Nuclear Security
Administration (NNSA) acted improperly by rejecting the bid on grounds that
were "factually incorrect, unsubstantiated, biased and prejudicial,
contrary to regulations and/or easily corrected." The bidders seek legal
relief in the form of "reinstatement" as an active competitor for the
Livermore Lab contract. The protest also requests a suspension of the
NNSA's procurement process until the group is put back on equitable footing
with other bidders. The protest was filed under the Federal Acquisition
Regulations.
"Our protest rests on the moral and legal principle of fair competition,"
explained Marylia Kelley, Executive Director of Tri-Valley CAREs and a
leader of the bidding team. "Our bid was unfairly eliminated from the
competition because NNSA officials involved in the evaluation did not agree
with its philosophical and political approach to attracting more civilian
science to Livermore Lab and moving the facility away from classified
nuclear weapons activities over time."
The "green team's" protest charges the NNSA:
-
Made factually-incorrect assertions in its grounds for rejecting the bid,
including by claiming that information was missing from the bid package
when it was there.
-
Made unsubstantiated allegations in its basis for rejecting the bid,
including allegations that the bid would "inhibit NNSA from complying with
the law" even though the bid closely aligned with congressional directives
to remove weapons-usable plutonium from Livermore Lab before 2014.
-
Acted in a biased and prejudicial manner in its rejection of the bid by
treating the Livermore Lab GREEN, LLC and its proposal differently than it
treated competitors.
-
Used grounds in rejecting the bid that could easily have been corrected
under the provisions of FAR, for example by rejecting the group's proposal
because it provided the managing entity's board of directors list but not
the lists for other partners.
-
Conducted a legally-deficient process in disallowing the GREEN, LLC bid,
including by canceling a debriefing meeting as team members were calling
in, and then refusing to reschedule it.
The group also cited congressional disapproval of the NNSA's Livermore Lab
bidding process. The GREEN LLC's protest includes Rep. David Hobson's
letter late last year as Chair of the House Energy and Water Development
Appropriations Subcommittee. Hobson wrote: "In mandating competition, it
was the intent of Congress to attract the widest possible group of
interested bidders... The [DOE] has resisted moving in the direction of
fair and open competitive processes. Unfortunately, [DOE] hasŠ telegraphed
to the contractor community that innovative ideas and concepts would not be
favorably received."
"Congress is increasingly recognizing that DOE, particularly its nuclear
weapons arm, makes up its own rules to suit itself," concluded Jay Coghlan,
Director of Nuclear Watch New Mexico, another member of the bidding team.
"Our proposal for transforming Livermore must be reinstated so the U.S. can
comply with its legal obligations to strengthen the global nonproliferation
regime, and not undermine it with new nuclear weapons and expanding
production," Coghlan continued.
Under the Federal Acquisition Regulations, NNSA is required to provide for
inexpensive, procedurally simple and expeditious resolution of the
Livermore Lab GREEN, LLC protest. This process can include alternative
dispute resolution, third party review and use of other agency's personnel.
The Livermore Lab GREEN, LLC's protest welcomes all these approaches.
Moreover, it also requests that the NNSA establish an "independent review"
for the protest, as allowed under the law.
Bring the Troops Home!
by Loulena Miles
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
President Bush proposes to send more than 20,000 additional troops to Iraq
with no timeline for ending the war, bringing the U.S. military presence
to more than 150,000. In response, half a million or more protested in
Washington, DC and in cities across the country. And, a handful of
pioneering Members of Congress, led by Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Santa Rosa),
have submitted a bill to bring the troops home.
In introducing what is being called the first comprehensive bill to get
U.S. troops out of Iraq, Rep. Woolsey was joined by California colleagues
Barbara Lee, Maxine Waters, Diane Watson and Bob Filner.
Woolsey highlighted the disparity between the President's idea of what more
troops in Iraq will accomplish and what will occur: "What the President
fails to grasp is that our military presence is only fueling the
insurgency, plunging Iraq further into chaos and civil war," she said.
Woolsey further stated: "The results of Nov. 7th showed just how fed up the
[public] is with the President's failed Iraq policy. It is time to honor
that mandate. It is now up to the Congress to catch up with the will of
the American public."
