ML20087P057

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Safeguards Summary Event List (Ssel)
ML20087P057
Person / Time
Issue date: 03/31/1984
From:
NRC OFFICE OF NUCLEAR MATERIAL SAFETY & SAFEGUARDS (NMSS)
To:
References
NUREG-0525, NUREG-0525-R08, NUREG-525, NUREG-525-R8, NUDOCS 8404050493
Download: ML20087P057 (72)


Text

-

2 e

NUREG-0525 i

Rev.8 i

t I

l I

l Safeguards Summary Event List (SSELD i

t I

l l

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards f

i i

pa arooq t

N,

)

\\

t I

0525 R pop L

  • p y
I NOTICE

?

\\[-

. Availabi!!ty of Reference Materials ' Cited in NRC Publications l

!l:

I

~ Most documents cited in NRC publications will be available from one of the following sources:

1

1. The NRC Public Document Room,.1717 H Street, N.W.-

.i

Washington, DC 20555

, fa

)

(

2. The NRC/GPO Sales Program, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, -

Washington, DC 20555 -

3. ' The National Technical Information Service, Springfield, VA 22161 -

t t-i

'Although the listing that follows represents the majority of documents citnd in NRC publications,-

l at is not intended to be exhaustive.

i

(

Referenced documents available for inspection and copying for a' fee from the NRC Public Docu-

.I ment Room include NRC correspondence and internal NRC memoranda; NRC Office of !nspection -

[

and Enforcement bulletins, circulars, information~ notices,. inspection and investigation notices;

-i Licensee Event Reports; vendor reports and correspondence; Commission papers; and applicant and ~

licensee documents and correspondence.

The following documents in the NUREG series are available for purchase from the NRC/GPO Sales :

Program: formal NRC staff and contractor reports, NRC-sponsored conference proceedings, andi

-l l

NRC booklets and brochures. Also available are Regulatory Guides, NRC regulations b the Code of Federal Regulations, and Nuclear Regulatory Commission Issuances.=

Documents available from the National Technical'mfor'mation Service include NUREG. series reports and technical reports prepared by other federal agencies and reports prepared by the Atomic 1 i

~"

[

Energy Commission, forerunner agency to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

}

Documents available from public and special technical libraries include all open literature items,L l

such as books, journal and periodical articles, and transactions. Federal Register notices, federal and -

f.

state legislation, and congressional reports can usually be obtained from these libraries.

t l.

Documents such as theses, dissertations, foreign reports and translations;and non-NRC conferencet proceedings are available for purchase from the organization sponsoring the, publication cited.-

Single copies of NRC draft reports are available free upon written request'to.the Division of Techl nical Information and Document Control, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission; Washington;DC.

~

4 20555.

~

'~

~"

~

Copies of industry codes and standards used in a substantive mannes; in the N RC regulatory process :

are maintained at the NRC Library, 7920 Norfolk Avenue, Bethesda, Maryland / and are available {

there for reference use.by the public. Codes and standards ~arelusually copyrighted and maylbe'

-purchased from the originating organization or, if they are American National Standards, from the; American National Standards institute,1430 Broadway, New York, NY =10018.'

'4

^

~

g~

~

GPO Printed copy pricei ' tA 150 '

4

[k ;

w 4

"-g'

'),

r

}

,.r h~

~~;

~

5-

.;L '

c z

x t

^

f.i :

~

+ -

~

~

s k

,e 1

i

_~ ui ' v \\ ? " a ^ l ~ ~ e

?

~ g g95 ,'(( s,f e. g g g r. p

y. y -

499 4 ., h.

NUREG-0525 Rev.8 O Safeguards Summary Event List LSSEL) Pre-NRC Through June 30,1983 This document represents a revision of a Safeguards Summary Event List published in December 1980 in response to inquiries concerning the nature of safeguards-related events involving NRC licensees and licensed material. Manuscript Completed: December 1983 l Date Published: March 1984 Regulatory Effectiveness Section x Division of Safeguards Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards U.S. Nuclear. Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20666 s..... / l

PAGE CHANGE INFORMATION SHE'ET: REV.'8 !O The attached pages represent the latest supplement (Revision 8) to NUREG-i 0525, Safeguards Summary Event List (SSEL)* Revision 8 summarizes events occurring between January 1,1983 and June 30, 1983. All Revision 8 pages are marked in the upper right hand corner with the end date of the reporting period, June 30, 1983. Page changes are as follows: New Pages Superceded Pages 18-103 thru 1B-107 IB-103 III-53 thru III-57 III-53 IV-9 & IV-10 IV-9 & IV-10 V-9 thru V-13 V-9 thru V-11 .{ VI-3 & VI-4 VI-3 ] VII-9 & VII-10 VII-9 & VII-10 VIII-l VIII-l j IX-9 thru IX-26 IX-9 thru IX-23 A-1 thru A-15 A-1 thru A-15 1

  • The baseline Safeguards Summary Event List is Revision 4 (published -

September 1981) including all reported events up through June 30, 1981. Revision 5 (published July 1982), Revision 6 (published February 1983) 'and Revision 7 (published August 1983) include events occurring between June 30,1981_ and December 31, 1982. A complete chronology of the Safeguards Summary Event List is composed of. Revisions -4, 5,'6, 7, and 8. l +-

l ABSTRACT 06/30/83 1 i ABSTRACT i The Safeguards Summary Event List (SSEL) provides brief summaries of several hundred safeguards-related events involving nuclear material or facilities regulated by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Events are described under the categories of bomb-related, intrusion, missing and/or allegedly stolen, transportation, tampering / vandalism, arson, firearms, radiological sabotage and miscellaneous. The O information contained in the event descriptions is derived primarily from official NRC reporting channels. ~ 1 s iii

TABLE OF CONTENTS l 06/30/83 i TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE ABSTRACT.......................... iii TABLE OF CONTENTS..................... v INTRODUCTION........................ vii I. B0MB-RELATED EVENTS.................... 1-1 .) II. INTRUSION EVENTS...................... II-1 I III. MISSING AND/0R ALLEGEDLY STOLEN EVENTS III-1 IV. TRANSPORTATION-RELATED EVENTS................ IV-1 V. TAMPERING / VANDALISM EVENTS................. V-1 VI. AR SO N EV E NTS........................ VI-1 VII. FIREARMS-RELATED EViNTS................... -VII-1 VIII. RADIOLOGICAL SAB0TAGE EVENTS................ VIII-1 IX. MISCELLANE0US EVENTS.................... IX-1 APPENDIX A - STATISTICS.................... A-1

l t

i Y {-

INTRODUCTION 06/30/83 INTRODUCTION The Safeguards Summary Event List (SSEL) provides brief summaries of several hundred safeguards-related events involving nuclear materials or facilities regulated by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). As the list is intended to provide a broad perspective on the nature.of safeguards incidents in the licensed nuclear industry, both unusual and routine events are described. Events have been placed in the several categories described below. Each i listing is included in a single category unless it is transportation related, in which case it will be cross-referenced in the transportation section. The first category, Bomb-Related Events, is concerned with explosive or i incendiary devices or materials and related threats. This category has been divided into two sections. Section A contains those few events in which a bomb or explosive material was located or an explosion occurted at.a licensed facility. Section B contains a chronology of all other bomb-related (e.g., hoax bomb threat) events. Intrusion Events (the second 1 category) includes incidents of attempted or actual penetration of a facility's barriers or safeguards systems. The Missing and/or Allegedly Stolen section (the third category) includes events in which licensed material was stolen, j alleged to be stolen, or found missing. Category IV, Transportation-Related Events, typically includes incidents where licensed material was misrouted or involved in an accident. Material reported missing or stolen during transport, for example, would be included in Category III and cross-referenced in the transportation category. Tampering / Vandalism (the fifth category) includes destruction or attempted destruction of property, parts and equipment which do not directly cause a radioactive release or hoax incidents, threats and associated harassing activities re~garding tampering or destruction of property, parts or equipment which would not directly cause a radioactive release. Category VI, Arson, includes acts intentionally utilizing ~ incendiary materials resulting in damage to' property, equipment or other assets. The seventh category, Firearms-Related Events, typically describes the discharge, discovery, or loss of fireanns at a licensed facility. Radiological Sabotage, Category VIII, includes any deliberate act directed against a licensed activity which could endanger the public health and safety by exposure to radiation.

Finally, Miscellaneous Events are those which hold some interest to safeguards but which do not fit into any of the previously described categories.

