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{{#Wiki_filter:OFFICIAL                 USE   OHL¥                                     OIG       INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
{{#Wiki_filter:OFFICIAL USE OHL¥ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION MEMORANDUM DATE:
August 9, 2023 Joyce L. Connery Chair TO:
FROM:
Robert J. Feitel Inspector General b
. I Digitally signed by Robert J.
Ro ert J. Fe1te Feitel


MEMORANDUM
==SUBJECT:==
Date: 2023.08.0911:13:07-04'00' ACTIONS INCONSISTENT WITH THE DELEGATION OF FUNCTIONS REQUIRED BY THE ATOMIC ENERGY ACT (OIG CASE NO. I2200180)
Attached is an Office of the Inspector General (OIG), U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB), Report of Investigation pertaining to an allegation that the DNFSB Chair failed to delegate requisite functions to the agency's Executive Director of Operations (EDO). As discussed in our report, the OIG found that while the Chair delegated to the EDO some of the functions required by the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954, as amended, both the Chair and the Board remained heavily involved in the agency's day-to-day operations and retained control over many administrative tasks, contrary to AEA sections 311(c)(3)(B) and 313(b)(3)(C).
This Memorandum and Report of Investigation is furnished for any corrective action you may deem appropriate. Please notify this office by September 15, 2023, of any corrective action taken or planned, based on the results of this investigation, and if you require further assistance.
The distribution of this memorandum and report should be limited to those DNFSB managers required for evaluation of this matter. To protect the identities of DNFSB CONTACT: Malion A. Bartley, Assistant Inspector General for Investigations 301.415.5925 OFFICmL U~'I!: ON'L, OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.


DATE:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               August    9 , 2023
OFFICIM:: USE ONL*1r OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION employees who cooperated with this investigation, the OIG will not provide the exhibits to the Board. Neither the memorandum, the report, nor its exhibits may be placed on DNFSB websites without the OIG's express written permission.


TO       :                                                J    oyce L. Connery Chair
==Attachment:==
As stated cc:
Thomas Summers, Vice Chair Jessie Roberson, Board Member OFFICIM:. USE ONL¥ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILil'IES SAFE'lY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENER.AL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
2


FROM:                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           Rob  ert J. Feite l Ro                                    ert J. Fe1te            Fei tel Ins  pect  o r Ge neral                                                                                                                                                                                                                      b                                                                                                                                                            .                         I Dig ita lly  sig ned by Robert J. Date  : 2023.08.0911:13    :07-04  '00'
OPPICltt t1Sf: Of~LY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION TABLE OF CONTENTS ALLEGATION...................................................................................................................... 1 BACKGROUND................................................................................................................... 1 EDO SELECTION AND SCOPE OF AUTHORITY................................................... 3 FINDINGS............................................................................................................................. 4 BASIS FOR FINDINGS..................................................................................................... 4 DISPOSITION.................................................................................................................... 12 OPPICIM; USE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUTOIG'S PERMISSION.


SUBJ          E    CT:                                   ACTI  ONS INCONSISTENT WITH TH E DELEGATION OF F  UNCTIO  NS RE QUIRED BY THE ATOMIC ENE RGY ACT (OIG CASE N  O. I  2 200180)
8FFICIM:: USE OMLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION ALLEGATION The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) initiated this investigation based on an allegation that the Chair of the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB) failed to appropriately delegate functions to its Executive Director of Operations (EDO), as required by the Atomic Energy Act (AEA), as amended.
BACKGROUND ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954 The AEA is the enabling legislation for the DNFSB. Among its provisions, the AEA establishes an EDO position at the DNFSB, describes the EDO's responsibilities, and requires the DNFSB's Chair to delegate certain functions to the EDO.
Section 311(c)(3)(B) of the AEA (42 U.S.C. § 2286(c)(3)(B)) states that the Chair "shall delegate" to the EDO the following functions:
(i)
Administrative functions of the Board.
(ii) Appointment and supervision of employees of the Board not specified under paragraph (6).
(iii) Distribution of business among the employees and administrative units and offices of the Board.
(iv) Preparation of-(i) proposals for the reorganization of the administrative units or offices of the Board; (ii) the budget estimate for the Board; and, (iii) the proposed distribution of funds according to purposes approved by the Board.
Additionally, section 313(b)(3)(C) of the AEA (42 U.S.C. § 2286b(b)(3)(C)) states that the EDO "shall be the senior employee of the Board responsible for-"
(i) general administration and technical matters; (ii) ensuring that the members of the Board are fully and currently informed with respect to matters for which the members are responsible; and, (iii) the functions delegated by the Chairperson pursuant to section 2286(c)(3)(B) of this title.
Of'f'fCIAL USE OMLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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Attached    is an Office of t    h  e Insp  ector    Genera      l  (OI  G), U.S. Nu  clear  Regul atory Co mmi        ssion  (N RC) a nd Defen  se N uclear Faciliti es Safet  y  Bo ard  (DNFSB),   Report  of Inves    ti gati on    pertainin  g t    o an allegation  th at th e DNFSB Ch  air fail e  d t  o d el  egat    e requisite      functions        t  o t h  e agen    cy's    Executive    Director    of Opera t  ions  (E DO ).           As discu  sse d in our r  eport    , the OIG fo  und th at  whil e th e Chair    d el  egat    ed t    o the EDO s om e of the functions        re q uire  d b y the Ato m    ic Energy  Act (AEA) of 1954, as am    ende  d  , bo th t h  e Ch    air and the Board r em      ained h  eavi  ly invo  lve  d  in the agen cy's    d ay- to-day op  erati  o ns and r et    ained co ntr  ol ove    r  m    a  n y ad  mini    strative  t  asks, co ntr ary  t  o AEA section    s 3  11(c)(3)(B) an d 313 (b)( 3)(  C).
OFFICIAL UBE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020 The EDO position was created by AEA amendments included in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (NDAA), which became law on December 20, 2019 (Pub. L. 116-92). The Committee Report that accompanied the Senate's version of the NDAA bill explained the basis for the EDO position.
SENATE COMMITTEE REPORT In the June 2019 report that accompanied the Senate's version of the NDAA bill (S. 1790 in the 116th Congress), the Committee on Armed Services referenced a report from the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) that, in the committee's view, painted a "disturbing picture" of the DNFSB. To help address persistent issues at the DNFSB, the committee recommended a legislative provision creating an EDO position at the agency. As stated in the report:
"The committee recommends a provision that would authorize the hiring of an executive director for operations as a senior employee at the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board. The provision would also authorize the Chairman of the Board, subject to the approval of the other Board members, to organize the staff of the Board as the Chairman considers appropriate to accomplish the mission of the Board.
"The committee notes that this provision is consistent with the recommendations of the National Academy of Public Administration's report titled "Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Organizational Assessment" (November 2018). Also, in keeping with that report's recommendations, the committee encourages the Chairman to consult and communicate with the staff and other Board members while considering organizational changes."
The committee's recommendation to create an EDO position was adopted by Congress and captured in section 3202 of the enacted NDAA for fiscal year 2020.
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REPORT NAP A is a Congressionally chartered, non-profit, non-partisan organization that aids Congress, federal agencies, and state, local, and international government entities regarding issues of importance. In particular, NAPA "provides expert advice to government leaders in building more effective, efficient, accountable, and transparent organizations." The DNFSB engaged NAPA in March 2018 to perform a comprehensive organizational assessment, and NAP A provided a report of their findings in November of that year.
OFFICIAL tJ~r! Otff:,: OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
2


Th is Memoran        dum    an d Rep  ort of I  nves  t  igation    is furn      ishe  d for  any  corrective        action yo  u  m    ay  d ee m    appr opri  at  e .            Please noti    fy  thi s o ffice b  y Septemb    er    15,  20  23 , of any corr ective action tak en  or  planned , b  ased  on th e r esult s of thi s inves ti gation    , and if y  ou require    furt    h  er assis t    ance  .
OFFICIAL US}!; ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION In its report NAP A made 16 recommendations aimed at increasing collaboration and teamwork within the DNFSB. While discussing its recommendations, NAPA stated in part:  
 
"There is also a critical need to follow a more traditional management model that empowers the staff to deal with issues at an appropriate level and brings to the top only the critical, strategic matters worthy of a Presidentially Appointed Senate-confirmed Official's precious time."
The distribution          of t h  is  memorandu                    m    and  report    sh  oul d be limi    t    ed to those DNFSB m    an    ager  s r eq uir ed for evaluati    o n of thi s matt      e r.            T o prot    ect  the ide  ntiti  es of DNFSB
NAPA therefore recommended the appointment of an EDO at the DNFSB (Recommendation 12). NAPA additionally stated that "[t]he measure would... provide another level to encourage a more traditional relationship among presidentially-appointed officials and professional staff."
 
EDO SELECTION AND SCOPE OF AUTHORI1Y Since the establishment of the EDO position in December 2019, the agency has had one permanent EDO, who held the position from January 2021 through August 2022. Since the EDO's departure, the General Manager, Technical Director, and Deputy Technical Director have each served as acting EDO for periods of time (August 2022 through November 2022, November 2022 through February 2023, and July 2023 to present, respectively) while the DNFSB searches for a permanent replacement. As of the date of this report, the DNFSB has not hired a new permanent EDO.
CONTACT:                        Malion A. Bartley  , Ass istant      Inspe ctor Gen  e  ral fo  r  Inves  tigati ons 3  0    1.4 15.5 9    25
The AEA states that the EDO shall be the senior DNFSB employee responsible for both administrative and technical matters. Notwithstanding this seemingly clear statutory language, the OIG found that a central question at the DNFSB is the scope of the EDO delegations mandated by the AEA, with one senior manager informing the OIG this topic was the single biggest issue at the agency.
 
DNFSB Chair Joyce Connery stated to the OIG that the DNFSB provided input on the NDAA provisions that created the EDO position. Chair Connery stated that historically employees within the Office of the Technical Director (OTD) viewed employees in the Office of the General Manager (OGM) as subordinates, because OGM supported OTD's work, which is the primary mission of the agency. She stated that the intent behind including the EDO as the lead in technical matters was to have "more consistency" among the technical and administrative staffs. 1 According to Chair Connery, the legislative intent behind the NOAA provisions was for the EDO to use the technical information provided by the OTD to strategically assess the 1 The DNFSB has four offices: OTD, OGM, the Office of the Executive Director of Operations (OEDO),
OFFICmL                                    U~'I!:  ON'L,                                                OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
and the Office of the General Counsel (OGC). The first two offices report to the EDO, whereas OGC reports directly to the DNFSB Chair.
 
0FFICIM:: USE 0i'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE        PROPERTY              OF THE    U.S. NUCLEAR          REGULATORY            COMMISSION                  AND DEFENSE            NUCLEAR            FACILITIES              SAFETY      BOARD        , OFFICE          OF THE      INSPECTORGENERAL                              (OIG).          IF LOANED      TO ANOTHER              AGENCY      , IT AND ITS    CONTENTS            ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR DISTRIBUTED                  OUTSIDE          THE      RECEIVING              AGENCY    WITHOUT            OIG    ' S  PERMISSION.
3  
OFFICIM::                USE    ONL*1r                      OIG        INVESTIGATION                                INFORMATION
 
employees      who cooperated      with this    investigation,          the  OIG will not provide    the  exhibits to the  Board.          Neither    the  memorandum                        , the  report      , nor its exhibit    s may be placed    on DNFSB websites  without    the OIG'  s express    written    permission.
 