"The Congress has already appropriated funding that will support our troops
and keep this occupation going for at least another six months. That
funding instead should be used to finance an aggressive withdrawal plan
that brings our troops home to their families. Our bill would do exactly
that," Woolsey concluded.
H.R. 508: The Bring the Troops Home and Iraq Sovereignty Restoration Act is
a plan to withdraw US forces and military contractors within six months of
the bill's enactment; repeal authorization for the use of force; prohibit
permanent military bases in Iraq; provide economic aid to the Iraqi people;
and fully fund health care for U.S. veterans.
The bill is co-sponsored (so far) by: Lynn Woolsey (CA), Barbara Lee (CA),
Maxine Waters (CA), Diane Watson (CA), James McGovern (MA), Barney Frank
(MA), Raul Grijalva (AZ), Chaka Fattah (PA), Jerrold Nadler (NY), John
Conyers, Jr. (MI), Wm. Lacy Clay (MO), Steve Cohen (TN), Maurice Hinchey
(NY), Bob Filner (CA), Dennis Kucinich (OH), Donald Payne (NJ) and Sheila
Jackson-Lee (TX).
Honoring Dr. King, Marching for Peace
by Mary Perner
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
Monday, Jan. 15, Tri-Valley CAREs and others in the Tri-Valley Peace
Coalition gathered at Livermore's United Christian Church for the third
annual commemoration of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the occasion of his
birthday.
Judith Flanagan's recorder music and K. Jones dedication to Coretta Scott
King initiated the program. Local author Prabha Duneja, spoke of the
spiritual ties between Dr. King and Mahatma Gandhi and their mutual
adherence to the principles of non-violence.
Reverend Martha Williams led a guided visualization. Many of the hundred
or so in attendance were young people. Mary Perner, Tri-Valley CAREs'
Community Organizer, invited youth to share their dreams of peace. Asale
Kimaada provided a beautiful background display.
In the activist spirit of Dr. King, the event culminated with participants
creating their own placards and marching for peace through city streets to
Lizzie Fountain in downtown Livermore. Community members held a vigil at
the busy corner of First St. and Livermore Ave. to mourn the troops and
civilians fallen in Iraq and to call for an end to war. The vigilers
received lots of interest and many honks of support.
Site 300 Bio-Lab Opposition Reaches 6,500!
by Marylia Kelley
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
The U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) continues to eye Livermore Lab's
Site 300 as a possible location for its half-a-million square foot National
Bio and Agro Defense (NBAF) bio-warfare agent research facility. If and
when it is built, this facility is expected to house the most deadly
diseases on earth, and will experiment on large animals on 30 - 100 acres
of land.
You may remember the DHS was supposed to announce its finalist list of
sites from the 14 contenders (Texas, Kentucky, California, Kansas,
Wisconsin, Oklahoma, Georgia, Tennessee, Missouri, Maryland, Mississippi,
N. Carolina) sometime around the end of last year. Instead, DHS has opted
to tour all 14 sites before it announces its choice(s). Once the finalist
sites are selected, environmental studies and construction of the facility
will follow. In the meantime, Livermore Lab is busy contacting all of the
city councils and community members in Tracy and surrounding areas to curry
favor and stifle citizen opposition to the bio-war research lab.
Even so, the outcry from local residents has been significant. Tri-Valley
CAREs has collected nearly 1,500 petitions opposing the bio-lab. There have
been letters to the editor opposing it. Working Assets Long Distance asked
its CA customers if they would be willing to pay a small fee to send
letter-grams telling DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff to stop the bio-lab.
More than 3,000 customers responded yes! Other Working Assets customers
made phone calls. Also, Nuclear Age Peace Foundation, a colleague
organization in Santa Barbara, sponsored an Internet forum that enabled
nearly 2,000 people to send their email messages to the Dept. of Homeland
Security opposing the bio-lab.
In all, more than 6,500 have registered their opposition to the
construction of a bio-war research lab at Site 300. This is an impressive
response - and we thank you.
Sadly, however, it isn't enough. We need to keep the opposition going - and
growing. Please contact us a.s.a.p. if you can spare any time at all to
help push this campaign forward. Your time and energy can help us stop this
ill conceived and dangerous plan before it becomes a reality.