Each event listed in the body of the report is identified by an alphanumeric composed of the appropriate category roman numeral, the last two digits of the year in which the event occurred, and a' sequential number for that specific year and category. Each incident listing includes the appropriate date(s) and locations (s) and a brief description of the event. - Descriptions vary in detail according to the amount of data available through NRC. reporting channels. I O 1

BOMB THREAT IB-103 06/30/83 ) O IB-82-54 12/29/82 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas & Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At 9:34 p.m., a male caller telephoned the General Construction Security Office and l stated that a bomb was set to go off at midnight in Containment I. Containment I was evacuated and searched with negative results. Fuel present at site. IB-83-01 01/11/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas & Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA i Bomb Threat. Apparent hoax. At about 4:35 p.m., the Sierra Vista Hospital at San Luis Obispo received a telephone call from a male who stated substantially; "There's-a bomb, to go off at 6:30 p.m., at Diablo Canyon. Get your beds ready." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. i IB-83-02 01/19/83 Shoreham O Long Island Lighting Company Suffolk County, NY Bomb Threat. Apparent hoax. At approximately 8:20- p.m., the Suffolk County Police Departemnt received a call from a young male caller who said, "I represent the Organization Against Nuclear Power. There is a bomb inside the reactor at Shoreham set to go off at 10:00 p.m." The caller then hung up. A' search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. IB-83-03 01/21/83 Fermi Detroit Edison Company Monroe County, MI Suspicious device. Apparent hoax. At 2:33 p.m., an electri-cal co, tract employee reported to security.that he had found a suspicious-item taped to a pipe.in the Relay Room in the Reactor Building. The Relay Room is located under the Control Room. The licensee requested assistance from the Michigan ~ State Police Bomb Team (MSPBT). The MSPBT removed the device, which looked like' a bomb. Tests' revealed that the device contained no explosives and was a hoax. Fuel not present at site. h 'I 'P ... = _.-.__.-_mm__

BOMB THREAT 6/30/83 IB-104 O IB-83-04 02/04/83 Watts Bar Tennesse Valley Authority Spring City County, TN Suspicious device. Appparent hoax. An unidentified caller telephoned the site at 9:00 p.m., to say that a bomb was somewhere on the the premises. A similar call was made to a Chattanooga television station's news department. TVA public safety personnel identified a suspicious device near a temporary building in a construction receiving area called the " Teamster Truck Shack," approximately 400 yards from the reactor and new fuel storage area. The device consisted of a brown paper bag with a metal foil-wrapped tube inside. The tube or pipe, was also wrapped with duct tape and had a set of wires running to a nearby windup alarm clock. Off-site assistance (FBI and E0D) was requested. Tests revealed that the device contained no explosives and was a hoax. Fuel present at site. IB-83-05 02/10/83 University of Wisconsin Madison, WI Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. 'At approximately 2:30 p.m., a small plywood box, with the message " Bomb, Do Not Disturb" on it, was discovered by a university employee in a laboratory near the University Research Reactor. The box, measuring 6 x 6 x 12 inches, was x-rayed and found to be empty. A piece of paper was found inside with the word " Boom" on it. Fuel present at site. O

BOMB THREAT 06/30/83 18-105 18-83-06 04/04/83 Calvert Cliffs Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Calvert County, MD Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At '7:23 a.m., an unidentified male telephoned a security watchperson at a support post located outside the protected area and stated, "I've just planted a bomb in the parking lot." lhe person then hung ) up. The call was made from an on-site telephone. A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. (Seenext entry. ) IB-83-07 04/07/83 Calvert Cliffs Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Calvert County, N) Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At 12:31 p.m., an unidentified male telephoned a security watchperson at a guard post located outside the protected area and stated, "I've just planted a bomb in the parking lot." The person left the phone off the hook. The call was made from an on-site telephone. A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. (See next entry.) i IB-83-08 04/18/83 Calvert Cliffs Baltimore Gas and Electric Company Calvert County, MD Bomb threat.. Apparent hoax. At 7:26 p.m., an unidentified male telephoned a securty watchperson at a security post located outside of the protected area and stated, "There's a bomb in security." The caller hung up. The call was made from an on-site telephone. A search produced negative results.. Fuel present at site. 1B-83-9 04/22/83 -0yster Creek GPU Nuclear Corporation Ocean County, NJ Suspicious device. Apparent hoax. At 8:30 a.m., a sketch - depicting a bomb threat was found on a chalkboard located in the office of the Site Director of Operations..The drawing outlined the Turbine Building and the Reactor Building with a connecting passageway. - An urow pointed at the l Reactor Building and the word " Bomb" was inscribed, The office was reported to.have been unoccupied, except for the cleaning personnel, since 5:30 a.m., April 21. The licensee / declared an " Unusual Event", evacuated and searched the Reactor Building. During the search,.a suspicious piece of metal pipe was found. on the floor in the spent fuel area - l (117'el.). The pipe was described'as stainless' steel, approximately 16 inches ;in' length,1 1/4 inches in diameter

B0MB THREAT 06/30/83 (cont) 18-83-9 crimped at both ends and bent in the middle. U.S. Arnly Explosive Ordinance Disposed (E00) support was requested. Tests by the E0D team indicated the device contained no explosives and was ruled a hoax. It was later determined that the pipe was discarded by a workman who was testing a cutting tool. Fuel present at site. IB-83-10 04/27/83 Hope Creek Public Service Electric and Gas Company Salem County, NJ Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At approximately 5:45 p.m., a Bechtel Safety Representative received a telephone call in the Bechtel Safety Department from an unidentified male caller on an on-site telephone line. The messege was, "If you think I'm , there's a bomb in the reactor and it will go off." A search produced negative results. Fuel not present at site. 18-83-11 04/27/83 Oyster Creek Jersey Central Power and Light Company Ocean County, NJ Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At 9:10 a.m., an unidentified male caller telephoned the site switchboard and stated, "There is a bomb in containment." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. 18-83-12 05/04/83 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Company Salem County, NJ Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At approximately 12:01 p.m., a securty officer working in the Badge Issue Area (BIA) of the main guard house received a bomb threat from an on-site telephone line. The caller was described as a male, trying to sound like a baby, with a high pitched voice, clear speech, poor language, very nervous. Factory machinery was audible in the background. The caller asked to speak to the security officer working the BIA. The caller was told that the other guard was busy issuing badges. The caller then j stated, "This is a bomb threat, I want to talk to the other guard." The other guard took the call and the caller stated, "This is a bomb threat." When asked where the bomb was located, the caller became very nervous and stammered, "The l bomb is in the bomb park." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site.

i B0MB THREAT 06/30/83 IB-107 O IB-83-13 05/04/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas and Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. An on-site contractor office received a bomb threat from an unknown caller who stated, "There is a bomb that will go off on the 85 foot elevation." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. (See next entry.) IB-83-14 05/05/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas and Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. An unknown caller telephoned the Avila Beach gate guard station and stated, "There is a bomb." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. IB-83-15 06/14/83 Duane Arnold i Iowa Electric Light and Power Company Linn County, IA Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At 3:59 p.m., the licensee,- at j its corporate office in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, received a telphone call from a male caller complaining of electric rate increase and state and local economic policies and then stated that he and his friends were going to " blow up the Duane Arnold Plant and the IE Tower (licensee offices)." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site. IB-83-16 06/23/83' Susquehanna-Pennsylvania Power and Light' Company Luzerne County, PA Bomb threat. Apparent hoax. At approximately 9:06 p.m., an - unidentified male caller telephoned the Unit 2 Construction site switchboard on an internal plant. phone circuit and stated, "You (expletive deleted), I have five pounds of-dynamite on the steam line. 'I'm going to blow this (exple-tive deleted) place sky high." Again at 11:05 p.m., an unidentified male caller telephoned a local:TV station in Wilkes Barre, PA, and stated, "There's'a bomb in Unit 2." A search produced negative results. Fuel present at site.. O .w --r.g .g,e.. p ,g-y--

i i III-53 MISSING / ALLEGEDLY STOLEN 12/31/82 l-III-82-19 10/29/82 Agreement State License Florida Department of Transportation A Troxler moisture-density gauge was reported stolen sometime over the weekend of 10/29-31/82. The device was padlocked at a temporary location at Davie, Florida. Local authorities investigated the theft. III-82-20 11/16/82 Unknown Washington, DC Two teenagers found a small lead pig in a gutter which was labeled "New England Nuclear." The students opened the pig and found it contained a vial of liquid labeled "5 millicuries chromium-51." The students apparently handled the vial a short time and then placed it in a school locker. An NIH Radiation Safety Officer surveyed the pig, vial and persons who handled it and found no removable contamination. The vial was left in the custody of the DC Bureau of Occupational and Institutional Hygiene. O III-82-21 11/17/82 Westinghouse Columbia, SC During a routine, semi-annual inventory, the licensee discovered an inventory discrepancy. The physical inventory was performed using a new computerized item control technique and identified 50 unaccounted for rods of which half were coded as defective. The licensee believes they were processed as scrap because of an inventory gain of uranium in the salvage area as well as the discovery of seven labels from the defective and unaccounted for. fuel rods in this same area. III-82-22 12/14/82 D'Appolonia Group Export, PA A truck containing a density gauge holding either a 9 milli-curie Cs-137 source or a 9 millicurie Cs-137 and a 40 milli-curie Am-241-Be source was stolen from the parking lot in Monroeville, PA. The gauge included shielding and did not- . present a risk to the public unless the. sources were removed. from the shielding. The truck was recovered, but the gauge is still missing. (Also included in Category IV as Item IV-82-03.) O H

