News
Pantex donates to WOWW Science Collaborative
Pantexans Stephanie Steelman, Bruce Phebus, and Berenice Pitre presented science excitement and education during the Window on a Wider World (WOWW) science collaborative this month.
This event is being held throughout the month of November at the Panhandle Plains Historical Museum in Canyon. The collaborative is an opportunity for fifth graders from the area to learn more about science and STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) careers in a hands-on way from scientists working at Pantex, Bell Helicopter and other companies.
Pantex presented $5,000 to Window On a Wider World on November 11 to support the ongoing WOWW Science Collaborative efforts.





Pantexans welcome home veterans
Pantex was proud to take part in the biggest ever 12th Annual Veteran’s Welcome Home Event on November 9. Sponsored by the Amarillo VA Healthcare system, the event was started as a way to thank local veterans for their service by welcoming them home no matter when, or where they served.
In addition to the free burger and entertainment at the event, Pantex volunteers and local Boy Scouts passed out about 1,000 cookies to veterans; including some Pantexan veterans who stopped by to say hello.
Emergency Management’s Bill Easley-Mcpherson also had a radioactive materials display for families to learn more about RAD science and safety.




Pantexans give back during Month of Volunteering
Each year, Consolidated Nuclear Security employees work in their communities to support charitable and non profit organizations. This year, the Pantex and Y-12 Day of Volunteering moved from a spring event to the fall, and instead of just one designated day, teams volunteered on projects throughout the entire month of October.

At Pantex, nine projects were supported and ranged from sprucing up the Botanical Gardens for the holiday season to building a wheelchair ramp for a local citizen to allow recipients to access their home safely and independently.
Below are the highlights from each of the Pantex projects for 2019:
• Amarillo Botanical Gardens – setting up for the holiday season by clearing out annual plants, general cleaning, and hanging holiday lights.
• Amarillo United Citizens Forum – cleaned around the exterior of the building and repainted parking lot stripes in two lots. This was a partnership with Bright Stripes, a local restriping business, and the Amarillo Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority.
• American Red Cross & Boy Scouts of America – installed 211 smoke alarms in the San Jacinto neighborhood.
• Downtown Women's Center shelters & Ronald McDonald House – sewed pillowcases that will be presented to the residents.
• Faith City Mission – served lunch to Amarillo’s homeless community.
• High Plains Food Bank – prepared the gardens for the next season by pulling weeds and cleaning garden beds.
• Snack Pak 4 Kids – packed snack pack bags at the Snack pack warehouse. This program serves more than 10,000 kids in 51 school districts.
• Southwest Ambuc – assembled Amtrykes, therapeutic tryciclyes that will be given to disabled children to provide exercise and improve mobility
• Texas Ramp Project – built a wheelchair ramp for a local resident
Each year, Consolidated Nuclear Security employees work in their communities to support charitable and non profit organizations. This year, the Pantex and Y-12 Day of Volunteering moved from a spring event to the fall, and instead of just one designated day, teams volunteered on projects throughout the entire month of October.
At Pantex, nine projects were supported and ranged from sprucing up the Botanical Gardens for the holiday season to building a wheelchair ramp for a local citizen to allow recipients to access their home safely and independently.
Below are the highlights from each of the Pantex projects for 2019.