The Eloquent Resistance to "Bombplex"
by Loulena Miles and Marylia Kelley
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
Few had understood that the Dept. of Energy (DOE) envisions 2030 as the
year when it puts the finishing touches on a fully renovated nuclear
weapons complex. But understand everyone did, when DOE officials showed up
in Livermore and Tracy on chilly December 12th to hold public hearings on
the "scope" of their proposed, new "Bombplex."
The DOE's plan includes a blueprint to revitalize nuclear weapons
production similar to what existed during the worst years of the Cold War.
"Complex 2030," or "Bombplex" as we and other environmentalists call it,
envisions the manufacture of hundreds of new plutonium bomb cores and 125
new nuclear weapons per year. These new nukes will come courtesy of the
so-called Reliable Replacement Warhead (RRW) program.
The U.S. Government Accountability Office estimates this endeavor will cost
at least $150 billion. Tri-Valley CAREs believes the cost could stretch to
twice that amount. The true cost of "Complex 2030" goes beyond money,
however, and includes the weakening of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty
and, across the U.S., a new generation of workers made ill by on the job
exposures. The "Bombplex" also means new contamination of our air, soil and
water in communities near these sites, including Livermore Lab.
Here is the good news. DOE was not expecting large crowds. In Livermore,
more than a hundred assembled over the course of the day to challenge the
"Bombplex" with heartfelt as well as technical arguments as to why building
new nukes was "insane", "reprehensible" and "illegal." In Tracy another two
dozen were present.
People were eloquent. Truth, grace and beauty were felt in the Northern
California hearing rooms as person after person stepped to the podium to
speak out, each in their own voice, against these destructive plans.
Several speakers were adolescents of about 11 years. They spoke of the
positive future they longed to see instead of nuclear bombs. Other speakers
were at the omega of their lives and brought with them the wisdom of many
years. Some asked why a proposal for new nukes was even being considered.
Many offered alternative visions for the future that included transforming
Livermore Lab into a research center for non-polluting, renewable energy
technologies and "green" science.
Too, Livermore and Tracy were not the only hearing locations where sizable
crowds gathered. There was a united response of concerned citizens across
the country - in Tennessee, New Mexico, South Carolina and in 12 hearings
in all that stretched from coast to coast.
The purpose of the hearings was "scoping." Next, the DOE will produce a
Draft Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement. Once the Draft is
released (which is scheduled to happen this summer), the DOE is required by
law to hold more public hearings before a Final plan is issued.
Tri-Valley CAREs will continue to challenge the DOE's "Bombplex." We will
look for it when the DOE budget request is released in Feb. - stay tuned
for next month's Citizen's Watch to see how much money DOE wants for new
bombs. And, of course, we will alert you when there is a new round of
hearings. Together, we can defeat the "Bombplex." We have to - our world
depends on it.
To read hearing transcripts, go to:
http://www.complex2030peis.com/project.html. To get Tri-Valley CAREs' RRW
report, "A Slippery Slope to New Nuclear Weapons," and other info, go to
www.trivalleycares.org.
Print Bites: All the News That Fits to Print
by Marylia Kelley
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
- Bigger Bomb Blasts. The San Joaquin County Air Pollution Control District
has given Livermore Lab a permit that allows a whopping 8-fold increase in
the explosive bomb tests at Site 300. The permit was granted without
consideration of the radioactive materials that may be used in the blasts
or the impact the blasts could have on endangered species or nearby homes.
Bob Sarvey, a long-time Tri-Valley CAREs member, appealed the permit. Our
Staff Attorney, Loulena Miles, will argue that the permit was issued
prematurely and without required public input. The hearing will take place
at 10 AM on Feb. 7 at the air district's offices, 4800 Enterprise Way in
Modesto. If you'd like to attend, call us for more info and carpool ideas.
- Doomsday Clock Reset. In a world where there are few popular icons to
symbolize the seriousness of the nuclear threat, the Doomsday Clock has
served as a reminder since 1947 of how close the world stands to its own
demise. On Jan. 18, the Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, who
maintain the clock, moved it from seven minutes to midnight to five minutes
to midnight. In a twist, the Board chose to include global climate change
in its countdown to the end of the human race. Sir Martin Rees, explained:
"Nuclear weapons still pose the most catastrophic and immediate threat to
humanity, but climate change and emerging technologies in the life sciences
also have the potential to end civilization as we know it."