MISSING / ALLEGEDLY STOLEN 06/30/83 111-54 III-83-01 01/25/83 METCOR, Inc. Fairfield, NJ METCOR Inc., a contractor carrier, was transporting three packages of licensed material from Newark airport to its main office in Fairfield, NJ, when the transport vehicle developed a flat tire. The driver stopped on McCarten Highway in Newark to change the tire. In order to reach the space he had to unload the licensed material from the van. While changing the tire, the three packages of licensed material were stolen. One package contained 1 millicurie of Sulfu-35; the second. 0.5 millicuries of phosphorus-32; and the third, a small-but unknown amount of phosphorous-32. The contents of the packages were clearly labeled. State of New Jersey officials located the sulfur-35 package in the possession of a citizen. The outer package was opened, but the can contained inside was unopened. There was no contamination on the can, package or citizen. The investigation and search for the the other missing packages is continuing. (Alsoincludedin Category IV as Item IV-83-02.) III-83-02 02/10/83 Standard Oil Company Amoco Research Center Naperville, IL A Kay-Ray Model 7052 level indicator source holder containing a 10 m1111 curies cesium-137 sealed source was discovered missing by the licensee. The locked and labeled unit that had been attached to a vessel in the Research and Development Building at the Research Center was removed by the licensee and stored in a wooden box while the area was being renovated by construction, workers. After discovering the source missing, the licensee began an investigation into the disap-pearance on February 28, 1983. The NRC Region III was informed that the source and holder were determined to be stolen. 111-83-03 02/13/83 Naval Regional Medical Center Camp Pendelton, CA A M0-99/TC-99n generator, containing approximately 880 millicuries of radioactive material, which was to be delivered on February 13, 1983, was not received. Contact with the supplier, Nuclear Pharmacy, Inc., San Diego, California indicated that the generator was later delivered to the Naval Regional Medical Center. (Alsoincludedin Category IV as Item IV-83-03),

l l l-MISSING / ALLEGEDLY STOLEN 06/30/83 III-55 'O III-83-04 02/21/83 Troxler Electronic Laboratories Research Triangle Park, NC Three guages were stolen from a station wagon parked outside '7 the Holiday Inn in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, between 11:30 p.m., on February 21,1983, and 8:00 a.m., on February 22, 1983. The Troxler model numbers and sealed source content were: #3241, 300 uillicuries americium-241-bery111um; #3411, 40 millicuries americium - 241-beryllium and 8 millicuries cesium-137; #3216, 40 millicuries americium-241-beryllium. The gauges included integral shielding and will not present a hazard to the public unless the sources are removed from the shielded, locked device. The local police department was notified. III-83-05 03/02/83 Unknown Philadelphia, PA Two police officers brought two 1.5 curie molybdenum-99/ techne-tium-99m generators to the Misericordia Hospital in Philadel-phia. The police officers discovered the generators behind a nearby Philadelphia residence. A survey by members of the hospital staff indicated surface readings ~ of less than 50nr/hr. No contamination was detected on the hands of the officers. The Philadelphia police are continuing their investigation and the generators are being stored at Misericordia Hospital.. 111-83-06 04/15/83 Rabbit Transit Company Memphis, TN + Mississippi authorities were notified that some radiopharmaceu - ticals were found missing from a can belonging to Rabbit Transit Company of Memphis, TN after the vehicle apparently ran off State Highway 35, eight miles south of Carthage', i Mississippi. The driver reported that the materials were apparently stolen while he was away from the scene seeking a wrecker. Missing are 30 millicuries of Xenon-133,15 milli-curies of Gallium-67, 20 capsules of Iodine-123, and 3 Thallium-201 sources. They were being shipped from New England Nuclear and Metaphysics Inc. to Nuclear Pharmacy and Baptist Hospital in Jackson, Mississippi, and to 'Jeff ' Anderson Hospital,- Meridian, Mississippi. (Also included in Category IV as item IV-83-04) O

MISSING / ALLEGEDLY STOLEN 06/30/83 III-56 O III-83-07 4/21/83 Private Citizen Pontiac, MI NRC Region III was informed that an individual at a Rock Mineral Club meeting in Ann Arbor, Michigan had a piece of rock which is believed to be part of the waste from a research reactor that was decommissioned in St. Louis, Missouri ten years ago. A Region III inspector performed radiat!1on level measurements near the shed where the rock was stored. No radiation was found. 111-83-08 05/04/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas and Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA The licensee notified the NRC Region V office that a 100 microcuries CS-137 check source was missing. This check source is part of Monitor RE-22, Gas Decay Tank Discharge Monitor, and is used for the monitor operability test. The check source was last known to be in place at 4:00 a.m. on the morning of May 4, 1983. On September 16, 1983 the licensee located the missing check source on the 65 ft.. level of the auxiliary building. The source had been placed inside a sheet rock wall by persons unknown. Fuel present at site. III-83-09 05/14/83 University Hospital of Cleveland Cleveland, OH A 50 millicurie cesium-137 seed was discovered missing by the licensee. The seed was last seen on May 14, 1983, when it was removed from a patient, inventoried, and placed in a storage safe. The seed, which is inside a one-inch stainless steel tube, reads approximately 150 rem per hour at one centimeter, or 170 millium per hour at one foot. A search produced negative results. 111-83-10 06/01/83 License of M.D. l Paterson, NJ l NRC Region I recieved a report from the licensee that a 225 microcorie barium-133 source had been lost. The licensee does not know how the source was lost. The source was last leak tested on November 2,1982. The source is a plastic vial, 30 millimeters in diameter by 85 millimeters in length with approximately 20 milli 11ters of active material set in epoxy. The lead " pig" in which the source is normally stored was also missing, and it is possible that the source is still shielded within.

i MISSING / ALLEGEDLY STOLEN 06/30/83 III-83-11 06/04/83 Fletcher Street Philadelphia, PA It was reported to NRC Region I that five children in Phila-delphia had played with vials labeled " Radioactive Material." i St. Christopher's Hospital, where the children were taken, requested assistance in determining whether the children were contaminated. A Region I inspector was dispatched. The children and their clothing were checked, no radioactive contamination was found. A vacant lot was searched and surveyed. No radiation was detected. A one-gallon can containing small vials which were labeled as containing small (less than 0.1 microcuries each) quantities of iodine-125 for use in radioummulassays was discovered. From dates on the vials, it appeared that the vials were at least eight years old. O 4 j -,we ~ ,a- ,-e

TRANSPORTATION RELATED IV-9 12/31/82 i i IV-80-04 07/29/80 Pharmatopes Oak Park, MI See Category III, Item III-80-26. IV-80-05 09/20/80 Automation Industries Phcanixville, PA See Category III, Item III-80-31. i IV-80-06 09/25/80 Gamma Diagnostic Laboratories Attleboro Falls, MA See Category III, Item III-80-32. IV-80-07 11/10/80 Mallinckrodt, Inc. St. Louis, M0 See Category III, Item III-80-35. IV-80-08 11/12/80 Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing Co.

O St. Paul, MN See Category III, Item III-80-36.

IV-80-09 11/25/80 United States Testing Co. Reading, PA See Category III, Item III-80-37. IV-80-10 12/07/80 Mallinckrodt, Inc. I St. Louis, M0 See Category III, Item III-80-38. IV-81-01 02/20/81 Mallinckrodt Inc. St. Louis, M0 See Category III, Item III-81-03. l IV-81-02 07/13/81 General Electric Wilmington, NC l See' Category III, -Item III-81'-07.

TRANSPORTATION RELATED 06/30/83 IV-10 IV-81-03 07/21/81 Technical Operations Burlington, MA See Category III, Item 111-81-07. IV-82-01 01/18/82 United States Priority Transport Corp. Long Island, NY See Category III, Item III-82-02. IV-82-02 06/10/82 Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights, IL to Troxler, Inc., Research Triangle Park, NC See Category III, Item 111-82-10. IV-82-03 12/14/82 0'Appolonia Group Export, PA See Category III, Item 111-82-20. IV-83-01 02/02/83 General Electric Wilmington, NC A Tri-State truck driver reported that he believed his vehicle, carrying UF6 (Low Enriched) cylinders, was fired upon at 10:30 p.m. near a truck stop about 30 miles from the General Electric Commercial Fuel Fabrication Plant in Wilmington, North Carolina. The driver informed the North Carolina Highway Patrol at 10:53 p.m. A State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) unit was dispatched to interview the driver, and General Electric placed the truck and cargo in isolation upon its arrival at Wilmington. A visual check of the cylinders showed three deep dents in the stainless steel outer skin of one cylinder overpack. No evidence of pene-tration to the UF6 cylinders was detected, and no radiological safety problems existed. It was not confirmed that the truck was actually fired on. In addition, it is possible that the incident was related to the nation's independent trucker's strike that was ^ on-going at the time. IV-83-02 See Category III, item 111-83-01 IV-83-03 See Category III, item 111-83-03 IV-83-04 See Category III, item 111-83-06 1

+ VANDALISM V-9 06/30/82 V-82-03 04/28/82 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Co. Salem County, NJ At about 3:50 p.m., a steam generator feedwater pump tripped while the plant was operating at 100 percent power. Licensee investigation determined that an isolation valve and a vent valve were mispositioned. No manipulation of the valves had been authorized. The licensee concluded that this was a deliberate act to trip the plant. Labor union contract negotia-tions were in progress. Fuel present at site. V-82-04 05/01/82 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Co. Salem Count;y, NJ l At 10:55 a.gi. a control room operator, noting that the wide range level recorder for a steam generator had not been operating, initiated an investigation.- At 3:45 p.m., an instrument and control engineer found two teminals in the hot shutdown panel shorted by a j metal cable clip. This had caused the failure of the wide range level recorder for the steam generator. A review of the recorder i trace revealed this failure occurred between 1:00 and 2:00 p.m. i on April 28, 1982. Subsequently, the licensee completed an inves-tigation of work in tne hot shutdown panel area and found that authorized modification work had been conducted in the cabinet. Fuel present at site. V-82-05 05/14/82 Brunswick Carolina Power and Light Co. Brunswick County. NC During an outage, twelve incore source range monitoring and intemediate range mor.itoring neutron detector tubes were found bent where the tui,es exit the reactor vessel. Licensee investigation indicated that the damage occurred between May 12 and 14 when maintenance contractors were working below the reactor vessel on control rod assemblies. Fuel present at site.

