Nuclear weapons woes: Understaffed nuke agency hit by DOGE and safety worries
Source: USA Today
Updated May 18, 2025, 3:30 p.m. ET
In 2021, after a pair of plutonium-handling gloves had broken for the third time at the Los Alamos National Laboratory, contaminating three workers, and after the second accidental flood, investigators from the National Nuclear Security Administration found a common thread in a plague of safety incidents: the contractor running the New Mexico lab lacked sufficient staff.
So did the NNSA. The agency, whose fewer than 1,900 federal employees oversee the more than 60,000 contractors who build and maintain the U.S. nuclear arsenal, has struggled to fill crucial safety roles. Only 21% of the agencys facility representative positions the governments eyes and ears in contractor-run buildings at Los Alamos were filled with qualified personnel as of May 2022.
Now, President Donald Trumps administration has thrown the NNSA into chaos, threatening hard-won staffing progress amid a trillion-dollar nuclear weapons upgrade. Desperately needed nuclear experts are wary of joining thanks to chaotic job cuts by Elon Musks Department of Government Efficiency, experts say.
The disruption of NNSAs chronically understaffed safety workforce is a recipe for disaster, said Joyce Connery, former head of the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board. Los Alamos is not the only facility with staffing shortages in crucial safety roles.
Read more: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/05/18/nuclear-weapons-woes-nuke-agency-hit-by-doge-and-safety-worries/83621978007/