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{{#Wiki_filter:November 2, 2007William R. Brian, Vice President of OperationsGrand Gulf Nuclear Station Entergy Operations, Inc.
{{#Wiki_filter:November 2, 2007 William R. Brian, Vice President of Operations Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Entergy Operations, Inc.
P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150      
P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150


==SUBJECT:==
==SUBJECT:==
GRAND GULF NUCLEAR STATION - NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTIONREPORT 05000416/2007004
GRAND GULF NUCLEAR STATION - NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTION REPORT 05000416/2007004


==Dear Mr. Brian:==
==Dear Mr. Brian:==


On September 30, 2007, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed aninspection at your Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility. The enclosed integrated report documents the inspection findings, which were discussed on October 10, 2007, with you and other members of your staff.The inspection examined activities conducted under your license as they relate to safety andcompliance with the Commission's rules and regulations and with the conditions of your license.
On September 30, 2007, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed an inspection at your Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility. The enclosed integrated report documents the inspection findings, which were discussed on October 10, 2007, with you and other members of your staff.
The inspectors reviewed selected procedures and records, observed activities, and interviewed personnel.This report documents four NRC identified and self-revealing findings of very low safetysignificance (Green). Three of these findings were determined to involve violations of NRC requirements; however, because of the very low safety significance and because they were entered into your corrective action program, the NRC is treating these findings as noncited violations (NCVs) consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy. If you contest these NCVs, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your denial, to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington DC 20555-0001; with copies to the Regional Administrator, U.S.
The inspection examined activities conducted under your license as they relate to safety and compliance with the Commission's rules and regulations and with the conditions of your license.
The inspectors reviewed selected procedures and records, observed activities, and interviewed personnel.
This report documents four NRC identified and self-revealing findings of very low safety significance (Green). Three of these findings were determined to involve violations of NRC requirements; however, because of the very low safety significance and because they were entered into your corrective action program, the NRC is treating these findings as noncited violations (NCVs) consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy. If you contest these NCVs, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your denial, to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington DC 20555-0001; with copies to the Regional Administrator, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission Region IV, 611 Ryan Plaza Drive, Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011-4005; the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington DC 20555-0001; and the NRC Resident Inspector at the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission Region IV, 611 Ryan Plaza Drive, Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011-4005; the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington DC 20555-0001; and the NRC Resident Inspector at the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility.
Entergy Operations, Inc.-2-In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter, itsenclosure, and your response (if any) will be made available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRC's document system (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).Sincerely,/RA/Michael C. Hay, ChiefProject Branch C Division of Reactor ProjectsDocket:   50-416License: NPF-29
 
Entergy Operations, Inc.                       In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's Rules of Practice, a copy of this letter, its enclosure, and your response (if any) will be made available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRCs document system (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).
Sincerely,
                                            /RA/
Michael C. Hay, Chief Project Branch C Division of Reactor Projects Docket: 50-416 License: NPF-29


==Enclosure:==
==Enclosure:==
Inspection Report 05000416/2007004 w/
Inspection Report 05000416/2007004 w/


==Attachment:==
==Attachment:==
Supplemental Informationcc w/
Supplemental Information cc w/


==Enclosure:==
==Enclosure:==
Senior Vice President Entergy Nuclear Operations P.O. Box 31995 Jackson, MS 39286-1995Senior Vice President and COOEntergy Operations, Inc.
P.O. Box 31995 Jackson, MS 39286-1995Vice President, Operations SupportEntergy Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 31995 Jackson, MS 39286-1995 ChiefEnergy & Transportation Branch Environmental Compliance and Enforcement Division Mississippi Department of Environmental Quality P.O. Box 10385 Jackson, MS  39289-0385PresidentClaiborne County Board of Supervisors P.O. Box 339 Port Gibson, MS  39150General Manager, Plant OperationsGrand Gulf Nuclear Station Entergy Operations, Inc.
P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS  39150Senior ManagerNuclear Safety & Licensing Entergy Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 31995 Jackson, MS 39286-1995Manager, LicensingEntergy Operations, Inc.
P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150 Entergy Operations, Inc.-3-Attorney General Department of Justice State of Louisiana P.O. Box 94005 Baton Rouge, LA  70804-9005 Office of the GovernorState of Mississippi Jackson, MS  39205Attorney GeneralAssistant Attorney General State of Mississippi P.O. Box 22947 Jackson, MS  39225-2947State Health OfficerState Board of Health P.O. Box 139 Jackson, MS  39205 Lisa R. HammondTechnological Hazards Branch National Preparedness Division FEMA Region VI 800 N. Loop 288 Denton, TX  76209Conrad S. Burnside, ChiefTechnological Hazards Branch National Preparedness Division DHS/FEMA 3003 Chamblee Tucker Road Atlanta, GA  30341DirectorNuclear Safety & Licensing Entergy Operations, Inc.
1340 Echelon Parkway Jackson, MS  39213-8298Director, Nuclear Safety AssuranceEntergy Operations, Inc.
P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS  39150Richard Penrod, Senior Environmental  Scientist, State Liaison Officer Office of Environmental Services Northwestern State University


Russsell Hall, Room 201 Natchitoches, LA 71497 Entergy Operations, Inc.-4-Electronic distribution by RIV:Regional Administrator (EEC)DRP Director (ATH)DRS Director (DDC)DRS Deputy Director (RJC1)Senior Resident Inspector (AJB6)Branch Chief, DRP/C (MCH2)Senior Project Engineer, DRP/C (WCW)Team Leader, DRP/TSS (CJP)RITS Coordinator (MSH3)Only inspection reports to the following:DRS STA (DAP)D. Pelton, OEDO RIV Coordinator (DLP)ROPreports GG Site Secretary (NAS2)SUNSI Review Completed:   MCH     ADAMS:   Yes       No   Initials:   MCH Publicly Available     Non-Publicly Available Sensitive     Non-SensitiveR:\_REACTORS\GG\2007\GG2007-04RP-AJB.wpdML073060622RIV:RI:DRP/CSPE:DRP/EC:SPE:DRP/CC:DRS/EB1C:DRS/PSBAJBarrett    GBMillerWCWalkerWBJonesMPShannon/RA - E//RA//RA//RA//RA KBrooks for/11/01/0710/29/0711/01/0710/29/0710/30/07C:DRS/OBC:DRS/EB2C:DRP/CATGodyLJSmithMCHay/RA BLarson for//RA Dpowers for//RA/11/01/0710/29/0711/02/07OFFICIAL RECORD COPY T=Telephone           E=E-mail       F=Fax EnclosureU.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION IV Docket:50-416Licenses:NPF-29 Report No.:05000416/2007004 Licensee:Entergy Operations, Inc.
Senior Vice President                                President Entergy Nuclear Operations                          Claiborne County Board of Supervisors P.O. Box 31995                                      P.O. Box 339 Jackson, MS 39286-1995                              Port Gibson, MS 39150 Senior Vice President and COO                        General Manager, Plant Operations Entergy Operations, Inc.                            Grand Gulf Nuclear Station P.O. Box 31995                                      Entergy Operations, Inc.
Facility:Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Location:Waterloo Road Port Gibson, Mississippi 39150Dates:July 1 through September 30, 2007 Inspectors:A. Barrett, Resident InspectorD. Bollock, Project Engineer G. A. George, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 S. Garchow, Operations Engineer B. Henderson, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 G. Miller, Senior Resident Inspector J. Reynoso, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 T. Stetka, Senior Operations Engineer E. Uribe, NSPDP Approved By:Michael C. Hay, ChiefProject Branch C Division of Reactor Projects EnclosureEnclosure
Jackson, MS 39286-1995                              P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150 Vice President, Operations Support Entergy Services, Inc.                              Senior Manager P.O. Box 31995                                      Nuclear Safety & Licensing Jackson, MS 39286-1995                              Entergy Services, Inc.
P.O. Box 31995 Chief                                                Jackson, MS 39286-1995 Energy & Transportation Branch Environmental Compliance and                        Manager, Licensing Enforcement Division                              Entergy Operations, Inc.
Mississippi Department of                            P.O. Box 756 Environmental Quality                              Port Gibson, MS 39150 P.O. Box 10385 Jackson, MS 39289-0385
 
Entergy Operations, Inc.      Attorney General Department of Justice              Conrad S. Burnside, Chief State of Louisiana                Technological Hazards Branch P.O. Box 94005                    National Preparedness Division Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9005        DHS/FEMA 3003 Chamblee Tucker Road Office of the Governor            Atlanta, GA 30341 State of Mississippi Jackson, MS 39205                  Director Nuclear Safety & Licensing Attorney General                  Entergy Operations, Inc.
Assistant Attorney General        1340 Echelon Parkway State of Mississippi              Jackson, MS 39213-8298 P.O. Box 22947 Jackson, MS 39225-2947            Director, Nuclear Safety Assurance Entergy Operations, Inc.
State Health Officer              P.O. Box 756 State Board of Health              Port Gibson, MS 39150 P.O. Box 139 Jackson, MS 39205                  Richard Penrod, Senior Environmental Scientist, State Liaison Officer Lisa R. Hammond                    Office of Environmental Services Technological Hazards Branch      Northwestern State University National Preparedness Division    Russsell Hall, Room 201 FEMA Region VI                    Natchitoches, LA 71497 800 N. Loop 288 Denton, TX 76209
 
Entergy Operations, Inc.                       Electronic distribution by RIV:
Regional Administrator (EEC)
DRP Director (ATH)
DRS Director (DDC)
DRS Deputy Director (RJC1)
Senior Resident Inspector (AJB6)
Branch Chief, DRP/C (MCH2)
Senior Project Engineer, DRP/C (WCW)
Team Leader, DRP/TSS (CJP)
RITS Coordinator (MSH3)
Only inspection reports to the following:
DRS STA (DAP)
D. Pelton, OEDO RIV Coordinator (DLP)
ROPreports GG Site Secretary (NAS2)
SUNSI Review Completed: MCH ADAMS: : Yes                   No Initials: MCH
: Publicly Available       Non-Publicly Available     Sensitive : Non-Sensitive R:\_REACTORS\GG\2007\GG2007-04RP-AJB.wpd                  ML073060622 RIV:RI:DRP/C            SPE:DRP/E        C:SPE:DRP/C        C:DRS/EB1    C:DRS/PSB AJBarrett              GBMiller          WCWalker          WBJones      MPShannon
/RA - E/               /RA/             /RA/               /RA/         /RA KBrooks for/
11/01/07                10/29/07          11/01/07          10/29/07      10/30/07 C:DRS/OB                C:DRS/EB2            C:DRP/C ATGody                  LJSmith              MCHay
/RA BLarson for/       /RA Dpowers for/     /RA/
11/01/07                10/29/07            11/02/07 OFFICIAL RECORD COPY                                   T=Telephone       E=E-mail     F=Fax
 