O

l l VANDALISM V-10 12/31/82 V-82-06 8/9/82 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Co. Salem County, NJ On August 9, 1982, Salem Nuclear Generating Station Unit 1 was ordered tripped by the senior shift supervisor due to steam feed flow mismatch and decreasing levels in the steam genera-tors. All safety systems responded normally to the manual trip. A subsequent investigation into the cause of the event determined that the No.12 Station Essential Controls Inverter Breaker was in the "off" position. Tests detennined that this position was not associated with any automatic protection action but rather could, apparently, only be achieved manually. Thus, deliberate action was suspected. The event did not involve major degradation of essential safety-related equipment i or reduction in the degree of protection of the public health and safety. As an immediate action, the licensee performed a i number of surveC. lances of safety-related equipment for both units, including start verification of rotating Emergency Core Cooling System equipment, start test and loading of the Emer-gency Diesel benerators, critical valve lineup verification, inspection of various motor control centers and safety related panels, and increasing the roving patrols thoughout the power block. No other discrepancies were found and the plant resumed operation at 8:50 a.m. on August 10. Fuel present at site. V-82-07 8/16/82 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Co. Salem County, NJ On August 16, 1982, at approximately 5:00 p.m., a shift equip-l l ment operator on tour in Salem Nuclear Generating Station Unit 2 found the manual isolation stop valves for each set of two ( air start motors (four total) for the 2C Diesel Generator in l the shut position. This would have prevented automatic or manual start of the diesel generator (one of three). Sub-l sequent investigation by site personnel found no reason for the position of the valves to have been changed since they had been verified open at abcut 5:00 p.m. 'on August 15 during the previous operator tour. The event did not involve major l degradation of essential safety-related equipment or major reduction in the degree of protection of the public health and i safety. Due to the possibility of deliberate tampering, the licensee conducted operability checks of all remaining Emergency Core Cooling equipment, started and loaded all diesel generators, O

I-VANDALISM V-11 12/31/82 inspected various motor control centers and safety-related. i 1 electrical panels, and sampled all fuel and water tanks. The additional precautionary measures initiated in response to the 4 August 9 event (see previous entry) had also been continued. i On August 18, the NRC issued a confirmatory action letter formally confirming licensee commitments to: 1) verify the i operability of safety-related equipment; 2) remove from plant vital areas all personnel not essential to continued safe operation of the plant; 3) discontinue work in vital areas not ] essential to continued safe operation of the plant, to the j satisfaction of previous commitments, or to meet the outage work schedule; and 4)~ implement more _ stringent controls for i access to vital equipment. Fuel present at site. 1 V-82-Od 9/3/82 Salem Public Service Electric and Gas Company Salem County, NJ On September 3,1982, licensee personnel, investigating the cause of an unplanned gaseous radioactive release from the Salem Nuclear i Pwer Station' Unit 1 Auxiliary Building, found a drain valve on I the vent line from the Volume Control Tank open. No authorization i had been given to manipulate this valve and the licensee's initial conclusion was that this was _an act of tampering. As an immediate action, the licensee conducted operability checks of essential ,O safety-related equipment in addition to the precautionary measures ~, committed to in the NRC confimatory action letter (see previous entry). The total radioactive release resulting from the valve being open'was estimated to be 19 curies of Xenon-133, which was well within the regulatory limits for routine _ radioactive releases, _ i from approximately 11:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. on September 3. The event did not involve major degradation of essential safety-related equipment or major reduction in the degree of protection of public-1 health and safety. The licensee subsequently conducted a detailed review and investigation which revealed that the valve would open after being repeatedly struck by a nearby cage door during entry into this area. The presence and contamination of a maintenance crew at the time the release began and the absence of knowledge or-report of anyone else entering into the immediate area substanti-ated the conclusion that the valve' opening was accidental rather than the result of tampering. Fuel present at site. V-82-09 11/18/82 Maine Yankee Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company. Lincoln County, ME j t An investigation by the licensee indicated intentional tampering with the oil: reservoir. for the No.1 Reactor Coolant P. ump sometime after the evening of November 15, and before :2:30 p.m. con November 18.~ ~ Additionally. debris - similar to that recovered'from the oil reservoir was found in - ~ containment where pipefitting operations had taken place - during the current refueling outage. No further ' indication of: tamnerino wn found.. Fuel oresent at site.

TAMPERING /VANDALISH 06/30/83 V-12 O V-83-01 03/18/83 Washington University St. Louis, M0 A Hemotology Laboratory was found to have been vandalized. Lab coats and upholstered furniture had been shredded and sulfuric acid had been poured on instruments. A vial which had contained 2-4 millicuries of I-125 was found almost empty. Air samples taken showed airborne concentrations of I-125 were within regulatory limits. The licensee reported that a research j assistant admitted she was responsible for the vandalism. I V-83-02 04/25/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas and Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA The licensee discovered gouges in a coolant pipe about 3/16 inches deep which were possibily caused by an implement such as a hand rotary grinder. The pipe runs from a coolant pump to the reactor vessel at Unit 1. There was no indication as to who was responsible or how the gouges occurred. Fuel present at site. V-83-03 06/15/83 Beaver Valley I Duquesne Light Company Beaver County, PA With the plant in cold shutdown and with one reactor coolant pump maintaining reactor temperature, the control room received a low seal flow alarm and lost indication of seal leak-off flow on one reactor coolant pump. Investigation into the cause of t l the problem found a valve closed. The valve, normally open, is located in containment on the basement level. The valve stands at approximately a 45* angle, two feet off the ground and is not located in a high traffic area. There was no major work going on in its immediate vicinity. The licensee immediately shutdown the reactor coolant pump, which was not required to be operating, and checked all required safety related systems. The licensee initiated an investigation in an attempt to determine the cause of the event and interviewed personnel working in containment at the time of the incident. An investigation by the FBI on June 17, 1983, concluded that there was no evidence of deliberate equipment tampering and that the valve could have been inadvertently closed. l Fuel present at site. O

TAMPERING / VANDALISM 06/30/83 V-13 O V-83-04 06/20/83 Rancho Seco Sacramento Municipal Utility District Sacramento County, CA During plant refueling, a Quality Control inspector was performing an inspection of cable termination in the new Nuclear Services Electrical Building (NSEB) (still under construction) when he discovered three non-safety-related cables that had been cut near their terminations. There were more than 100 electricians working in the building and over 300 of 650 workers had been laid-off during the previous two week time frame, with another 100 expected to be laid-off by June 25, 1983. On the day before, two meters on the front of equipment on another floor of the NSEB were found smashed. The licensee conducted an investigation in an attempt to determine who cut the cables and smashed the meters. The results of the investigation proved to be inconclusive. Fuel present at site. V-83-05 06/28/83 Millstone Northeast Nuclear Energy Company New London County, CT O A Stone and Webster craft worker discovered 20 severed cables which were located in an unfinished lower level of the control building, Unit 3, at the termination / penetration of a duct bank connecting to the intake structure. The licensee (8) of the 20 Eight control cables were safety-related. conducted an investigation. The results of the investigation proved to be inconclusive. Fuel not present at site. 4

i VI-3 ARSON 12/31/82 VI-82-02 06/30/82 Limerick f Philadelphia Electric Co. Montgomery County, PA At about 7:00 p.m., smoke in the 239' elevation of the Control Building was traced to a fire in two non-safety-i related cable trays located near the switchgear room. The fire was put out with dry chemical extinguishers. As the cables were cut as well as burned, tha fire was determined to j be a malevolent act. There was no damage outside the two l cable trays involved. No fuel present at site. VI-82-03 07/12/82 Waterford Louisiana Power & Light Company l St. Charles Parrish, LA l Suspected arson. A fire was discovered in a cardboard box in the cable spreading room. Investigation revealed that 19 to 27 cables had been damaged. The fire investigator indicated l that the fire may have been deliberately set.. Fuel present at site. VI-82-04 11/19/82 Calvert Cliffs 1 & 2 Baltimore Gas & Electric Company Calvert County, MD Suspected arson. A. t approximately 4:16 a.m., a small fire was discovered by a contractor employee in the Outage Planning Room on the second floor of the South Service Building. This is an administrative building within the protected area but neither is it near nor does it house any safety-related features. A liquid appeared to have been poured on_ a table and a burnt match and a melted plastic cellophane tape i dispenser were found in the scorched area. Very little l damage occurred. Fuel present at site. l 1 I !O

VI-4 ARSON 06/30/83 VI-83-01 02/02/83 LaSalle Commonwealth Edison Company LaSalle County, IL A fire was discovered in the Unit 1 Turbine Building in a non-safety-related area. The fire was extinguished within five minutes of discovery by the on-site fire brigade. The local fire department was notified of the fire, and assisted in the investigation. Twenty empty cardboard resin containers, one full container, and a metal locker containing protective r clothing and miscellaneous material were either damaged or destroyed. There were no injuries. Radioactive materials I were not involved. The building was not evacuated. Unit I was shutdown at the time. The Illinois Fire Marshall reported that the fire was of " suspicious nature" based on its rapid propagation which may be indicative of the use of an accelerant. Fuel present at site. VI-83-02 03/08/83 Peach Bottom Philadelphia Electric Company York County, PA-A reactor operator observed a small smoldering fire in an area containing stored radwaste material in the Radwaste Building. The material was being prepared for compaction and subsequent shipment. Preliminary investigation by the licensee revealed that one of the plastic bags had a small burned out area of approximately 1 square foot. The investigators found two burned out cardboard matches stuck to one of the unburned bags in the pile. Fuel present at site. O

i FIREARMS RELATED VII-10 06/30/83 J VII-82-06 06/07/82 Crystal River i Florida Power Corporation Citrus County, FL A loaded.32 caliber revolver was found in an. employee's briefcase prior to entry to the protected area. The employee stated he forgot the gun was in the briefcase and did not intend to bring it into the protected area. l The employee was required to undergo psychological assessment. Fuel present at site. t VII-82-07 08/25/82 United Nuclear Corporation UNC Naval Products j New Haven, CT At 8:45 a.m., a.38 caliber handgun was discovered missing 4 from the weapon storage area during a routine shift inventory. j The weapon was last inventoried at 3:00 a.m., on the same date. On September 20, 1982, the wapon was recovered on-site. It was determined to have been misplaced. Fuel present at site. i VII-83-01 01/15/83 LaSalle Commonwealth Edison Company LaSalle County, IL At 9:48 p.m., a security officer tripped on the stairs of the Unit 2 Auxiliary Building. His pistol came loose from its holster and discharged, sending a bullet into a chair on a stair landing. There were no injuries. Fuel _present at site. i VII-83-02 01/26/83 San Onofre Southern California Edison San Diego County, CA At 1:45 p.m., while holstering his just issued revolver, a security guard accidentally discharged the weapon and caused 4 superficial wounds to his right leg. The. incident occurred in i the Units #2 and #3 ' vehicle search area at.the protected area j boundary. The guard was treated and held overnight for observation at San Clemente General Hospital. Fuel present~ at site. I i ' O