On October 11, a team of volunteers kicked off the month of volunteering by constructing a wheelchair ramp for a local resident with the Texas Ramp Project. The Texas Ramp Project’s mission is to build wheelchair ramps for those who find their steps a barrier. Almost every day our volunteers somewhere in the state are building a ramp for an elderly or disabled person who needs one. Our ramps allow recipients to leave their home safely and independently, especially if there is a fire or other emergency. They provide relief to families and caregivers, and they allow people to remain at home, aging in place surrounded by those who love them.
Volunteers worked at the Amarillo United Citizens Forum on October 19 to clean around the exterior of the building and re-paint parking lot stripes in the two lots. The group partnered with Bright Stripes, a local restriping small business, and the Amarillo Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority.
On October 22 volunteers gathered at the Snack Pak for Kids warehouse to pack bags. The Snack Pak for Kids program has grown to serve more than 10,000 kids in 51 school districts. Snack Paks always contain brand new, brand-name food. And, thanks to generous partnerships and a steady stream of volunteers, 100% of all donations given to SP4K are used to purchase food for hungry children and Snack Pak’s mission is “to end weekend hunger for children by providing a backpack filled with kid-friendly snacks each Friday of the year.”
A team met up on October 24, to benefit Southwest Ambuc by assembling Amtrykes - therapeutic tricycles that will be given to disabled children to provide exercise and improve mobility.
October 25 was a busy day for volunteers as four different team worked around the community.

The first team met at the Potter County Extension Office to sew pillowcases that will be presented to the Downtown Women's Center shelters and Ronald McDonald House in Amarillo. This project was part of a challenge issued online to quilters, crafters and sewers to donate 1 million pillowcases to local charities.
Faith City Mission was also the recipient of volunteer efforts on October 25, with volunteers serving lunch to Amarillo’s homeless community. Faith City serves three hot meals Monday through Saturday and ministers to men, women, and children who have fallen on hard times. They are either homeless, battling addiction, or experiencing some type of poverty. All of Faith City's programs are designed to take a person from crisis to stability, and in the end, enable them to live on their own.
A third team met at the gardens of the High Plains Food Bank on October 25 and helped to prepare the gardens for next season by pulling weeds and cleaning garden beds.
And the fourth team that worked on October 25 assisted the Amarillo Botanical Gardens with setting up for the Holiday season, clearing out annual plants, general cleaning, and hanging holiday lights.

On October 26, volunteers worked with American Red Cross & Boy Scouts of America to install battery operated smoke detectors in the San Jacinto neighborhood. This project was an Eagle Scout Project for Adrian Avila and the day was officially proclaimed by the Amarillo City Government as “Adrian Avila’s Eagle Scout Day.” There were approximately 50 volunteers from various organizations that came out to lend a hand. Adrian was able to complete the final phase of his Eagle Scout Project, and said he couldn’t have done it without the wonderful people of the Amarillo community.
As a result of this program and media coverage surrounding this particular project, 211 smoke alarms were installed in the San Jacinto neighborhood on this one day. Adrian was asked to continue this program apart from his Boy Scout activities, and graciously accepted. There were 300 smoke alarms purchased for this event leaving 89 yet to be installed. The American Red Cross has been receiving requests from the community for smoke alarms, and on November 16, Adrian and the Knights of Columbus Council 4621 plan to complete installing the remaining 89 smoke alarms. Several Pantexans have volunteered to assist on that day as well.
Pantexans named to Top 20 under 40
Congratulations to Pantexans Christopher Whitmer and Ryan Johnston who were recognized by the Amarillo Chamber of Commerce as members of the Top 20 Under 40.
The award is given annually to area early career professionals who demonstrate professional excellence and bring value to the Amarillo business community.

Whitmer has worked at Pantex for more than 5.5 years and is a registered professional engineer in the state of New Mexico. He graduated from New Mexico State University with a bachelor of science in civil engineering and a master of science in industrial engineering.
“I’m very proud to have won the award, and I’m proud to represent CNS in doing so,” Whitmer said.
Currently, Whitmer is on a rotational assignment with Enterprise Independent Assessment Program as a lead assessor. In this role, he establishes the necessary technical competency to adequately and effectively assess engineering-related activities at Pantex. Whitmer was the founding chairman of the Pantex Outreach and Leadership Organization (POLO), an early career professional organization for employees in STEM fields. POLO focuses on career development, networking, community service, and teambuilding principles.
He encourages early career professionals to show initiative and get the job done.
“Take it upon yourself to learn as much as you can from your peers. Also, make opportunities for yourself. Really show leadership that you want to be here and continue to learn and you want to continue to succeed,” Whitmer said.
His peer and co-honoree Johnston is a Small Business Program manager in the Socioeconomic Programs Office at Pantex. He is responsible for establishing relationships with local and national small businesses, assisting development of bid lists, and encouraging and increasing small business participation. He holds a B.A. in supply chain management from Brigham Young University-Idaho.

