Five Questions with the NRC’s SECY
Posted by on October 4, 2016
Annette Vietti-Cook is the NRC’s Secretary of the Commission
Every
day I work directly with the Commission offices managing the
Commission’s decisionmaking process, and as the official record keeper,
historian, and meeting coordinator. I oversee the planning of Commission
meetings, drafting of Commission decisions, tracking of Commission
requirements, and managing of Commission correspondence and records, and
rulemaking and adjudicatory dockets. I also work with the agency’s
historian.
Training,
developing, and mentoring employees so my office can provide
outstanding support to the Commission. Commissioners come and go, so
it’s important that the Office of the Secretary maintain the
institutional knowledge of how the Commission does its work. The
Internal Commission Procedures, which lay out how all manner of
regulatory and policy issues are handled, are vitally important but can
never tell the whole story. I’ve been with the agency for 34 years and
Secretary for 17 years and many of my staff have similar long tenures.
So we believe our institutional knowledge is a real asset.
Five Questions is an occasional series in which we pose the same questions to different NRC staff members.
- How would you describe your job in three sentences or less?
Every
day I work directly with the Commission offices managing the
Commission’s decisionmaking process, and as the official record keeper,
historian, and meeting coordinator. I oversee the planning of Commission
meetings, drafting of Commission decisions, tracking of Commission
requirements, and managing of Commission correspondence and records, and
rulemaking and adjudicatory dockets. I also work with the agency’s
historian.- What is the single most important thing that you do at work?
- What is the single biggest challenge you face?
Training,
developing, and mentoring employees so my office can provide
outstanding support to the Commission. Commissioners come and go, so
it’s important that the Office of the Secretary maintain the
institutional knowledge of how the Commission does its work. The
Internal Commission Procedures, which lay out how all manner of
regulatory and policy issues are handled, are vitally important but can
never tell the whole story. I’ve been with the agency for 34 years and
Secretary for 17 years and many of my staff have similar long tenures.
So we believe our institutional knowledge is a real asset.- If you could change one thing at the NRC or within the nuclear industry, what would it be?
- What one thing about the NRC do you wish more people knew?
Five Questions is an occasional series in which we pose the same questions to different NRC staff members.
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