RADIOLOGICAL SAB0TAGE VIII-1 06/30/83 1 i )- VIII There have been no reported events meeting the radiological 1 sabotage criteria. i \\ i i i i h f i a I i I l 4 i - r 4 i h 1, i 4 r f' l 1 i l l I l 4 ? A ---,e-. -,.--+m.-+.-%-.,--,ww,--.--ww.es---e - ---.. +.., ,--,..~w,,--,-v.---=<- r- ,,e.=w -e-. ,,,~----,ar,-,. --w-e- -y

MISCELLANEOUS-IX-9 06/30/81 i IX-79-07 07/31/79 Three Mile Island Metropolitan Edison Company Dauphin County, PA i At approximately 7:50 p a. during a routine security patrol, a vital area door was discovered unsecured. The door, which provides access to the Unit 2 control building basement and the equipment hatch area, opened when pulled due to a mechanical failure of the locking mechanism. t There was no indication of tampering. A search procedure i was initiated at 7:54 p a., with all access control points to Units 1 and 2 secured along with the North and South Bridge access locations. The search was completed with negative results and all access control points were returned to normal operation. The door was secured and the locking mechanism repaired. Fuel present at site. IX-79-08 08/5/79 Indian Point Power Authority of the State of New York Westchester County, NY At 2:00 a m. and again at 5:45 a m., the plant security { i organization observed a swimmer in scuba gear emerge from i the water at the beachfront adjacent to Indian Point Unit j 3. No attempt was made to enter the site. A boat from which the swiinner came remained offshore (adjacent to the i discharge canal) during most of the night. In both occurrences the swimmer returned to the boat after sighting the security force. Fuel present at site. i IX-79-09 08/10/79 Power Operation Support Facility Tennessee Valley Authority Nashville, TN At approximately 3:00 a m., the Associated Press in Nashville, Tennessee received an anonymous telephone call stating that 300 grams of radioactive material would be released inside a Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) power l operation support facility in Nashville. The Associated Press notified the Nashville Police and the TVA security organization. Upon arrival at the threatened office complex, police discovered a small brick wrapped in aluminum foil which had been thrown through the front door. A threatening note was attached to the package-which was examined by TVA health-physics specialists and found to be non-radioactive. The incident _ was judged to be a radioactive materials hoax.

MISCELLANEOUS IX-10 12/31/82 IX-79-10 8/30/79 Poquoson, VA At 3:40 p.m., a container marked " strontium-90" was found on a lawn in a residential area. The item was secured by local police who contacted Langley Air Force base for assistance. Personnel from Langley surveyed the container and found no radioactive contamination. IX-79-11 10/25/79 Vernon County Sheriff's Department Vernon County, WI At approximately 10:40 p.m., the sheriff's department received a threatening call from an individual who claimed l to have two sets of keys for the Zion (Commonwealth Edison), Genoa (Dairyland Power) and Morris (not specific regarding Commonwealth Edison's Dresden plant or General Electric s spent fuel storage site) locations. The individual stated that "at midnight, it would be good-bye Omega." Subsequent investigation revealed that the call was made by a committed patient from the psychiatric division of a local hospital. IX-79-12 11/08/79 Trojan Portland General Electric Co. Columbia County, OR A narcotics investigation (regarding the alleged use and traffic of marijuana and amphetamines) resulted in the arrests and/or teminations of 13 individuals, the majority I from the contract guard force. Of the 12 individuals arrested, eight were guards and two were former guards; one was a fomer employee of a maintenance contractor and one had been employed as a watchman. In addition, an auxiliary operator was terminated for his uncooperative attitude regarding his alleged use of cocaine off-site. The individuals implicated as a result of the investigation were relieved from duty and replaced with qualified back-up security officers. The plant was in a cold shutdown mode at the time of the arrests. Fuel present at site. 9

MISCELLANEOUS IX-11 06/30/81 IX-79-13 11/21/79 The Mineral Equipment Co. Salt Lake City, UT As a result of an aerial survey revealing certain areas with higher than expected radiation levels, a survey by State of Utah personnel revealed contaminated equipment at the Mineral Equipment Company facility. The contamination was fixed and resulted from the presence of radium-226 and uranium-238 yielding radiation levels of less than 3 millirems per hour at one foot. The owner was unaware that the equipment was contaminated and reported that he gained possession of it from the Yuba City Uranium Mill, Yuba, Arizona. IX-79-14 11/25/79 Tampa, FL A county inspector responded to a call from the local police indicating that some children had found containers labeled " Radioactive" in a park. The children and police 4 who handled the containers were surveyed at a local hospital, with no contamination detected. Additional identically labeled, empty containers found in a nearby abandoned car were examined with negative results. The authorities subsequently traced the car to an individual in Tennessee, who stated that he secured the containers from a hospital and was planning to sell them for scrap lead. IX-80-01 01/2-31/80 Three Mile Island Metropolitan Edison Co. Dauphin County, PA A person hired by the contract guard service as a watchman at the site turned in his uniform on 1/31/80 and informed the licensee that he was a reporter for a local newspaper. He worked at the site under an assumed name beginning on 1/2/80 for the stated purpose of preparing a story for his j paper. Fuel present at site. IX-80-02 01/11/80 Seabrook Public Service Co. Rockingham County, NH Twelve individuals employed as construction workers at the site were arrested on charges of conspiracy to violate state drug laws and for possessing and trafficking in O cocaine, hashish, amphetamines'and marijuana. Fuel not present at site. i-

MISCELLANEOUS IX-12 06/30/81 IX-80-03 03/04/80 Duane Arnold Iowa Electric Light & Power Co. Linn County, IA At approximately 10:00 p.m., an on duty contractor watchperson was arrested by local law enforcement officials and charged with possession of a controlled drug without a prescription with intent to deliver. Her arrest followed a police raid at her home address earlier that evening which resulted in three arrests and in the seizure of a quantity of marijuana and cash. The watchperson was suspended pending resolution of the charges. There was no evidence that she had sold or dispersed drugs on the site. Fuel present at site. IX-80-04 04/03/80 South Texas Houston Lighting & Power Co. Matagorda County, TX At 10:00 a.m., NRC was notified that four construction personnel and one mechanical QC person were tenninated for possession of marijuana while on the job. Fuel not present on site. IX-80-05 04/29/80 Davis-Besse Toledo Edison Co. Ottawa County, OH I A patrolling guard observed a contractor employee smoking i marijuana on the roof of a building. The employee was discharged immediately, his security badge was recovered and he was escorted off the site. Fuel not present at site. IX-80-06 07/08/80 Mallinckrodt, Inc. St. Louis, M0 An individual in St. Louis purchased two cases of bottles at i I an esta'te sale marked " Radioactive Material - Mallinckrodt Nuclear (RUS Site)." The individual stated that some of the bottles were marked "T-4" with a date of " August,1975". A health physicist from the licensee subsequently examined the bottles and found them to be T-3 and T-4 in-vitro testing kits (each originally containing 10 microcuries of iodine-125). As the kits were five years old, no measurable radioactive material was present due to the 60-day half-life of iodine-125. O

MISCELLANEOUS IX-13 06/30/81 O IX-80-07 07/22/80 Nuclear Pharmacy Chicago, IL ~ An abandoned automobile with a package identified as containing radioactive material was found and subsequently towed to a body shop in Chicago Ridge, Illinois, and stored in a fenced, locked area guarded by a watch dog. The package was determined to be a delivery case used by Nuclear Pharmacy to deliver radiopharma-ceuticals to hospitals. IX-80-08 09/22/80 Three Mile Island Metropolitan Edison Co. Dauphin County, PA A female contractor employee's handbag was found to contain a questionable substance which appeared to be marijuana. She was temporarily terminated and denied access to the site. On October 21,1980, the licensee was notified that laboratory analysis of the substance proved it to be marijuana. Charges were subsequently filed against the employee. Fuel present at site. IX-80-09 11/03/80 Indian Point Power Authority of the State of New York Buchanan, NY A plant employee, while conducting a tour (approved only for the plant's secondary system) for a 14 year old boy, took the boy into the containment building. As the plant was in a shut-down condition, containment was open for routine entries; however, the access point to containment was apparently unmanned. A i i dosimeter worn by the boy during the entry indicated that no radiation had been received. Fuel. present at site. IX-81-01 02/09/81 Indian Point Power Authority of the State of New York Buchanan, New York Following background investigations of security personnel '(who were transferring from a contract security force to the Power Authority of the State ~ of New York proprietary security. force) seven security personnel were termi_nated when derogatory informa-- c tion was revealed. The information, derived from polygraph- -examinations and associated admissions, indicated that these O individuals had either used on-site (or reported to work under the influence of) controlled substances or_ alcohol. Fuel present~ at site.