- In With the New. The 2007 Congress has new faces and a new majority. Here
are three (of many). Rep. George Miller, respected senior statesman of the
Bay Area delegation, has been named as Chair of the House Education and
Workforce Committee. Our Livermore Rep., Ellen Tauscher, has risen to Chair
the House Armed Services Strategic Forces Subcommittee. And, replacing
Richard Pombo in Pleasanton/Tracy is newly-elected Rep. Jerry McNerney, a
renewable energy expert. We congratulate and welcome the new Congress - and
challenge it to create real change for peace, justice and the environment.
- Out With the Old. Linton Brooks, head of the Dept. of Energy's National
Nuclear Security Administration, was fired last month. The stated reason
Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman asked for his resignation was Brooks'
mishandling of ongoing security deficiencies at Los Alamos Lab, though
similar problems exist at Livermore Lab and other sites in the nuclear
weapons complex. We note that Brooks promoted the nuclear bunker buster
until Congress pulled the plug on its funding - and then jumped on the
"Reliable Replacement Warhead" bandwagon. It's not likely that Bush will
choose a disarmament advocate to replace Brooks, but we do hope for someone
who will rein in and not promote every new nuclear weapon pushed by the
labs.
Citizen's Alerts
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
Wednesday, February 7
Workshop on Cleanup of Radioactive and Toxic Pollution at Site 300
6 PM, Tracy Community Center
300 East 10th Street, Tracy
(925) 443-7148 for details
The morning permit appeal hearing (see Print Bites on page 4) is about
future pollution at Site 300. This Superfund workshop, held the evening of
the same day, is about contamination already in Site 300's soil and
groundwater. The workshop is hosted by Livermore Lab. Tri-Valley CAREs will
have a table and technical experts for you to speak with about the Lab's
draft cleanup plan and ways it needs to be strengthened. We will also have
a letter you can sign asking for improvements. Join us.
Thursday, February 8
Sick Workers Support Group
10 AM, Livermore Library
1188 So. Livermore Ave.
(925) 443-7148 for details
The sick worker support group is for Livermore Lab, Sandia and other DOE
workers made ill by the job exposure to toxic and radioactive materials-and
for their families. The meeting will focus on the upcoming audit of
Livermore Lab's "site profile," which is a document the government uses to
determine the likelihood that workers were exposed. The Livermore "site
profile" is woefully incomplete. How to address this problem will be
discussed. You are invited to attend.
Thursday, February 15
Tri-Valley CAREs meets
7:30 PM, Livermore Library
1188 So. Livermore Ave.
(925) 443-7148 for details
Come and find the nuclear weapons pork in the DOE budget request, which
goes to Congress on Feb 5. Get the latest on our "green bid." Discuss our
2007 strategies to win on nuclear weapons and waste issues. Your
participation is crucial to our success.
Justice for Sick Workers?: The Program Still Has a Long Way to Go
by Loulena Miles
from Tri-Valley CAREs' February 2007 newsletter, Citizen's Watch
In the fall of 1999, for the first time in history, the Dept. of Energy
admitted that it had placed its workers in harm's way without their
knowledge, consent or adequate protections.
In Oct. 2000, the U.S. Congress -- on a bipartisan basis -- enacted the
Energy Employees Occupational Illness Compensation Program Act (EEOICPA) to
compensate these workers. The law covers employees at 350 facilities in 42
states.
The law states that: "Since the inception of the nuclear weapons program
... a large number of nuclear weapons workers at sites of the Department of
Energy and at sites of vendors who supplied the Cold War effort were put at
risk without their knowledge and consent for reasons that, documents
reveal, were driven by fears of adverse publicity, liability, and employee
demands for hazardous duty pay..."
Since the passage of this law, its execution has been mired in scandal and
poor management.
Not only was part of the program shifted from the Dept. of Energy to the
Dept. of Labor so that it would be more independently administered, but
evidence has surfaced that the Bush Administration Labor Dept. tried to cut
program costs by orchestrating a behind-the-scenes deal with the White
House Office of Management and Budget (OMB), including by giving extra
oversight authority and what amounts essentially to "veto" power to the
White House in some instances.
