ML19350C765

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Response to Intervenor Aamodt 810310 Filing Re Operator Fatigue.Objects to Intervenor Attempt to Challenge Propriety of Shift Length or Shift Rotation Schedules.Subj Is Outside Scope of Proceeding.Certificate of Svc Encl
ML19350C765
Person / Time
Site: Three Mile Island Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 03/19/1981
From: Blake E
METROPOLITAN EDISON CO., SHAW, PITTMAN, POTTS & TROWBRIDGE
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
References
NUDOCS 8104060673
Download: ML19350C765 (9)


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LIC 3/19/81 CNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY CCMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of )

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METROPOLITAN EDISON COMPANY ) Docket No. 50-289

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RELATED TO OPERATOR FATIGUE UT ,

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Following objections by Licensee and the NRC Staff to the admissibility of one section, entitled "Another Stressor, Fatigue,"

of Intervenor Marjorie Aamodt's prepared testimony on Aamodt Contention 2, the Board ruled that the challenged section of the testimony would be accepted and examined upon, subject to a sub-sequent demonstration by Ms. Aamodt that fatigue was a contributor to the accident and that therefore the testimony was within the scope of the proceeding. (Tr. 12,926;12,930.) After the testimony was heard, the Board established a schedule of two weeks (s ubse-quently extended) for Ms. Aamodt to provide the demonstration.

(Tr. 13,189;13,194.)

On March 10, 1981, Ms. Aamodt filed "Intervenor Response to Board Request for Evidence 3 ration of Control Room h h'Qt)

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Operator Fatigue is Appropriate." The pleading addresses a wide variety of topics, one of which is the area of interest--whether record evidence or reliable evidence which could be made evidence of record exists which establishes that fatigue was a contributor to the accident, or the handling of the accident. (Intervenor Response, pp. 4-7; see Tr. 13,189-90.) Because Ms. Aamodt cites no record evidence or reliable evidence which could be made evi-dence of record that fatigue played a role in the TMI-2 accident, Licensee maintains that this subject is outside the scope of this proceeding.

The challenged section was one of some eight sections in the Aamodt testimony. This section dealt with the subject of potential operator fatigue as a function of length of shift and shift rotation.

It never mentions nor alludes to operator training or testing l (clearly the subject of Aamodt Contention 2 and clearly a subject t

within the' scope of the proceeding), nor to human factors engineer-ing considerations (arguably the subject of Aamodt Contention 2 l

L and clearly a subject within the scope of the proceeding) . It attempts to challenge the use of an eight-hour shift and suggests a six-hour shift as preferable. Elsewhere in the testimony, Ms. Aamodt' treats training, testing and human factors engineering,

. including fatigue, as a function of control room design. (See

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particularly pages 2-3 of Ms. Aamodt's prepared testimony. ) Licensee did not object to the admissibility of Ms. Aamodt's human factors engineering views, including her opinions on fatigue considerations t

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I in control room design. The subject of control room design is '

clearly within the scope of the proceeding and has been covered in several pieces of prepared testimony not only by Ms. Aamodt but as well by Licensee and the NRC Staff. Licensee's objection goes to Ms. Aamodt's attempt to challenge under her contention 2, and within the scope of this proceeding generally, the propriety of shift length or shift rotation schedules.

Ms. Aamodt cites only one instance in the tens of thousands of pages of studies of the accident where operator fatigue as a contributor to the accident is discussed. It is the same source that Licensee relied on for its objection--page 23 of NUREG/CR-1270, Vol. 1, Human Factors Evaluation of Control Room Design and Operator Performance at Three Mile Island-2, prepared for the NRC by the Essex Corporation. The Essex Corporation there states "there is no evidence that, at the time of the accident, the actions or inactions of the operators were significantly influenced by fatigue, disorientation, or distractions." This statement appears in a i sixteen-page section from the Essex Report entitled " Analysis of Human Error In The Accident," which discusses in detail the results of a nuaan factors review of the accident (see pages 10-26) ,

i l including specifically looking for incidence of fatigue (see page t

! 11 for factors considered). The Essex Report from any reasonable reading does not support the viau that fatigue played a role in the accident, no matter what the cause of fatigue. It is pure imagination to cite it as support for the proposition that length of shift or shift rotation led to fatigue which was a cause or

contributor to the accident. Despite her on-the-record reluctance to dhallenge the Essex Corporation's credentials (Tr. 12,921),

Ms. Aamodt now claims that the Essex Report is wrong. (Intervenor Response, at 4-5).