MISCELLANEOUS IX-14 06/30/81 IX-81-02 02/13/81 Vogtle Georgia Power Co. Burke County, GA Eleven contractor employees were arrested at the Vogtle Plant construction site for the sale of illegal drugs, including marijuana, amphetamines, phencyclidine, and methaqualone. Fuel not present at site. IX-81-03 02/24/81 Zion Commonwealth Edison Co. Lake County, IL As a result of an investigation, two plant employees (equipment operators) were arrested and charged with alleged possession and/or use of controlled substances. There were indications that the drugs were used onsite during working hours. The arrested employees were suspended and their access authorizations to the site were revoked. Fuel present at site. IX-81-04 03/03/81 Maine Yankee Maine Yankee Atomic Power Co. Lincoln County, ME The Maine Yankee switchboard operator received a telephone call from an unidentified female at 8:23 a.m. who stated, "Someone l is coming down to sabotage... someone is coming to sabotage." l The facility was searched and a re-identification of all onsite personnel was conducted. A strike was ongoing at the time. Fuel present at site. IX-81-05 03/17/81 Waterford Louisiana Power & Light Co. St. Charles Parrish, LA Eight construction workers at the Waterford Unii 3 construction site were arrested on charges of possession and sale of marijuana. No fuel present at site. l 0

MISCELLANEOUS IX-15 12/31/81 O IX-81-06 03/19/81 Crystal River i Florida Power Corp. Citrus County, FL At approximately 4:00 p.m., the Citrus County Sheriffs Depart-i ment arrested 13 individuals in the vicinity of the Crystal River nuclear site. The group, taken into custody approximately two miles from the facility and charged with trespassing on private property, wore military camouflage unifoms and were amed with what appeared to be automatic weapons. At the time of their-arrest, the individuals declined to identify themselves except for one individual who identified himself as a civilian advisor. IX-81-07 05/21/81 River Bend Gulf States Utilities Co. Pointe Coupee County, LA A contractor quality control employee, observed by security personnel to be acting in a suspicious manner, was investigated and subsequently teminated for the use of controlled substances on the job. The licensee notified the local Sheriff's department of the incident. Fuel not prescat at site. O IX-81-08 05/28/81 Rancho Seco i Sacramento Municipal Utility District Sacramento County, CA Local law enforcement authorities arrested an employee assigned to Rancho Seco and a contractor employee working on the site for the sale of marijuana and cocaine. These arrests were the result of an investigation that began in November 1980 by the Sacramento Municipal Utility District Security Department when a cache of tools was found, obviously brought together to later be removed from the si te. Investigation into the tool thefts developed infomation in-dicating possible narcotics usage at Ranch Seco. Fuel present at si te. IX-81 06/04/81 Maine Yankee Maine Yankee Atomic Power Co. Lincoln County, ME The licensee received an anonymous letter (postmarked in Portland, Maine) which implied a plot to ham the. facility. The note was similar to some threats received by the parent utility, Central Maine Power. Fuel present at site. l

MISCELLANE0US IX-16 12/31/81 IX-81-10 06/12/81 Oyster Creek Jersey Central Power and Light Co. Ocean County, NJ At 7:40 a.m., a contractor employee was selected at random for search at the contractor access control point. The search revealed a 35 m film canister containing three to four grams of a green substance which was identified by the contractor as marijuana. The employee's unescorted access was withdrawn and local law enforcement authorities were notified. Fuel present at si te. IX-81-11 07/31/81 McGuire Duke Power Co. Mecklenbury County, NC At approximately 8:00 p.m., a contract security officer reported finding a smoldering incendiary device in a storage area of the Auxiliary Building. The device was a 5-gallon can approximately 1/8 full of a substance identified as paint thinner. A paper towel wick was found protruding through the spout of the can. Subsequent investigation revealed that the security officer had staged the event in an attempt to obtain a promotion. Fuel present at site. IX-81-12 09/14/81 Shearon Harris Carolina Power and Light Co. Wake and Chatham Counties, NC Five construction personnel were discovered smoking marijuana dur-ing a work break, terminated and escorted off-site. No fuel pre-sent at site. IX-81-13 09/20/81 Grand Gulf Mississippi Power and Light Co. Claiborne County, MS A Senior Reactor Operator was arrested off-site on and charged with drug possession. The licensee suspended the individual and initiated an internal investigati)n. Fuel present at site. l e 0

l MISCELLANEOUS l IX-17 12/31/81 IX-81-14 09/23/81 Farley Alabama Power Co. Houston County, AL Six employees of Alabama Power Company were suspended following a company-initiated investigation concerning drug use at the pl ant. No on-site drug use was discovered; some minor off-site use was confirmed. No NRC-licensed reactor operators were iden-l tified as being involved. Fuel present at site. l l IX-81-15 10/03/81 Turkey Point J Florida Power and Light Co. Dade County, FL A contractor employee was found with a controlled substance while l undergoing on-site treatment for an apparent medical problem. Fuel present on site. 4 IX-81-16 10/16/81 Sequoyah Tennessee Valley Authority Hamilton County, TN O A student operator trainee was arrested at the Sequoyah site and charged with off-site sale of drugs. The individual's site access authorization was removed by the licensee. Fuel present at site. ? IX-81-17 10/21/81~ Peach Bottom Philadelphia Electric Co. York County, PA i At approximately 2:00 p.m., a licensee employee found a sandwich bag containing a small amount of marijuana in a parking lot on licensee property outside the protected area. Fuel l present at site. IX-81-18 10/22/81 Humboldt Bay Pacific Gas and Electric Co. Humboldt County, CA At 11:56 p.m., two unidentified males were observed outside a perimeter access gate by a security officer. Apparently alerted to the officer's presence as he radioed his report, the individuals moved to a nearby hillside where a sharp, loud noise was heard by two security officers maintaining surveillance of these individuals. The Humboldt County Sheriffs Department was summoned to the site 1

MISCELLANE0US IX-18 12/31/81 IX-81-18 cont'd and conducted a search of the area. According to the ifcensee, the area around the access gate showed signs of digging, and two strands of barbed wire topping were reportedly broken. The licensee increased site security posture. No persons were apprehended. Fuel present at si te. IX-81-19 12/09/81 Monticello Northern States Power Co. Wright County, MN At approximately 6:00 a.m., the NRC Resident Inspector discovered two security officers sleeping at their gatehouse posts. Subse-quent investigation revealed that during the time the security officers were asleep (detennined to be a maximum of 20 minutes) there was no evidence of unauthorized entry to the facility. Fuel present at site. IX-81-20 12/09/81 Surry Virginia Electric and Power Co. l Surry County, VA Following an investigation into alleged illegal drug use by licensee employees, five security personnel resigned and 13 were tenninated for using marijuana off-site or reporting to work under its influence. Fuel present at site. IX-81-21 12/31/81 Mill stone Northeast Nuclear Energy Co. New London County, CT At about 1:32 a.m., the security organization for Unit 3 reported a possible intruder within their controlled area. Unit 3 is a construction site adjacent to the operating Millstone units' pro-l tected area. A search was conducted with negative results. Fuel I not present at site. l O

MISCELLANEOUS IX-19 06/30/82 l i IX-82-01 01/28/82 Zion Commonwealth Edison Company Lake County, IL I At about 1:30 a.m. packages containing a note and video tape were delivered by a young woman to several Chicago area television stations and news services. The note stated, "This is a warning. i The next time will be for real." The video tape recording showed a night scene, identified as the plant site, with a series of i i flares going off. The local police reported seeing flares near the Zion site on the night of January 26, 1982 or the early morning hours of January 27, 1982. Several individuals subsequently claimed responsibility for the threatening act. They claimed they staged the incident to demon-strate the vulnerability of nuclear plants to terrorist attack. 4 Fuel present on site. i i IX-82-02 01/29/82 Davis-Besse Toledo Edison l Ottawa County, OH O In response to a door alarm to the service water tunnel (non-vital area), a security officer found two contractor construction workers smoking marijuana inside the area. The workers were terminated. Fuel present at site. IX-82-03 01/29/82 Shearon Harris Carolina Power and Light Co. Wake and Chatham Counties, NC 2 A plant employee was arrested on site for theft of tools. ] During a personal search, a bag of marijuana was found in the individual's possession. Fuel not present at site. IX-82-04 02/04/82 Shearon' Harris Carolina Power and Light Co.- Wake _ and Chatham Counties, NC A quality assurance weld inspector was terminated'due to drug use. Weld defects were found when 187 seismic hangers with which he had been involved were reinspected. Fuel not present at site. _2

MISCELLANEOUS IX-20 06/30/82 IX-82-05 02/04/82 Turkey Point Florida Power and Light Co. Dade County, FL Seven contract security officers, three contract workers, and one concessionaire were implicated as a result of a licensee investigation regarding illegal drug use. Subsequently, all were denied access to the plant site. Fuel present at site. IX-82-06 02/05/82 Zion Commonwealth Edison Co. Lake County, IL As a result of a NRC investigation into drug usage, two ~ members of the site's contract security force were suspended. One individual was a security force supervisor and the other was a security force training coordinator. Findings indicated drug and/or alcohol involvement by these individuals both on and off site. Fuel present at site. O IX-82-07 02/12/82 Dresden Commonwealth Edison Co. Grundy County, IL Two contractor employees were teminated for attempting to bring alcohol and marijuana into the protected area. The items were found by security officers during routine ingress searches. Fuel present at site. IX-82-08 02/17/82 Peach Bottom Philadelphia Electric Co. York County, PA Security personnel observed two contractor employees smoking one pipe in the protected area. The pipe was confiscated and was found to contain a small residue of an unidentifiable substance. The two workers had perfonned custodial-type services. l but did not work on safety-related equipment. Their site accesses were teminated. Fuel present at site. l l l