U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION IV Docket:     50-416 Licenses:   NPF-29 Report No.: 05000416/2007004 Licensee:   Entergy Operations, Inc.
Facility:   Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Location:   Waterloo Road Port Gibson, Mississippi 39150 Dates:       July 1 through September 30, 2007 Inspectors: A. Barrett, Resident Inspector D. Bollock, Project Engineer G. A. George, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 S. Garchow, Operations Engineer B. Henderson, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 G. Miller, Senior Resident Inspector J. Reynoso, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 T. Stetka, Senior Operations Engineer E. Uribe, NSPDP Approved By: Michael C. Hay, Chief Project Branch C Division of Reactor Projects Enclosure


==SUMMARY==
==SUMMARY==
OF FINDINGSIR05000416/2007004; 7/1/07 - 9/30/07; Grand Gulf Nuclear Station -- Integrated Resident andRegional Report; Maintenance Effectiveness, Permanent Plant Modifications, Refueling and Outage Activities, Event Follow-up.This report covered a 3-month period of inspection by resident inspectors and regional officeinspectors. These inspection activities identified four Green findings, three of which were noncited violations. The significance of most findings is indicated by their color (Green, White, Yellow, or Red) using Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process."
OF FINDINGS IR05000416/2007004; 7/1/07 - 9/30/07; Grand Gulf Nuclear Station -- Integrated Resident and Regional Report; Maintenance Effectiveness, Permanent Plant Modifications, Refueling and Outage Activities, Event Follow-up.
Findings for which the significance determination process does not apply may be Green or be assigned a severity level after NRC management's review. The NRC's program for overseeing the safe operation of commercial nuclear power reactors is described in NUREG-1649, "Reactor Oversight Process," Revision 3, dated July 2000.A.NRC-Identified and Self-Revealing FindingsCornerstone: Mitigating Systems*Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50,Appendix B, Criterion III, "Design Control," for the failure to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into an instruction or procedure. The licensee established a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F. If outside air temperatures exceeded 102.5°F, safety-related equipment, which are located in rooms that are cooled by outdoor air (i.e., standby service water pump room), would be operationally challenged. The inspectors identified that no instruction or procedure was established to monitor high outside temperature or subsequent actions established in the event the design basis temperature limit is exceeded. The inspectors determined that the finding was more than minor because thefinding affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of the standby service water system that responds to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process," this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded.
This report covered a 3-month period of inspection by resident inspectors and regional office inspectors. These inspection activities identified four Green findings, three of which were noncited violations. The significance of most findings is indicated by their color (Green, White, Yellow, or Red) using Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process.
The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in determining not to establish a procedure or instruction to monitor high outside temperature for design limits on the standby service water pump room [H.1(b)] (Section 1R17). *Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2)for the failure to adequately monitor the performance of the control rod drive system. Specifically, the licensee failed to adequately perform a functional failure determination for a degraded flow control valve. Following licensee EnclosureEnclosure-2-review of this condition the system was placed in the maintenance rule (a)(1)monitoring status. This finding was more than minor since the degraded control rod drive flowcontrol valve caused the system to be placed in the (a)(1) monitoring status.
Findings for which the significance determination process does not apply may be Green or be assigned a severity level after NRC management's review. The NRCs program for overseeing the safe operation of commercial nuclear power reactors is described in NUREG-1649, Reactor Oversight Process, Revision 3, dated July 2000.
This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with decisionmaking because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions [H.1(b)] (Section 1R12).*Green. A self-revealing noncited violation of Technical Specifications 5.4.1(a)was identified involving the failure to adequately follow procedure to align valves in the fuel pool cooling and cleanup system. The valves were aligned in the wrong sequence, contrary to the system operating instructions, causing both fuel pool cooling and cleanup pumps to trip and a subsequent loss of fuel pool cooling. The licensee entered this issue in their corrective action program as Condition Report CR-GGN-2007-04284.The finding is more than minor, since it affects the human performance attributeof the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using the Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process," Phase 1 worksheet, the finding has a very low safety significance since it only represents a degradation of the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performanceassociated with work practices because licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure [H.4(b)]
A. NRC-Identified and Self-Revealing Findings Cornerstone: Mitigating Systems
(Section 1R20).Cornerstone: Initiating Events*Green. A self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure to properlycalibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition. This issue was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Report CR-GGN-2007-02756. The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiatingevents cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations.
* Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, Design Control, for the failure to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into an instruction or procedure. The licensee established a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F. If outside air temperatures exceeded 102.5°F, safety-related equipment, which are located in rooms that are cooled by outdoor air (i.e., standby service water pump room), would be operationally challenged. The inspectors identified that no instruction or procedure was established to monitor high outside temperature or subsequent actions established in the event the design basis temperature limit is exceeded.
Using the Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process," Phase 1 EnclosureEnclosure-3-worksheet, the finding was determined to have very low safety significance because the finding did not contribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipmentor functions would not be available following a reactor trip. The cause of thefinding was related to the human performance crosscutting component ofresources in that the calibration procedure did not provide clear instructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©] (Section 4OA3).B.Licensee-Identified ViolationsViolations of very low safety significance which were identified by the licensee havebeen reviewed by the inspectors. Corrective actions taken or planned by the licensee have been entered into the licensee's corrective action program. These violations and corrective actions are listed in Section 4OA7 of this report.
The inspectors determined that the finding was more than minor because the finding affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of the standby service water system that responds to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded.
EnclosureEnclosure-4-REPORT DETAILSSummary of Plant StatusGrand Gulf Nuclear Station (GGNS) began the inspection period at full rated thermal power. On August 21, 2007, the reactor experienced an automatic reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feedpump turbine controller. Following troubleshooting and repairs, the reactor was restarted on August 22, 2007, and reached full power on August 26, 2007. On August 26, 2007, the reactor recirculation Pump B motor tripped due to a ground fault, causing the plant to experience an unplanned power reduction to 58 percent power. The plant remained at approximately 58 percent power and in single loop operation until September 1, 2007, when the reactor was shutdown to replace the failed motor. On September 14, 2007, the plant started up from the outage and reached full power on September 18, 2007. The plant remained at or near full rated thermal power for the remainder of the inspection period.1.REACTOR SAFETYCornerstones: Initiating Events, Mitigating Systems, Barrier Integrity1R01Adverse Weather Protection (71111.01).1Readiness For Seasonal Susceptibilities     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors completed a review of the licensee's readiness for seasonalsusceptibilities involving extreme high temperatures. The inspectors: (1) reviewed plant procedures, the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR), and Technical Specifications (TS) to ensure that operator actions defined in adverse weather procedures maintained the readiness of essential systems; (2) walked down portions of the three systems listed below to ensure that adverse weather protection features were sufficient to support operability, including the ability to perform safe shutdown functions; (3) evaluated operator staffing levels to ensure the licensee could maintain the readiness of essential systems required by plant procedures; and (4) reviewed the corrective action program (CAP) to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to adverse weather conditions. August 6, 2007, standby service water systemAugust 8, 2007, turbine building cooling water systemAugust 9, 2007, plant service water systemDocuments reviewed by the inspectors included:Procedure 05-1-02-VI-2, "Hurricanes, Tornadoes, and Severe Weather,"Revision 108Procedure ENS-EP-302, "Severe Weather Response," Revision 4 EnclosureEnclosure-5-SDC-P41, "System Design Criteria for Standby Service Water System P41,"Revision 3Procedure 04-1-01-P43-1, "Turbine Building Cooling Water System," Revision 44Procedure 04-1-01-P44-1, "Plant Service Water/ Radial Well System,"Revision 84The inspectors completed one sample.1R02Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments (71111.02)     a.Inspection ScopeFrom August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed the effectiveness of the licensee'simplementation of changes to the facility structures, systems, and components; risk-significant normal and emergency operating procedures; test programs; and the UFSAR report in accordance with 10 CFR 50.59, "Changes, Tests, and Experiments." The inspectors reviewed seven 10 CFR 50.59 safety evaluations performed by thelicensee since the last NRC inspection of the 10 CFR 50.59 process. The evaluations were reviewed to verify that licensee personnel had appropriately considered the conditions under which the licensee may make changes to the facility or procedures or conduct tests or experiments without prior NRC approval. In addition, the inspectors reviewed fifteen 10 CFR 50.59 screenings, in which licensee personnel determined that evaluations were not required, to ensure that the exclusion of a full evaluation was consistent with the requirements of 10 CFR 50.59. The inspectors reviewed a sample of recent licensee condition reports (CRs) related tothe 10 CFR 50.59 process to determine whether the licensee had identified problems and entered them into the CAP at the appropriate threshold. The inspection procedure specifies that the inspectors review a minimum sample offive licensee safety evaluations and a combination of ten applicability determinations or screenings. The inspectors completed a review of seven licensee safety evaluations and fifteen applicability/screenings. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.
The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in determining not to establish a procedure or instruction to monitor high outside temperature for design limits on the standby service water pump room [H.1(b)] (Section 1R17).
EnclosureEnclosure-6-1R04Equipment Alignment (71111.04).1Partial System Walkdowns a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors: (1) walked down portions of the two listed risk important systems andreviewed plant procedures and documents to verify that critical portions of the selected systems were correctly aligned; and (2) compared deficiencies identified during the walkdown to the licensee's UFSAR and CAP to ensure problems were being identified and corrected. July 23, 2007, and July 26, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of thecontrol rod drive Train A system following a system maintenance outage.July 31, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of the reactor core isolationcooling system following a system maintenance outage.Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
* Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) for the failure to adequately monitor the performance of the control rod drive system. Specifically, the licensee failed to adequately perform a functional failure determination for a degraded flow control valve. Following licensee Enclosure
Procedure 04-1-01-C11-1, "System Operating Instruction - Control Rod DriveHydraulic System," Revision 128System Piping Diagram M-1081A, "Control Rod Drive Hydraulic System,"Revision 38Procedure 04-1-01-E51-1, "System Operating Instruction - Reactor CoreIsolation Cooling System," Revision 124System Piping Diagram M-1083A, "Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System,"Revision 33System Piping Diagram M-1083B, "Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System,"Revision 36Vendor Manual 460000182, "Reactor Core Isolation Cooling"The inspectors completed two samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.
 