Johnston’s most recent accomplishment is the establishment of the first mentor-protégé agreement for CNS at Pantex. Working with small businesses allows large organizations to provide guidance, training, and business development, allowing the small companies to grow and eventually compete with larger businesses for federal contracts.
Johnston has 13 years of commercial and government procurement experience. Prior to joining Pantex, he worked at several facilities including the Advanced Mixed Waste Treatment Plant in Idaho, the Waste Treatment Plant in Washington, and the Pueblo Chemical Agent-Destruction Pilot Plant in Colorado. His experience includes purchasing, materials management, Six Sigma, and expediting.
Johnston advises other early career professionals to try different things.
“Just because you have a degree or higher education in one field doesn’t mean don’t try something else. I always thought I would be designing how to roll product from one shelf to another shelf because that’s what my degree was in,” Johnston said. “I don’t do that now, and I love what I do, and I’ve done a lot of different things. Everything I’ve tried has built my knowledge a little bit more. So instead of just a small piece of what the supply chain needs, I can see a wider view of it, and it’s really helped me out.”
Johnston had a mentor who has influenced his career and the advice he received has stuck with him throughout his career.
“When I was at Hanford, I had a wonderful mentor, Ian Petterson. He taught me to chase ideas. When we would go to staff meetings, no matter who would ask the question, he would always say, ‘Ok, let’s think that through,’ and we’d think through every step. He taught us to sit back and think about it from a different angle, think about it how someone else would think of it. That has changed the way I’ve viewed things. It’s the best advice I ever got.”
To be eligible, along with being under the age of 40, the candidates must be employed in the area for at least three years, and in the same field, though not necessarily at the same businesses. Nominations were received through the Amarillo Chamber of Commerce website, and the winners were selected by judges who reviewed nominations and picked the top 20 award winners as up-and-coming Amarillo professionals who are standouts in their professions.
Local business keeps Pantex rolling
Casters of Amarillo, Inc. is a female, veteran owned business that keeps Pantex rolling along, literally. They are a local distributor for casters, wheels and material handling equipment and fulfill special orders that meet the needs of Pantex.
Karen Hicks, President of Casters of Amarillo, said the company has been working with Pantex since at least 1991 when she took over the company from her parents who started the business in 1974.
Karen is a retired Lt. Col in the Army, and served 11 years active duty in military intelligence along with time in a civil affairs unit and reserve training unit in Lubbock.
She said the relationship with Pantex is special because of what is done here.
“There’s a kindred spirit,” she said. “We’re happy we can be of service to Pantex. It’s a vendor relationship, but it’s also a service relationship. It’s like the Army and military – it’s all about service.”

CNS employees receive DP awards
The week of October 14 was an impressive one for CNS as more than 572 employees from Pantex and Y-12 were recognized with a 2018 Defense Programs Award of Excellence.
At Y-12, Site Manager Bill Tindal, NPO Deputy Manager Teresa Robbins, and NNSA’s Dr. Mark Suriano, assistant deputy administrator for Stockpile Management, congratulated the winners at an October 15 event. At Pantex, Site Manager Todd Ailes, Deputy Manager for the NNSA Production Office at Pantex and Y-12 Bill Eckroade, NNSA Acting Assistant Deputy Administrator for Stockpile Management John Evans, and Manager of Stockpile Programs Colby Yeary honored the winners at an October 17 event.
Tindal said, “I want to thank each of you for all your hard work, your dedication, and your commitment to the mission. Our country is safer because of what you do.”
Evans said, “It’s really important that we get out and we see the work this complex can do. Here at Pantex it’s nothing short of amazing. That plaque on the wall that all roads come to Pantex that’s true. The important thing though is the capabilities that are embodied in you all allow for the weapons to go out of Pantex. Without your expertise and dedication and devotion to your jobs those weapons don’t go out of Pantex, they don’t go come back for repairs and they don’t leave in a way that they can be part of the deterrent.”
The DP Award of Excellence, established in 1982, recognizes individual and team accomplishments from across the nuclear weapons complex in support of NNSA’s nuclear weapons program.




