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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Friday, May 18, 2001
Jeff Garberson 510.987.0105
pager 877.992.2850
jeff.garberson@ucop.edu
JOHN MCTAGUE NAMED UC VICE PRESIDENT--LAB MANAGEMENT
The University of California Board of Regents Thursday approved
the appointment of John P. McTague as vice president--laboratory
management, the new senior management position that has primary
responsibility in the university's continued management of the three
national laboratories of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and
National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).
A former vice president of Ford Motor Company, McTague has had
extensive experience with DOE and its labs, with academia, and with
governmental science policy, including at the White House. He will
start on June 1 at an annual salary of $300,000.
"I am delighted that John McTague has agreed to take this
position," said UC President Richard C. Atkinson. "The
scientific work these laboratories perform is vital to the nation.
Its success demands a wide range of scientific and management skills,
which John has in abundance. His stature and experience make him
ideally suited to lead the university's and the laboratories' efforts
to provide the best in science and technology."
In Washington, Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham and NNSA Administrator
Gen. John Gordon expressed strong support for the appointment.
Abraham said, "John McTague has years of very practical, high
level
management experience in science and technology, both in government
and industry. It is important that the university continue on the
track of
closer lab management and oversight that began with the latest contracts,
and John is an excellent choice to guide that process."
Gordon commented: "John McTague has an unusually strong background
for the wide range of challenges demanded by this job. I am pleased
that the University of California continues to meet its contractual
commitments, which NNSA negotiated with UC last winter. The UC-managed
laboratories provide great scientific value to the nation."
Creation of the new position was specified in contracts signed in
January by DOE/NNSA and the university as one of the steps to strengthen
UC management of the three laboratories. The university is filling
the position approximately two months ahead of the contract schedule,
which specified that the vice president would be on-board by August.
Two months ago, the university announced that it had met another
of the key milestones, the award of subcontracts for industrial
expertise in security and project management, approximately one
month ahead of the contract schedule.
McTague has had a distinguished career in industry, government and
academia. He was founding co-chair of the DOE National Laboratories
Operations Board and a member of the Secretary of Energy Advisory
Board from its inception in 1990 through 2000. He has chaired a
number of studies for DOE including the Secretary of Energy Advisory
Board National Ignition Facility Task Force. He co-chaired DOE's
Laboratory Operations Board, and chaired the National Research Council's
report on Balancing Scientific Openness and National Security Controls
at the Nuclear Weapons Laboratories.
He retired on Jan. 1, 1999, from Ford Motor Co., where he spent
more than 12 years, first as vice president, research, then vice
president,
technical affairs. He established USCAR, a research collaboration
involving Ford, Chrysler and General Motors.
Before joining Ford in 1986, he served as deputy director and acting
director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy.
He
was acting science advisor to the president. During the Bush
Administration, he was a member of the President's Council of Advisors
on Science and Technology, and U.S. chair of the U.S.-Japan High
Level
Advisor Panel on Science and Technology.
McTague is a physical chemist with his undergraduate degree in chemistry
from Georgetown University (1960) and Ph.D. from Brown University
(1965). From 1970 to 1982, he was a professor of chemistry and member
of the Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at UCLA.
In 1992, he was a founding member of the UC President's Council
on the National Laboratories and first chairman of the Council's
Technology
Transfer Panel, serving on both until 1995.
He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and a fellow
of the American Physical Society and American Association for the
Advancement of Science. He has received Alfred P. Sloan, John Simon
Guggenheim and NATO senior fellowships, as well as the California
Section Award of the American Chemical Society. In 1998 the American
Physical Society awarded him the Pake Prize for his contributions
to research, to the management of science and to research collaborations.
The following year, he received the Glenn Seaborg Medal from UCLA.
History
The University of California has managed the three DOE laboratories
since their inception. Today, Livermore and Los Alamos laboratories
each employ 7,000 or more full-time staff with annual operating
budgets exceeding $1 billion, while BerkeleyLab has 4,000 employees
and an annual budget of about $400 million.
The laboratories are major sources of scientific and technical strength
for the U.S. in fields ranging from national security to basic physics,
biotechnology, climate studies, computer development, materials
science, energy and the environment. The laboratories contribute
to the nation's economic competitiveness through research partnerships
with industry and engage in math and science education for students
and teachers at all levels.
Several high visibility security and project management issues at
the
laboratories led DOE last year to direct the then-new National Nuclear
Security Administration to restructure the department's contracts
with UC for operating Livermore and Los Alamos.
The university proposed a number of measures to strengthen oversight
and operations, which DOE accepted and which were incorporated into
the existing contracts, modified and signed in January 2001,as an
appendix. The modified contracts extend through Sept. 30, 2005.
The contract for operating BerkeleyLab has not been amended and
remains in force through Sept. 30, 2002.
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