Attachme        nt    :
As  stated
 
cc:                                                                  Thomas      Summers              , Vice Chair Jes s ie Roberson,    Board  Member
 
OFFICIM:.              USE  ONL¥                                    OIG        INVESTIGATION                                INFORMATION
 
THIS      DOCUMENT            IS THE        PROPERTY              OF THE    U.S. NUCLEAR            REGULATORY            COMMISSION                  AND DEFENSE            NUCLEAR            FACILil'IES                  SAFE    ' lY BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE      INSPECTORGENER.AL                          (    OIG    )    . IF LOANED    TO  ANOTHER              AGENCY,        IT AND ITS    CONTENTS            ARE    NOT  TO  BE  REPRODUCED                  OR DISTRIBUTED                  OUTSIDE          THE        RECEIVING              AGENCY  WITHOUT              OIG'S        PERMISSION.
2 OPPICltt            t1Sf: Of~LY                              OIG INVESTIGATION                      INFORMATION
 
TABLE  OF CONTENTS
 
ALLEGATION                  ...................................................................................................................... 1
 
BACKGROUND                  ............................. .......... .............. ........................ ........................ .............. 1
 
EDO  SELECTION          AND    SCOPE    OF AUTHORITY      ................................................... 3
 
FINDINGS          ............................................................................................................................. 4
 
BASIS      FOR FINDINGS      ............................................................... ...................................... 4
 
DISPOSITION              ................................ ........................ ........................ ........................ ............ 12
 
OPPICIM;          USE ONLY                            OIG INVESTIGATION                    INFORMATION
 
THIS  DOCUMENT    IS THE  PROPERTY      OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR    REGULATORY  COMMISSION          AND DEFENSE      NUCLEAR    FACILITIES      SAFETY    BOARD  , OFFIC    E OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL              (OIG).      IF LOANED TO ANOTHER      AGENCY, IT AND  ITS CONTENTS  ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED        OR DISTRIBUTED        OUTSIDE    THE R ECEIV  ING AGENCY WITHOUTOIG'S                P  ERMISS      ION.
8FFICIM::                    USE    OMLY                              OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
ALLEGATION
 
The Office of the  Inspector        General    (OIG) initiated        this    investigation        based  on an allegation    that  the Chair of the Defense Nuclear    Facilities Safety  Board  (DNFSB) failed to appropriately            delegate    functions    to its Executive  Director  of Operations          (EDO), as required    by the Atomic    Energy  Act (AEA), as amended.
 
BACKGROUND
 
ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954
 
The AEA is the  enabling    legislation  for the    DNFSB.        Among  its provisions,      the AEA establishes        an EDO position      at the  DNFSB, describes    the  EDO's responsibilities,        and requires    the  DNFSB's Chair to delegate    certain    functions      to the EDO.
 
Section 311(c)(3)(B) of the AEA (42  U.S.C. §  2286(c)(3)(B))          states  that  the Chair "shall delegate" to the    EDO the following functions:
 
(i)                                                Administrative              functions      of the  Board.
(ii)                                  Appointment            and  supervision        of employees      of the  Board  not specified under      paragraph          (6).
(iii)                          Distribution        of business      among    the  employees      and administrative                  units and offices of the  Board.
(iv)                            Preparation            of-(i)                                          proposals      for the  reorganization            of the  administrati                  v  e units  or offices of the    Board; (ii)                              the budget      estimate        for the Board;  and, (iii)              the  proposed      distribution          of funds    according    to purposes        approved by the  Board.
 
Additionally,      section  313(b)(3)(C) of the AEA (42    U.S.C. §  2286b(b)(3)(C))        states    that the EDO "shall be the  senior  employee      of the  Board  responsible    for-"
 
(i)                                              general    administration                  and technical      matters; (ii)                                  ensuring    that  the members            of the Board are fully  and currently        informed with  respect  to matters          for which the members            are responsible;        and, (iii)              the functions        delegated    by the  Chairperson      pursuant          to section 2286(c)(3)(B)      of this  title.
 
Of'f'fCIAL                    USE    OMLY                              OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFE'IY          BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION                          .
1 OFFICIAL                 UBE  ONLY                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020
 
The  EDO position      was  created    by AEA amendments                      included      in the National          Defense Authorization              Act for  Fiscal Year 2020    (NDAA), which  became      law on December        20,  2019 (Pub.      L. 116-92).        The  Committee            Report    that    accompanied            the Senate      's version        of the  NDAA bill explained    the basis  for the  EDO position.
 
SENATE COMMITTEE REPORT
 
In the June  2019  report      that    accompanied            the  Senate's        v ersion      of the  NDAA bill (S. 1790 in the  116th Congress),      the  Committee            on Armed      Services  referenced          a report from      the  National      Academy    of Public Administration                          (NAPA) that,      in the  committee's view,  painted          a "disturbing            picture"      of the DNFSB.      To help  address        persistent              issues    at the    DNFSB, the committee              recommended                      a legislative        provision        creating      an EDO position      at the  agency.              As stated      in the  report:
 
          "The committee                recommends                    a provision        that    would    authori          z e the  hiring of an executive      director      for  operations            as  a senior      employee          at the Defense Nuclear    Facilities    Safety  Board.            The  provision        would  also  authori          z e the Chairman          of the  Board,    subject    to the    approval        of the  other    Board members,            to organize      the  staff of the  Board as the Chairman            considers appropriate                to  accomplish      the  mission      of the  Board.
 
          "The committee              notes  that  this  provision        is consistent          with  the recommendations                        of the    National      Academy      of Public Administration's report        titled      "Defense  Nuclear      Facilities  Safety  Board  Organizational Assessment"            (Nov ember        2018).              Also, in keeping      with that  report's recommendations,                      the  committee              encourages          the Chairman          to consult      and communicate                with  the staff  and other      Board  members                while  considering organizational                changes.      "
 
The  committee's                recommendation                    to create      an EDO position        was  adopted      by Congress    and captured          in section      3202    of the enacted        NDAA for fiscal year    2020.
 
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REPORT
 
NAP A is a Congressionally          chartered,            non-profit,            non-partisan                organi      z ation    that    aids Congress,  federal        agencies,      and  state,      local,  and international                  government                entities regarding        issues    of importance.                        In particular              , NAPA "provides      e xpert    advice  to government                leaders        in building      more    effective,    efficient,    accountable,          and transparent organi      z ations."                The  DNFSB engaged      NAPA in March      2018  to perform              a comprehensi                v    e organi      z ational        assessment,              and  NAP A provided            a report      of their    findings      in November of that  year.
 
OFFICIAL                    tJ~r!          Otff:,:                                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS    DOCUMENT      IS THE PROPER'IY        OF THE U.S  . NUCLEAR    REGULATORY      COMMISSION        AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR    FACILITIES          SAFETY  BOARD,    OFFICE    OF THE  INSPECTORGENERAL                (OIG).      IF LOANED  TO ANOTHER      AGENCY,  IT AND ITS CONTENTS    ARE  NOT TO BE REPRODUCED          OR DISTRIBUTED          OUTSIDE    THE RECEIVING    AGENCYWITHOUT              OIG' S  PERMISSION.
2 OFFICIAL                      US}!; ONLY                                 OIG       INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
 
In its report         NAP A made       16 recommendations                     aimed       at increasing     collaboration       and teamwork       within   the DNFSB. While discussing     its recommendations,                         NAPA stated       in part:
 
          "There is also a critical   need to follow a more   traditional           management model     that   empowers       the   staff to deal with issues at an appropriate level and brings     to the top only the critical,   strategic     matters           worthy     of a Presidentially       Appointed       Senate-confirmed               Official's precious     time.       "
 
NAPA therefore       recommended             the appointment               of an EDO at the   DNFSB (Recommendation               12).                   NAPA additionally       stated     that   "[t]he   measure         would ... provide another         level to encourage       a more   traditional           relationship           among     presidentially appointed         officials and professional       staff. "
 
EDO     SELECTION                     AND SCOPE             OF AUTHORI1Y
 
Since the   establishment             of the EDO position       in December     2019,       the   agency has had one permanent                 EDO, who held the position     from     January           2021   through       August   2022.                   Since the   EDO's departure,           the General   Manager,   Technical   Director     , and   Deputy   Technical Director hav e each served       as acting EDO for periods     of time     (August   2022   through November       2022,     November       2022     through       February       2023,       and July     2023     to present, respectivel    y ) while the   DNFSB searches     for a permanent                 replacement.                           As of the   date of this   report,     the   DNFSB has   not hired     a new permanent                   EDO.
 
The AEA states     that the   EDO shall be the senior       DNFSB employee       responsible     for both administrative                 and technical     matters.                       Notwithstanding           this   seemingly     clear statutory language,   the   OIG found   that   a central   question       at the   DNFSB is the   scope of the   EDO delegations       mandated             by the AEA, with one senior   manager         informing       the OIG this topic was the   single biggest issue   at the   agency   .
 
DNFSB Chair Joyce       Connery   stated     to the   OIG that   the DNFSB provided     input     on the NDAA provisions     that   created       the   EDO position.               Chair Connery   stated     that historically employees     within   the   Office of the   Technical   Director (OTD) viewed     employees     in the Office of the   General Manage  r  (OGM) as subordinates               , because     OGM supported             OTD's work, which is the primary             mission     of the agency.             She stated     that the intent       behind including   the   EDO as the lead in technical     matters           was to have     "more     consistency" among     the technical     and   administrati                v e staffs. 1
 
According to Chair   Conne  ry  , the legislative   intent     behind     the NOAA provi      sions  was for the EDO to use the technical     information             provided     by the   OTD to strategically       assess the
 
1   The DNFSB has four   offices :       OTD, OGM, the Office of the Exe cuti v  e  Direct  o  r of Operation        s  (OEDO) ,
and th e Office of the Ge n  eral Counsel (OGC).     The fir s t two offices r e port to the   EDO, whe r  ea  s OGC repo rts d  i rectly  t  o t h e  DNFSB Chair.
 
0FFICIM::                     USE   0i'&Y                                       OIG       INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
 
THIS         DOCUMENT             IS THE   PROPER'IY                 OF THE     U.S   . NUCLEAR         REGULATORY               COMMISSION                 AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR           FACILITIES                 SAFETY       BOARD,       OFFICE           OF THE       INSPECTORGENERAL                           (OIG).           IF   LOANED       TO ANOTHER             AGENCY     , IT AND ITS   CONTENTS         ARE     NOT TO   BE   REPRODUCED                 OR   DISTRIBUTED                 OUTSIDE           THE RECEIVING           AGENCYWITHOUT                           OIG   ' S   PERMISSION                         .
3 017171CIAL US£ ONLY                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
best  way to achieve  the  desired  safety  outcome        in a given  matter.                      Some  managers          at the agency interpreted            the  enacted    legislation      differently,    however,    and  understood          the statutory          language    as placing the EDO ahead    of the Technical  Director      as the lead  on technical    matters.
 
Additionally,    some      employees        interviewed      by the  OIG stated      their  belief that  the  NDAA mandated            wholesale  delegations      of authority        to the      EDO; therefore,        the Chair had no choice but to allow the  EDO to execute  a broad    range    of functions      related    to general administration                  and technical      matters.                      One individual      in the  Office of the  General Counsel  (OGC) stated      to the  OIG, "[T]he statute        says  that  the  Chair shall  delegate  to the EDO .. .it's  mandatory              language .. .it means      everything            .        It doesn't        mean    the  Chair gets to pick and choose  and delegate    some    administrative                  responsibilities          and  not others."


