PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran

DOE Mentor of the Year and Service-Disabled Veteran Business of the Year

DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran
2024-06-25
(Press-News.org) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The Department of Energy has once again awarded Sandia National Laboratories for its work helping small businesses. One of those businesses, owned by a disabled veteran, was also awarded for its extraordinary work.

DOE Mentor of the Year Sandia’s small business Mentor-Protégé Program has been named as DOE Mentor of the year, an award it has received for three consecutive years.

Now in its fifth year, the program has mentored five protégés from around the country. More than 150 volunteer mentors and support personnel help these small and disadvantaged businesses grow, succeed and navigate doing business with Sandia and others in the DOE enterprise.

Royina Lopez leads the program and has become known as the go-to person for helping small businesses. She was also named this year’s “Small Business Advocate MVP” by the Small Business Administration’s Supply Chain Management center.

This award recognizes outstanding performance by a small business professional who has made a significantly positive impact on the NNSA’s small business program.

Lopez's outreach efforts have not only helped protégés but have also expanded small business opportunities throughout DOE. Lopez received her award on May 1 and accepted the DOE award, along with other members of her team, on June 4 in Minneapolis.

Service-Disabled Veteran Business of the Year When Paul Farless joined the Navy after graduating from Los Lunas High School in 1992, he was looking for his future. That future turned out to be building.

Farless became a part of the Navy’s Construction Battalion known as the Seabees, providing advance wartime infrastructure support and construction during Navy and Marine Corp ground force operations.

“Our teams were often deployed to undeveloped areas where we were tasked with everything from humanitarian objectives to building base operations from the ground up,” Farless said. “The Seabees must be ready to respond under any circumstances, so we also had to be combat trained. When something was bombed out, we had to be ready to repair it immediately and defend our teams and others."

Today, Farless’ job is much less dangerous, but he still supports America’s mission as president and CEO of SDV Construction, which was recently named Service-Disabled Veteran Business of the Year by the Department of Energy.

Working for Sandia SDV Construction is recognized as a top-performing general contractor at Sandia, earning $80 million in subcontracts. It is also the sole Certified Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business providing construction services to Sandia. SDV has traveled as far as Prudo Bay, Alaska to support projects for Sandia, primarily involving facility building, expansion, design and remodeling.

But it’s not just the work itself that has earned SDV Construction recognition. Alongside its efficiency and safety record, the company also embraces new technology, practices and creative solutions to elevate its work.

The company also boasts a substantial number of employees with security clearances, reducing escort costs and project times. They also provide a 4-10 work week, which has proven to be an incentive for their workforce.

Providing a place for veterans Supporting veterans is the reason founder Kirk McWethy started the company in 2005. He wanted to provide opportunities for veterans transitioning into the civilian world. Farless continues to carry that torch.

“Veterans transitioning out of the service are not always given a lot of opportunities,” Farless said. “Veterans say they are taught how to write a resume and how to look for a job, but they don’t help you find the role you need or the best possible role for the skills you have.”

Fareless says another challenge is the difference between the skills taught to active-duty members and the ones in the civilian world.

“If you have roles that are combat centered, there isn’t necessarily a role like that in the civilian world. You must learn new things,” Farless said.

SDV Construction helps veterans build those needed new skills through trade association sponsored apprenticeship programs and scholarships they fund at the University of New Mexico and Central New Mexico Community College. These scholarships are exclusively reserved for veterans and their families looking to get into the construction industry.

Following his mentor It’s a situation Farless knows all too well. After leaving active duty, he knew he wanted to continue to build, but needed additional wisdom and guidance. He worked as a journeyman carpenter and worked toward starting his own construction business. Knowing the value of mentorship, he connected with Air Force Veteran Kirk McWethy with whom he had worked on other projects. He ultimately found a home in SDV Construction.

Today Farless leads the company and serves as a mentor to his team, including the veterans on staff. While the primary goal is to help veterans find a place where they can use their skills, SDV Construction also supports veterans in other ways including donating to and volunteering at numerous veteran-centered nonprofits.

