Idaho National Laboratory is hiring a Spent Fuel Analyst- Radiation Transport Specialist to work in our Used Fuel Management department. Our team works a 9x80 schedule located out of our Research and Education Campus with every other Friday off. As an experienced Spent Fuel Analyst - Radiation Transport Specialist you apply a complete understanding and wide application of radiation transport principles to the evaluation, characterization, and modeling and analysis of nuclear design, nuclear experimentation, and nuclear waste management. Also, a general knowledge of nuclear operations and other related fields such as criticality safety is required. Will gain a complete understanding of spent fuel facilities (e.g., independent spent fuel storage installations, spent fuel pools, canister/cask handling procedures), technologies (e.g., canister and cask design system design, canister and cask closure options, drying technologies, repair/mitigation alternatives), and the current DOE-managed and commercial spent fuel management system. The ability to work on problems of diverse scope, including the utility, vendor, and Federal roles, is required. You will contribute to a broad range of spent fuel related projects, including the Molten Chloride Reactor Experiment Advanced Reactor Demonstration Project. Working under only general direction, you will publish work in various customer-required reports as well as peer-reviewed journal publications. Also, you will be heavily involved and/or leading the preparation, peer review, and delivery of program plans, oral presentations, and other activities related to INL spent fuel programs and projects, though little day-to-day instruction will be provided. You are expected to work both independently and as a member of a multi-disciplinary team, and frequent internal customer contacts as well as limited external customer contracts are required. You will take direction from other team members and peers and provide input in a constructive manner. You will report to the Department Manager.