017171CIAL US£ ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter. Some managers at the agency interpreted the enacted legislation differently, however, and understood the statutory language as placing the EDO ahead of the Technical Director as the lead on technical matters.
Additionally, some employees interviewed by the OIG stated their belief that the NDAA mandated wholesale delegations of authority to the EDO; therefore, the Chair had no choice but to allow the EDO to execute a broad range of functions related to general administration and technical matters. One individual in the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) stated to the OIG, "[T]he statute says that the Chair shall delegate to the EDO...it's mandatory language...it means everything. It doesn't mean the Chair gets to pick and choose and delegate some administrative responsibilities and not others."
FINDINGS
FINDINGS
: 1.                           During the former         EDO' s tenure,       the   Chair and   Board acted inconsistently           with AEA section     311(c)(3)(B) by retaining       control   over   many         DNFSB administrative functions       that   had been   delegated   to the   EDO, and by bypassing     the EDO when interacting       with employees       under     the EDO's supervision.
: 1. During the former EDO's tenure, the Chair and Board acted inconsistently with AEA section 311(c)(3)(B) by retaining control over many DNFSB administrative functions that had been delegated to the EDO, and by bypassing the EDO when interacting with employees under the EDO's supervision.
: 2.                 The Chair and Board acted   inconsistently         with AEA section     313(b)(3)(C), which states   that   the   EDO shall be the senior   employee     of the Board responsible       for technical     matters.
: 2. The Chair and Board acted inconsistently with AEA section 313(b)(3)(C), which states that the EDO shall be the senior employee of the Board responsible for technical matters.
: 3.                   Disagreements             over the scope of the   EDO's authority           as it related   to OGC employees       caused   work disruptions           during     the former         EDO's tenure       and,   ifleft unaddressed,         these   disagreements               could potentially       compromise           the effectiveness   of any future         EDO.
: 3. Disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority as it related to OGC employees caused work disruptions during the former EDO's tenure and, ifleft unaddressed, these disagreements could potentially compromise the effectiveness of any future EDO.
 
BASIS FOR FINDINGS
BASIS           FOR       FINDINGS
: 1. The Chair and the Board acted inconsistently with the delegations of authority required by AEA section 311(c)(3)(B).
: 1.           The Chair   and     the Board       acted     inconsistently             with   the delegations         of authority required           by AEA section 311(c)(3)(B).
AEA section 311(c)(3)(B) states that the Chair "shall delegate" to the EDO (i) the administrative functions of the DNFSB; (ii) the authority for appointing and supervising employees other than the EDO and General Counsel; (iii) the distribution of business among DNFSB staff, units, and offices; and, (iv) the preparation of various proposals or estimates related to office reorganization, budgets, and the distribution of funds. As described below, the Chair and Board took actions that were inconsistent with the delegations required by subsections (i), (ii), and (iii).
 
OFFICIAL USf: ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
AEA section     311(c)(3)(B) states   that   the Chair "shall delegate" to the EDO (i) the administrative                   functions     of the   DNFSB; (ii) the authority         for appointing       and supervising employees       other   than   the   EDO and General   Counsel;   (iii) the   distribution           of business among         DNFSB staff,   units,     and offices   ; and,     (iv) the   preparation           of various       proposals     or estimates           related   to office reorganization,           budgets,       and the distribution             of funds.               As described     below, the   Chair and   Board took actions   that were inconsistent           with the delegations     required     by subsections       (i),   (ii), and (iii).
4  
 
OFFICIAL                 USf:     ONLY                                 OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFETY        BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION                          .
4 tlPPICIAL                                  t:J'~~          ONL,-                                                    OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
: a.                            The Chair      and      the Board      retained          control      over,  or significant      involvement in, many      DNFSB administrative                  functions              to  be performed            by the EDO.
 
The OIG found  that  the Chair  had not  delegated    many      of the  agency's    administrative functions    to the former        or acting    EDOs and had otherwise    taken      actions  that    were inconsistent          with the delegations      of authority          required      by th e AEA.        When describing her own responsibilities,          Chair Connery    stated,      "I don't      do anything .. .I vote  on things ... that's          all I do,"  implying    that  the EDO was otherwise      responsible      for    DNFSB functions.                    She further      stated      " .. .I prefer  to maintain          awareness      and not necessarily    the authorities."
 
Notwithstanding            these  statements,              the  OIG found    that,      rather    than    merely        maintaining awareness      of DNFSB operations,        the  Chair retained          day-to-day          control      over  many aspects  of those      operations.
 
For example,    after  the DNFSB hired  the former            EDO in January              2021, the Chair continued      to make      decisions  and  provide    guidance    on a wide range  of administrative matters,            as illustrated          by the  following actions  taken    between  January              2021 and Jul  y 2022:
* In m    e  moranda        to Chair  Connery,  the Technical    Director  and  General Manager  sought  the  Chair's  approval      of routin        e administrative                  actions,  such as approval      of remote      work for  employees,      promotion            s for six DNFSB employees      on the  Defense Nuclear    Pay Scale, requests      submitted            by junior OTD staff for classified Department            of Energy    (DOE) docum      ents,    waiver  of an overpayment                  recovery    involving    an employee,        and  an  extension    request for  an employee      relocation      report      -to  -duty-station                date.          The Chair  signed each  memorandum                        as the final  agency authority            approving      the requested action.
* Chair Connery,    the DNFSB General    Manager,    and  other  senior    leadership discussed  in emails    whether      the    DNFSB had  a minimum                requirement                for home    internet        bandwidth        for teleworking      employees,      matters          related    to one e  mploy    ee's  student        loan    r epayme        nt,  and th e nam    e of the forthcoming telework    policy.
* The Chair signed  SF-52 (Request    for  Personnel      Action) forms    for  employees who did not report  to her directly    and  which    could have  been  signed  by either  the  EDO or General    Counsel.
 
During  our investigation,        the OIG review  ed  an email    from    Chair Connery    in which she appeared      to state  that  the former          EDO was unable    or unwilling  to assume      certain responsibilities      that    should  have  been  delegated    to him.              For example,    Chair Connery
 
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THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFE'IY          BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION.
5 OFFICIAL              USE  Ol\\lkY                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
stated    that    "[the  EDO] wants  to hav  e  all of the  'authorities          ' but isn' t yet  capable  nor willing to take  responsibility ... "          However,  the  matters          described        above  generally involv    ed routin      e personnel        actions,    and the  OIG did not identify    any evide  nce that  th e former          EDO was unabl      e or unwilling to assume          r espo nsibilit    y in these    matt      er s.
 
The former          EDO also told th e OIG that  h  e attempted            to secure additional          staffing for th e Office of the  EDO (OEDO) to effectively handle      the full delegations    of authority        he expected und  er the AEA.      The Chair, howev er,  d enied the former            EDO's request      for additional        staffing.            The OIG reviewed  emails    that  demonstrated                othe    r Board members agreed    with  the Chair's    decision  in this    matter.
 
In addition,      the  OIG found  that  the entire    Board was  involved    in administrative                matters that  s hould have    been  within  the former        EDO's delegated    authority.                    For examp    l e, th e DNFSB holds    weekly meetings,        called "OGM Gatherings,"  where the  OGM briefs  senior leadership        , including  the Board,  on matters            involving    the office.        While the  EDO and other    office directors        are  present      at the gatherings,      the Board is the target      audience    for the briefings.            The OIG reviewed    numerous            emails    discussing      OGM gatherings      and found  that  th e discuss ion topic s were primarily            administrative              in natur        e,  addressing matters          such  as conference      room      HVAC repair,  contractor          clearance  processing      updates, random        drug testing,      and  procurement                updates.
 
Testimony        the  OIG obtained        also showed  th at both    during    the former          EDO's tenure        and after  his departure,            man  y  of the OGM gath    erings have  b  een  primarily          administrative              in nature          .          One office director      told the  OIG, " [e]  very  week the  Board has  an OGM gathering and that  's all the day-  to -day    operations        of the Agency that      [the  Board]  s hould    not be involv    ed in.  "      The office dir  ector provid  ed exam    ples of topics  di scussed,  such  as auto replies  for the Human            Resources  inbox thanking        employees        for sending    their      messages, status      sheets  for safet  y allegations,    and office carpeting.                Another      office director      told  the OIG they    spent    time      at OGM gatherings      discussing    wall coverings    for the office.      The office director      believed    th e topic  was "compl  et  ely b  eneath [the    Board m    emb    ers]. . .it's b  en  eath m  e" and the Board should  hav  e d el    egat  ed the s ubj  ect to lower-l eve  l personnel.
One of the  senior    managers        that    served      as the acting    EDO following the departure          of the former          EDO told the OIG that  th e Board  now hold s "sync m    eeti n  gs" with the se nior managers        to shorten      the  OGM gatherings      and  discuss  the  Board's  calendar        , although the se m    eetin  gs s till t    end to invol  ve "in th e weeds" administrative                  topics.
 
Four  senior    managers          also stated    that  the  Board  maintained            interest        and influence    on day-to-day          administrative                fun  ction  s within  the agency eve n    after the appointment                of the first  EDO.          One senior    manager        stated    that  the Board, in fact,  operated      the  same        now as it did prior    to the  creation    of the    EDO position.              The manager          stated      that in his/her view the  Board m    emb    er s n  eede  d to act at a l eve  l appropriate          for  Preside  nti  al  appointees          and not stray    into  the  weeds of the DNFSB's administrative                matters.                      Other  senior    managers expressed    similar        opinions    about  the  Board'  s invol vemen        t  in administrative                    matters.
 
Of'f'fCIAL                    USE  Oi'&Y                                      OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFETY        BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION                          .
6 OFFICIAL                USE  ONLY                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
One senior    manager        stated    that  the  Chair-not              the  EDO-oversaw                  administrative                      areas such  as hiring.
 
The OIG found  that  the DNFSB did not initially    establish      a clear process  to delegate authorities        to the    EDO; for  example,      the authority            for Defense Nuclear    Pay  Scale promotions              did not shift to the  EDO until  nearly    two years    after  the position      '  s creation.
One senior    manager      told  the  OIG "[the    Board]. .. still get[s]    involv  ed and distracted ... by some  of the operations        of the Agency, but  in part    I think    it's  that    '  s just  what  they      are used  to , and they still  need  to transition            in their      own tasks    a little  bit more      ."
 
The Board indicated        a willingness  to continue    that    transition.                        Vice Chair Thomas Summers          told  the OIG, "I think    the  delegation    intent      from    the statute        is to take those types    oflower-level...administrative                              tasks  from    the Chair  's plate  and make    sure  that  the EDO .. .is empowered ... without    having  to go to the Chair for every    decision."                Board Member    Jessie      Roberson  told  the  OIG the  agency had been  working  on sepa  r  ating the Board from      administrative                matters        by updating      the agency directives,      which has been an ongoing  process.                Chair Connery    admitted          she had been too hands-on          in several areas,  telling  the OIG, "I probably        need  some    weaning  to get out of those weeds .. .!  am happy    to back off."
 
Three senior    managers          told the  OIG they  believed    the Board could increase    its impact on nuclear    safety  by focusing less on administrative                functions        of the  agency and  more on nuclear    safety  itself.              One of these  senior    managers        stated      that    "if you  added  up the amount        of time    [the    Board] talked    about    various      issues,  nuclear    safety  would fall to about    fourth      on the list."          Another    stated    that    Board members            could spend    more    time visiting      DOE sites  within  their jurisdiction,            collaborating        with their    DOE counterparts, and interacting        with  DOE site  contractors          and  DNFSB resident      inspectors.                      Vice Chair Summers            and Board Member      Roberson    agreed  that  the agency  could  manage administrative                functions      more      efficiently,  which would  allow the Board more    time    to focus on the  agency's    mission.
: b.                          The Chair      and  the Board    undermined                  the authority              of the former            and    acting EDOs by bypassing            the EDOs when  interacting              with employees    under        their supervision.
 
AEA section    311(c)(3)(B)(ii) requires    the  Chair to delegate  to the EDO those    functions related    to the  appointment                and  supervision        of employees      other  than  the  General Counsel  and the  EDO.        The OIG found,    however,    that  the  Chair took  actions that undermined            the former          EDO's abilit y to approp        r iately  supervise      emplo      y ees , including the General    Manager  and the Technical    Director.              These actions    included    holding meetings        with the General  Manager  or the Technical    Director  without    the    EDO present, encouraging      the  EDO's direct      reports    to bypass      him    and interact      with  the  Board directly,    and excluding the EDO from    email      chains  with  his direct      reports.
 
