It had all the makings of a debacle. The president spent the night in Denver so he could deliver a speech at the National Renewable Energy Lab this morning, as part of the White House push to tout the administration’s energy initiatives this week. There was, however, one fairly significant problem.
The Bush administration, almost immediately after the president vowed in his State of the Union address to expand investment and research into alternative fuels, began laying off researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. The budget cuts that forced the layoffs were concentrated among researchers working on the same technologies singled out for praise in the SOTU. It was an example of Bush’s approach to governing at its most inexplicable.
All of this was going to be awfully embarrassing when the president showed up at the Lab today. And it would have been, of course, if the administration didn’t scramble to avoid the public relations problem.
On the eve of a presidential visit to a renewable energy lab in Colorado, the Department of Energy said it has transferred $5 million to the operation, which had funding cut and employees laid off this month due to budget shortfalls.
U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman transferred the money over the weekend to restore jobs at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colorado, according to a department news release.
What an amazing coincidence. The administration wanted to lay off 32 researchers and technicians, right up until the president was slated to visit their office. Then, magically, the money reappears.
Well, some of the money.
Bush cut the budget for the National Renewable Energy Lab by $28 million, but restored just enough to keep the staff on the job. As Philip Clapp, president of the National Environmental Trust, said, “The $5 million stopped the bodies from going out the door, but it doesn’t provide the money for the (renewable energy) programs.”
As for the Lab’s employees, there’s some relief — and some confusion.
“I’m still questioning why the budget cuts even happened or why the layoffs had to happen in the first place — like how it can happen two or three weeks later they restore the money to the budget,” said Tina Larney, an employee being rehired who works with state and local governments on energy initiatives.
“It makes me question … the seriousness of the commitment [of] the administration and the government in Washington to renewable energies and moving the U.S. forward in our energy policy.”
You mean Bush’s policy commitments are shallow and meaningless? You don’t say….