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100  +
The purpose of this report is to provide aThe purpose of this report is to provide a telephone notification under 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v)(D) to notify the NRC of a temporary loss of the Control Room Envelope (CRE) boundary. The safety function of the CRE boundary is to ensure the in-leakage of unfiltered air into the CRE will not exceed the in-leakage assumed in the licensing basis analysis of design basis accident (DBA) consequences to CRE occupants. In addition to an intact CRE boundary maintaining CRE occupant dose from a large radioactive release below the calculated dose in the licensing basis consequence analysis for DBAs, it also ensures the occupants are protected from hazardous chemicals and smoke.</br>The loss of the CRE boundary was due to a failed latching mechanism for a CRE boundary door used for normal passage of personnel into and out of the CRE. The failure of the door to latch as designed is considered a condition that could have prevented the fulfillment of a safety function at the time of discovery, and is therefore reportable as required by paragraph 50.72(b)(3), 'Eight-hour reports.'</br>Procedural controls have restored the safety function of the CRE boundary by mechanically locking the subject door in the closed position through the use of a specifically designed mechanical strong-back until a permanent repair is made.</br>The NRC Resident Inspector has been notified.</br>* * * RETRACTION FROM MARK HAWES TO JOHN SHOEMAKER AT 1642 EDT ON 6/1/15 * * *</br>The main control room corridor fire door (76FDR-A-300-10) was found to not be able to latch. The latch was stuck in the latch mechanism because the latch bolt was bent. The latch was replaced on 4/15/2015.</br>The Control Room Emergency Ventilation Air Supply System (CREVAS) provides a protected environment from which occupants can control the plant following an uncontrolled release of radioactivity, hazardous chemicals, or smoke. The Control Room Envelope (CRE) is the physical boundary around the CREVAS environment. The Operability of the CRE boundary depends on its ability to minimize in-leakage of unfiltered air such that after a design bases accident a habitable environment can be maintained for 31 days without exceeding 5 rem whole body dose or its equivalent to any part of the body.</br>The control room is normally pressurized greater than the 0.125 inches water gauge. This causes air to leak out rather than allowing infiltration of air from surrounding areas into the CRE boundary. The pressurized control room pushes this door (76FDR-A-300-10) outward, toward the open direction; however, even though the latch to the door did not work the door was still able to close. The closed door minimized in-leakage and a positive differential pressure was maintained in the control room during this event. These doors are kept closed against the door seals primarily by the closure mechanism. The latch is a secondary means of ensuring that the doors remain closed as well as a means to control personnel access to the control room.</br>The Control Room Envelope (CRE) remained Operable with this deficiency and there was no loss of safety function per 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v)(D). The original notification may be retracted.</br>The licensee has notified the NRC Resident Inspector.</br>Notified the R1DO (Powell).ent Inspector. Notified the R1DO (Powell).  
22:00:00, 12 April 2015  +
50,979  +
20:51:00, 12 April 2015  +
22:00:00, 12 April 2015  +
The purpose of this report is to provide aThe purpose of this report is to provide a telephone notification under 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v)(D) to notify the NRC of a temporary loss of the Control Room Envelope (CRE) boundary. The safety function of the CRE boundary is to ensure the in-leakage of unfiltered air into the CRE will not exceed the in-leakage assumed in the licensing basis analysis of design basis accident (DBA) consequences to CRE occupants. In addition to an intact CRE boundary maintaining CRE occupant dose from a large radioactive release below the calculated dose in the licensing basis consequence analysis for DBAs, it also ensures the occupants are protected from hazardous chemicals and smoke.</br>The loss of the CRE boundary was due to a failed latching mechanism for a CRE boundary door used for normal passage of personnel into and out of the CRE. The failure of the door to latch as designed is considered a condition that could have prevented the fulfillment of a safety function at the time of discovery, and is therefore reportable as required by paragraph 50.72(b)(3), 'Eight-hour reports.'</br>Procedural controls have restored the safety function of the CRE boundary by mechanically locking the subject door in the closed position through the use of a specifically designed mechanical strong-back until a permanent repair is made.</br>The NRC Resident Inspector has been notified.</br>* * * RETRACTION FROM MARK HAWES TO JOHN SHOEMAKER AT 1642 EDT ON 6/1/15 * * *</br>The main control room corridor fire door (76FDR-A-300-10) was found to not be able to latch. The latch was stuck in the latch mechanism because the latch bolt was bent. The latch was replaced on 4/15/2015.</br>The Control Room Emergency Ventilation Air Supply System (CREVAS) provides a protected environment from which occupants can control the plant following an uncontrolled release of radioactivity, hazardous chemicals, or smoke. The Control Room Envelope (CRE) is the physical boundary around the CREVAS environment. The Operability of the CRE boundary depends on its ability to minimize in-leakage of unfiltered air such that after a design bases accident a habitable environment can be maintained for 31 days without exceeding 5 rem whole body dose or its equivalent to any part of the body.</br>The control room is normally pressurized greater than the 0.125 inches water gauge. This causes air to leak out rather than allowing infiltration of air from surrounding areas into the CRE boundary. The pressurized control room pushes this door (76FDR-A-300-10) outward, toward the open direction; however, even though the latch to the door did not work the door was still able to close. The closed door minimized in-leakage and a positive differential pressure was maintained in the control room during this event. These doors are kept closed against the door seals primarily by the closure mechanism. The latch is a secondary means of ensuring that the doors remain closed as well as a means to control personnel access to the control room.</br>The Control Room Envelope (CRE) remained Operable with this deficiency and there was no loss of safety function per 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v)(D). The original notification may be retracted.</br>The licensee has notified the NRC Resident Inspector.</br>Notified the R1DO (Powell).ent Inspector. Notified the R1DO (Powell).  
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100  +
00:00:00, 1 June 2015  +
Modification date"Modification date" is a predefined property that corresponds to the date of the last modification of a subject and is provided by <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a>.
01:47:37, 2 March 2018  +
20:51:00, 12 April 2015  +
false  +
-0.0479 d (-1.15 hours, -0.00685 weeks, -0.00158 months)  +
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22:00:00, 12 April 2015  +
Temporary Loss of Control Room Envelope Boundary  +
URL"URL" is a <a href="/Special:Types/URL" title="Special:Types/URL">type</a> and predefined property provided by <a rel="nofollow" class="external text" href="https://www.semantic-mediawiki.org/wiki/Help:Special_properties">Semantic MediaWiki</a> to represent URI/URL values.
1  +