TMI owner cutting jobs to the marrow, putting community at risk
Lancaster New Era, Commentary, 12/16/03
By Eric Joseph Epstein
The employees of Three Mile Island are an integral part of our
community. Many, at great personal risk to their own health and
safety, performed invaluable tasks during the defueling of Three
Mile Island Unit-2.
But the current owner of TMI, Exelon, is placing these plant
workers in harm's way through attrition, regionalization, forced
overtime and consolidation of job functions.
It is essential that Exelon maintain adequate staffing at Three
Mile Island. Since they purchased TMI, the number of workers has
shrunk from 804 (1998) to 643 (2002). Contract labor, including
security, has supplanted existing full-time positions, and the
number of contractor and subcontractor employees has grown from
65 (2000) to 103 (2002).
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission does not track the number of
employees at TMI. The community was told at the NRC's annual
meeting in Middletown on April 9 that the number of employees at
TMI was 529. When the NRC was apprised that they were off by 114
employees, they assured the community it didn't matter how many
people worked at TMI based on the Commission's Performance
Indicators "Report Card," TMI's Fitness for Duty Program.
TMI is heading down the same path as another Exelon plant:
Oyster Creek. In 1990, Oyster Creek was owned by GPU Nuclear,
and operated by 1,000 employees. Oyster Creek was sold to
AmerGen, an Exelon company, for $10 million dollars on Sept. 14,
1999. According to plant spokeswoman, Gina G. Scala, today there
are 440 employees at the nation's oldest operating nuclear power
plant.
Exelon has reiterated its commitment to slash its labor force,
and is pursuing initiatives to attain "steady state" staffing
levels. Exelon's program of labor reductions is called the
"Exelon Way," and is designed to eliminate 3,400 employees or
15% of its work force by the end of 2002 (Press Release, Jan. 29.)
On Aug. 6, the company announced the elimination of 10% of its
work force or 1,900 positions. Not to worry, according to
company spokeswoman Ann Mary Carley, the job cuts will have a
"minimal" impact on nuclear operations.
Despite Exelon's emphasis on downsizing, the company somehow
found the resources to fund a "golden parachute" for Corbin
McNeill, Jr., the ex-chairman and former CEO of Exelon Corp. His
compensation package of nearly $29.8 million last year made him
the fourth highest paid CEO out of the 250 utility executives
(Nuclear News, July 9.)
Our community should not be put at risk by an Illinois-based
corporation intent on cutting staffing levels to the marrow. In
order to maintain a healthy espirit de corps and ensure
vigilance at TMI, Exelon must increase staffing levels to
pre-sale levels.