Being honored by DOE DOE honored Farless and SDV Construction for their work in supporting Sandia and its mission.

“It gives my team the recognition they deserve for the work they put in every single day. It’s really the icing on the cake,” Farless said.

But Farless says it’s the work they do every day that brings the most satisfaction: “The entire premise of veterans as a whole is service. We are able to continue our service to our country, and national defense, just as veterans have sworn to do.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran 2 DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Family, friends can be more effective health role models than celebrities

2024-06-25
PULLMAN, Wash. – Your mom might be a better health influencer than Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson. Adults in a study who said they looked to a person they knew as role model for good health—such as a friend, relative or healthcare provider—rather than a celebrity, had greater motivation to reach their health goals. The women participants were also more likely than men to choose a personal role model rather than a celebrity. And the person most often named was their own mother. “We know that parents have a huge influence on shaping people’s health trajectories throughout their life just ...

Australia’s giant lizards help save sheep from being eaten alive

Australia’s giant lizards help save sheep from being eaten alive
2024-06-25
Giant lizards called heath goannas could save Australian sheep farmers millions of dollars a year by keeping blowfly numbers down - and must be prioritised in conservation schemes to boost native wildlife, say researchers. A study led by the University of Cambridge has found that heath goannas - a species of giant, scavenging lizard - act as natural clean-up crews by clearing maggot-ridden animal carcasses from the landscape. This reduces the emergence of blowflies, which attack sheep by laying eggs on their backsides that hatch into flesh-eating maggots. The disease, known as ‘fly strike’, costs the Australian sheep farming industry an estimated $280 million a year. This ...

New tipping point discovered beneath the Antarctic ice sheet

2024-06-25
This process is currently not included in models that predict sea level rise, so the new results could offer a more accurate picture of how the world will change with global warming and how much coastal areas will need to adapt. Carried out by scientists at the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), the findings are published in the journal Nature Geoscience. “We have identified the possibility of a new tipping-point in Antarctic ice sheet melting,” says Alex Bradley, an ice dynamics researcher ...

Dietary fibers make our gut bacteria behave healthy

Dietary fibers make our gut bacteria behave healthy
2024-06-25
We get healthy dietary fibres from consuming fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. But why are the fibres so good for us? A team of researchers has discovered that dietary fibres play a crucial role in determining the balance between the production of healthy and harmful substances by influencing the behaviour of bacteria in the colon. Dietary fibres benefit our health, and scientists from DTU National Food Institute and the Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports at the University of Copenhagen have now uncovered an essential part of why this is the case. Different types of bacteria inside our colon compete to utilize an essential amino acid called tryptophan. This competition ...

Study links gut microbiome changes to increased risk of type 2 diabetes

2024-06-25
The largest and most ethnically and geographically comprehensive investigation to date of the gut microbiome of people with type 2 diabetes (T2D), prediabetes, and healthy glucose status has found that specific viruses and genetic variants within bacteria correspond with changes in gut microbiome function and T2D risk. Results of the study—which represents a collaboration across Brigham and Women’s Hospital (a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system), the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health—are published in Nature Medicine. "The microbiome is highly variable across different geographic ...

NYU Abu Dhabi researchers present new evidence for how heat is transported below the sun’s surface

NYU Abu Dhabi researchers present new evidence for how heat is transported below the sun’s surface
2024-06-25
Abu Dhabi, UAE, June 25, 2024: A team of solar physicists at NYU Abu Dhabi’s Center for Astrophysics and Space Science (CASS), led by Research Scientist Chris S. Hanson, Ph.D., has revealed the interior structure of the sun’s supergranules, a flow structure that transports heat from the sun’s hidden interior to its surface. The researchers’ analysis of the supergranules presents a challenge to the current understanding of solar convection. The sun generates energy in its core through nuclear fusion; that energy is then transported to ...

Gene variant may underlie diabetes disparities: study

Gene variant may underlie diabetes disparities: study
2024-06-25
A genetic variation common in people of African ancestry is associated with an increased risk of complications from diabetes, including diabetic retinopathy, according to a report published June 25 in the journal Nature Medicine.   The investigators found that the diagnosis of diabetes and treatment needed to prevent diabetes complications may be delayed in people who carry the variant, G6PDdef, because it is associated with reduced levels of HbA1c, a widely used clinical marker of blood glucose levels.   Testing for genetic variations that cause G6PD ...