EnclosureEnclosure-7-1R05Fire Protection (71111.05)     a. Inspection ScopeQuarterly InspectionThe inspectors walked down the six listed plant areas to assess the material condition ofactive and passive fire protection features and their operational lineup and readiness.
review of this condition the system was placed in the maintenance rule (a)(1) monitoring status.
The inspectors: (1) verified that transient combustibles and hot work activities were controlled in accordance with plant procedures; (2) observed the condition of fire detection devices to verify they remained functional; (3) observed fire suppression systems to verify they remained functional and that access to manual actuators were unobstructed; (4) verified that fire extinguishers and hose stations were provided at their designated locations and that they were in a satisfactory condition; (5) verified that passive fire protection features (electrical raceway barriers, fire doors, fire dampers, steel fire proofing, penetration seals, and oil collection systems) were in a satisfactory material condition; (6) verified that adequate compensatory measures were established for degraded or inoperable fire protection features and that the compensatory measures were commensurate with the significance of the deficiency; and (7) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected fire protection problems. Secondary Alarm StationControl Room Emergency Dormitory (Room 1OC604)Technical Support Center (Room 1OC608) Upper Relay Room (Room 1OC703)Instrument Motor Generator Room (Room 1OC707)Drywell, All Elevations (1A112)Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
This finding was more than minor since the degraded control rod drive flow control valve caused the system to be placed in the (a)(1) monitoring status.
Procedure 10-S-03-4, "Control of Combustible Material," Revision 14Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Fire Pre-Plans, Revision 15Procedure 01-S-10-1, "Fire Protection Plan," Revision 102Procedure 10-S-03-9, "Control of Fire Pre-Plans," Revision 2The inspectors completed six samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R11Licensed Operator Requalification (71111.11).1Biennial InspectionThe licensed operator requalification program involves two training cycles that areconducted over a two year period. In the first cycle, the annual cycle, the operators are EnclosureEnclosure-8-administered an operating test consisting of job performance measures and scenarios. In the second part of the training cycle, the biennial cycle, operators are administered anoperating test and a written examination. The inspectors reviewed the results of the biennial cycle of the requalification program.
This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with decision making because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions [H.1(b)] (Section 1R12).
* Green. A self-revealing noncited violation of Technical Specifications 5.4.1(a) was identified involving the failure to adequately follow procedure to align valves in the fuel pool cooling and cleanup system. The valves were aligned in the wrong sequence, contrary to the system operating instructions, causing both fuel pool cooling and cleanup pumps to trip and a subsequent loss of fuel pool cooling. The licensee entered this issue in their corrective action program as Condition Report CR-GGN-2007-04284.
The finding is more than minor, since it affects the human performance attribute of the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using the Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, the finding has a very low safety significance since it only represents a degradation of the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with work practices because licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure [H.4(b)]
(Section 1R20).
Cornerstone: Initiating Events
* Green. A self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure to properly calibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition. This issue was entered into the licensees corrective action program as Condition Report CR-GGN-2007-02756.
The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiating events cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations.
Using the Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 Enclosure
 
worksheet, the finding was determined to have very low safety significance because the finding did not contribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipment or functions would not be available following a reactor trip. The cause of the finding was related to the human performance crosscutting component of resources in that the calibration procedure did not provide clear instructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©] (Section 4OA3).
B. Licensee-Identified Violations Violations of very low safety significance which were identified by the licensee have been reviewed by the inspectors. Corrective actions taken or planned by the licensee have been entered into the licensee's corrective action program. These violations and corrective actions are listed in Section 4OA7 of this report.
Enclosure
 
REPORT DETAILS Summary of Plant Status Grand Gulf Nuclear Station (GGNS) began the inspection period at full rated thermal power.
On August 21, 2007, the reactor experienced an automatic reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feedpump turbine controller. Following troubleshooting and repairs, the reactor was restarted on August 22, 2007, and reached full power on August 26, 2007. On August 26, 2007, the reactor recirculation Pump B motor tripped due to a ground fault, causing the plant to experience an unplanned power reduction to 58 percent power. The plant remained at approximately 58 percent power and in single loop operation until September 1, 2007, when the reactor was shutdown to replace the failed motor. On September 14, 2007, the plant started up from the outage and reached full power on September 18, 2007. The plant remained at or near full rated thermal power for the remainder of the inspection period.
: 1.     REACTOR SAFETY Cornerstones: Initiating Events, Mitigating Systems, Barrier Integrity 1R01 Adverse Weather Protection (71111.01)
.1      Readiness For Seasonal Susceptibilities
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors completed a review of the licensee's readiness for seasonal susceptibilities involving extreme high temperatures. The inspectors: (1) reviewed plant procedures, the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR), and Technical Specifications (TS) to ensure that operator actions defined in adverse weather procedures maintained the readiness of essential systems; (2) walked down portions of the three systems listed below to ensure that adverse weather protection features were sufficient to support operability, including the ability to perform safe shutdown functions; (3) evaluated operator staffing levels to ensure the licensee could maintain the readiness of essential systems required by plant procedures; and (4) reviewed the corrective action program (CAP) to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to adverse weather conditions.
C      August 6, 2007, standby service water system C      August 8, 2007, turbine building cooling water system C      August 9, 2007, plant service water system Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
C      Procedure 05-1-02-VI-2, Hurricanes, Tornadoes, and Severe Weather, Revision 108 C      Procedure ENS-EP-302, Severe Weather Response, Revision 4 Enclosure
 
C        SDC-P41, System Design Criteria for Standby Service Water System P41, Revision 3 C        Procedure 04-1-01-P43-1, Turbine Building Cooling Water System, Revision 44 C        Procedure 04-1-01-P44-1, Plant Service Water/ Radial Well System, Revision 84 The inspectors completed one sample.
1R02 Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments (71111.02)
: a. Inspection Scope From August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed the effectiveness of the licensees implementation of changes to the facility structures, systems, and components; risk-significant normal and emergency operating procedures; test programs; and the UFSAR report in accordance with 10 CFR 50.59, Changes, Tests, and Experiments.
The inspectors reviewed seven 10 CFR 50.59 safety evaluations performed by the licensee since the last NRC inspection of the 10 CFR 50.59 process. The evaluations were reviewed to verify that licensee personnel had appropriately considered the conditions under which the licensee may make changes to the facility or procedures or conduct tests or experiments without prior NRC approval. In addition, the inspectors reviewed fifteen 10 CFR 50.59 screenings, in which licensee personnel determined that evaluations were not required, to ensure that the exclusion of a full evaluation was consistent with the requirements of 10 CFR 50.59.
The inspectors reviewed a sample of recent licensee condition reports (CRs) related to the 10 CFR 50.59 process to determine whether the licensee had identified problems and entered them into the CAP at the appropriate threshold.
The inspection procedure specifies that the inspectors review a minimum sample of five licensee safety evaluations and a combination of ten applicability determinations or screenings. The inspectors completed a review of seven licensee safety evaluations and fifteen applicability/screenings.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Enclosure
 
1R04 Equipment Alignment (71111.04)
.1    Partial System Walkdowns
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) walked down portions of the two listed risk important systems and reviewed plant procedures and documents to verify that critical portions of the selected systems were correctly aligned; and (2) compared deficiencies identified during the walkdown to the licensee's UFSAR and CAP to ensure problems were being identified and corrected.
C      July 23, 2007, and July 26, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of the control rod drive Train A system following a system maintenance outage.
C      July 31, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of the reactor core isolation cooling system following a system maintenance outage.
Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
C      Procedure 04-1-01-C11-1, System Operating Instruction - Control Rod Drive Hydraulic System, Revision 128 C      System Piping Diagram M-1081A, Control Rod Drive Hydraulic System, Revision 38 C      Procedure 04-1-01-E51-1, System Operating Instruction - Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 124 C      System Piping Diagram M-1083A, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 33 C      System Piping Diagram M-1083B, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 36 C      Vendor Manual 460000182, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling The inspectors completed two samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Enclosure
 
1R05 Fire Protection (71111.05)
: a. Inspection Scope Quarterly Inspection The inspectors walked down the six listed plant areas to assess the material condition of active and passive fire protection features and their operational lineup and readiness.
The inspectors: (1) verified that transient combustibles and hot work activities were controlled in accordance with plant procedures; (2) observed the condition of fire detection devices to verify they remained functional; (3) observed fire suppression systems to verify they remained functional and that access to manual actuators were unobstructed; (4) verified that fire extinguishers and hose stations were provided at their designated locations and that they were in a satisfactory condition; (5) verified that passive fire protection features (electrical raceway barriers, fire doors, fire dampers, steel fire proofing, penetration seals, and oil collection systems) were in a satisfactory material condition; (6) verified that adequate compensatory measures were established for degraded or inoperable fire protection features and that the compensatory measures were commensurate with the significance of the deficiency; and (7) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected fire protection problems.
C        Secondary Alarm Station C        Control Room Emergency Dormitory (Room 1OC604)
C        Technical Support Center (Room 1OC608)
C        Upper Relay Room (Room 1OC703)
C        Instrument Motor Generator Room (Room 1OC707)
C        Drywell, All Elevations (1A112)
Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
C        Procedure 10-S-03-4, Control of Combustible Material, Revision 14 C        Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Fire Pre-Plans, Revision 15 C        Procedure 01-S-10-1, Fire Protection Plan, Revision 102 C        Procedure 10-S-03-9, Control of Fire Pre-Plans, Revision 2 The inspectors completed six samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
1R11 Licensed Operator Requalification (71111.11)
.1    Biennial Inspection The licensed operator requalification program involves two training cycles that are conducted over a two year period. In the first cycle, the annual cycle, the operators are Enclosure