Pantexan named 2019 Hispanic Man of the Year
AMARILLO, Texas- The recent Hispanic Heritage Luncheon was the scene for the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce’s announcement for its 2019 award winners. They include the Man and Woman of the Year, Young Rising Star, and Business Community Service.
Pantex’s Milton Guerrero, a nuclear procurement engineer, was named 2019 Hispanic Man of the Year. His role in the Pantex Outreach and Leadership Organization (POLO) leadership, and work in the community are what Milton believes lead to his nomination by friends and co-workers.
“When I got the phone call and was notified that I was nominated and won the award I was surprised. It was something I truly did not expect to win. It was a little bit of everything that I do that got me nominated. From volunteering with POLO at different events, to my overall involvement in the community, along with trying to be a solid resource/co-worker for those here at work.”
Milton added that he grew up in the area, the very neighborhood where the Wesley Community Center is located, and where the luncheon was held. He says he is both honored and humbled by the recognition.
“The award is what I consider a great honor and a milestone. More importantly, it was an opportunity to meet with other community leaders and see where there is a need for people, such as myself, to help out. I feel that it is important for professionals to take an interest in speaking with students about their future career paths and we can’t forget that the youth in our community are our future leaders.
Other winners include Helen Burton as 2019 Woman of the Year, Amarillo High School senior Oscar Elizondo garnered the Rising Star award, and Tyson Foods received the award for Business Community Service.
Consolidated Nuclear Security, LLC (CNS) operates the Pantex Plant, located in Amarillo, Texas, and the Y-12 National Security Complex, located in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, under a single contract for the U.S. National Nuclear Security Administration. Pantex and Y-12 are key facilities in the U.S. Nuclear Security Enterprise, and CNS performs its work with a focus on the absolute priorities of safety, security, quality, mission delivery and cost efficiency.
For more information on each site, visit www.pantex.energy.gov or www.y12.doe.gov. Follow Pantex on Facebook, X or LinkedIn. Follow Y-12 on Facebook, X, and LinkedIn.
CONTACT
Steve Myers
Communications
Office (806) 573.0490
Stephen.Myers@pantex.doe.gov
Pantex Fire Department takes first at BBQs
Congratulations to the Pantex Fire Department Cook Team who took home bragging rights at two recent competitions.
They placed first in corporate brisket at this year’s Amarillo Chamber of Commerce Barbeque. The popular event took place in the streets of downtown Amarillo near the chamber building in September. CNS Chief Operating Officer and Chamber President Michelle Reichert and CNS Senior Director for Communications Jason Bohne also participated as barbeque judges. Among the other barbeque dishes the PFD created, they made pulled pork Frito pies that CNS volunteers handed out to the public when they visited the booth.
The team also won as overall grand champions of the Canyon Chamber Chowdown BBQ Cook-off on October 4. The team was comprised of barbeque masters and teammates, David Stewart, Kevin Payne, Kyle Butler, Scott Johnson, Matthew Ladd, Justin Baker, Brenda Graham and Jeremy Baker. They competed against 37 other teams and received 2nd place in brisket, 2nd place in pork, and 3rd place in ribs earning them the grand champion title.