81-'FIClAL        USE    Olill..Y                        OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFETY        BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION.
7 OFFICIM::              USE  ONU              .l                            OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
The OIG reviewed    an email    chain  from    August  2021  between    the former          EDO and  Chair Connery  in which the      EDO asked to attend    the Chair  '  s meetings        with the General Manager    and the Technical    Director  in order    to stay  informed      on pressing    matters.                      The Chair did not  respond        directly  to the  EDO's request,      instead      stating    that              "I felt like
[your    request]      was a  message    of your    distrust        for  me.    " A review of Chair  Connery's scheduled      meetings      held via  Microsoft Teams    showed that  between    November          2021  and July    2022,      the Chair held 18 one-on-one          meetings      with the General    Manager,  with  an average      meeting    time      of 39 minutes.                  The Chair met    with the Technical  Director  via Micros  oft Teams    for scheduled        meetings      25 times        between    October  2021  and July      2022    ,
with an average    meeting      time      of approximately              37 minutes.                    Although  the  Deputy Technical    Director    occasionall  y participated        in these    meetings,      the    EDO did  not.
 
Senior  managers          confirmed      that  Chair Connery    did not  allow the  former        EDO to attend one-on-one        meetings        she held with the  General    Manager    and the Technical    Director, both  of whom    reported        directly    to the  EDO, and refused  to allow them      to provide summaries            of those    meetings      to the    EDO.          One office director    stated      that  "[the    EDO]
would come ... to the  [General  Manager    and the Technical    Director]      discussions    with Mr. Summers          and Ms. Roberson,  but he was  not allowed to come  to the  discussions with Ms. Connery."          When    asked why,  the  office director      stated        , "apparently          she told him    not to come."
 
One of the  senior    managers        who served        as acting    EDO after  the first    EDO's departure told  the  OIG that    neither    of the first  two  acting  EDOs participated        in the  one-on-one meetings      Chair Connery  held with the  General    Manager    and the Technical    Director. 2 The manager          never      asked to be part    of those    meetings      while  in the  role of acting  EDO, largely because  Chair  Connery  had already    established        the  precedent        of the    EDO not being involved      in them.
 
In their      testimony,          seven  senior    managers        told  the  OIG that  the  Board regularly undercut        the form    e  r EDO'  s ability  to successfully  manag      e his subordinate              employees      by often  going around      him  to communicate              directly    with the  EDO's subordinates, including  the  General  Manager    and the Technical    Director.              Some of those    managers believed    that  the Chair empowered      the General  Manager    and the Technical  Director  to bypass    the    EDO and go directly    to the  Board with  issues  that  should    have  been  raised first with  the    EDO.        Some  managers        believed    the General  Manager      routinely      bypassed the  EDO when  bringing    issues  to the  Board.
 
2      The ma nager pro v ided thi  s informa    tion t  o t  h e OIG prio  r t  o the t enur  e of the thi  r  d acti ng EDO.
 
OFFIClhL                        USE  Oi'&Y                                            OIG      INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFE'IY          BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION.
8 OFFICIAL                  US£ ONMZ                              OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
In addition,      the  Board Chair communicated                at times      with the  General    Manager    and the Technical    Director    , or s taff in their    offices, via  emails    that excluded  the EDO.        The Chair also emailed    the  General  Manager  and the Technical    Director  directly      with administrative                  questions        and requests,        excluding the    EDO from    the email    discussions.
 
The former          EDO informed      the  OIG that  the  Chair undermined              his  ability to effectively manage      the    General  Manager    and empowered      the  Gener al Manager  to go around    him.
The OIG reviewed  emails    that  supported        that    position.                For example,      in a September 2021 email  to the  senio    r leade    r ship team,        Chair Conne ry outlined      the  EDO's roles  and responsibilities,          stating    that  the    EDO was the  rating  official for the  General    Manager and the Technical    Director,  but she was the reviewing  official.        In anoth      er email,  the Chair told  the General  Manager    she did not want    him  to rely on the    EDO to pass information            within  the chain  of command,            b  e  cause the  EDO'  s " ... main  job is not managing          [the  General    Manager  and the Technical    Director].      "      The Chair told the General    Manage r  in  another        email  that,      "I am  trying    to get OEDO out of the bus ines s of being  a passthrough,          that's        why  I asked  for dir ect answers  from    you      all."
 
The OIG found  that  Chair Connery  often bypassed      the  EDO by communicating directl  y with OGM div  isions  or staff, including    staff within  the    Division of Human Re sources    (HR).            Although    Chair Connery  told  the  OIG that  s he  nev er went directl  y to the HR Director    to discuss  is  sues that  should  have    included    either  the  EDO or the General    Manager    , the  OIG found    substantial          contrar        y ev idence.            For example      , the  OIG reviewed  an email    the  Chair sent  the former        HR  Director    in July    2021 , without copying the EDO, asking fo  r a meeting      to discuss  the    makeup    of the  OEDQ.3 The OIG also reviewed  another        email      chain,  from    July      2021, in which th e Board  members specifically discussed    the OEDO's makeup        and hiring      new employees      to work within OEDO.        In that  email      chain, Chair  Connery  stated,        "I am going to reach  out to  [the  HR Director]."              In addition,    the OIG found  several      email    conversations          between  the Chair and HR staff that    omitted      the  General  Manager    and the  EDO, and which inv olv ed general    HR matters.
 
Chair Conner  y  also acted in matters            related    to the  appointment              of employee      s in a manner        that  was inconsistent          with the authority          delegated  to the    EDO and the  EDO's subo  r  dinate    employees.                  A s enior    OGM emplo    y ee told  the OIG that    hiring    n  ew HR staff at the agency was tricky  because    the Chair felt she had th e final  decision  on selections, and becaus      e she wanted    to interview    the final  HR candidates          herself.            For example,    the Chair had a significant        role in the  selection  of the current          HR Director    , a  GS-15 employee    who  reports      directly    to the  Deputy    General  Manager,      and then  to the  General Manager  and the      EDO.        Senior  OGM staff advised      Chair Connery    she could  conduct    a "meet    and greet    " with  candidates,          but  she could  not  ask technical    questions,        nor influence  the hiring    decision      .          Despite that guidance      , the Chair  made    s ev eral  comment            s
 
3                Chair  Conn ery stated  to the OIG she did not rem      emb er  either    the  email    or any  meetin      gs with  the  HR Directo  r regar    di ng t  h e OE DO's stru  ctur  e .
 
OFFIClhL                        USE  Oi'&Y                                      OIG        INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
 
THIS         DOCUMENT             IS THE   PROPER'IY                 OF THE     U.S   . NUCLEAR         REGULATORY               COMMISSION                 AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR           FACILITIES                 SAFETY       BOARD,       OFFICE           OF THE       INSPECTORGENERAL                           (OIG).           IF   LOANED       TO ANOTHER             AGENCY,       IT AND ITS   CONTENTS         ARE     NOT TO   BE   REPRODUCED                 OR   DISTRIBUTED                 OUTSIDE           THE RECEIVING           AGENCYWITHOUT                           OIG   ' S   PERMISSION.
9 OFFIOIM:.                      USE    Ql)lllsY                        OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
in a  meeting      in the  presence      of the selecting  official for the  HR Director    position regarding    which  candidate      she preferred.
 
The OIG reviewed  emails      supporting        the  OGM employee      '  s testimony              regarding    the Chair's  role in the selection    process.              In those    emails      OGM staff provided      the Chair with the final two  candidates'            application    packets    and scheduled      interviews    with  the  Chair for each of those  candidates.                    The Chair  thereafter          sent  an email    to OGM staff members approving      of both  candidates          and requesting        a  meeting      to discuss  her thoughts.
: 2.                        The Chair    acted    in a    manner              that    was  inconsistent      with the EDO's role as  the senior    employee        responsible for    technical      matters.
 
Under    AEA section  313(b)(3)(C)(i),  the    EDO is the  senior    agency employee        responsible for technical    matters.                        Several  office directors      and one deputy      office director      stated, however,    that  the  Board  did  not empower      the    EDO to act as the agency lead on technical matters.                      These managers          also stated    that  they  heard        Board members          say the Technical Director  was the  agency's    technical    lead,  and that  the Technical    Director  did not have  to report    through      the    EDO on technical    matters.
 
The Chair appeared      to take    a similar    view  regarding    the  EDO's technical    role.            In an email  to senior    staff, Chair Connery  outlined      her view of the EDO's role  and responsibilities            as "the front    office/exec sec, strategic    direction,        as well as the day-to day  operations        of the entire      agency."          In the same      email,    however      , the Chair stated      that
"[the Technical    Director]    has the final say  as to the technical    sufficiency of information to be reported      to the  Board ... "      The Chair further          stated    that  "[a]ny    'emerging' information            pertinent        to the Board  will be related      by the Technical    Director  to the Board ... [t]hat        [information]            should    not be 'telephoned'          through        anyone      else at the agency."
 
Senior managers          told  the  OIG that  the Technical    Director  preferred        to communicate with the  Board through      the    EDO and had requested      that  the  EDO be allowed to participate        in his meetings      with  the  Chair, but the  Chair denied    that    request.                  One manager        additionally        stated        :
 
          "[T[he  [Technical  Director]. .. should    have    a direct  line to the  Board members  ... because    they're      technical      experts ... But the    EDO is [the Technical    Director's] ... supervisor.                  If [the Technical    Director    is]
running        directly    to the    Board members            without    at least  informing      the EDO, that...undercuts                  the whole supervisor-subordinate relationship ... "
 
The OIG observed      that  the Chair  and    DNFSB managers          had  divergent        views  over the EDO's role in technical    matters.                    The Chair's    view was that  the  legislative  intent    behind
 
OFFfCIM::            USE    OHlsY                                      OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
THIS        DOCUMENT            IS THE    PROPER'IY                  OF THE    U.S  . NUCLEAR          REGULATORY              COMMISSION                AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR            FACILITIES                  SAFETY        BOARD,        OFFICE          OF THE        INSPECTORGENERAL                            (OIG).          IF  LOANED        TO ANOTHER              AGENCY,      IT AND ITS    CONTENTS          ARE      NOT  TO    BE  REPRODUCED                  OR    DISTRIBUTED                OUTSIDE          THE RECEIVING            AGENCYWITHOUT                            OIG  ' S    PERMISSION.
10 OFFICIM::              USE  ONU              .l                            OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
 
Congress  making    the EDO the "senior    employee      of the  Board  responsible      for  ...
technical    matters"        was for this  person    to use technical      information            provided      by the  OTD to strategically        assess  the best    way to achieve  the desired      safety  outcome        in a given matter.                      Certain      DFNSB managers,          however,      understood          this  language    as placing the EDO ahead  of the Technical  Director      as the lead  on technical      matters.
 
Regardless    of which  view betters          aligns  with the AEA, the  Chair appears      to have    acted contrary      to the  delegations      of authority            required      by the statute.                      Even  if the  EDO's technical      role primarily            involves      strategically        assessing  the best  way to achieve the desired    safety  outcome      in a given  matter,            as the  Chair  maintained,            the Chair took actions  that  interfered        with the former          EDO's ability  to fulfill that    role.            Excluding the EDO from      meetings  between      the  Chair and  the Technical    Director,    and requiring    the Technical    Director  to communicate              directly    with the  Board  about    emerging      technical matters,          would  appea    r to be  inconsistent        with  any  plausible    interpretation                of AEA section  313(b)(3)(C)(i),  including    the Chair's    interpretation.
: 3.                  Interpretive                  disagreements                over    the scope of the EDO's authority                could compromise              the effectiveness of any future            EDO.
 
DNFSB managers        and staff stated      that,      during    the former          EDO's tenure,        there    were disagreements                over the  scope of the EDO's authority            as it related    to OGC employees.
Soon after the  EDO joined    the    DNFSB, the  Chair delegated  to the  EDO the authority          to oversee  the agency  '  s directive      program        and  issue    new or revised      directives    that    are binding    on agency staff.          The DNFSB's General    Counsel  objected  to this    delegation    as it applied  to OGC staff, however,    because    AEA section  311(c) exempts    the  General Counsel-and                  in the General  Counsel  's view,    OGC staff as well-from                the    EDO'  s supervision.
 
