ML052030209

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U1R28 OCC Interactive Turnover Meeting Agenda
ML052030209
Person / Time
Site: Point Beach  NextEra Energy icon.png
Issue date: 05/30/2004
From:
Nuclear Management Co
To:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
References
FOIA/PA-2004-0282
Download: ML052030209 (5)


Text

NMC1 Cornmitted to Nuctear EWclJcnce

.4' Point Beach Nuclear Plant U1R28 OCC Interactive Turnover Meeting Agenda Sunday, May 30, 2004 Start Time:

0600 NSB Cafeteria BRIEI ATTENDEES Shift Outage Directors Shift Outage Managers (SOM)

Operations Coordinators (SOC)

Maintenance Coordinators (MOC)

Engineer/ Projects Coordinators (EOM)

Rad Protection Manager (RPM)

Site Safety Coordinator (SSC)

Shutdown Safety Assessor (SSA)

Site Management (SSM)

General Supervisors First Line Supervisors Agenda

1. Safety Issue Discussion (SSC)
2. Radiation Protection (RPM)
3. Operations Coordinator Turnover (SOC)
4. Shutdown Safety Assessment (SSA)
a. Containment Fire Loading SAT /

UNSAT -+ Review Deficiencies

5. Maintenance Coordinator Turnover (MOC)
6. Engineering Coordinator Turnover (EOM)
7. Major Projects Update (EOM)
8. Schedule Review (SOM)
9. Management Expectations (SSM)
10. ACEMAN Assessment Results (SOM)
11. Shift Goals (SOM)

Items Included in Daily Package:

Site Communication Safety Snippet Outage Alara Report Outage Status Report Shutdown Safety Assessment Defined Critical Path Work Activity Risk Assignment Outage Schedule 1

Committed to Nuclear Point Beach Nuclear Plant U1R28 Refueling Outage

-Safet Topic for week of May 30- June 5,2004 --

Theme for the week This week's focus is looking back at our reported Injuries so far in 2004. There were 52 injuries to workers on the site so far this year. That's almost more than we typically see in 2 yearsl That's an injury every 3 daysl Our goal is NONE. Let's review what goin-on and discuss how to prevent anything else from occurring In 2004.

Daily Safety Snippets Sunday "Twist and strains are no one's gains" Mechanic Electrician was removing a temporary rigging fixture from a roof beam and felt a strain in the upper back. Rememberyour Save A Back training!

Monday "Stretching before you work may reduce the strains that lurk."

An engineer experienced severe back pain upon exiting containment. The employee was bending in order to exit the accident fan coolers prior to the incident. Medical treatment was necessary and this was an OSHA recordable event.

Tuesday "If your backfield Is In motion, use a zone defense."

Contract electrician was pulling wire for a conduit through a junction box for the security upgrade project While bending over to retrieve a pull string, the wind caught the junction box door. It swung and struck the employee in the back.

Wednesday "It's too late for learning when your skin is already burning."

There have been 3 incidents in the past month where individuals contacted hot equipment and minor bums resulted. Two in maintenance - one was during welding activity, the second was when an employee came in contact with a hot muffler on a pump. The third was when one of the M&M Lunch employees placed her hand on a hot grill. What human performance barriers are we missing here?

Thursday "Where danger lingers, watch your fingers" What is the most likely injury the site has? Given the age of the work force, it should be strains.

But it's hand injuries 22 injuries so far this year! Example - chem. tech was removing a glass funnel from tygon tubing. The funnel separated from the stem, resulting in a minor finger laceration. The wrong technique was used for doing this work.

Friday "Never gamble with more than you can handle" Two situations to review here. One was a RP worker and contractor trying to maneuver material through a security door. Rather than calling security, they figured they could ubeat the door.'

They beat it all right And the contractor suffered a leg injury from the steel hitting him. The second was an OAII carrying a large box through a door. She ended up catching hitting her hand on the doorframe. How can we prevent these injuries?

Saturday "The brain is mightier than the brawn" Contract insulator struck his head on an I-beam while reaching for material. He was wearing the right PPE, but felt neck discomfort from the hit. The worker knew the beam was a potential hazard, but did not take the time to soften it prior to beginning his work.

2

Y I.