= ( MISCELLANEOUS IX-21 12/31/82 i IX-82-09 03/31/82 Davis-Besse Toldeo Edison Co. Ottawa, OH A contractor employee with a small quantity of marijuana I was prevented from entering the protected area. The marijuana was confiscated and the craft employee was terminated. Fuel present at site. IX-82-10 05/05/82 Farley [ Alabama Power Co. Houston County, AL During routine security searches of handcarried items at the access control building, a security' officer found what appeared to be marijuana and pills in a contractor employee's lunch box. i The items were confiscated and the employee was terminated. Fuel present at site. IX-82-11 05/05/82 Zion Commonwealth Edison Company Lake county, IL O. U.S. Army military police apprehended a contractor employee for being absent without leave from military service. The individual's job assignment allowed him to have routine access to site vital areas. Fuel present at site. IX-82-12 05/07/82 Calvert Cliffs 2 Baltimore Gas & Electric Company Calvert County, MD The Baltimore Gas & Electric-Security Investigations Unit conducted an investigation into an allegation of ' drug misuse by member (s) of the nuclear security organization. As a result, four contract watch persons and two licensee-security officers were terminated from employment and their access authorizations were suspended for. marijuana usage. Fuel present at site. IX-82-13 05/21/82 Oconee: Duke Power Co. c Oconee County, SC A secu'rity officer discovered a, small. quantity of marijuana ( - among an individual 's personal. items during a protected. area ' ( ingress search. The subsequent investigation led to the arrest of the individual and a co-worker. The individuals were maintenance . employees not routinely assignedLto the site. .They were denied future access to the. site. Fuel presentfat site. f

MISCELLANE0US IX-22 12/31/82 IX-82-14 05/26/82 Brunswick Carolina Power and Light Co. Brunswick County, NC At 2:45 a.m., a utility employee found a contractor employee smoking marijuana in the protected area. The individual was escorted from the site and was subsequently terminated by the contractor. Fuel present at site. IX-82-15 06/29/82 Zion Commonwealth Edison Co. Lake County, IL At approximately 12:30 p.m., a security officer found a pipe and marijuana cigarette in a contractor vehicle attempting to enter the protected area. The licensee notified the police who confiscated the pipe and marijuana. The driver was denied site access, but was not charged because the marijuana was not in his actual possession. Fuel present at site. IX-82-16 10/21-22/82 Vogtle Georgia Power Company Burke County, GA Arrests of twelve persons employed by two contractors at the Vogtle construction site were made ori a variety of drug-related charges. No licensee employees were involved. The substances include marijuana, cocaine and valium. Fuel not present at site. IX-82-17 11/23/82 Indian Point 2 Consolidated Edison Company Westchester County, NY Threat. Apparent hoax. At 8:36 a.m., the Consolidated Edison Corporate Security Office received a call from a deep-voiced male who said, "At 6:00 p.m., tonight we are going to show you what Indian Point is all about and there is nothing security and that..... McGovern can do about it." When the receptionist asked who was calling, the caller replied, "You will find out at 6:00 tonight." A security alert was declared. Fuel present at site. I

MISCELLANEOUS IX-23 06/30/83 IX-82-18 11/30/82 Zion Commonwealth Edison Company Lake County, IL During a routine pat-down search of a contractor employee, security personnel found a substance believed to be marijuana. The worker was denied access to the site and the substance was turned over to the Zion police department for analysis. The substance was confirmed to be marijuana. Fuel present at site. IX-82-19 12/06/82 Beaver Valley Unit 2 Duquesne Light Company Beaver County, PA A security guard at Unit 2 was caught by his supervisor while preparing to smoke a marijuana cigarette. The cigarette was confiscated and the guard was fired. Laboratory analysis confirmed that it was marijuana. Fuel present at Unit 1. IX-83-01 01/19/83 Diablo Canyon Pacific Gas and Electric Company San Luis Obispo County, CA As a result of an on-going investigation conducted by the licensee involving the use of marijuana in the employees' parking lot (outside the protected area) three Pacific Gas and Electric (PG&E) employees, two maintenance helpers and an apprentice welder were terminated. Fuel present at site. IX-83-02 02/28/83 LaSalle j Comonwealth Edison Company i LaSalle County, IL At approximately 12:30 p.m., two contractor employees were apprehended as they were leaving the Unit 2 heater drain tank room after the Unit 2 construction superintendent detected the odor of burning marijuana in the area. The remains of a partically burned substance was found in the room and turned over to local law enforcement officials who confirmed that the burned material was marijuana. The two employees were taken to a local nospital for a urinalysis to determine.whether they had smoted marijuana. The two refused to allow the release of the results of the test to the licensee and were_ subsequently s fired. Fuel present at site.

MISCELLANEOUS 06/30/83 IX-24 O IX-83-03 04/06/83 LaSalle Commonwealth Edison Company LaSalle County, IL A supervisor employed by a subcontractor discovered a foil package containing a white powered substance in his unlocked desk in a trailer within the protected area, approximately 75 yards east of the Unit 1 Reactor Building. The material was turned over to the construction security superintendent who in turn gave it to the licensee's security administrator. A " field test" indicated that the substance was an amphetamine. The licensee released the material to the LaSalle County Sheri f f. The individual who found the material denies ownership. The results of the investigation proved to be inconclusive. Fuel present at site. IX-83-04 04/24/83 Indian Point Power Authority of the State of New York Westchester County, NY At approximately 11:15 p.m., a security officer overheard voices coming from a darkened storage trailer located within the pro-tected area. The officer checked the trailer and noted that both doors were locked but a rear window was broken out and other rear windows were covered over with dark material. The officer called for back-up officers. A few minutes later the officers apprehended four contract employees exiting the trailer through the broken window. A search of the trailer turned up the remains of what was believed to be a marijuana cigarette and the odor of marijuana. The four were taken to the Security Ruilding where they were interviewed. One individual admitted to smoking marijuana in the trailer. One claimed to have been asleep in the trailer. The other two claimed no knowledge of the incident. A trace of these four individual's key cards showed that one of those,who claimed no knowledge of the incident had left the protected area at 10:34 p.m., and returned at 10:36 p.m. A subsequent search of the individual's automobile turned up the l remains of six more suspected marijuana cigarettes. All four individual's site access authorization was suspended. All four were suspended pending further disciplinary action. Fuel i present at site. 1 l l l O

_~. .I MISCELLANEOUS 06/30/83 O IX-25 4 i IX-83-05 04/02/83 Duane Arnold Iowa Electric Light and Power Company Linn County, IA j The licensee notified NRC Region III, that a contract health { physics technician was observed with a small vial containing a white powdery substance. The vial fell from his clothing and broke, spilling part of the powder. Licensee security person-i nel collected the spilled substance, and a preliminary test by the local law enforcement agency identified the substance as cocaine. The health physics technician denied knowledge of the vial and its contents. The individual has been denied access to the site by the licensee. Fuel present at site. IX-83-06 05/20/83 Rancho Seco 3 Sacramento Municipal Utility District Sacramento County, CA At approximately 10:45 p.m., while performing security duties inside the protected area, a security officer heard loud l voices coming from the area of a truck being off-loaded with !O scaffolding. Upon approaching the vehicle the security officer observed one of the four male laborers, throw some-thing into the passenger window of the cab. Upon searching the cab, the security officer discovered a small amount of white substance inside a small glass container. During questioning, the laborer stated in writing that he had brought less than 1/4 gram o'f cocaine on site earlier that day for his ' i own personal use and when he was observed by the security officer, he dumped it inside the cab of the vehicle. Site access for the laborer was suspended. Fuel present at site. t IX-83-07 06/16/83 Millstone Northeast Nuclear Energy Company New London County, CT During a routine, unannounced narcotics search'of site facili-ties initiated by the licensee with assistance from local law enforcement officers and trained narcotics sniffing dogs from + the Connecticut State Police and Waterford Police Department, one marijuana cigarette was found in the pocketbook belonging to a contract security watchperson. The discovery-occurred in the security personnel briefing room where security personnel had been assembled for a pre-duty briefing. The watchperson's l employment was terminated. - As a result of this incident and a follow-up investigation, an additional seven (7). contract security

MISCELLANE0US 06/30/83 IX-26 (cont) IX-83-07 personnel were terminated because of accusations and/or admissions of usage. Fuel present at site. IX-83-08 06/29/83 Zion Comonwealth Edison Company Lake County, IL At approximately 2:30 p.m., a Zion station security officer found several rolled cigarette butts and a small quantity of loose material, believed to be marijuana, in the ashtray of a contractor's vehicle during a routine vehicle search. The individuals were denied access to the plant, and the alleged controlled substances were turned over to the Zion Police Department for analysis. Fuel present at site. O i l O l l l