a.Inspection ScopeTo assess the performance effectiveness of the licensed operator requalification program, the inspectors conducted personnel interviews, reviewed samples of both the operating and written examinations, observed ongoing operating examination activities, and reviewed personnel records.The inspectors interviewed five licensee personnel, consisting of three operators, aninstructor, and a training supervisor to determine their understanding of the policies and practices for administering requalification examinations. The inspectors also reviewed operator performance on the written and operating examinations. These reviews included observations of portions of the operating examination by the inspectors. The operating examinations observed included five job performance measures and two scenarios that were used in the current biennial requalification cycle. These observations allowed the inspectors to assess the licensee's effectiveness in conducting the operating test to ensure operator mastery of the training program content.
administered an operating test consisting of job performance measures and scenarios.
The results of these examinations were reviewed to determine the effectiveness of the licensee's appraisal of operator performance and to determine if feedback of performance analyses into the requalification training program was being accomplished.
In the second part of the training cycle, the biennial cycle, operators are administered an operating test and a written examination. The inspectors reviewed the results of the biennial cycle of the requalification program.
The inspectors interviewed members of the training department to assess the responsiveness of the licensed operator requalification program to incorporate the lessons learned from both plant and industry events. Examination results were also assessed to determine if they were consistent with the guidance contained in NUREG 1021, "Operator Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors,"
: a. Inspection Scope To assess the performance effectiveness of the licensed operator requalification program, the inspectors conducted personnel interviews, reviewed samples of both the operating and written examinations, observed ongoing operating examination activities, and reviewed personnel records.
Revision 9, and NRC Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix I, "Operator Requalification Human Performance Significance Determination Process.Forty-three out of fifty licensed operators passed the written examination. The seven operators (four reactor operators and three senior operators) that failed the written examination were remediated and successfully re-examined.The inspectors also reviewed the licensee's program for maintaining active operatorlicenses and ensuring the medical fitness of the licensed operators. The inspectors sampled records to ensure that all operators have active licenses and that any licenses reactivated since the last inspection were current. The inspectors also reviewed a sampling of licensed operator medical records to verify that the required physical examinations are being performed. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.
The inspectors interviewed five licensee personnel, consisting of three operators, an instructor, and a training supervisor to determine their understanding of the policies and practices for administering requalification examinations. The inspectors also reviewed operator performance on the written and operating examinations. These reviews included observations of portions of the operating examination by the inspectors. The operating examinations observed included five job performance measures and two scenarios that were used in the current biennial requalification cycle. These observations allowed the inspectors to assess the licensee's effectiveness in conducting the operating test to ensure operator mastery of the training program content.
EnclosureEnclosure-9-.2Quarterly Inspection     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors observed testing and training of senior reactor operators and reactoroperators to assess training, operator performance, and the evaluator's critique.
The results of these examinations were reviewed to determine the effectiveness of the licensees appraisal of operator performance and to determine if feedback of performance analyses into the requalification training program was being accomplished.
Specifically, the inspectors observed the training Scenario GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, "Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises (EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4),
The inspectors interviewed members of the training department to assess the responsiveness of the licensed operator requalification program to incorporate the lessons learned from both plant and industry events. Examination results were also assessed to determine if they were consistent with the guidance contained in NUREG 1021, Operator Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors, Revision 9, and NRC Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix I, Operator Requalification Human Performance Significance Determination Process. Forty-three out of fifty licensed operators passed the written examination. The seven operators (four reactor operators and three senior operators) that failed the written examination were remediated and successfully re-examined.
Revision 5, involved a crane boom crashing into a service water valve room at the standby service water basins and a subsequent feedwater line break outside containment. The scenario then led to an anticipated transient without scram (greater than 4 percent power) due to a blockage in the scram discharge volume. Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, "Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises(EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4), Revision 5Training Procedure 14-S-02-20, "Preparing, Conducting and Review of SimulatorEvaluations," Revision 4The inspectors completed one sample. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R12Maintenance Effectiveness (71111.12)     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors reviewed the following maintenance rule scoped systems that havedisplayed performance problems to: (1) verify the appropriate handling of structure, system, and component (SSC) performance or condition problems; (2) verify the appropriate handling of degraded SSC functional performance; (3) evaluate the role of work practices and common cause problems; and (4) evaluate the handling of SSC issues reviewed under the requirements of the maintenance rule, 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, and the TSs. *control rod drive hydraulic system*containment cooling system Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors also reviewed the licensees program for maintaining active operator licenses and ensuring the medical fitness of the licensed operators. The inspectors sampled records to ensure that all operators have active licenses and that any licenses reactivated since the last inspection were current. The inspectors also reviewed a sampling of licensed operator medical records to verify that the required physical examinations are being performed.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Enclosure
 
.2    Quarterly Inspection
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors observed testing and training of senior reactor operators and reactor operators to assess training, operator performance, and the evaluator's critique.
Specifically, the inspectors observed the training Scenario GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises (EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4),
Revision 5, involved a crane boom crashing into a service water valve room at the standby service water basins and a subsequent feedwater line break outside containment. The scenario then led to an anticipated transient without scram (greater than 4 percent power) due to a blockage in the scram discharge volume. Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
C      GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises (EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4), Revision 5 C      Training Procedure 14-S-02-20, Preparing, Conducting and Review of Simulator Evaluations, Revision 4 The inspectors completed one sample.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
1R12 Maintenance Effectiveness (71111.12)
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the following maintenance rule scoped systems that have displayed performance problems to: (1) verify the appropriate handling of structure, system, and component (SSC) performance or condition problems; (2) verify the appropriate handling of degraded SSC functional performance; (3) evaluate the role of work practices and common cause problems; and (4) evaluate the handling of SSC issues reviewed under the requirements of the maintenance rule, 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, and the TSs.
* control rod drive hydraulic system
* containment cooling system Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed two samples.
Enclosure
: b. Findings Introduction. The inspectors identified a Green noncited violation (NCV) of 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) for the failure to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance.
Description. On May 23, 2006, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2006-2117 in response to a crack in the body of control rod drive system flow control Valve B. While reviewing failure evaluations for the control rod drive system, the inspectors noted the licensee did not consider the crack in the flow control valve to be a functional failure for the valves maintenance rule function to provide maximum flow to the reactor vessel. The licensees determination that the crack was not a functional failure was based on the valves continued ability to open and provide flow. The inspectors challenged the assumptions used in the analysis, noting the evaluation only used an estimated as-found leak rate and failed to consider the pressure changes on the crack that would result from fully opening the valve or continued crack propagation. In response to the inspectors concerns, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2007-2361 and after further evaluation reclassified the degraded condition as a functional failure. The licensee also initiated CR-GGN-2007-3004 to evaluate the need for increased monitoring and goal setting for the control rod drive system.
Analysis. Using NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0612, Appendix E, Example 7.b, the inspectors determined the finding was more than minor since the failure of the control rod drive flow control valve caused the system to be placed in (a)(1) monitoring status.
This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with decision making, because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions [H.1(b)].
Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(1) requires, in part, that licensees shall monitor the performance or condition of SSCs within the scope of the rule against licensee established goals in a manner sufficient to provide reasonable assurance that the SSCs are capable of fulfilling their intended safety functions. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) requires, in part, that the monitoring specified in paragraph (a)(1) is not required where it has been demonstrated that the performance or condition of an SSC is being effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate preventive maintenance such that the SSC remains capable of performing its intended function. Contrary to the above, the licensee failed to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance. Specifically, the licensee failed to appropriately account for the failure of the Train B flow control valve on May 23, 2006, which demonstrated that the performance of the system was not being effectively controlled and goal setting and monitoring was required. Because this finding was of very low safety significance and has been entered in the CAP as CR-GGN-2007-3004, this violation is being treated as Enclosure
 