Point Beach Nuclear Plant Outage 1R28 DAY Supporting Operational Excellence 55 Path

.N Picture Meets Outaae Radiation. Performance 1n-n-nQ &A-f F

-rnAn I

1 i1a I

u-nl A

II IThis indicator measures cumulative dose radiation exposure and total number of personnel-contamination events (PCE's > 5000 cpm) during refueling outages. The dose indicator is measured in Rem and individual PCE events.

Meets:

<=92 Rem Actual Cum.

Exceeds:

<=88 Rem Dose:,

84.471 Rem gDay 55 - May 28 1

Actual = 0.466 Cumulative = 84.471 Cumulative Forecast =88.598 Meets: <= 18 Exceeds: <= 12 Actual PCE's:

'11

.Se I Sa -

Stu Thomas I

Personnel Contamination Events Cummulative Dose Exposure 20 18

16 14 Ci12 10 8 8 6

E 4

2 0

Actual I-Forecast Goal itE C) 0:

to 0C C) 0)

'U 0

60 ZZ 40 20 -

0 2 4 a 6 10 2 14 1 1I222242fi2I30323430384246 465052 s45s8s60 Actual


Forecast Goal 0

5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60

I NMC -

Committed to Nuclear Excellence Outage Status Report Plant:

Point Beach Unit I Dav:

Sunday Today's Date ! Time:

5/30/04 0230 Outage Duration: Day 57 Of Refueling Outage Number U1R28 Safety Status Industrial -Within the last 12 hours1.388889e-4 days <br />0.00333 hours <br />1.984127e-5 weeks <br />4.566e-6 months <br /> OSHA Recordables 0

First Aid cases 0

Near misses 0

Total for this outage I

Sumnmary-Radiological Dose to date 84.471 Projected to date

  • 88.598 Outage Goal S92 R Difference

-4.127

  • Reforecast on 5/23 Number of PCEs II Summary:

Nuclear Significant human performance errors and events in last 24 hours2.777778e-4 days <br />0.00667 hours <br />3.968254e-5 weeks <br />9.132e-6 months <br /> 0

Sumnmary Plant Status Mode:

E Hot Standby (Mode 3) 0 Hot Shutdown (Mode 4) 0 Cold Shutdown (Mode 5) 0 Refueling Shutdown twode 6)

RCS:

Temperature:

95 Pressure:

300 psig RV Level:

Pressurizer Solid Time to Boil:

126 minutes hutdown Safety Assessm ent Protected Equipment:

Major Activities Completed In Last 24 Hours Critical Path and Near Critical Path Activities (Next 24 Hours)

Lower Hatch Interlocks Made Up Post Fill & Vent Valve Line Ups

  • Fill Pressurizer Solid Establish Normal Operation of RCDT & PRT
  • Bumped 'A' Reactor Coolant Pump Start Containment Purge Work Commence C-2 Upper Hatch Restoration Significant Outstanding Issues Date Issue Due Responsibility 5/17/04 Rx Head Relief Request 6!01/04 Jim Schweitzer Upcoming Ma orMilestones Scheduled Actual Scheduled Actual Date Time Date Time Date Time Date Time Cooldown <2000 4/03/04 2100 4/03/04 2230 RCS Fill & Vent 4/23/04 1500 Head Lift 4/09/04 0900 4/21/04 1550 Heatup >2000 4/25/04 0900 Refueled f 4/14/04 0300 5/02/04 1848 Reactor Critical 4/28/04 0800 RV Headset 4118/04 1900 5/23/04 1338 On-Line 4/30/04 0100 4

Point Beach Nuclear Plant PBNP SHUTDOWN-SAFETY ASSESSMENT AND FIRE CONDITION CHECKLIST OUTAGE SAFETY ASSESSMENT UNIT:

1 DATE:

May 30, 2004 TIMIE:

0200 KEY SAFETY FUNCTIONS:

REACTIVITY:

CORE COOLING:

POWER AVAILABLE:

INVENTORY:

CONTAINMENT:

SFP COOLING:

PROTECTED EOUIPMENT:

COMMENTS:

GREEN YELLOW GREEN YELLOW GREEN NA

  • Core Cooling and Inventory aill become GREEN after OP4B-060 (RCP A/B 10 minute run and vent)

PBF-1562 Revision 2 10130/02

References:

NP 10:3.6 NP 10.2.1 5

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