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Posted by: SLAC/Stanford on Apr 21, 2024


Location:

Menlo Park , CA

Job Description:

SLAC Job Postings

Position overview:

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory's Office of Project Management (OPM) manages infrastructure and capital projects from conceptual project development, through design, construction, and occupancy. We plan and develop high-value, quality, long-term cost-effective facilities and landscapes that enhance research objectives at SLAC, embrace our partnership with the Department of Energy (DOE) and Stanford University.

We are seeking a Senior Project Controls Specialist to monitor, control, support, assess, and report on a project or portfolio or projects generally greater than $500M as a Subject Matter Expert and Individual Contributor.

SLAC is a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) laboratory operated by Stanford University and based in Menlo Park, CA. Given the nature of this position, SLAC is open to on-site, hybrid, and remote work options.

Your specific responsibilities include: Serve as the technical lead of a functional unit of project controls professionals and other support staff; direct and oversee the entire portfolio of projects in the unit;, train and delegate to project controls staff while ensuring operational and financial goals are achieved. Lead project controls staff; assign work to staff and resolve workload distribution issues to address current and future demand. Advise on best practices for the tools and approaches used to address planning, scheduling and controls, risk, and programmatic requirements. Contribute to the establishment and upkeep of standards, systems descriptions, software applications, protocols and practices in the Project Management Office. When asked, interface with governing bodies and regulators on project planning, controls, risk, and programmatic issues and requests. Recommend software, methods, techniques, and evaluation criteria for obtaining results - identify and disseminates best practices throughout the project controls department. Work with clients to anticipate future demand and coordinate with the applicable project operations manager to secure the necessary resources to address project controls, risk, or OPM programmatic requirements. May be involved in developing and modifying laboratory policies or practices. Other duties may also be assigned To be successful in this position you will bring: Bachelor's degree with 10+ years of project planning, controls, or risk management experience or a combination of education and relevant experience. Demonstrated experience in overseeing a functional unit of project controls professionals and other support staff. Demonstrated expertise in applicable foundational aspects of project planning and controls, including planning, budgeting, scheduling, and risk management. Thorough understanding of the project and its operational needs. Ability to use professional concepts and project objectives to resolve complex issues in creative and effective ways. Experience in performance management, career development, succession planning, and workload distribution. In-depth knowledge of applicable project controls systems including Primavera and Cobra (or equivalent scheduling and cost processing tools), risk management systems, Microsoft Project and Microsoft Office applications. Extensive understanding of common PM software and applicable DOE Orders, including EVMS techniques and SLAC project management policies and procedures. Excellent written and verbal communication skills and the ability to work effectively within a cross-functional team with diverse technical backgrounds. Must possess excellent organizational skills with attention to detail and have the ability to manage several projects or programs and oversee associated staff simultaneously. SLAC employee competencies: Effective Decisions: Uses job knowledge and solid judgment to make quality decisions in a timely manner. Self-Development: Pursues a variety of venues and opportunities to continue learning and developing. Dependability: Can be counted on to deliver results with a sense of personal responsibility for expected outcomes. Initiative: Pursues work and interactions proactively with optimism, positive energy, and motivation to move things forward. Adaptability: Flexes as needed when change occurs, maintains an open outlook while adjusting and accommodating changes. Communication: Ensures effective information flow to various audiences and creates and delivers clear, appropriate written, spoken, presented messages Relationships: Builds relationships to foster trust, collaboration, and a positive climate to achieve. Physical requirements and Working conditions: Consistent with its obligations under the law, the University will provide reasonable accommodation to any employee with a disability who requires accommodation to perform the essential functions of his or her job. Work standards: Interpersonal Skills: Demonstrates the ability to work well with Stanford colleagues and clients and with external organizations. Promote Culture of Safety: Demonstrates commitment to personal responsibility and value for environment, safety and security; communicates related concerns; uses and promotes safe behaviors based on training and lessons learned. Meets the applicable roles and responsibilities as described in the ESH Manual, Chapter 1-General Policy and Responsibilities: http://www-group.slac.stanford.edu/esh/eshmanual/pdfs/ESHch01.pdf Subject to and expected to comply with all applicable University policies and procedures, including but not limited to the personnel policies and other policies found in the University's Administrative Guide, http://adminguide.stanford.edu ------------------------------- Classification Title: Project Controls Specialist 3 Employment Duration: Regular Continuing Grade: M, Job code: 4328 This role is open to candidates anywhere in the United States. SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory/Stanford University has five Regional Pay Structures . The compensation for this position will be based on the location of the successful candidate. The expected pay range for this position is $144,000 to $212,000 per annum.