Former Congressman Hostettler (R-IN) made this point at an oversight
hearing in March of 2006, "This plan to override science to meet OMB's
budget priorities is inappropriate and speaks to an institutional mind set
at odds with congressional intent. It does a disservice to these Cold War
veterans. Unless we root out this problem, it will undermine Government
credibility with claimants and the public." The House Judiciary Committee
investigating the problems plaguing this program has held five hearings.
Meanwhile sick workers in California continue to struggle with illnesses,
often clearly correlated with their on the job exposures, but receive no
compensation.
Since the inception of the compensation program, a total of 2,093 Livermore
Lab claims have been submitted. Of those claims, only 157 or roughly 7%
have received compensation.
Many workers receive letters telling them that they don't qualify for
compensation. In several cases, former Livermore Lab employees were told
that their illnesses were 49% likely to be related to workplace exposure
rather than the 51% required to be eligible for compensation.
Malcolm Nelson was just sworn in as the new Ombudsman for the EEOICPA
program. His job is to help answer questions and disputes about the
program. If you are a sick Dept. of Energy worker, former worker,
contractor or family member, you can contact him toll-free at
1-877-OMBUDME.
There is also an audit team coming to Livermore in late February or March
to learn from sick workers and former workers about Livermore Lab's
history. This historical document is called a "site profile." The auditors
will also evaluate the accuracy of the Labor Department's models.
Tri-Valley CAREs has already submitted comments pointing out some of the
flaws in the Livermore Lab's draft site profile. To find out more, come to
the Sick Worker Support Group meting at 10 AM on Feb. 8 at the Livermore
Library, 1188 So. Livermore Ave..
Workers and former workers wishing to provide input into this process can
also contact the Tri-Valley CAREs office at (925) 443-7148.
Busywork for Nuclear Scientists
New York Times Editorial
Published: January 15, 2007
After reading this excellent editorial opposing the "Reliable Replacement
Warhead" Program, please send a copy of it to your members of Congress
along with a short note from you.
The Bush administration is eager to start work on a new nuclear warhead
with all sorts of admirable qualities: sturdy, reliable and secure from
terrorists. To sweeten the deal, officials say that if they can replace the
current arsenal with Reliable Replacement Warheads (what could sound more
comforting?), they probably won t have to keep so many extra warheads to
hedge against technical failure. If you're still not sold, the warhead
comes with something of a guarantee -- that scientists can build the new
bombs without ever testing them.
Let the buyer beware. While the program has gotten very little attention
here, it is a public-relations disaster in the making overseas. Suspicions
that the United States is actually trying to build up its nuclear
capabilities are undercutting Washington's arguments for restraining the
nuclear appetites of Iran and North Korea.
Then there's the tens of billions it is likely to cost. And the most
important question: Nearly two decades after the country stopped building
nuclear weapons, does it really need a new one? The answer, emphatically,
is no. This is a make-work program championed by the weapons laboratories
and belatedly by the Pentagon, which hasn't been able to get Congress to
pay for its other nuclear fantasies.
The Rumsfeld team's first choice was for a nuclear "bunker buster" to go
after deeply buried targets. The Pentagon got concerned about "aging"
warheads only after it was clear that even the Republican-led Congress, or
at least one intrepid House subcommittee chairman, considered the bunker
buster too Strangelovian to finance.
One crucial argument for the new program took a major hit in November when
the Jason -- a prestigious panel of scientists that advises the government
on weapons -- reported that most of the plutonium triggers in the current
arsenal can be expected to last for 100 years. Since the oldest weapons are
less than 50 years old, supporters of the new warhead have fallen back on
warnings that other bomb components are also aging, and that the nuclear
labs need the work to attract and train the best scientists. But the labs
are already spending billions on studying and preserving the current
arsenal.
Then there's that guarantee that there will be no need for testing -- one
of the few arms-control taboos President Bush hasn't broken yet. While
experts debate whether the labs can really build a weapon without testing
it, the more important question is whether any president would stake
America's security on an untested arsenal.
America would be much safer if the president focused on reducing the number
of old nuclear weapons still deployed by the United States and the other
nuclear powers. The new Congress should stop this program before any more
dollars are wasted, or more damage is done to America's credibility.
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