an NCV, consistent with Section IV.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy:
NCV 05000416/2007004-01, Failure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod Drive System.
1R13 Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control (71111.13)
.2    Emergent Work Control
: a. Inspection Scope For the work activities listed below, the inspectors: (1) verified that the licensee performed actions to minimize the probability of initiating events and maintained the functional capability of mitigating systems and barrier integrity systems; (2) verified that emergent work-related activities such as troubleshooting, work planning/scheduling, establishing plant conditions, aligning equipment, tagging, temporary modifications, and equipment restoration did not place the plant in an unacceptable configuration; and, (3) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected risk assessment and emergent work control problems.
* WO 86316, Control Rod Drive System Pump A Seal Replacement Extended Work Scope, July 25, 2007
* WO 51085228, High Pressure Core Spray Diesel Generator Lube Oil Circulating Pump Failure, August 28, 2007 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed two samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
1R15 Operability Evaluations (71111.15)
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) reviewed plant status documents such as operator shift logs, emergent work documentation, deferred modifications, and standing orders in order to determine if an operability evaluation was warranted for degraded components; (2) referred to the UFSAR and design basis documents in order to review the technical adequacy of licensee operability evaluations; (3) evaluated compensatory measures associated with operability evaluations; (4) determined degraded component impact on any TS; (5) used the significance determination process to evaluate the risk significance of degraded or inoperable equipment; and (6) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with degraded components.
Enclosure
* CR-GGN-2007-03385, High Pressure Core Spray Relief Valve Lifted Following Pump Shutdown during a Surveillance Test
* CR-GGN-2007-03374, Control Room Air Conditioning System Flow Degraded Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed two samples.
The inspectors completed two samples.
EnclosureEnclosure    b.FindingsIntroduction. The inspectors identified a Green noncited violation (NCV) of                10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) for the failure to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance.Description. On May 23, 2006, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2006-2117 in response toa crack in the body of control rod drive system flow control Valve B. While reviewing failure evaluations for the control rod drive system, the inspectors noted the licensee did not consider the crack in the flow control valve to be a functional failure for the valve's maintenance rule function to provide maximum flow to the reactor vessel. The licensee's determination that the crack was not a functional failure was based on the valve's continued ability to open and provide flow. The inspectors challenged the assumptions used in the analysis, noting the evaluation only used an estimated as-found leak rate and failed to consider the pressure changes on the crack that would result from fully opening the valve or continued crack propagation. In response to the inspectors' concerns, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2007-2361 and after further evaluation reclassified the degraded condition as a functional failure. The licensee also initiated CR-GGN-2007-3004 to evaluate the need for increased monitoring and goal setting for the control rod drive system.Analysis. Using NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0612, Appendix E, Example 7.b, theinspectors determined the finding was more than minor since the failure of the control rod drive flow control valve caused the system to be placed in (a)(1) monitoring status.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area ofhuman performance associated with decision making, because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions [H.1(b)].Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(1) requires, in part, that licensees shall monitor theperformance or condition of SSCs within the scope of the rule against licensee established goals in a manner sufficient to provide reasonable assurance that the SSCs are capable of fulfilling their intended safety functions. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) requires, in part, that the monitoring specified in paragraph (a)(1) is not required where it has been demonstrated that the performance or condition of an SSC is being effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate preventive maintenance such that the SSC remains capable of performing its intended function. Contrary to the above, the licensee failed to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance. Specifically, the licensee failed to appropriately account for the failure of the Train B flow control valve on May 23, 2006, which demonstrated that the performance of the system was not being effectively controlled and goal setting and monitoring was required. Because this finding was of very low safety significance and has been entered in the CAP as CR-GGN-2007-3004, this violation is being treated as EnclosureEnclosure-11-an NCV, consistent with Section IV.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy: NCV 05000416/2007004-01, "Failure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod DriveSystem."1R13Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control (71111.13).2Emergent Work Control    a.Inspection ScopeFor the work activities listed below, the inspectors:  (1) verified that the licenseeperformed actions to minimize the probability of initiating events and maintained the functional capability of mitigating systems and barrier integrity systems; (2) verified that emergent work-related activities such as troubleshooting, work planning/scheduling, establishing plant conditions, aligning equipment, tagging, temporary modifications, and equipment restoration did not place the plant in an unacceptable configuration; and, (3) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected risk assessment and emergent work control problems. *WO 86316, Control Rod Drive System Pump A Seal Replacement ExtendedWork Scope, July 25, 2007*WO 51085228, High Pressure Core Spray Diesel Generator Lube Oil CirculatingPump Failure, August 28, 2007 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
1R17 Permanent Plant Modifications (71111.17)
The inspectors completed two samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R15Operability Evaluations (71111.15)    a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors:  (1) reviewed plant status documents such as operator shift logs,emergent work documentation, deferred modifications, and standing orders in order to determine if an operability evaluation was warranted for degraded components; (2) referred to the UFSAR and design basis documents in order to review the technical adequacy of licensee operability evaluations; (3) evaluated compensatory measures associated with operability evaluations; (4) determined degraded component impact on any TS; (5) used the significance determination process to evaluate the risk significance of degraded or inoperable equipment; and (6) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with degraded components.
.1    Annual Inspection
EnclosureEnclosure-12-*CR-GGN-2007-03385, High Pressure Core Spray Relief Valve Lifted FollowingPump Shutdown during a Surveillance Test*CR-GGN-2007-03374, Control Room Air Conditioning System Flow Degraded Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed key affected parameters associated with energy needs, materials/replacement components, timing, heat removal, control signals, equipment protection from hazards, operations, flow paths, pressure boundary, ventilation boundary, structures, process medium properties, licensing basis, and failure modes for the modification listed below. The inspectors verified that: (1) modification preparation, staging, and implementation did not impair emergency/abnormal operating procedure actions, key safety functions, or operator response to loss of key safety functions; (2) postmodification testing maintained the plant in a safe configuration during testing by verifying that unintended system interactions will not occur, that SSC performance characteristics still meet the design basis, ascertaining the appropriateness of modification design assumptions, and that the modification test acceptance criteria has been met; and (3) the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with permanent plant modifications.
The inspectors completed two samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R17Permanent Plant Modifications (71111.17).1Annual Inspection     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors reviewed key affected parameters associated with energy needs,materials/replacement components, timing, heat removal, control signals, equipment protection from hazards, operations, flow paths, pressure boundary, ventilation boundary, structures, process medium properties, licensing basis, and failure modes for the modification listed below. The inspectors verified that: (1) modification preparation, staging, and implementation did not impair emergency/abnormal operating procedure actions, key safety functions, or operator response to loss of key safety functions; (2) postmodification testing maintained the plant in a safe configuration during testing by verifying that unintended system interactions will not occur, that SSC performance characteristics still meet the design basis, ascertaining the appropriateness of modification design assumptions, and that the modification test acceptance criteria has been met; and (3) the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with permanent plant modifications.The inspectors reviewed a modification that replaced obsolete Riley temperatureswitches with NUS switches. The inspectors ensured that the design bases, licensingbases, and performance capability of risk significant SSCs were not degraded by the modification. The inspection included a review of the engineering request, system drawings, and work package and observation of the field work during installation of the modification. The inspectors also reviewed the results of the post maintenance testing.
The inspectors reviewed a modification that replaced obsolete Riley temperature switches with NUS switches. The inspectors ensured that the design bases, licensing bases, and performance capability of risk significant SSCs were not degraded by the modification. The inspection included a review of the engineering request, system drawings, and work package and observation of the field work during installation of the modification. The inspectors also reviewed the results of the post maintenance testing.
*July 11, 2007, Riley temperature switch replacement with NUS temperatureswitch.Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
* July 11, 2007, Riley temperature switch replacement with NUS temperature switch.
Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed one sample.
The inspectors completed one sample.
EnclosureEnclosure    b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified..2Biennial Inspection     a.Inspection ScopeFrom August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed seven permanent plant modificationpackages and associated documentation, such as implementation reviews, safety evaluation applicability determinations, and screenings, to verify that they were performed in accordance with regulatory requirements and plant procedures. The inspectors also reviewed the procedures governing plant modifications to evaluate the effectiveness of the program for implementing modifications to risk-significant SSCs, such that these changes did not adversely affect the design and licensing basis of the facility. Further, the inspectors interviewed the cognizant design and system engineers for the identified modifications as to their understanding of the modification packages and process. The inspectors evaluated the effectiveness of the licensee's corrective action process toidentify and correct problems concerning the performance of permanent plant modifications by reviewing a sample of related CRs.The inspection procedure specifies inspector-review of a required minimum sample offive permanent plant modifications. The inspectors completed review of seven permanent plant modifications. b.FindingsIntroduction. The inspectors identified a Green, NCV of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B,Criterion III, "Design Control," for the failure to translate the monitoring and subsequentactions associated with exceeding the maximum outdoor design basis temperature into a formal instruction or procedure. The maximum outdoor design basis temperature was derived from analysis for the standby service water pump room to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals. Description. The inspectors reviewed licensee Evaluation ER-GG-2006-0099-000, "Greater than 95°F Outdoor Air Temperature.This licensee evaluation was a result of a 2005 NRC question associated with outdoor air temperatures. In June 2006, the licensee evaluation evaluated the effects of high outdoor air temperature, exceeding the UFSAR 95°F maximum outdoor temperature, on standby service water pump room ventilation system and safety-related equipment in that room. The results of the evaluation concluded that outdoor air temperature could reach 102.5°F before the safety related equipment in the standby service water pump room would be challenged. The UFSAR was updated to reflect the new maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F. In addition to the new maximum outdoor temperature limit, the engineering evaluationconcluded that actions may be necessary to prevent challenges to the operability of the EnclosureEnclosure-14-safety-related equipment in the standby service water pump room if the outdoortemperature exceeded 102.5°F. Those actions included initiating a CR to evaluate the condition of the safety-related equipment when outdoor temperatures exceeded the maximum limit, monitoring outdoor air temperatures when temperature were near the maximum limit, and taking specific actions to return the standby service water pump room temperature to within design limits.The inspectors requested to review documentation that implemented the above actionsthat would control deviations of the UFSAR maximum outdoor air temperature limit. The licensee stated that there was no formally documented procedure to monitor temperatures or take necessary actions to prevent challenges. A formally documented procedure was never implemented because the licensee assumed, based on historical weather data, that outdoor temperatures will never exceed the new maximum outdoor temperature limit. The inspectors concluded that the lack of a specific instruction or procedure could affectthe monitoring and subsequent actions for areas containing safety-related equipment which use outdoor air for cooling. In the event the maximum analyzed outdoor temperature limit for the safety-related service water pump room is exceeded, a planned systematic action is necessary to assure the equipment would perform to meet its functional goals.Through followup discussions with the licensee staff, the inspectors were told, during theresolution of the 2005 NRC question, the engineering and operations departments made a cognizant decision not to establish a written procedure to continually monitor outdoor air temperatures. The decision was based on historical weather data and the perceived difficulty of continually monitoring and evaluating conditions when outdoor air temperature was near or exceeded 102.5°F. Although no formal written procedure existed to monitor temperatures, the licensee staff did direct the chemistry group to inform the licensing manager and control room should 1 hour average temperature readings exceed 102.5°F. Analysis. The inspectors determined that failure to translate a design basis limit foroutdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure is a performance deficiency. The finding was more than minor because it affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of systems, standby service water, that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process,"
Enclosure
this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance (Green) because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded. The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in not establishing an instruction or procedure to monitor high outdoor air temperatures and for followup actions to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals [H.1(b)].Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, states, in part, measures shallbe established to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis EnclosureEnclosure-15-are correctly translated into specifications, drawings, procedures, and instructions.These measures shall include provisions to assure that appropriate quality standards are specified and included in design documents and that deviations from such standards are controlled. Contrary to this, on June 28, 2006, the licensee failed to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure to monitor outdoor air temperatures during extreme high temperature weather to ensure the standby service water pump room design basis limit would not be exceeded.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Subsequent actions in the event the design basis temperature is exceeded were also not established. Because this finding is of very low safety significance and has been entered in the licensee's CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04076, this violation is being treated as a NCV consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy: NCV 05000416/2007004-02, "Failure to Establish a Formal Instruction or Procedure toMonitor Outdoor Air Temperatures."1R19Postmaintenance Testing (71111.19)     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors selected the six listed postmaintenance test activities of risk significantsystems or components. For each item, the inspectors: (1) reviewed the applicable licensing basis and/or design-basis documents to determine the safety functions; (2) evaluated the safety functions that may have been affected by the maintenance activity; and (3) reviewed the test procedure to ensure it adequately tested the safety function that may have been affected. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that acceptance criteria were met, plant impacts were evaluated, test equipment was calibrated, procedures were followed, jumpers were properly controlled, test data results were complete and accurate, test equipment was removed, the system was properly re-aligned, and deficiencies during testing were documented. The inspectors also reviewed the UFSAR to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to postmaintenance testing. *WO 116201, Control Room Air Conditioning Flow Test*WO 86886, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling Temperature Switch Replacement*WO 88931, Control Room Air Conditioning System Outage*WO 93109, Secondary Containment Isolation Valve P11F066 ActuatorModification*WO 119863, Division II Diesel Generator Turbocharger Lube Oil Pre-lube LineClogged
.2    Biennial Inspection
*WO 66378, Installation of Vibration Sensor on Control Room Air ConditioningMotors EnclosureEnclosure-16-Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.The inspectors completed six samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R20Refueling and Outage Activities (71111.20)     a.Inspection ScopeFor the outages listed below, the inspectors reviewed the following risk significantrefueling items or outage activities to verify defense in depth commensurate with the outage risk control plan and compliance with the TSs: (1) tagging/clearance activities; (2) electrical power; (3) decay heat removal; (4) inventory control; (5) reactivity control; (6) heatup and cooldown activities; (7) restart activities; and (8) licensee identification and implementation of appropriate corrective actions associated with refueling and outage activities. *Forced Outage 07-02: August 21 through August 22,2007*Forced Outage 07-03: September 1, through September 14, 2007Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
: a. Inspection Scope From August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed seven permanent plant modification packages and associated documentation, such as implementation reviews, safety evaluation applicability determinations, and screenings, to verify that they were performed in accordance with regulatory requirements and plant procedures. The inspectors also reviewed the procedures governing plant modifications to evaluate the effectiveness of the program for implementing modifications to risk-significant SSCs, such that these changes did not adversely affect the design and licensing basis of the facility. Further, the inspectors interviewed the cognizant design and system engineers for the identified modifications as to their understanding of the modification packages and process.
The inspectors completed two samples. b.FindingsIntroduction:  A Green, self-revealing NCV of TS 5.4.1(a), was identified involving thefailure to follow the system operating instructions to align valves in the fuel pool cooling and cleanup (FPCCU) system, causing both FPCCU pumps to trip and a subsequent loss of fuel pool cooling.Description: On August 23, 2007, the plant began a control rod blade disposal project todispose of spent control rods using an underwater cutting machine. During this process, the FPCCU heat exchangers and drain tank were isolated to keep irradiated particulate from plating out on the components, preventing an increase in radiological dose rates in the heat exchanger area. On the evening of September 1, 2007, the heat exchangers were realigned to lower pool temperatures overnight so that control rod disposal could continue on the following day without the heat exchangers in service. The operator performing this task failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, "Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System," Revision 54, causing a high discharge pressure alarm to annunciate in the control room and a subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps. Referencing the procedure, the valves should have been manipulated in a specificorder. The order is (1) open G41F011A(B) [inlet valve], (2) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve], and then (3) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve]. Contrary to what the procedure EnclosureEnclosure-17-required, the order that the manipulations were made was (1) open G41F011A(B) [inletvalve], (2) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve], and then (3) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve]. This out of sequence manipulation caused the high discharge pressure on the outlet of the fuel pool cooling pumps and subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps.
The inspectors evaluated the effectiveness of the licensees corrective action process to identify and correct problems concerning the performance of permanent plant modifications by reviewing a sample of related CRs.
Following the event, control room operators promptly restored fuel pool cooling. The inspectors verified that fuel pool temperature did not exceed the 140 oF limit as specifiedby the Technical Requirements Manual, Section 6.7.4.Analysis: The performance deficiency associated with this finding was that theoperators failed to implement the FPCCU system operating instructions for system alignment. The finding is more than minor because it affects the human performance attribute of the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using NRC Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process," Phase 1 worksheet, inspectors determined that the finding has a very low safety significance since it only affects the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with work practicesbecause licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure [H.4(b)].Enforcement: TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented asrecommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978.
The inspection procedure specifies inspector-review of a required minimum sample of five permanent plant modifications. The inspectors completed review of seven permanent plant modifications.
Regulatory Guide 1.33 recommends procedures for fuel storage pool purification and cooling system. Contrary to the above, operators failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, "Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System," Revision 54, resulting in both FPCCU pumps tripping and a subsequent loss of spent fuel pool cooling. Because this violation was of very low safety significance and was entered into the licensee's CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04284, this violation is being treated as an NCV consistent with Section VI.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy:
: b. Findings Introduction. The inspectors identified a Green, NCV of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, Design Control, for the failure to translate the monitoring and subsequent actions associated with exceeding the maximum outdoor design basis temperature into a formal instruction or procedure. The maximum outdoor design basis temperature was derived from analysis for the standby service water pump room to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals.
NCV 05000416/2007004-03, "Failure to Follow Procedure Causes a Loss of Decay Heat Removal in the Spent Fuel Pool."1R22Surveillance Testing (71111.22)     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, procedure requirements, and TSs to ensure thatthe six listed surveillance activities demonstrated that the SSCs tested were capable of performing their intended safety functions. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that the following significant surveillance test attributes were adequate: (1) preconditioning; (2) evaluation of testing impact on the plant; (3) acceptance criteria; (4) test equipment; (5) procedures; (6) jumper/lifted lead controls; (7) test data; (8) testing frequency and method demonstrated TS operability; (9) test equipment removal; (10) restoration of plant systems; (11) fulfillment of ASME Code requirements; (12) updating of performance indicator (PI) data; (13) engineering evaluations, root causes, and bases for returning tested SSCs not meeting the test acceptance criteria were correct; (14) reference setting data; and, (15) annunciator and EnclosureEnclosure-18-alarm setpoints. The inspectors also verified that the licensee identified andimplemented any needed corrective actions associated with the surveillance testing. *July 17, 2007, local leak rate test of containment isolation Valve E12F028A perProcedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, "LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test," Revision 107*July 23, 2007, average power range monitor testing perProcedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, "APRM Time Response Testing," Revision 3*July 30, 2007, reactor core isolation cooling system quarterly testing perProcedure 06-OP-1E51-Q-0003, "RCIC Quarterly Pump Operability Verification,"
Description. The inspectors reviewed licensee Evaluation ER-GG-2006-0099-000, Greater than 95°F Outdoor Air Temperature. This licensee evaluation was a result of a 2005 NRC question associated with outdoor air temperatures. In June 2006, the licensee evaluation evaluated the effects of high outdoor air temperature, exceeding the UFSAR 95°F maximum outdoor temperature, on standby service water pump room ventilation system and safety-related equipment in that room. The results of the evaluation concluded that outdoor air temperature could reach 102.5°F before the safety related equipment in the standby service water pump room would be challenged. The UFSAR was updated to reflect the new maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F.
Revision 121*August 8, 2007, hot restart of standby diesel generator perProcedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, "Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-month Functional Test," Revision 112*August 17, 2007, review of licensee leak detection measurement perProcedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, "Daily Operating Logs," Revision 114*August 25, 2007, radiation meter response testing perProcedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, "Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test," Revision 100Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.The inspectors completed six samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.1R23Temporary Plant Modifications (71111.23)     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, plant drawings, procedure requirements, and TSsto ensure that the temporary modification listed below was properly implemented. The inspectors: (1) verified that the modification did not have an adverse effect on system operability/availability; (2) verified that the installation was consistent with modification documents; (3) ensured that the post-installation test results were satisfactory and that the impact of the temporary modification on permanently installed SSCs was supported by the test; (4) verified that the modification was identified on control room drawings and that appropriate identification tags were placed on the affected drawings; and, (5) verified that appropriate safety evaluations were completed. The inspectors verified that the licensee identified and implemented any needed corrective actions associated with EnclosureEnclosure-19-temporary modifications. *July 18, 2007, temperature alarm set point raised for safety reliefValve B21F041B tailpipe temperature sensor Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:*EC1994, "Temporarily Raise Setpoint for 1B21F041B Tailpipe TemperatureAlarm to Prevent Masking of New Alarms," Revision 0*WO 116172 The inspectors completed one sample. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.
In addition to the new maximum outdoor temperature limit, the engineering evaluation concluded that actions may be necessary to prevent challenges to the operability of the Enclosure
Cornerstone: Emergency Preparedness1EP6Drill Evaluation (71114.06)     a.Inspection ScopeFor the emergency drill listed below, which contributes to the Drill/Exercise Performanceand emergency response organization performance indicators, the inspectors: (1) observed the training evolution to assess classification, notification, and protectiveaction requirement development activities; (2) compared inspector identified weaknesses and deficiencies against licensee identified findings to determine whether the licensee is properly identifying failures; and (3) determined whether licensee performance is in accordance with the guidance of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) 99-02, "Voluntary Submission of Performance Indicator Data," acceptance criteria. *July 11, 2007, the inspectors observed the licensee's emergency responseorganization in the simulator, the Emergency Response Facility, the Technical Support Center, and the Operations Support Center respond to a loss of reactor coolant and an unisolable main steam line break in the auxiliary building tunnel, leading to an unmonitored radiological release to the atmosphere.Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
 