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory/Stanford University provides pay ranges representing its good faith estimate of what the university reasonably expects to pay for a position. The pay offered to a selected candidate will be determined based on factors such as (but not limited to) the scope and responsibilities of the position, the qualifications of the selected candidate, departmental budget availability, internal equity, geographic location, and external market pay for comparable jobs.

Pay Rate:

Unspecified

HR. Website URL:

https://erp-hprdext.erp.slac.stanford.edu/psc/hprdext/EMPLOYEE/SL_CG/c/HRS_HRAM_FL.HRS_CG_SEARCH_FL.GBL?Page=HRS_APP_SCHJOB_FL&Action=U

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About SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

As one of 17 Department of Energy national labs, SLAC pushes the frontiers of human knowledge and drives discoveries that benefit humankind. We invent the tools that make those discoveries possible and share them with researchers all over the world. X-rays Reveal the Atomic World Our 2-mile-long particle accelerator is the lab’s backbone. Once the scene of major discoveries in particle physics, today it generates the world’s brightest X-rays for our revolutionary X-ray laser, the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Thousands of researchers come to SLAC to use LCLS and the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource to probe matter in atomic detail. These X-ray studies help scientists understand the fundamental workings of nature and find solutions to real-world problems. Fundamental Science, Practical Benefits When researchers delve into basic details of the world around us, practical benefits often follow. This is true of research at SLAC. In chemistry, “molecular movies” made with our X-ray laser are capturing all the tiny steps of chemical reactions for the first time. This new understanding will help improve reactions that give us fuels, fertilizers and a host of other products. In biology, X-rays reveal how proteins – one of the key molecules of life – function in our bodies and in nature. This research has contributed to the development of medications for melanoma, flu and HIV and is aiding the fight against COVID-19, Ebola, high blood pressure and other ills. SLAC studies of exotic materials with quirky traits could have a profound impact on society, although it may be far in the future. Meanwhile, scientists use our X-ray beams for experiments to improve materials for computer chips, jet planes, refinery operations and “smart windows” that automatically adjust the amount of light coming in, to name a few.Even the accelerator technology developed for basic physics experiments has had a huge impact in medicine and industry, where it shrinks tumors, sterilizes medical supplies and hardens materials, among many other things. SLAC researchers are working to make accelerators much smaller and cheaper so they can accomplish even more. Solving Energy Challenges Many threads of SLAC research come together in the quest for clean, sustainable energy sources. We study how plants make energy from sunlight with an eye to doing the same, and customize chemical reactions for generating clean fuels. Our specialized X-ray equipment allows scientists to watch batteries, solar cells and fuel cells in operation, a crucial step in improving how they work. An Eye on the Cosmos SLAC started more than 50 years ago as a place to discover fundamental particles and forces. Today, our researchers still explore the universe at the largest and smallest scales. At the tiniest scale, we help search for new particles and forces at the Large Hadron Collider in Europe, where the Higgs boson was discovered. At the most sweeping scale, we’re building the world’s biggest digital camera for the widest, deepest survey of the night sky ever undertaken. Our longstanding expertise in building particle detectors is being put to use in experiments that search for dark matter and dark energy, probe the secrets of ghostly neutrinos, look for signs of cosmic inflation and capture high-energy particles from the most violent events in the universe. Key Partnerships Stanford University operates SLAC for the DOE Office of Science. Our five joint research centers and facilities with Stanford focus on cosmology and astrophysics, materials and energy science, catalysis, ultrafast science and cryogenic electron microscopy. SLAC’s location in Silicon Valley and our connections with DOE, Stanford and other leading research centers speed our progress. We also look for ways to work with industry to solve problems and spread the benefits of research out into society.

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