STATISTICS A-1 06/30/83 APPENDIX A . STATISTICS This appendix contains thirteen graphics derived from the data presented in i the main body of this document. The figures refer to reported events from 1976 through June 30, 1983, a period of seven years. Data are divided into reactor and non-reactor (i.e., fuel cycle-related) events, and categories of incidents shown are generally consister.t with the categories used in the body of-the report. The significance of' variations in activity levels during the reporting period should be viewed with caution as reporting standards for safeguards events and criteria used for including events in this publication have changed during the period under consideration. Figure 1 provides an overview, by year, of the data base used for all figures presented in this appendix, a total of 781 safeguards events from 1976 through June 30, 1983. The graph illustrates that overall safeguards event activity increased by more than 100 percent from 1978 to 1979, remained relatively constant from 1979 to 1980, decreased by approximately 37 percent between 1980 and 1981 and increased in 1982 by approximately 22 percent. Figure 2 depicts safeguards events 5xcluding any bomb-related incidents. It shows a peak in other-ton-bomb-related incidents in 1980 with a 39 percent decrease in 1981-and a,31 percent increase from 1981 to 1982. Figure 3 shows the total population of 781 safeguards events plotted against O the five NRC geographic regions in which they occurred.* Regions 1, 2 and 3 each have had roughly twice as many events as Regions 4 and 5, which is due primarily to the vastly higher number of licensed facilities in Regions 1, 2 and 3 as compared to Regions 4 and 5. Figure's 4; 5 and 6 show overall safeguarde event activity divided between ~ reactor and non-reactor events. Figure 7 displays the percentage of events falling into each safeguards category. .The majority of events (52%) during the seven-year period have been bomb-related, events. The vast majority of b.yb-related events have been directed at reactor s facilities. The r: ext most comm'an " class of event is material missing, lost or stolen (20%). It should be hotec.that the 1% indicated for the transportation category reflects only those transportation-related events that are not already included in another category since 'the transportation category is generally a cross-reference. Figure 8)llustrates the percentage of reactor safeguards events (a population of 580) by category and shows that approximately 67% of all safeguards events at reactors have been bomb-relate <f. O

  • These regions, which correspond to NRC organizational entities, are made up as follows:

1 - CT, DE, DC, ME, MD, MA NH, NJ, PA, RI, NY, VT; 2 - AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, PR, SC, TN, VA, WV; 3 - IA, IL, IN, MI, MN, MO, OH, WI; 4 - AR, CO, ID, KS, LA, MT, NE, ND, NM, OK, SD, TX, UT, WY; 5 - AK, AZ, CA, HI, NV, OR, WA. pm _P ug I

STATISTICS 06/30/83 A-2 Figure 9 displays the total number of bomb-related incidents (408) involving reactor and non-reactor activities by year. This graph shows peak bomb threat activity during 1979 followed by two years of decline and a 14 percent increase from 1981 to 1982. Figure 10 plots the total number of reported intrusion events (38) by year. The graph shows peak activity in 1980; hov:ever, the small sample size calls for caution in judging the significance of activity levels. Figure 11 shows that 41 tampering / vandalism events have been reported for the seven year period under consideration. The vandalism events reported between i 1976 and June 30, 1983 represent approximately 4 percent of all safeguards l events. l Figure 12 shows the relatively small number of reported firearms-related events that have occurred at all facilities. These 31 events comprise approximately 5 percent of the safeguards event population. Figure 13 shows the number of reported drug and alcohol-related events increasing l since 1978. The 8 events reported from January 1,1983 through June 30, 1983, comprise about 1 percent of the total reported safeguards event population. ,y I l l O

SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (7811 BY YEAR N 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 200 n B R 168-O iss F S ^ 120-00~ R h 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 YEAR FIGURE 1 O O O

O O O i SAFEGUARDS EVENTS 1373) BY YEAR EXCLUDING BONS-RELATED EVENTS N 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 190 p B E E X i R C ~ i 0U F D I S N su AG 69 - EB l Go 4e 1 Un 4: B 4g_ DE sa Sy n I I I I I I I I 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 YEAR i FIGURE 2 t

SAFEGUARDS EVENTS [7811 BY REGION N 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 388-n B E R 249-- O sie F mie see g A 180-E G y U 128-p D es S E a 68 - E I I I I REGION I REGION II REGION III REGION IV REGION V NRC GEOGRAPHICAL REGION FIGURE 3 O O O

O O O ? REACTOR SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (588) BY YEAR [ 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 ase i NS I SS - I l BE i EG l R'u 120-n OR FD S y R EE 88 - AV 7: l CE TN l l 0T l RS 4g~ 85 a: E E I I I I I I I i 1976 1977 1978 1979 1988 1981 1982 1983 ~ YEAR l ~ FIGURE 4 i I

REACTOR SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (1921 EXCLUDING BOMB-RELATED EVENTS i h 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 NE ISO BN ET RS OE 80 - FX C RL EU AD 60 - CI TN OG s B 48-SD AM FB E ri V/A SS 8 g g y y 1976 1977 1978 1979 1988 1981 1982 1983 YEAR FIGURE 5 9 O O

O O O NON-REACTOR SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (2011 BY YEAR 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 l 1es N U r1_ S i Bf 80 - R EG O U F. 60 - N D 0 S

  • ?

N E 40 - s7 E E n A N C T as T S 23 - O i, M M 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 YEAR FIGURE 6 l r

i i SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (7811 BY CATEGORY 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 BOMB 52X i m4 TRANSPORT N 12 FIREARNS INTRUSION 4x 5X N TANP/VAND NISC 12X ON LOST / STOLEN 20% FIGURE 7 O O O

l O O O l REACTOR SAFEGUARDS EVENTS (5881 BY CATEGORY l l 1976 - JUNE 38, 1983 l l B0718 67X t i 4 TRANSPORT % eX 1 INTRUSION 6% LOST / STOLEN IX TAMP /VAND \\ 7% ARSON REARNS MISC 13X' FIGURE 8 9

REACTOR (388) AND NON-REACTOR (20) BOMB-RELATED EVENTS BY YEAR 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 120 NR 96 - UE t1 L RE 72 - D hE no .c BE 48 - 0N T1 T BS a a 24 - 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 YEAR (AN EXPLOSION OCCURRED IN ONLY 2 CASES OUT OF 408) FIGURE 9 O O O

O O O REACTOR (381 INTRUSION EVENTS BY YEAR N 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 B E R 16 - F i4 is g N 12-R is y S I 8-i O N E 4-N 2 m a i M M M 1976 1977 1978 1979 1989 1981 1982 1983 l YEAR FIGURE 10

REACTOR (39) AND NON-REACTOR (2) TAMPERING / VANDALISM EVENTS BY YEAR T 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 ^ 15 - P E R 12 - NG U/ nV BA 9-EN e R O oL 4 F 6-M E E 8 l I l l l l I I 1976 1977 1978 1979* 1980 1981 1982 1983* YEAR (* YEARS IN WHICH NON-REACTOR EVENTS OCCUREO.) l FIGURE 11 O O O

a -a w .m. m l O O O REACTOR (26) AND NON-REACTdR (5) FIREARMS BY YEAR l 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 g i. M B E R 8-F l 6-R E e A ] R 4 4_ M S i 1976 1977* 1978* 1979 1980* 1981 1982* 1983 YEAR [* YEARS IN WHICH NON-REACTOR EVENTS OCCURRED.) FIGURE 12 l

REACTOR (461 DRUG-AND ALCOHOL-RELATED EVENTS BY YEAR 1976 - JUNE 30, 1983 25 20 - N B is 15 - O F E y 10-E e N T 6 5-s.& E 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 YEAR FIGURE 13 O O O

l g,, U.S. NUCLEA2 CEGULATORY COMMIS$lON BIBLIOGRAPHIC DATA SHEET NUREG-0525 Rev. 8

4. TITLE kN D SUBTITLE (A da Vosme No., sf apprepnasef
2. (Leere 6/m*/

'\\ Safeg rds Su:nmary Event List (SSEL), Revision 8 ) CiPiENT S ACCES$acN NO.

7. AUTHOR
5. DATE REPORT COMPLETED -

Regulat Effectiireness Section~ Dc her 1983

9. PE R F ORMING RGAN82ATION NAME AND MAILING ADDRESS (inciucs, Zip C DATE REPORT ISSUED Division o afeguards wDura IvEAR Office of Nu ear Material Safety and Safeguards March 1984 U.S. Nuclear ulatory Commission 6- (L'*"' **a * /

Washington, DC 555

8. (Leave Nmkl
12. SPONSORING ORGANI T NAME AND MAILING ADDRESS (/nci I,a coci,J pp Same as 9 above.

II. CONTRACT NO.

13. TYPE OF REPORT PE RIOD Cove RE D (/nclusive daars/

Information Li, sting Through June 30, 1983

15. SUPPLEMENTARY NOTES
14. (Leave We*1
16. ASSTR ACT 000 words or less)

The Safeguards Summary Event Li (SSEL ides brief summaries of several hundred p safeguards-related events invo. ing nucl m tal or facilities regulate i by the (v) U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commi. ion (NRC). vents described under 'the categories of bomb-related, intrusion, ssing/ alleged

stolen, nsportation, tampering /

vandalism, arson, firearms-lated, radiologi l sabotag d miscellaneous. The information contained in t event descriptions s derived p rily from official NRC reporting channels.

17. KEY WORDS ANO DOCUMEN AN A LYSIS 17a. DESCRIPTORS 17th IDENTIFIERS /OPEN-ENDED TERMS 18 AVAILABikiTY STATEMENT
19. SECURITY CLASS (Tass report) 2 3. NO. OF PAGES

(' Unc1assified Unlimited ro gCgigsS /ra,s,s es

22. P RICE g

N RC F ORM 335 67 ??) t}}