*GGNS 2007 3 rd Quarter Emergency Preparedness Drill Evaluator's Notebook*Drill Emergency Notification Forms
safety-related equipment in the standby service water pump room if the outdoor temperature exceeded 102.5°F. Those actions included initiating a CR to evaluate the condition of the safety-related equipment when outdoor temperatures exceeded the maximum limit, monitoring outdoor air temperatures when temperature were near the maximum limit, and taking specific actions to return the standby service water pump room temperature to within design limits.
*Procedure 10-S-01-1, "Activation of the Emergency Plan," Revision 116The inspectors completed one sample.
The inspectors requested to review documentation that implemented the above actions that would control deviations of the UFSAR maximum outdoor air temperature limit. The licensee stated that there was no formally documented procedure to monitor temperatures or take necessary actions to prevent challenges. A formally documented procedure was never implemented because the licensee assumed, based on historical weather data, that outdoor temperatures will never exceed the new maximum outdoor temperature limit.
EnclosureEnclosure    b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.Cornerstone: Occupational Radiation Safety4.OTHER ACTIVITIES 4OA2Identification and Resolution of Problems (71152).1Routine Review of Identification and Resolution of Problems     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors performed a daily screening of items entered into the licensee's CAP. This assessment was accomplished by reviewing work orders and condition reports and attending corrective action review and work control meetings. The inspectors:
The inspectors concluded that the lack of a specific instruction or procedure could affect the monitoring and subsequent actions for areas containing safety-related equipment which use outdoor air for cooling. In the event the maximum analyzed outdoor temperature limit for the safety-related service water pump room is exceeded, a planned systematic action is necessary to assure the equipment would perform to meet its functional goals.
(1) verified that equipment, human performance, and program issues were being identified by the licensee at an appropriate threshold and that the issues were entered into the CAP; (2) verified that corrective actions were commensurate with the significance of the issue; and, (3) identified conditions that might warrant additional follow-up through other baseline inspection procedures. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified.4OA3Event Follow-up (71153).1Personnel Performance During Nonroutine Evolutions, Events, and Transients     a.Inspection ScopeThe inspectors: (1) reviewed operator logs, plant computer data, and/or strip charts forthe below listed evolutions to evaluate operator performance in coping with nonroutine events and transients; (2) verified that operator actions were in accordance with the response required by plant procedures and training; and (3) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with personnel performance problems that occurred during the events sampled.               *On July 7, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated witha loss of instrument air following a break in a supply line in the turbine building.
Through followup discussions with the licensee staff, the inspectors were told, during the resolution of the 2005 NRC question, the engineering and operations departments made a cognizant decision not to establish a written procedure to continually monitor outdoor air temperatures. The decision was based on historical weather data and the perceived difficulty of continually monitoring and evaluating conditions when outdoor air temperature was near or exceeded 102.5°F. Although no formal written procedure existed to monitor temperatures, the licensee staff did direct the chemistry group to inform the licensing manager and control room should 1 hour average temperature readings exceed 102.5°F.
The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-V-9, "Loss of Instrument Air," Revision 34.*On August 21, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associatedwith a reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feed pump controller.
Analysis. The inspectors determined that failure to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure is a performance deficiency. The finding was more than minor because it affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of systems, standby service water, that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance (Green) because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded. The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in not establishing an instruction or procedure to monitor high outdoor air temperatures and for followup actions to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals [H.1(b)].
EnclosureEnclosure-21-*On August 26, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associatedwith an unplanned trip of the reactor recirculation Pump B motor due to a ground fault in the motor windings. The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-III-3, "Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate,"Revision 106.The inspectors completed three samples. b.FindingsNo findings of significance were identified..2(Closed) LER 05000416/2007-02, "Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Lossof Condenser Vacuum"Introduction
Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, states, in part, measures shall be established to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis Enclosure
A Green self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure toproperly calibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition. Description
 
