Semantic search

Jump to navigation Jump to search
 Entered dateEvent description
ENS 4061427 March 2004 21:22:00

The item was found adjacent to a house in a wooded area in East Lyme, CT. It was a cylinder measuring 6 inches in length and 2 inches in diameter. The bottom of the cylinder had the following serial number: M2477. It was a general licensed strontium-90 source. The source was contained inside a metal box with a radioactive material symbol on the outside. The State response personnel conducted a radiological survey. The source read 250 millirem per hour on contact for gamma. The source read 3.2 rem per hour on contact for beta. At 12 inches, the source measured 5 millirem per hour. At one meter the source measured less than 1 millirem per hour. The State took the source to a secure locked location for followup on Monday to try to determine the owner.

  • * * UPDATE 0900 ON 3/29/04 MOSS (NMSS) TO GOTT * * *

The item was identified as a component to a helicopter In-flight Blade Inspection System. Notified Mark Evetts at the Homeland Security Operations Center.

  • * * UPDATE 1120 ON 05/07/04 USNA Capt. Dave Farrand TO John MacKinnon * * *

U.S. NRC, Region I (Mr. Jim Schmidt) informed the U. S. Navy (NAVSEADET RASO) on March 31, 2004 that an IBIS device (serial number 2397) containing 500 microCi of Sr-90 was found on private property in East Lyme, Connecticut, on March 28, 2004. The NRC also informed the Navy that the IBIS device was confiscated by the State of Connecticut, and placed in safe and secure storage. Early results of NRC inquiries pointed to the U.S. Navy as the probable owner of the IBIS device. A preliminary investigation by the Navy has found that the these devices are routinely returned to the manufacturer (General Nucleonics) for refurbishing, where they may be resold, through the Defense Logistic Agency to the Navy, the Marine Corp, the Army, or the Coast Guard. The Navy's preliminary investigation also found that these devices are also used on some commercial aircraft. The Navy's preliminary investigation verified that the Navy possessed the device until at least 1989, but found no conclusive data or documentation to show that the device was returned to the manufacturer after that time. Therefore, the Navy has accepted responsibility for the device. The Navy's preliminary investigation was unable to determine how the IBIS device came to be located on private property. The Navy has contacted the State of Connecticut, and has initiated actions to retrieve the device for proper disposal or facilitate its return to the manufacturer. The Navy will follow-up with a 30 day report as required by 10 CFR 20.2201. United States Navy General Radioactive Material license number is 45-23645-01NA. R1DO (Della Greca) & NMSS (Roberto Torres) notified.

ENS 4046321 January 2004 18:10:00The State of Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection reported that the Pepperidge Farm bakery facility in Norwalk, CT reported that a generally-licensed Kay-Ray (now Thermo Measure Tech, Inc) Model 7060BP density gauge used to measure bakery dough density is missing and presumed sent to a scrap recycler in South Norwalk, CT sometime within the last 4 weeks. Pepperidge Farm is in the process of relocating their facility and the gauge will no longer be used. The gauge contains a 50 millicurie (as of August 1983) Cs-137 source. The State plans on notifying recipients of processed scrap shipped by the scrap recycler. In addition, the State will be conducting a radiation survey of the Pepperidge Farm facility to help confirm that the gauge is no longer at the facility.