CNS employees receive NA-50 awards
CNS employees were recognized with awards from NNSA’s Office of Safety, Infrastructure, and Operations – or NA-50 – for the exceptional accomplishments made in support of NA-50 efforts to achieve the NNSA mission. At the September 10 Pantex event, Bill Eckroade, Pantex deputy manager for the NNSA Production Office, and NA-50 Associate Administrator Jim McConnell honored employees who worked on the projects. At Y-12 on the same day, NPO Manager Geoff Beausoleil, Y-12 Site Manager Bill Tindal, and Senior Director of Infrastructure Programs Steve Laggis handed out the awards.
“Each of our sites have old infrastructure, and that adds substantial challenges in the workforce and keeping our operations efficient, reliable, and safe,” Eckroade said. “As I’ve seen people trying to manage that infrastructure, you see workers using innovation persistence and sometimes sheer determination for making old infrastructure work to achieve the mission we’ve been assigned. But, the good news is that in recent years, we have seen enhanced allocations of resources to help us with our infrastructure.”
McConnell said Pantex is a good example of the forefront of what NA-50 does considering the combined safety implications of the site and the large amount aging infrastructure. “My job is to help you succeed, and your success is the thing that I then get to feed back into the system to allow people to bring us even more opportunities and more resources, so that the success you did in 2018 turns into the things you’re doing right now,” he said. “It was great seeing all the great work you do here.”
At Y-12, Laggis thanked team members for demonstrating excellence in “doing the right things to the right infrastructure in the right way.”
Tindal told the honorees, “Your insistence on excellence, your tenacity in doing the job right, and your understanding that teamwork is often the best solution on a project, has been recognized by NNSA as the best of the best across the enterprise in 2018.”
Beausoleil’s comments echoed those of McConnell in that CNS’s work has brought success. “Your work in revitalizing our infrastructure will help support missions for years to come. You have my sincere gratitude and congratulations,” he said.
Laggis ended the program by saying each of the winning teams were important ingredients in the success of CNS. “Without your great work,” he said, “we could not reach our goals and complete our mission.”
CNS Enterprise Fire Department Team wins Sportsmanship Award at HAZMAT Challenge
A combined CNS Enterprise Fire Department Team represented Pantex and Y-12 at the 2019 Hazardous Material (HAZMAT) Challenge held at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) recently.
The combined team did an outstanding job representing both sites and were voted by the other teams and operators in the competition as winners of the Sportsmanship Award. This award recognizes a team that embodies the values of working as a team, working with other teams, and being willing to step up wherever a need arises.
“The CNS Enterprise FD Team did an excellent job. It was rewarding to see how they came together the first day operating as one team in the events,” Doug Trout, CNS Senior Director, Enterprise Emergency Services said. “The planning beforehand and collaboration by the team was evident in all of the events. They have ideas for training to take back and are looking forward to next year. This was an excellent event.”
The HAZMAT Challenge has been hosted by the Emergency Management Division of LANL for the past 22 years, and HAZMAT teams network with one another, practice technical skills, and learn new HAZMAT techniques under realistic conditions in a safe environment.
During the Challenge, vehicles, trucks, tankers, and rail cars are used in some of the props to mimic real-life hazardous material situations. Past Challenge scenarios have included drug laboratory or chemical hazard identification, manipulation of complex valve configurations to stop leaks, confined space rescue, compressed gas leaks, a leaking rail car dome, pressurized drum opening, stinger operation responding to damaged tanker trailer, and damming/diking exercise from an overturned tanker.
Lyle Cary, Vice President of Safeguards, Security, and Emergency Services added, “The training value and relationships built during these events strengthens capability across the Nuclear Security Enterprise, and because of the number of teams from federal, state, and municipal departments, it strengthens the Nation”.
Representing Pantex were Firefighters John Sappington, Daniel Sholder, and Cody Steever, and Fire Captains Mark Campbell and Chad Zarbock.
Representing Y-12 were Firefighters Chris Altman, Scot Rose, and Craig Shaver, and Fire Captains Jeremy Maiden and Jim Arnold.