FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, Jan. 8, 2003
Michael Reese (510) 987-9169
michael.reese@ucop.edu
Bruce Darling named interim vice president
for laboratory management
University of California President Richard C.
Atkinson today (Wednesday) named longtime UC senior administrator
Bruce B. Darling as interim vice president for laboratory management.
Darling, who currently serves
as systemwide senior vice president for university affairs, will
take on the additional responsibilities of overseeing the university's
administration of the national laboratories UC manages for the U.S.
Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.
"By making this appointment of Bruce
Darling, one of my oldest and closest associates, I am sending a
very clear signal that the University of California's management
of the national laboratories is among my highest priorities,"
said Atkinson. "Bruce has been intimately involved in getting
to the bottom of recent allegations surrounding business practices
at Los Alamos National Laboratory, has worked closely with the Department
of Energy and the NNSA on these matters, and has proved again and
again that he is a trusted and effective manager and problem solver
on a wide range of university issues. All these are the attributes
I need in the vice president position at this critical time."
Darling most recently chaired a Special Review
Team of senior UC officials charged with making an independent review
of the business practices and controls in place at Los Alamos. The
team visited the laboratory in November and made recommendations
at that time to improve the laboratory's business practices, and
then again in December to understand the facts surrounding various
allegations related to the dismissal of two laboratory investigators.
Darling, 50, replaces John P. McTague, whose retirement,
announced Nov. 8, 2002, was effective Jan. 6, 2003. McTague is returning
to UC Santa Barbara, where he is professor of materials.
The announcement comes less than a week after
the University of California unveiled a sweeping set of management
changes at Los Alamos, including the resignations of Director John
C. Browne and Principal Deputy Director Joseph Salgado. Retired
Vice Admiral George P. "Pete" Nanos, the former commander
of the Naval Sea Systems Command and of the Navy's strategic nuclear
program, has been named interim director. Nanos had been principal
deputy associate director for Los Alamos' Threat Reduction Directorate.
Additionally, the university implemented new controls
on laboratory administrative, business and audit operations, and
announced that an oversight board will soon be appointed to guide
the interim director on general laboratory management issues.
Meanwhile, Atkinson announced that a nationwide
search will be conducted for a permanent vice president for laboratory
management. He will soon name members of a search committee.
Darling joined UC in 1980 after six years at the
National Science Foundation. When Atkinson was chancellor at UC
San Diego, he named Darling a special assistant and then vice chancellor.
Darling was appointed systemwide vice president for university and
external relations in 1996 and promoted to senior vice president
for university affairs in May 2002 with the added responsibility
for integrating internal and external activities across all areas
of the University of California. His responsibilities also include
the acquisition of UC's state-funded operating and capital budgets;
the university's governmental relations programs in Sacramento and
Washington, D.C.; communications with the news media and public;
and alumni and fundraising.
Darling has received several scholastic and professional
honors and is active in numerous professional and civic activities.
He serves on the boards of the California Council on Science and
Technology and Californians for Higher Education and the Donald
Bren School of Environmental Science and Management at UC Santa
Barbara.
Darling graduated summa cum laude from UCLA in
1974. He speaks Spanish and Portuguese, having spent much of his
childhood in South America and the Caribbean.
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