Ms. Aamodt then goes on to infer from several NRC documents that fatigue associated with shift length or rotation contributed i

to the accident. (Intervenor Response, 5-6). Not one of these documents cites fatigue as a factor in the accident or supports the Aamodt position. Some do indeed discuss fatigue generally, but Licensee has not, nor does it now, contest that fatigue can exist and that long hours of work can be tiring. Anyone associated with this hearing alone would subscribe to this view. But the I

l facts surrounding the accident and studies done of the accident do not support the Aamodt view of fatigue as an accident cause due to extended hours of work. Rather, the operators were only some five hours into their eight-hour shift at the time the accident occurred, and there is absolutely no support for the bald assumption

! (Intervenor Response, p. 7) that the operators had been previously working long overtime hours, simply because records show that selected maintenance people at TMI on occasions during earlier years had worked a lot of overtime.

The TMI-2 accident has been a launching platform for a large l number of assorted regulatory revisions and new requirements for the nuclear industry. Some are directly linked to the causes of 1

! the accident; some are merely the result of a period of reflection 1

l j and thought on many prior industry and regulatory practices.

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Ms. Aamodt cites no direct link between fatigue and accident causes and Licensee is aware of none. Licensee makes this state-ment after reviewing each of the NRC documents cited by Ms. Aamodt (including Aamodt Reference 6--unidentified--which is NUREG-0616, Report of Special Review Group, Office of Inspection and Enforce-ment on Lessons Learned From Three Mile Island) as well as pertinent references in those documents. It appears that the genesis of those NRC documents--which address shift working hours and which bear titles that refer generally to TMI such as NUREG-0694, TMI-Related Requirements for New Operating Licenses--is NUREG -585, TMI-2 Lessons Learned Tade Force Final Report. The subject of " Working Hours" is discussed on page A-9 of NUREG-0585. There is no reference to the accident in this discussion (although elsewhere in its dis-cussions of other recommendations NUREG-0585 is peppered with direct links to accident-related facto s). To the contrary, NUREG-0585 states with respect to its recommendations on working hours that " Indications aside from Three Mile Island lead the Task Force to conclude that this step (a general policy to avoid consecutive days of 12-hour shifts] must be taken to reasonably assure that individuals are in proper physical condition to perform work at nuclear power plants." (emphasis added) Thus, it is baseless for Ms . Aa- co argue by inference that,- because pere-accident NRC guidance co all licensees has included recommenor.tions on vorking ho urs , fatigue due to shift hours and shift rocation contributed to the accident. Rather r this particular guidance would appear to be prompted :)y other concurrent considerations not directly linked to 4

causes or contributors to the accident. None of the various NRC documents on working hours, including IE Circular 80-2, NUREG-0694, and NUREG-0373--all cited by Ms. Aamodt--even logically appear related to the accident. All the NRC post-accident guidance on shift lengths provides generally 12-hour-day or 72-hour-week guidance. The operators at TMI-2 at the time of the accident were working eight-hour shifts. It is just not logical to say NRC guidance on working hours, which is less restrictive than the hours being worked at the time of the accident at TMI, stems from factors found to have caused or contributed to the accident. /

Accordingly, Licensee maintains that the subject matter of the section styled, "Another Stressor, Fatigue," of the prepared testimony of Ms. Aamodt is inadmissible in the instant proceeding.