Scientists identify safe havens we must preserve to prevent ‘the sixth great extinction of life on Earth’

Scientists identify safe havens we must preserve to prevent ‘the sixth great extinction of life on Earth’
2024-06-25
In a groundbreaking new article, a coalition of conservationists and researchers have shown how we can protect Earth’s remaining biodiversity by conserving just a tiny percentage of the planet’s surface. This affordable, achievable plan would make it possible for us to preserve the most threatened species from extinction, safeguarding Earth’s wildlife for the future.    “Most species on Earth are rare, meaning that species either have very narrow ranges or they occur at very low densities ...

FRONTIERS opens new call for science journalism in residency program

2024-06-25
Today, the FRONTIERS Science Journalism Initiative opens the second call for applications for its science journalism in residency programme. The application period will remain open until the 25th of September 2024, at 17:00 CEST. Funded by the European Research Council (ERC), this initiative offers science journalists the opportunity to develop independent journalism while spending three to five months in a host research institution, located in an EU Member State or a country associated with the EU’s Horizon Europe Programme. The residency ...

Beyond work: Employment affects identity in late 20-somethings

Beyond work: Employment affects identity in late 20-somethings
2024-06-25
Osaka, Japan — For people in their late 20s, “Your job doesn’t define you” is likely an unconvincing cliché. Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have unveiled critical insights into the intricate relationships between employment status, identity development and life satisfaction among Japanese individuals in late emerging adulthood, or their late 20s, highlighting the importance of stable employment during this pivotal life stage. Their findings were published in the Journal of Youth and Adolescence on May 15. Identity reflects a sense of self and is closely ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Impact of pollutants on pollinators, and how neural circuits adapt to temperature changes

Researchers seek to improve advanced pain management using AI for drug discovery

‘Neutron Nexus’ brings universities, ORNL together to advance science

Early release from NEJM Evidence

UMass Amherst astronomer leads science team helping to develop billion-dollar NASA satellite mission concept

Cultivating global engagement in bioengineering education to train students skills in biomedical device design and innovation

Life on Earth was more diverse than classical theory suggests 800 million years ago, a Brazilian study shows

International clean energy initiative launches global biomass resource assessment

How much do avoidable deaths impact the economy?

Federal government may be paying twice for care of veterans enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans

New therapeutic target for cardiac arrhythmias emerges

UC Irvine researchers are first to reveal role of ophthalmic acid in motor function control

Moffitt study unveils the role of gamma-delta T cells in cancer immunology

Drier winter habitat impacts songbirds’ ability to survive migration

Donors enable 445 TPDA awards to Neuroscience 2024

Gut bacteria engineered to act as tumor GPS for immunotherapies

Are auditory magic tricks possible for a blind audience?

Research points to potential new treatment for aggressive prostate cancer subtype

Studies examine growing US mental health safety net

Social risk factor domains and preventive care services in US adults

Online medication abortion direct-to-patient fulfillment before and after the Dobbs v Jackson decision

Black, Hispanic, and American Indian adolescents likelier than white adolescents to be tested for drugs, alcohol at pediatric trauma centers

Pterosaurs needed feet on the ground to become giants

Scientists uncover auditory “sixth sense” in geckos

Almost half of persons who inject drugs (PWID) with endocarditis will die within five years; women are disproportionately affected

Experimental blood test improves early detection of pancreatic cancer

Groundbreaking wastewater treatment research led by Oxford Brookes targets global challenge of toxic ‘forever chemicals’

Jefferson Health awarded $2.4 million in PCORI funding

Cilta-cel found highly effective in first real-world study

Unleashing the power of generative AI on smart collaborative innovation network platform to empower research and technology innovation

[Press-News.org] DOE awards Sandia small business program and local veteran
DOE Mentor of the Year and Service-Disabled Veteran Business of the Year