On May 19, 2007, a failure occurred in the high pressure condenserexpansion joint between the main turbine and condenser resulting in condenser air inleakage, and lowering condenser vacuum. Operators entered the loss of condenser vacuum Off-Normal-Event Procedure (ONEP), and reduced reactor power from 100 percent to 78 percent in order to reduce condenser load. As condenser vacuum was decreasing the operators made the decision to manually scram the reactor prior to reaching the automatic turbine trip setpoint of 21 inches Hg vacuum; however, the automatic turbine trip occurred at 24.9 inches Hg vacuum as trended by the plant data server. It was determined that the main condenser vacuum trip setpoint was calibrated incorrectly during the previous Refueling Outage RF15. During the investigation, the licensee determined that the as-found trip setpoint of the main condenser vacuum switch was set to trip at 25.89 inches Hg vacuum.On April 10, 2007, nearing the end of Refueling Outage RF15, plant personneldiscovered that the main condenser vacuum switch had not been calibrated. This was discovered after the turbine had been placed on the turning gear. The calibration methodology required that primary oil (from the turbine lube oil system) be disconnected from the switch so that instrument air could be used to simulate turbine lube oil pressure. The technicians were concerned that a significant amount of oil could be lost if the primary oil was disconnected with the turbine on the turning gear. In order to continue with plant startup, engineering revised the calibration procedure to use an adjustment to the speed simulation screw, instead of removing the primary oil supply line. The revised procedure required the speed simulation screw to be turned to the "full down" position. The technicians adjusted the speed simulation screw to be flush with the stem nut on the actuator, but did not set the screw to the "full down" position. This EnclosureEnclosure-22-caused the main condenser switch calibration to set the vacuum trip to an incorrectsetpoint. Analysis: The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiatingevents cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations. Using the Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, "Significance Determination Process," Phase 1 worksheet, the findingwas determined to have very low safety significance, because the finding did notcontribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipment or functions would not be availablefollowing a reactor trip. The cause of the finding was related to the human performance crosscutting component of resources in that the calibration procedure did not have clearinstructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©]. This issue was entered into the licensee's CAP as CR-GGN-2007-02756.Enforcement: No violation of NRC requirements occurred. FIN 0500416/2007004-04.
are correctly translated into specifications, drawings, procedures, and instructions.
EnclosureEnclosure-23-4OA6Meetings, Including ExitOn August 17, 2007, the inspectors presented the results of InspectionProcedure 71111.02, "Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments," and Inspection Procedure 71111.17, "Permanent Plant Modifications," to Mr. M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations, and other members of licensee management. The licensee acknowledged the issues and observations presented. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.On August 30, 2007, the inspectors briefed Mr. R. Brian, Site Vice President, and othermembers of the licensee's staff of the results of the inspection. The licensee acknowledged the findings presented. After completion of this biennial requalification cycle, the remaining examination results were forwarded to the inspectors for their review. After determining that there were no findings of significance, the inspectors conducted a teleconference exit with Mr. C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification), on October 1, 2007. The inspectors asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary.
These measures shall include provisions to assure that appropriate quality standards are specified and included in design documents and that deviations from such standards are controlled. Contrary to this, on June 28, 2006, the licensee failed to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure to monitor outdoor air temperatures during extreme high temperature weather to ensure the standby service water pump room design basis limit would not be exceeded.
No proprietary information was identified.On October 10, 2007, the resident inspectors presented the inspection results toMr. R. Brian and others who acknowledged the findings. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.4OA7Licensee-Identified ViolationsThe following violations of very low significance (Green) were identified by the licenseeand are violations of NRC requirements which meet the criteria of Section VI of the NRC Enforcement Policy, NUREG-1600, for being dispositioned as NCVs.*TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended byRegulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on March 30, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement work instructions by installing the wrong limit switch settings on the actuator for the standby service water reactor heat removal heat exchanger inlet valve. As a result, the valve opened further than the required throttled position, diverting more standby service water flow to the reactor heat removal heat exchanger.
Subsequent actions in the event the design basis temperature is exceeded were also not established. Because this finding is of very low safety significance and has been entered in the licensees CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04076, this violation is being treated as a NCV consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy: NCV 05000416/2007004-02, Failure to Establish a Formal Instruction or Procedure to Monitor Outdoor Air Temperatures.
This resulted in a degraded flow to other Division I safety-related systems. This condition was discovered following investigation of degraded flow in the control room air conditioning system, which was identified during performance of System Operating Instruction 04-1-03-Z51-1, "Control Room HVAC System," Revision 41, on July 2, 2007. This issue was documented in CRs-GGN-2007-03374 and CR-GGN-2007-03514. This finding is of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of operability.
1R19 Postmaintenance Testing (71111.19)
EnclosureEnclosure-24-*TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended byRegulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on September 5, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement an infrequently performed test or evolution procedure to lift and move a 29 ton recirculation system pump motor through the drywell. The procedure required redundant rigging so that the lift could be designated as single failure proof and not require a load path analysis. The individual directing the lift ordered the movement of the motor without redundant rigging through most of the planned drywell load path. The inappropriate movement was identified by individuals in the drywell during the move and by the test coordinator in the control room via a video monitor. This issue was documented in CR-GGN-2007-04382. This finding is of very low safety significance since there was no actual loss of operability. ATTACHMENT: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION AttachmentA-1SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATIONKEY POINTS OF CONTACTLicensee PersonnelC. Abbott, Acting Manager, Quality AssuranceK. Baker, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Barfield, Director, Engineering C. Bell, Senior Operations Instructor C. Bottemiller, Manager, Plant Licensing R. Brian, Vice President, Operations M. Causey, Senior Lead Technical Specialist R. Collins, Manager, Operations D. Cooper, Senior Operations Instructor D. Coulter, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing L. Eaton, Senior Lead Engineer B. Edwards, Minority Owner Specialist C. Ellsaesser, Manager, Maintenance R. Fuller, Engineer, Design Engineering K. Grillis, Senior Operations Instructor M. Guynn, Manager, Emergency Preparedness E. Harris, Manager, Corrective Action and Audits T. Harrellson, Senior Operations Instructor J. Hixon, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Jones, Manager, System Engineering D. Killingsworth, Reactor Operator M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations G. Lantz, Supervisor, Design Engineering M. Larson, Senior Licensing Engineer C. Mason, Quality Assurance Auditor E. Mathes, Shift Manager M. McAdory, Senior Operations Instructor D. McDirmid, Maintenance Rule Engineer J. Owens, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing M. Rasch, Senior Operations Instructor S. Reeves, Acting Operations Training Superintendent (Initial)
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors selected the six listed postmaintenance test activities of risk significant systems or components. For each item, the inspectors: (1) reviewed the applicable licensing basis and/or design-basis documents to determine the safety functions; (2) evaluated the safety functions that may have been affected by the maintenance activity; and (3) reviewed the test procedure to ensure it adequately tested the safety function that may have been affected. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that acceptance criteria were met, plant impacts were evaluated, test equipment was calibrated, procedures were followed, jumpers were properly controlled, test data results were complete and accurate, test equipment was removed, the system was properly re-aligned, and deficiencies during testing were documented. The inspectors also reviewed the UFSAR to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to postmaintenance testing.
* WO 116201, Control Room Air Conditioning Flow Test
* WO 86886, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling Temperature Switch Replacement
* WO 88931, Control Room Air Conditioning System Outage
* WO 93109, Secondary Containment Isolation Valve P11F066 Actuator Modification
* WO 119863, Division II Diesel Generator Turbocharger Lube Oil Pre-lube Line Clogged
* WO 66378, Installation of Vibration Sensor on Control Room Air Conditioning Motors Enclosure
 
Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed six samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
1R20 Refueling and Outage Activities (71111.20)
: a. Inspection Scope For the outages listed below, the inspectors reviewed the following risk significant refueling items or outage activities to verify defense in depth commensurate with the outage risk control plan and compliance with the TSs: (1) tagging/clearance activities; (2) electrical power; (3) decay heat removal; (4) inventory control; (5) reactivity control; (6) heatup and cooldown activities; (7) restart activities; and (8) licensee identification and implementation of appropriate corrective actions associated with refueling and outage activities.
* Forced Outage 07-02: August 21 through August 22,2007
* Forced Outage 07-03: September 1, through September 14, 2007 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed two samples.
: b. Findings
 
== Introduction:==
A Green, self-revealing NCV of TS 5.4.1(a), was identified involving the failure to follow the system operating instructions to align valves in the fuel pool cooling and cleanup (FPCCU) system, causing both FPCCU pumps to trip and a subsequent loss of fuel pool cooling.
 