Chair Connery    stated      to the OIG that    this  issue caused    significant    problems        for DNFSB leadership          as they  were creating    policies to fully implement            the EDO position.
For example,    as a result    of the conflicting  views  regarding    the  scope  of his  authority, the former            EDO abandoned        his  attempts          to update    the  agency's    directives    and focused on other  tasks.              Chair Connery  said  that  this    issue also damaged      the  relationship between  the  office directors,      leading  to hostile    exchanges    during      meetings        and stifling their    ability  to create    and  update    policies  and directives.                  One office director      told the OIG that  the General  Counsel's  position    regarding      the  EDO's  authority        caused  the Board to step in and  "take  control"    of the distribution          of business      within  the  agency.4
 
4  The OIG's  review of th e DNFSB SharePoi      nt directi  v    es pag e  in April    2023  show ed  t h  at the Board had updated      only  28 of 137 directives,        policies  , and appendices          since the former            EDO joined    the agenc y  in January          2021.


OFFIClhL                        USE  Oi'&Y                                      OIG       INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
tlPPICIAL t:J'~~ ONL,-
OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION
: a. The Chair and the Board retained control over, or significant involvement in, many DNFSB administrative functions to be performed by the EDO.
The OIG found that the Chair had not delegated many of the agency's administrative functions to the former or acting EDOs and had otherwise taken actions that were inconsistent with the delegations of authority required by the AEA. When describing her own responsibilities, Chair Connery stated, "I don't do anything...I vote on things... that's all I do," implying that the EDO was otherwise responsible for DNFSB functions. She further stated "...I prefer to maintain awareness and not necessarily the authorities."
Notwithstanding these statements, the OIG found that, rather than merely maintaining awareness of DNFSB operations, the Chair retained day-to-day control over many aspects of those operations.
For example, after the DNFSB hired the former EDO in January 2021, the Chair continued to make decisions and provide guidance on a wide range of administrative matters, as illustrated by the following actions taken between January 2021 and July 2022:
In memoranda to Chair Connery, the Technical Director and General Manager sought the Chair's approval of routine administrative actions, such as approval of remote work for employees, promotions for six DNFSB employees on the Defense Nuclear Pay Scale, requests submitted by junior OTD staff for classified Department of Energy (DOE) documents, waiver of an overpayment recovery involving an employee, and an extension request for an employee relocation report-to-duty-station date. The Chair signed each memorandum as the final agency authority approving the requested action.
Chair Connery, the DNFSB General Manager, and other senior leadership discussed in emails whether the DNFSB had a minimum requirement for home internet bandwidth for teleworking employees, matters related to one employee's student loan repayment, and the name of the forthcoming telework policy.
* The Chair signed SF-52 (Request for Personnel Action) forms for employees who did not report to her directly and which could have been signed by either the EDO or General Counsel.
During our investigation, the OIG reviewed an email from Chair Connery in which she appeared to state that the former EDO was unable or unwilling to assume certain responsibilities that should have been delegated to him. For example, Chair Connery OFFICIMJ USJZ Oi"tlsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
5


THIS         DOCUMENT             IS THE   PROPER'IY                 OF THE     U.S   . NUCLEAR         REGULATORY               COMMISSION                 AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR           FACILITIES                 SAFE'IY          BOARD,       OFFICE           OF THE       INSPECTORGENERAL                           (OIG).           IF   LOANED       TO ANOTHER             AGENCY,       IT AND ITS   CONTENTS         ARE     NOT TO   BE   REPRODUCED                 OR   DISTRIBUTED                 OUTSIDE           THE RECEIVING           AGENCYWITHOUT                           OIG   ' S   PERMISSION                         .
OFFICIAL USE Ol\\lkY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION stated that "[the EDO] wants to have all of the 'authorities' but isn't yet capable nor willing to take responsibility... " However, the matters described above generally involved routine personnel actions, and the OIG did not identify any evidence that the former EDO was unable or unwilling to assume responsibility in these matters.
11 QFFI0IAL                            l.-JSf; ONLY                                  OIG        INVESTIGATION                              INFORMATION
The former EDO also told the OIG that he attempted to secure additional staffing for the Office of the EDO (OEDO) to effectively handle the full delegations of authority he expected under the AEA. The Chair, however, denied the former EDO's request for additional staffing. The OIG reviewed emails that demonstrated other Board members agreed with the Chair's decision in this matter.
In addition, the OIG found that the entire Board was involved in administrative matters that should have been within the former EDO's delegated authority. For example, the DNFSB holds weekly meetings, called "OGM Gatherings," where the OGM briefs senior leadership, including the Board, on matters involving the office. While the EDO and other office directors are present at the gatherings, the Board is the target audience for the briefings. The OIG reviewed numerous emails discussing OGM gatherings and found that the discussion topics were primarily administrative in nature, addressing matters such as conference room HVAC repair, contractor clearance processing updates, random drug testing, and procurement updates.
Testimony the OIG obtained also showed that both during the former EDO's tenure and after his departure, many of the OGM gatherings have been primarily administrative in nature. One office director told the OIG, "[e]very week the Board has an OGM gathering and that's all the day-to-day operations of the Agency that [the Board] should not be involved in." The office director provided examples of topics discussed, such as auto-replies for the Human Resources inbox thanking employees for sending their messages, status sheets for safety allegations, and office carpeting. Another office director told the OIG they spent time at OGM gatherings discussing wall coverings for the office. The office director believed the topic was "completely beneath [the Board members]...it's beneath me" and the Board should have delegated the subject to lower-level personnel.
One of the senior managers that served as the acting EDO following the departure of the former EDO told the OIG that the Board now holds "sync meetings" with the senior managers to shorten the OGM gatherings and discuss the Board's calendar, although these meetings still tend to involve "in the weeds" administrative topics.
Four senior managers also stated that the Board maintained interest and influence on day-to-day administrative functions within the agency even after the appointment of the first EDO. One senior manager stated that the Board, in fact, operated the same now as it did prior to the creation of the EDO position. The manager stated that in his/her view the Board members needed to act at a level appropriate for Presidential appointees and not stray into the weeds of the DNFSB's administrative matters. Other senior managers expressed similar opinions about the Board's involvement in administrative matters.
Of'f'fCIAL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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Chair Conner  y further      stated    to the   OIG that   she believed   personality            differences contributed          to various        disagreements            between    the   office directors,       and she  assigned    a Senior  Executive  Service coach to improve        teamwork        and mediate          disputes        among them        .         Based on our inv estigation        , howev e  r, it does not appear    the   coaching  s essions resolved    the underlying          disagreements            regarding        the   EDO's authority            as it relates    to OGCstaff.
OFFICIAL USE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION One senior manager stated that the Chair-not the EDO-oversaw administrative areas such as hiring.
The OIG found that the DNFSB did not initially establish a clear process to delegate authorities to the EDO; for example, the authority for Defense Nuclear Pay Scale promotions did not shift to the EDO until nearly two years after the position's creation.
One senior manager told the OIG "[the Board]... still get[s] involved and distracted... by some of the operations of the Agency, but in part I think it's that's just what they are used to, and they still need to transition in their own tasks a little bit more."
The Board indicated a willingness to continue that transition. Vice Chair Thomas Summers told the OIG, "I think the delegation intent from the statute is to take those types oflower-level...administrative tasks from the Chair's plate and make sure that the EDO...is empowered... without having to go to the Chair for every decision." Board Member Jessie Roberson told the OIG the agency had been working on separating the Board from administrative matters by updating the agency directives, which has been an ongoing process. Chair Connery admitted she had been too hands-on in several areas, telling the OIG, "I probably need some weaning to get out of those weeds...! am happy to back off."
Three senior managers told the OIG they believed the Board could increase its impact on nuclear safety by focusing less on administrative functions of the agency and more on nuclear safety itself. One of these senior managers stated that "if you added up the amount of time [the Board] talked about various issues, nuclear safety would fall to about fourth on the list." Another stated that Board members could spend more time visiting DOE sites within their jurisdiction, collaborating with their DOE counterparts, and interacting with DOE site contractors and DNFSB resident inspectors. Vice Chair Summers and Board Member Roberson agreed that the agency could manage administrative functions more efficiently, which would allow the Board more time to focus on the agency's mission.
: b. The Chair and the Board undermined the authority of the former and acting EDOs by bypassing the EDOs when interacting with employees under their supervision.
AEA section 311(c)(3)(B)(ii) requires the Chair to delegate to the EDO those functions related to the appointment and supervision of employees other than the General Counsel and the EDO. The OIG found, however, that the Chair took actions that undermined the former EDO's ability to appropriately supervise employees, including the General Manager and the Technical Director. These actions included holding meetings with the General Manager or the Technical Director without the EDO present, encouraging the EDO's direct reports to bypass him and interact with the Board directly, and excluding the EDO from email chains with his direct reports.
81-'FIClAL USE Olill..Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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During  our investigation,        the OIG reviewed   memoranda              and email      s sent to the   Board from    the General     Counsel or OGC staff stating    their  position      regarding      the   EDO's authority            as it relates  to OGC.       These  docum      e  nts d  escribe  a relationship          betwe  en th e EDO and OGC staff that   does not appear      significantl  y different      from    the   relationships between      EDOs and legal staff at many    other    federal  boards    or commissions.
OFFICIM:: USE ONU.l OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION The OIG reviewed an email chain from August 2021 between the former EDO and Chair Connery in which the EDO asked to attend the Chair's meetings with the General Manager and the Technical Director in order to stay informed on pressing matters. The Chair did not respond directly to the EDO's request, instead stating that "I felt like
Accordingly,   even  if disagreements                over the scope of the   EDO 's authority        initiall  y delay ed work at the DNFSB, it is unclear    why the   Board did  not act  quickly to account for, or potentially        refute,       OGC' s position      and minimize            disruption          at the  agency.
[your request] was a message of your distrust for me." A review of Chair Connery's scheduled meetings held via Microsoft Teams showed that between November 2021 and July 2022, the Chair held 18 one-on-one meetings with the General Manager, with an average meeting time of 39 minutes. The Chair met with the Technical Director via Microsoft Teams for scheduled meetings 25 times between October 2021 and July 2022, with an average meeting time of approximately 37 minutes. Although the Deputy Technical Director occasionally participated in these meetings, the EDO did not.
Senior managers confirmed that Chair Connery did not allow the former EDO to attend one-on-one meetings she held with the General Manager and the Technical Director, both of whom reported directly to the EDO, and refused to allow them to provide summaries of those meetings to the EDO. One office director stated that "[the EDO]
would come... to the [General Manager and the Technical Director] discussions with Mr. Summers and Ms. Roberson, but he was not allowed to come to the discussions with Ms. Connery." When asked why, the office director stated, "apparently she told him not to come."
One of the senior managers who served as acting EDO after the first EDO's departure told the OIG that neither of the first two acting EDOs participated in the one-on-one meetings Chair Connery held with the General Manager and the Technical Director.2 The manager never asked to be part of those meetings while in the role of acting EDO, largely because Chair Connery had already established the precedent of the EDO not being involved in them.
In their testimony, seven senior managers told the OIG that the Board regularly undercut the former EDO's ability to successfully manage his subordinate employees by often going around him to communicate directly with the EDO's subordinates, including the General Manager and the Technical Director. Some of those managers believed that the Chair empowered the General Manager and the Technical Director to bypass the EDO and go directly to the Board with issues that should have been raised first with the EDO. Some managers believed the General Manager routinely bypassed the EDO when bringing issues to the Board.
2 The manager provided this information to the OIG prior to the tenure of the third acting EDO.
OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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DISPOSITION
OFFICIAL US£ ONMZ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION In addition, the Board Chair communicated at times with the General Manager and the Technical Director, or staff in their offices, via emails that excluded the EDO. The Chair also emailed the General Manager and the Technical Director directly with administrative questions and requests, excluding the EDO from the email discussions.
The former EDO informed the OIG that the Chair undermined his ability to effectively manage the General Manager and empowered the General Manager to go around him.
The OIG reviewed emails that supported that position. For example, in a September 2021 email to the senior leadership team, Chair Connery outlined the EDO's roles and responsibilities, stating that the EDO was the rating official for the General Manager and the Technical Director, but she was the reviewing official. In another email, the Chair told the General Manager she did not want him to rely on the EDO to pass information within the chain of command, because the EDO's "... main job is not managing [the General Manager and the Technical Director]." The Chair told the General Manager in another email that, "I am trying to get OEDO out of the business of being a passthrough, that's why I asked for direct answers from you all."
The OIG found that Chair Connery often bypassed the EDO by communicating directly with OGM divisions or staff, including staff within the Division of Human Resources (HR). Although Chair Connery told the OIG that she never went directly to the HR Director to discuss issues that should have included either the EDO or the General Manager, the OIG found substantial contrary evidence. For example, the OIG reviewed an email the Chair sent the former HR Director in July 2021, without copying the EDO, asking for a meeting to discuss the makeup of the OEDQ.3 The OIG also reviewed another email chain, from July 2021, in which the Board members specifically discussed the OEDO's makeup and hiring new employees to work within OEDO. In that email chain, Chair Connery stated, "I am going to reach out to [the HR Director]." In addition, the OIG found several email conversations between the Chair and HR staff that omitted the General Manager and the EDO, and which involved general HR matters.
Chair Connery also acted in matters related to the appointment of employees in a manner that was inconsistent with the authority delegated to the EDO and the EDO's subordinate employees. A senior OGM employee told the OIG that hiring new HR staff at the agency was tricky because the Chair felt she had the final decision on selections, and because she wanted to interview the final HR candidates herself. For example, the Chair had a significant role in the selection of the current HR Director, a GS-15 employee who reports directly to the Deputy General Manager, and then to the General Manager and the EDO. Senior OGM staff advised Chair Connery she could conduct a "meet and greet" with candidates, but she could not ask technical questions, nor influence the hiring decision. Despite that guidance, the Chair made several comments 3 Chair Connery stated to the OIG she did not remember either the email or any meetings with the HR Director regarding the OEDO's structure.
OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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This  Memorandum              and Report    of Investigation            conve  ys the   result    s of our inv estigation and is being    provided      to the   Board for  any  corrective      action  you  deem      appropriate.
OFFIOIM:. USE Ql)lllsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION in a meeting in the presence of the selecting official for the HR Director position regarding which candidate she preferred.
Please  notify  this  office by September          15,     2023,       of any corrective  action taken  or planned, to better        align the   EDO position    with the delegations        required      b  y the AEA and  address any limitations          on the   scope of the EDO's authority.                         To the extent additional        time      is required    bey ond the September        15,     2023    deadline      to plan    or implement              any  corrective action,  please    update    the OIG every    ninety    (90)     days  on progress    made    in this  regard        .
The OIG reviewed emails supporting the OGM employee's testimony regarding the Chair's role in the selection process. In those emails OGM staff provided the Chair with the final two candidates' application packets and scheduled interviews with the Chair for each of those candidates. The Chair thereafter sent an email to OGM staff members approving of both candidates and requesting a meeting to discuss her thoughts.
: 2. The Chair acted in a manner that was inconsistent with the EDO's role as the senior employee responsible for technical matters.
Under AEA section 313(b)(3)(C)(i), the EDO is the senior agency employee responsible for technical matters. Several office directors and one deputy office director stated, however, that the Board did not empower the EDO to act as the agency lead on technical matters. These managers also stated that they heard Board members say the Technical Director was the agency's technical lead, and that the Technical Director did not have to report through the EDO on technical matters.
The Chair appeared to take a similar view regarding the EDO's technical role. In an email to senior staff, Chair Connery outlined her view of the EDO's role and responsibilities as "the front office/exec sec, strategic direction, as well as the day-to-day operations of the entire agency." In the same email, however, the Chair stated that
"[the Technical Director] has the final say as to the technical sufficiency of information to be reported to the Board... " The Chair further stated that "[a]ny 'emerging' information pertinent to the Board will be related by the Technical Director to the Board... [t]hat [information] should not be 'telephoned' through anyone else at the agency."
Senior managers told the OIG that the Technical Director preferred to communicate with the Board through the EDO and had requested that the EDO be allowed to participate in his meetings with the Chair, but the Chair denied that request. One manager additionally stated:
"[T[he [Technical Director]... should have a direct line to the Board members... because they're technical experts... But the EDO is [the Technical Director's]... supervisor. If [the Technical Director is]
running directly to the Board members without at least informing the EDO, that...undercuts the whole supervisor-subordinate relationship... "
The OIG observed that the Chair and DNFSB managers had divergent views over the EDO's role in technical matters. The Chair's view was that the legislative intent behind OFFfCIM:: USE OHlsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
10