In view of the state of the record, Licensee believes it would 4

not be sensible to attempt to locate, identify and strike related evidence. In these circumstances, Licensee requests that the l

  • / Although Licensee understands Ms. Aamodt's position to rely on tFa possible effects of fatigue on the operators during the co'.rse of the " accident," i.e., at the time of initiation and during the several hours that immediately followed, the Licensing Board's language of " handling of the accident" could presumably include the days and weeks following the March 28th accident.

To the extent that was intended, Licensee observes that while long hours were spent by many people involved in the post-accident weeks at TMI, on information and belief the operators generally remained on nominal eight-hour shift schedules and in any event, Licensee is unaware that operator actions during the recovery period have been faulted.

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Board direct the parties that findings on this subject will not be considered by the Board in reaching its decision on the restart o f TMI-1.

Respectfully submitted, SHAW, PITTMAN,, POTTS & TROWBRIDGE 1800 M Street, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20036 l

t (202) 822-1000 BY: h/W.ll be.

Ernest L. Blake,'Jr.

Counsel for Licensee i

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LIC 3/19/81  ;

l UNITED STATES OF A52RICA

, NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of )

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METROPOLITAN EDISON COMPANY ) Docket No. 50-289

) (Restart)

(Three Mile Is] 2nd Nuclear )

Station, Unit No. 1) )

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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE The undersigned hereby certifies ' hat a true and correct copy of the attached " LICENSEE'S RESPONSE TO INTERVENOR AAMODT'S FILING OF MARCH 10 RELATED TO OPERATOR FATIGUE" was mailed by United States mail, postage prepaid, to those persons listed on

! the attached Service List this /9Td day of March, 1981.

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hrs d/ d Y k h Ernest L. Blake, Jr.

l Counsel for Licensee

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SERVICE LIST Administrative Judge Ivan W. Smith Walter W. Cohen, Esquire U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Consumer Advocate Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Office of Consumer Advocate Washington, D. C. 20555 1425 Strawberry Square Harrisburg, PA 17127 Administrative Judge Walter H. Jordan Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Jordan D. Cunningham, Esquire 881 West Guter Drive Fox, Farr & Cunningham Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37830 2320 North Second Street Harrisburg, PA 17110 Administrative Judge Linda W. Little Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Ms. Louise Bradford 5000 Hermitage Drive TMI ALERT Raleigh, North Carolina 27612 315 Peffer Street Harrisburg, PA 17102 James R. Tourtellotte, Esquire (4)

Office of Executive Legal Director Ellyn R. Weiss, Esquire ,

9. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Harmon & Weiss '

Washington, D. C. 20555 1725 Eye Street, N.W., Suite 506 Washington, D. C. 20006 Docketing and Service Section (3)

Office of the Secretary Steven C. Sholly U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission 304 South Market Street Washington, D. C. 20555 Mechanicsburg. PA 17055 John A. Levin, Esquire Gail Bradford Assistant Counsel ANGRY Pennsylvania Public Utility 245 West Philadelphia Street Commission York, PA 17404 P. O. Box 3265 Harrisburg, INA 17120 William S. Jordan, III, Esquire-Harmon & Weisc Karin W. Carter, Esquire 1725 Eye Street, N.W., Suite 506

. Assistant Attorney General Washington, D. C. 20006 505 Executive House ,,

P. O. Box 2357 Robert Q. Pollard Harrisburg, . ]N4 17120 609 Montpelier Street Baltimore, Maryland 21218 John E. Minnich Chairman, Dauphin County Board Chauncey Kepford of Commissioners Judith H.'Johnsrud Dauphin County Courthouse Environmental Coalition on Front and Market Streets Nuclear Power Harrisbarg, PA 17101 433 Orlando Avenue State College, PA 16801 Marjorie M. Aamodt

.R. D. 5 Attorney General of New Jersey Coatesville, PA 19320 Attn: Thomas J. Ge rmine , Esquire Deputy Attorney Gere. al Marvin I. Lewis Division of Law - Room 316 6504 Bradford Terrace 1100 Raymond Boulevard Philadelphia, PA 19149 Mewark, New Jersey 07102

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