6PPfCIM::                             US:E OML¥-                OIG       INVESTIGATION                               INFORMATION
OFFICIM:: USE ONU.l OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION Congress making the EDO the "senior employee of the Board responsible for...
technical matters" was for this person to use technical information provided by the OTD to strategically assess the best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter. Certain DFNSB managers, however, understood this language as placing the EDO ahead of the Technical Director as the lead on technical matters.
Regardless of which view betters aligns with the AEA, the Chair appears to have acted contrary to the delegations of authority required by the statute. Even if the EDO's technical role primarily involves strategically assessing the best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter, as the Chair maintained, the Chair took actions that interfered with the former EDO's ability to fulfill that role. Excluding the EDO from meetings between the Chair and the Technical Director, and requiring the Technical Director to communicate directly with the Board about emerging technical matters, would appear to be inconsistent with any plausible interpretation of AEA section 313(b)(3)(C)(i), including the Chair's interpretation.
: 3. Interpretive disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority could compromise the effectiveness of any future EDO.
DNFSB managers and staff stated that, during the former EDO's tenure, there were disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority as it related to OGC employees.
Soon after the EDO joined the DNFSB, the Chair delegated to the EDO the authority to oversee the agency's directive program and issue new or revised directives that are binding on agency staff. The DNFSB's General Counsel objected to this delegation as it applied to OGC staff, however, because AEA section 311(c) exempts the General Counsel-and in the General Counsel's view, OGC staff as well-from the EDO's supervision.
Chair Connery stated to the OIG that this issue caused significant problems for DNFSB leadership as they were creating policies to fully implement the EDO position.
For example, as a result of the conflicting views regarding the scope of his authority, the former EDO abandoned his attempts to update the agency's directives and focused on other tasks. Chair Connery said that this issue also damaged the relationship between the office directors, leading to hostile exchanges during meetings and stifling their ability to create and update policies and directives. One office director told the OIG that the General Counsel's position regarding the EDO's authority caused the Board to step in and "take control" of the distribution of business within the agency.4 4 The OIG's review of the DNFSB SharePoint directives page in April 2023 showed that the Board had updated only 28 of 137 directives, policies, and appendices since the former EDO joined the agency in January 2021.
OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
11


THIS         DOCUMENT             IS THE   PROPER'IY                 OF THE     U.S   . NUCLEAR         REGULATORY               COMMISSION                 AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR           FACILITIES                 SAFETY       BOARD,       OFFICE           OF THE       INSPECTORGENERAL                           (OIG).           IF   LOANED       TO ANOTHER             AGENCY,       IT AND ITS   CONTENTS         ARE     NOT TO   BE   REPRODUCED                 OR   DISTRIBUTED                 OUTSIDE           THE RECEIVING           AGENCYWITHOUT                           OIG   ' S   PERMISSION.
QFFI0IAL l.-JSf; ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION Chair Connery further stated to the OIG that she believed personality differences contributed to various disagreements between the office directors, and she assigned a Senior Executive Service coach to improve teamwork and mediate disputes among them. Based on our investigation, however, it does not appear the coaching sessions resolved the underlying disagreements regarding the EDO's authority as it relates to OGCstaff.
During our investigation, the OIG reviewed memoranda and emails sent to the Board from the General Counsel or OGC staff stating their position regarding the EDO's authority as it relates to OGC. These documents describe a relationship between the EDO and OGC staff that does not appear significantly different from the relationships between EDOs and legal staff at many other federal boards or commissions.
Accordingly, even if disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority initially delayed work at the DNFSB, it is unclear why the Board did not act quickly to account for, or potentially refute, OGC's position and minimize disruption at the agency.
DISPOSITION This Memorandum and Report of Investigation conveys the results of our investigation and is being provided to the Board for any corrective action you deem appropriate.
Please notify this office by September 15, 2023, of any corrective action taken or planned, to better align the EDO position with the delegations required by the AEA and address any limitations on the scope of the EDO's authority. To the extent additional time is required beyond the September 15, 2023 deadline to plan or implement any corrective action, please update the OIG every ninety (90) days on progress made in this regard.
6PPfCIM:: US:E OML¥-OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.
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Latest revision as of 18:46, 24 November 2024

FOIA-2024-000092 Released Set
ML24094A045
Person / Time
Issue date: 04/02/2024
From:
NRC/OCIO
To:
References
FOIA-2024-000092
Download: ML24094A045 (15)


Text

OFFICIAL USE OHL¥ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION MEMORANDUM DATE:

August 9, 2023 Joyce L. Connery Chair TO:

FROM:

Robert J. Feitel Inspector General b

. I Digitally signed by Robert J.

Ro ert J. Fe1te Feitel

SUBJECT:

Date: 2023.08.0911:13:07-04'00' ACTIONS INCONSISTENT WITH THE DELEGATION OF FUNCTIONS REQUIRED BY THE ATOMIC ENERGY ACT (OIG CASE NO. I2200180)

Attached is an Office of the Inspector General (OIG), U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB), Report of Investigation pertaining to an allegation that the DNFSB Chair failed to delegate requisite functions to the agency's Executive Director of Operations (EDO). As discussed in our report, the OIG found that while the Chair delegated to the EDO some of the functions required by the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954, as amended, both the Chair and the Board remained heavily involved in the agency's day-to-day operations and retained control over many administrative tasks, contrary to AEA sections 311(c)(3)(B) and 313(b)(3)(C).

This Memorandum and Report of Investigation is furnished for any corrective action you may deem appropriate. Please notify this office by September 15, 2023, of any corrective action taken or planned, based on the results of this investigation, and if you require further assistance.

The distribution of this memorandum and report should be limited to those DNFSB managers required for evaluation of this matter. To protect the identities of DNFSB CONTACT: Malion A. Bartley, Assistant Inspector General for Investigations 301.415.5925 OFFICmL U~'I!: ON'L, OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

OFFICIM:: USE ONL*1r OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION employees who cooperated with this investigation, the OIG will not provide the exhibits to the Board. Neither the memorandum, the report, nor its exhibits may be placed on DNFSB websites without the OIG's express written permission.

Attachment:

As stated cc:

Thomas Summers, Vice Chair Jessie Roberson, Board Member OFFICIM:. USE ONL¥ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILil'IES SAFE'lY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENER.AL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OPPICltt t1Sf: Of~LY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION TABLE OF CONTENTS ALLEGATION...................................................................................................................... 1 BACKGROUND................................................................................................................... 1 EDO SELECTION AND SCOPE OF AUTHORITY................................................... 3 FINDINGS............................................................................................................................. 4 BASIS FOR FINDINGS..................................................................................................... 4 DISPOSITION.................................................................................................................... 12 OPPICIM; USE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPERTY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCY WITHOUTOIG'S PERMISSION.

8FFICIM:: USE OMLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION ALLEGATION The Office of the Inspector General (OIG) initiated this investigation based on an allegation that the Chair of the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board (DNFSB) failed to appropriately delegate functions to its Executive Director of Operations (EDO), as required by the Atomic Energy Act (AEA), as amended.

BACKGROUND ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954 The AEA is the enabling legislation for the DNFSB. Among its provisions, the AEA establishes an EDO position at the DNFSB, describes the EDO's responsibilities, and requires the DNFSB's Chair to delegate certain functions to the EDO.

Section 311(c)(3)(B) of the AEA (42 U.S.C. § 2286(c)(3)(B)) states that the Chair "shall delegate" to the EDO the following functions:

(i)

Administrative functions of the Board.

(ii) Appointment and supervision of employees of the Board not specified under paragraph (6).

(iii) Distribution of business among the employees and administrative units and offices of the Board.

(iv) Preparation of-(i) proposals for the reorganization of the administrative units or offices of the Board; (ii) the budget estimate for the Board; and, (iii) the proposed distribution of funds according to purposes approved by the Board.

Additionally, section 313(b)(3)(C) of the AEA (42 U.S.C. § 2286b(b)(3)(C)) states that the EDO "shall be the senior employee of the Board responsible for-"

(i) general administration and technical matters; (ii) ensuring that the members of the Board are fully and currently informed with respect to matters for which the members are responsible; and, (iii) the functions delegated by the Chairperson pursuant to section 2286(c)(3)(B) of this title.

Of'f'fCIAL USE OMLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIAL UBE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2020 The EDO position was created by AEA amendments included in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020 (NDAA), which became law on December 20, 2019 (Pub. L. 116-92). The Committee Report that accompanied the Senate's version of the NDAA bill explained the basis for the EDO position.

SENATE COMMITTEE REPORT In the June 2019 report that accompanied the Senate's version of the NDAA bill (S. 1790 in the 116th Congress), the Committee on Armed Services referenced a report from the National Academy of Public Administration (NAPA) that, in the committee's view, painted a "disturbing picture" of the DNFSB. To help address persistent issues at the DNFSB, the committee recommended a legislative provision creating an EDO position at the agency. As stated in the report:

"The committee recommends a provision that would authorize the hiring of an executive director for operations as a senior employee at the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board. The provision would also authorize the Chairman of the Board, subject to the approval of the other Board members, to organize the staff of the Board as the Chairman considers appropriate to accomplish the mission of the Board.

"The committee notes that this provision is consistent with the recommendations of the National Academy of Public Administration's report titled "Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board Organizational Assessment" (November 2018). Also, in keeping with that report's recommendations, the committee encourages the Chairman to consult and communicate with the staff and other Board members while considering organizational changes."

The committee's recommendation to create an EDO position was adopted by Congress and captured in section 3202 of the enacted NDAA for fiscal year 2020.

NATIONAL ACADEMY OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION REPORT NAP A is a Congressionally chartered, non-profit, non-partisan organization that aids Congress, federal agencies, and state, local, and international government entities regarding issues of importance. In particular, NAPA "provides expert advice to government leaders in building more effective, efficient, accountable, and transparent organizations." The DNFSB engaged NAPA in March 2018 to perform a comprehensive organizational assessment, and NAP A provided a report of their findings in November of that year.

OFFICIAL tJ~r! Otff:,: OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIAL US}!; ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION In its report NAP A made 16 recommendations aimed at increasing collaboration and teamwork within the DNFSB. While discussing its recommendations, NAPA stated in part:

"There is also a critical need to follow a more traditional management model that empowers the staff to deal with issues at an appropriate level and brings to the top only the critical, strategic matters worthy of a Presidentially Appointed Senate-confirmed Official's precious time."

NAPA therefore recommended the appointment of an EDO at the DNFSB (Recommendation 12). NAPA additionally stated that "[t]he measure would... provide another level to encourage a more traditional relationship among presidentially-appointed officials and professional staff."

EDO SELECTION AND SCOPE OF AUTHORI1Y Since the establishment of the EDO position in December 2019, the agency has had one permanent EDO, who held the position from January 2021 through August 2022. Since the EDO's departure, the General Manager, Technical Director, and Deputy Technical Director have each served as acting EDO for periods of time (August 2022 through November 2022, November 2022 through February 2023, and July 2023 to present, respectively) while the DNFSB searches for a permanent replacement. As of the date of this report, the DNFSB has not hired a new permanent EDO.

The AEA states that the EDO shall be the senior DNFSB employee responsible for both administrative and technical matters. Notwithstanding this seemingly clear statutory language, the OIG found that a central question at the DNFSB is the scope of the EDO delegations mandated by the AEA, with one senior manager informing the OIG this topic was the single biggest issue at the agency.

DNFSB Chair Joyce Connery stated to the OIG that the DNFSB provided input on the NDAA provisions that created the EDO position. Chair Connery stated that historically employees within the Office of the Technical Director (OTD) viewed employees in the Office of the General Manager (OGM) as subordinates, because OGM supported OTD's work, which is the primary mission of the agency. She stated that the intent behind including the EDO as the lead in technical matters was to have "more consistency" among the technical and administrative staffs. 1 According to Chair Connery, the legislative intent behind the NOAA provisions was for the EDO to use the technical information provided by the OTD to strategically assess the 1 The DNFSB has four offices: OTD, OGM, the Office of the Executive Director of Operations (OEDO),

and the Office of the General Counsel (OGC). The first two offices report to the EDO, whereas OGC reports directly to the DNFSB Chair.

0FFICIM:: USE 0i'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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017171CIAL US£ ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter. Some managers at the agency interpreted the enacted legislation differently, however, and understood the statutory language as placing the EDO ahead of the Technical Director as the lead on technical matters.

Additionally, some employees interviewed by the OIG stated their belief that the NDAA mandated wholesale delegations of authority to the EDO; therefore, the Chair had no choice but to allow the EDO to execute a broad range of functions related to general administration and technical matters. One individual in the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) stated to the OIG, "[T]he statute says that the Chair shall delegate to the EDO...it's mandatory language...it means everything. It doesn't mean the Chair gets to pick and choose and delegate some administrative responsibilities and not others."

FINDINGS

1. During the former EDO's tenure, the Chair and Board acted inconsistently with AEA section 311(c)(3)(B) by retaining control over many DNFSB administrative functions that had been delegated to the EDO, and by bypassing the EDO when interacting with employees under the EDO's supervision.
2. The Chair and Board acted inconsistently with AEA section 313(b)(3)(C), which states that the EDO shall be the senior employee of the Board responsible for technical matters.
3. Disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority as it related to OGC employees caused work disruptions during the former EDO's tenure and, ifleft unaddressed, these disagreements could potentially compromise the effectiveness of any future EDO.

BASIS FOR FINDINGS

1. The Chair and the Board acted inconsistently with the delegations of authority required by AEA section 311(c)(3)(B).

AEA section 311(c)(3)(B) states that the Chair "shall delegate" to the EDO (i) the administrative functions of the DNFSB; (ii) the authority for appointing and supervising employees other than the EDO and General Counsel; (iii) the distribution of business among DNFSB staff, units, and offices; and, (iv) the preparation of various proposals or estimates related to office reorganization, budgets, and the distribution of funds. As described below, the Chair and Board took actions that were inconsistent with the delegations required by subsections (i), (ii), and (iii).

OFFICIAL USf: ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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tlPPICIAL t:J'~~ ONL,-

OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION

a. The Chair and the Board retained control over, or significant involvement in, many DNFSB administrative functions to be performed by the EDO.

The OIG found that the Chair had not delegated many of the agency's administrative functions to the former or acting EDOs and had otherwise taken actions that were inconsistent with the delegations of authority required by the AEA. When describing her own responsibilities, Chair Connery stated, "I don't do anything...I vote on things... that's all I do," implying that the EDO was otherwise responsible for DNFSB functions. She further stated "...I prefer to maintain awareness and not necessarily the authorities."

Notwithstanding these statements, the OIG found that, rather than merely maintaining awareness of DNFSB operations, the Chair retained day-to-day control over many aspects of those operations.

For example, after the DNFSB hired the former EDO in January 2021, the Chair continued to make decisions and provide guidance on a wide range of administrative matters, as illustrated by the following actions taken between January 2021 and July 2022:

In memoranda to Chair Connery, the Technical Director and General Manager sought the Chair's approval of routine administrative actions, such as approval of remote work for employees, promotions for six DNFSB employees on the Defense Nuclear Pay Scale, requests submitted by junior OTD staff for classified Department of Energy (DOE) documents, waiver of an overpayment recovery involving an employee, and an extension request for an employee relocation report-to-duty-station date. The Chair signed each memorandum as the final agency authority approving the requested action.

Chair Connery, the DNFSB General Manager, and other senior leadership discussed in emails whether the DNFSB had a minimum requirement for home internet bandwidth for teleworking employees, matters related to one employee's student loan repayment, and the name of the forthcoming telework policy.

  • The Chair signed SF-52 (Request for Personnel Action) forms for employees who did not report to her directly and which could have been signed by either the EDO or General Counsel.

During our investigation, the OIG reviewed an email from Chair Connery in which she appeared to state that the former EDO was unable or unwilling to assume certain responsibilities that should have been delegated to him. For example, Chair Connery OFFICIMJ USJZ Oi"tlsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIAL USE Ol\\lkY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION stated that "[the EDO] wants to have all of the 'authorities' but isn't yet capable nor willing to take responsibility... " However, the matters described above generally involved routine personnel actions, and the OIG did not identify any evidence that the former EDO was unable or unwilling to assume responsibility in these matters.

The former EDO also told the OIG that he attempted to secure additional staffing for the Office of the EDO (OEDO) to effectively handle the full delegations of authority he expected under the AEA. The Chair, however, denied the former EDO's request for additional staffing. The OIG reviewed emails that demonstrated other Board members agreed with the Chair's decision in this matter.

In addition, the OIG found that the entire Board was involved in administrative matters that should have been within the former EDO's delegated authority. For example, the DNFSB holds weekly meetings, called "OGM Gatherings," where the OGM briefs senior leadership, including the Board, on matters involving the office. While the EDO and other office directors are present at the gatherings, the Board is the target audience for the briefings. The OIG reviewed numerous emails discussing OGM gatherings and found that the discussion topics were primarily administrative in nature, addressing matters such as conference room HVAC repair, contractor clearance processing updates, random drug testing, and procurement updates.

Testimony the OIG obtained also showed that both during the former EDO's tenure and after his departure, many of the OGM gatherings have been primarily administrative in nature. One office director told the OIG, "[e]very week the Board has an OGM gathering and that's all the day-to-day operations of the Agency that [the Board] should not be involved in." The office director provided examples of topics discussed, such as auto-replies for the Human Resources inbox thanking employees for sending their messages, status sheets for safety allegations, and office carpeting. Another office director told the OIG they spent time at OGM gatherings discussing wall coverings for the office. The office director believed the topic was "completely beneath [the Board members]...it's beneath me" and the Board should have delegated the subject to lower-level personnel.

One of the senior managers that served as the acting EDO following the departure of the former EDO told the OIG that the Board now holds "sync meetings" with the senior managers to shorten the OGM gatherings and discuss the Board's calendar, although these meetings still tend to involve "in the weeds" administrative topics.

Four senior managers also stated that the Board maintained interest and influence on day-to-day administrative functions within the agency even after the appointment of the first EDO. One senior manager stated that the Board, in fact, operated the same now as it did prior to the creation of the EDO position. The manager stated that in his/her view the Board members needed to act at a level appropriate for Presidential appointees and not stray into the weeds of the DNFSB's administrative matters. Other senior managers expressed similar opinions about the Board's involvement in administrative matters.

Of'f'fCIAL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIAL USE ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION One senior manager stated that the Chair-not the EDO-oversaw administrative areas such as hiring.

The OIG found that the DNFSB did not initially establish a clear process to delegate authorities to the EDO; for example, the authority for Defense Nuclear Pay Scale promotions did not shift to the EDO until nearly two years after the position's creation.

One senior manager told the OIG "[the Board]... still get[s] involved and distracted... by some of the operations of the Agency, but in part I think it's that's just what they are used to, and they still need to transition in their own tasks a little bit more."

The Board indicated a willingness to continue that transition. Vice Chair Thomas Summers told the OIG, "I think the delegation intent from the statute is to take those types oflower-level...administrative tasks from the Chair's plate and make sure that the EDO...is empowered... without having to go to the Chair for every decision." Board Member Jessie Roberson told the OIG the agency had been working on separating the Board from administrative matters by updating the agency directives, which has been an ongoing process. Chair Connery admitted she had been too hands-on in several areas, telling the OIG, "I probably need some weaning to get out of those weeds...! am happy to back off."

Three senior managers told the OIG they believed the Board could increase its impact on nuclear safety by focusing less on administrative functions of the agency and more on nuclear safety itself. One of these senior managers stated that "if you added up the amount of time [the Board] talked about various issues, nuclear safety would fall to about fourth on the list." Another stated that Board members could spend more time visiting DOE sites within their jurisdiction, collaborating with their DOE counterparts, and interacting with DOE site contractors and DNFSB resident inspectors. Vice Chair Summers and Board Member Roberson agreed that the agency could manage administrative functions more efficiently, which would allow the Board more time to focus on the agency's mission.

b. The Chair and the Board undermined the authority of the former and acting EDOs by bypassing the EDOs when interacting with employees under their supervision.

AEA section 311(c)(3)(B)(ii) requires the Chair to delegate to the EDO those functions related to the appointment and supervision of employees other than the General Counsel and the EDO. The OIG found, however, that the Chair took actions that undermined the former EDO's ability to appropriately supervise employees, including the General Manager and the Technical Director. These actions included holding meetings with the General Manager or the Technical Director without the EDO present, encouraging the EDO's direct reports to bypass him and interact with the Board directly, and excluding the EDO from email chains with his direct reports.

81-'FIClAL USE Olill..Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIM:: USE ONU.l OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION The OIG reviewed an email chain from August 2021 between the former EDO and Chair Connery in which the EDO asked to attend the Chair's meetings with the General Manager and the Technical Director in order to stay informed on pressing matters. The Chair did not respond directly to the EDO's request, instead stating that "I felt like

[your request] was a message of your distrust for me." A review of Chair Connery's scheduled meetings held via Microsoft Teams showed that between November 2021 and July 2022, the Chair held 18 one-on-one meetings with the General Manager, with an average meeting time of 39 minutes. The Chair met with the Technical Director via Microsoft Teams for scheduled meetings 25 times between October 2021 and July 2022, with an average meeting time of approximately 37 minutes. Although the Deputy Technical Director occasionally participated in these meetings, the EDO did not.

Senior managers confirmed that Chair Connery did not allow the former EDO to attend one-on-one meetings she held with the General Manager and the Technical Director, both of whom reported directly to the EDO, and refused to allow them to provide summaries of those meetings to the EDO. One office director stated that "[the EDO]

would come... to the [General Manager and the Technical Director] discussions with Mr. Summers and Ms. Roberson, but he was not allowed to come to the discussions with Ms. Connery." When asked why, the office director stated, "apparently she told him not to come."

One of the senior managers who served as acting EDO after the first EDO's departure told the OIG that neither of the first two acting EDOs participated in the one-on-one meetings Chair Connery held with the General Manager and the Technical Director.2 The manager never asked to be part of those meetings while in the role of acting EDO, largely because Chair Connery had already established the precedent of the EDO not being involved in them.

In their testimony, seven senior managers told the OIG that the Board regularly undercut the former EDO's ability to successfully manage his subordinate employees by often going around him to communicate directly with the EDO's subordinates, including the General Manager and the Technical Director. Some of those managers believed that the Chair empowered the General Manager and the Technical Director to bypass the EDO and go directly to the Board with issues that should have been raised first with the EDO. Some managers believed the General Manager routinely bypassed the EDO when bringing issues to the Board.

2 The manager provided this information to the OIG prior to the tenure of the third acting EDO.

OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIAL US£ ONMZ OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION In addition, the Board Chair communicated at times with the General Manager and the Technical Director, or staff in their offices, via emails that excluded the EDO. The Chair also emailed the General Manager and the Technical Director directly with administrative questions and requests, excluding the EDO from the email discussions.

The former EDO informed the OIG that the Chair undermined his ability to effectively manage the General Manager and empowered the General Manager to go around him.

The OIG reviewed emails that supported that position. For example, in a September 2021 email to the senior leadership team, Chair Connery outlined the EDO's roles and responsibilities, stating that the EDO was the rating official for the General Manager and the Technical Director, but she was the reviewing official. In another email, the Chair told the General Manager she did not want him to rely on the EDO to pass information within the chain of command, because the EDO's "... main job is not managing [the General Manager and the Technical Director]." The Chair told the General Manager in another email that, "I am trying to get OEDO out of the business of being a passthrough, that's why I asked for direct answers from you all."

The OIG found that Chair Connery often bypassed the EDO by communicating directly with OGM divisions or staff, including staff within the Division of Human Resources (HR). Although Chair Connery told the OIG that she never went directly to the HR Director to discuss issues that should have included either the EDO or the General Manager, the OIG found substantial contrary evidence. For example, the OIG reviewed an email the Chair sent the former HR Director in July 2021, without copying the EDO, asking for a meeting to discuss the makeup of the OEDQ.3 The OIG also reviewed another email chain, from July 2021, in which the Board members specifically discussed the OEDO's makeup and hiring new employees to work within OEDO. In that email chain, Chair Connery stated, "I am going to reach out to [the HR Director]." In addition, the OIG found several email conversations between the Chair and HR staff that omitted the General Manager and the EDO, and which involved general HR matters.

Chair Connery also acted in matters related to the appointment of employees in a manner that was inconsistent with the authority delegated to the EDO and the EDO's subordinate employees. A senior OGM employee told the OIG that hiring new HR staff at the agency was tricky because the Chair felt she had the final decision on selections, and because she wanted to interview the final HR candidates herself. For example, the Chair had a significant role in the selection of the current HR Director, a GS-15 employee who reports directly to the Deputy General Manager, and then to the General Manager and the EDO. Senior OGM staff advised Chair Connery she could conduct a "meet and greet" with candidates, but she could not ask technical questions, nor influence the hiring decision. Despite that guidance, the Chair made several comments 3 Chair Connery stated to the OIG she did not remember either the email or any meetings with the HR Director regarding the OEDO's structure.

OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFIOIM:. USE Ql)lllsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION in a meeting in the presence of the selecting official for the HR Director position regarding which candidate she preferred.

The OIG reviewed emails supporting the OGM employee's testimony regarding the Chair's role in the selection process. In those emails OGM staff provided the Chair with the final two candidates' application packets and scheduled interviews with the Chair for each of those candidates. The Chair thereafter sent an email to OGM staff members approving of both candidates and requesting a meeting to discuss her thoughts.

2. The Chair acted in a manner that was inconsistent with the EDO's role as the senior employee responsible for technical matters.

Under AEA section 313(b)(3)(C)(i), the EDO is the senior agency employee responsible for technical matters. Several office directors and one deputy office director stated, however, that the Board did not empower the EDO to act as the agency lead on technical matters. These managers also stated that they heard Board members say the Technical Director was the agency's technical lead, and that the Technical Director did not have to report through the EDO on technical matters.

The Chair appeared to take a similar view regarding the EDO's technical role. In an email to senior staff, Chair Connery outlined her view of the EDO's role and responsibilities as "the front office/exec sec, strategic direction, as well as the day-to-day operations of the entire agency." In the same email, however, the Chair stated that

"[the Technical Director] has the final say as to the technical sufficiency of information to be reported to the Board... " The Chair further stated that "[a]ny 'emerging' information pertinent to the Board will be related by the Technical Director to the Board... [t]hat [information] should not be 'telephoned' through anyone else at the agency."

Senior managers told the OIG that the Technical Director preferred to communicate with the Board through the EDO and had requested that the EDO be allowed to participate in his meetings with the Chair, but the Chair denied that request. One manager additionally stated:

"[T[he [Technical Director]... should have a direct line to the Board members... because they're technical experts... But the EDO is [the Technical Director's]... supervisor. If [the Technical Director is]

running directly to the Board members without at least informing the EDO, that...undercuts the whole supervisor-subordinate relationship... "

The OIG observed that the Chair and DNFSB managers had divergent views over the EDO's role in technical matters. The Chair's view was that the legislative intent behind OFFfCIM:: USE OHlsY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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OFFICIM:: USE ONU.l OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION Congress making the EDO the "senior employee of the Board responsible for...

technical matters" was for this person to use technical information provided by the OTD to strategically assess the best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter. Certain DFNSB managers, however, understood this language as placing the EDO ahead of the Technical Director as the lead on technical matters.

Regardless of which view betters aligns with the AEA, the Chair appears to have acted contrary to the delegations of authority required by the statute. Even if the EDO's technical role primarily involves strategically assessing the best way to achieve the desired safety outcome in a given matter, as the Chair maintained, the Chair took actions that interfered with the former EDO's ability to fulfill that role. Excluding the EDO from meetings between the Chair and the Technical Director, and requiring the Technical Director to communicate directly with the Board about emerging technical matters, would appear to be inconsistent with any plausible interpretation of AEA section 313(b)(3)(C)(i), including the Chair's interpretation.

3. Interpretive disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority could compromise the effectiveness of any future EDO.

DNFSB managers and staff stated that, during the former EDO's tenure, there were disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority as it related to OGC employees.

Soon after the EDO joined the DNFSB, the Chair delegated to the EDO the authority to oversee the agency's directive program and issue new or revised directives that are binding on agency staff. The DNFSB's General Counsel objected to this delegation as it applied to OGC staff, however, because AEA section 311(c) exempts the General Counsel-and in the General Counsel's view, OGC staff as well-from the EDO's supervision.

Chair Connery stated to the OIG that this issue caused significant problems for DNFSB leadership as they were creating policies to fully implement the EDO position.

For example, as a result of the conflicting views regarding the scope of his authority, the former EDO abandoned his attempts to update the agency's directives and focused on other tasks. Chair Connery said that this issue also damaged the relationship between the office directors, leading to hostile exchanges during meetings and stifling their ability to create and update policies and directives. One office director told the OIG that the General Counsel's position regarding the EDO's authority caused the Board to step in and "take control" of the distribution of business within the agency.4 4 The OIG's review of the DNFSB SharePoint directives page in April 2023 showed that the Board had updated only 28 of 137 directives, policies, and appendices since the former EDO joined the agency in January 2021.

OFFIClhL USE Oi'&Y OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFE'IY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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QFFI0IAL l.-JSf; ONLY OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION Chair Connery further stated to the OIG that she believed personality differences contributed to various disagreements between the office directors, and she assigned a Senior Executive Service coach to improve teamwork and mediate disputes among them. Based on our investigation, however, it does not appear the coaching sessions resolved the underlying disagreements regarding the EDO's authority as it relates to OGCstaff.

During our investigation, the OIG reviewed memoranda and emails sent to the Board from the General Counsel or OGC staff stating their position regarding the EDO's authority as it relates to OGC. These documents describe a relationship between the EDO and OGC staff that does not appear significantly different from the relationships between EDOs and legal staff at many other federal boards or commissions.

Accordingly, even if disagreements over the scope of the EDO's authority initially delayed work at the DNFSB, it is unclear why the Board did not act quickly to account for, or potentially refute, OGC's position and minimize disruption at the agency.

DISPOSITION This Memorandum and Report of Investigation conveys the results of our investigation and is being provided to the Board for any corrective action you deem appropriate.

Please notify this office by September 15, 2023, of any corrective action taken or planned, to better align the EDO position with the delegations required by the AEA and address any limitations on the scope of the EDO's authority. To the extent additional time is required beyond the September 15, 2023 deadline to plan or implement any corrective action, please update the OIG every ninety (90) days on progress made in this regard.

6PPfCIM:: US:E OML¥-OIG INVESTIGATION INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT IS THE PROPER'IY OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION AND DEFENSE NUCLEAR FACILITIES SAFETY BOARD, OFFICE OF THE INSPECTORGENERAL (OIG). IF LOANED TO ANOTHER AGENCY, IT AND ITS CONTENTS ARE NOT TO BE REPRODUCED OR DISTRIBUTED OUTSIDE THE RECEIVING AGENCYWITHOUT OIG'S PERMISSION.

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