== Description:==
On August 23, 2007, the plant began a control rod blade disposal project to dispose of spent control rods using an underwater cutting machine. During this process, the FPCCU heat exchangers and drain tank were isolated to keep irradiated particulate from plating out on the components, preventing an increase in radiological dose rates in the heat exchanger area. On the evening of September 1, 2007, the heat exchangers were realigned to lower pool temperatures overnight so that control rod disposal could continue on the following day without the heat exchangers in service. The operator performing this task failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System, Revision 54, causing a high discharge pressure alarm to annunciate in the control room and a subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps.
Referencing the procedure, the valves should have been manipulated in a specific order. The order is (1) open G41F011A(B) [inlet valve], (2) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve], and then (3) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve]. Contrary to what the procedure Enclosure
 
required, the order that the manipulations were made was (1) open G41F011A(B) [inlet valve], (2) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve], and then (3) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve]. This out of sequence manipulation caused the high discharge pressure on the outlet of the fuel pool cooling pumps and subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps.
Following the event, control room operators promptly restored fuel pool cooling. The inspectors verified that fuel pool temperature did not exceed the 140 oF limit as specified by the Technical Requirements Manual, Section 6.7.4.
Analysis: The performance deficiency associated with this finding was that the operators failed to implement the FPCCU system operating instructions for system alignment. The finding is more than minor because it affects the human performance attribute of the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using NRC Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, inspectors determined that the finding has a very low safety significance since it only affects the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with work practices because licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure [H.4(b)].
Enforcement: TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978.
Regulatory Guide 1.33 recommends procedures for fuel storage pool purification and cooling system. Contrary to the above, operators failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System, Revision 54, resulting in both FPCCU pumps tripping and a subsequent loss of spent fuel pool cooling. Because this violation was of very low safety significance and was entered into the licensee's CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04284, this violation is being treated as an NCV consistent with Section VI.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy:
NCV 05000416/2007004-03, Failure to Follow Procedure Causes a Loss of Decay Heat Removal in the Spent Fuel Pool.
1R22 Surveillance Testing (71111.22)
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, procedure requirements, and TSs to ensure that the six listed surveillance activities demonstrated that the SSCs tested were capable of performing their intended safety functions. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that the following significant surveillance test attributes were adequate: (1) preconditioning; (2) evaluation of testing impact on the plant; (3) acceptance criteria; (4) test equipment; (5) procedures; (6) jumper/lifted lead controls; (7) test data; (8) testing frequency and method demonstrated TS operability; (9) test equipment removal; (10) restoration of plant systems; (11) fulfillment of ASME Code requirements; (12) updating of performance indicator (PI) data; (13) engineering evaluations, root causes, and bases for returning tested SSCs not meeting the test acceptance criteria were correct; (14) reference setting data; and, (15) annunciator and Enclosure
 
alarm setpoints. The inspectors also verified that the licensee identified and implemented any needed corrective actions associated with the surveillance testing.
* July 17, 2007, local leak rate test of containment isolation Valve E12F028A per Procedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test, Revision 107
* July 23, 2007, average power range monitor testing per Procedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, APRM Time Response Testing, Revision 3
* July 30, 2007, reactor core isolation cooling system quarterly testing per Procedure 06-OP-1E51-Q-0003, RCIC Quarterly Pump Operability Verification, Revision 121
* August 8, 2007, hot restart of standby diesel generator per Procedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-month Functional Test, Revision 112
* August 17, 2007, review of licensee leak detection measurement per Procedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, Daily Operating Logs, Revision 114
* August 25, 2007, radiation meter response testing per Procedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test, Revision 100 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.
The inspectors completed six samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
1R23 Temporary Plant Modifications (71111.23)
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, plant drawings, procedure requirements, and TSs to ensure that the temporary modification listed below was properly implemented. The inspectors: (1) verified that the modification did not have an adverse effect on system operability/availability; (2) verified that the installation was consistent with modification documents; (3) ensured that the post-installation test results were satisfactory and that the impact of the temporary modification on permanently installed SSCs was supported by the test; (4) verified that the modification was identified on control room drawings and that appropriate identification tags were placed on the affected drawings; and, (5) verified that appropriate safety evaluations were completed. The inspectors verified that the licensee identified and implemented any needed corrective actions associated with Enclosure
 
temporary modifications.
* July 18, 2007, temperature alarm set point raised for safety relief Valve B21F041B tailpipe temperature sensor Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
* EC1994, Temporarily Raise Setpoint for 1B21F041B Tailpipe Temperature Alarm to Prevent Masking of New Alarms, Revision 0
* WO 116172 The inspectors completed one sample.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Cornerstone: Emergency Preparedness 1EP6 Drill Evaluation (71114.06)
: a. Inspection Scope For the emergency drill listed below, which contributes to the Drill/Exercise Performance and emergency response organization performance indicators, the inspectors: (1) observed the training evolution to assess classification, notification, and protective action requirement development activities; (2) compared inspector identified weaknesses and deficiencies against licensee identified findings to determine whether the licensee is properly identifying failures; and (3) determined whether licensee performance is in accordance with the guidance of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) 99-02, Voluntary Submission of Performance Indicator Data, acceptance criteria.
* July 11, 2007, the inspectors observed the licensees emergency response organization in the simulator, the Emergency Response Facility, the Technical Support Center, and the Operations Support Center respond to a loss of reactor coolant and an unisolable main steam line break in the auxiliary building tunnel, leading to an unmonitored radiological release to the atmosphere.
Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
* GGNS 2007 3rd Quarter Emergency Preparedness Drill Evaluators Notebook
* Drill Emergency Notification Forms
* Procedure 10-S-01-1, Activation of the Emergency Plan, Revision 116 The inspectors completed one sample.
Enclosure
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
Cornerstone: Occupational Radiation Safety
: 4. OTHER ACTIVITIES 4OA2 Identification and Resolution of Problems (71152)
.1    Routine Review of Identification and Resolution of Problems
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors performed a daily screening of items entered into the licensee's CAP.
This assessment was accomplished by reviewing work orders and condition reports and attending corrective action review and work control meetings. The inspectors:
(1) verified that equipment, human performance, and program issues were being identified by the licensee at an appropriate threshold and that the issues were entered into the CAP; (2) verified that corrective actions were commensurate with the significance of the issue; and, (3) identified conditions that might warrant additional follow-up through other baseline inspection procedures.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
4OA3 Event Follow-up (71153)
.1    Personnel Performance During Nonroutine Evolutions, Events, and Transients
: a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) reviewed operator logs, plant computer data, and/or strip charts for the below listed evolutions to evaluate operator performance in coping with nonroutine events and transients; (2) verified that operator actions were in accordance with the response required by plant procedures and training; and (3) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with personnel performance problems that occurred during the events sampled.
* On July 7, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with a loss of instrument air following a break in a supply line in the turbine building.
The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-V-9, Loss of Instrument Air, Revision 34.
* On August 21, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with a reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feed pump controller.
Enclosure
* On August 26, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with an unplanned trip of the reactor recirculation Pump B motor due to a ground fault in the motor windings. The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-III-3, Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate, Revision 106.
The inspectors completed three samples.
: b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.
.2   (Closed) LER 05000416/2007-02, Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum
 
== Introduction:==
A Green self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure to properly calibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition.
 
== Description:==
On May 19, 2007, a failure occurred in the high pressure condenser expansion joint between the main turbine and condenser resulting in condenser air inleakage, and lowering condenser vacuum. Operators entered the loss of condenser vacuum Off-Normal-Event Procedure (ONEP), and reduced reactor power from 100 percent to 78 percent in order to reduce condenser load. As condenser vacuum was decreasing the operators made the decision to manually scram the reactor prior to reaching the automatic turbine trip setpoint of 21 inches Hg vacuum; however, the automatic turbine trip occurred at 24.9 inches Hg vacuum as trended by the plant data server. It was determined that the main condenser vacuum trip setpoint was calibrated incorrectly during the previous Refueling Outage RF15. During the investigation, the licensee determined that the as-found trip setpoint of the main condenser vacuum switch was set to trip at 25.89 inches Hg vacuum.
On April 10, 2007, nearing the end of Refueling Outage RF15, plant personnel discovered that the main condenser vacuum switch had not been calibrated. This was discovered after the turbine had been placed on the turning gear. The calibration methodology required that primary oil (from the turbine lube oil system) be disconnected from the switch so that instrument air could be used to simulate turbine lube oil pressure. The technicians were concerned that a significant amount of oil could be lost if the primary oil was disconnected with the turbine on the turning gear. In order to continue with plant startup, engineering revised the calibration procedure to use an adjustment to the speed simulation screw, instead of removing the primary oil supply line. The revised procedure required the speed simulation screw to be turned to the full down position. The technicians adjusted the speed simulation screw to be flush with the stem nut on the actuator, but did not set the screw to the full down position. This Enclosure
 
caused the main condenser switch calibration to set the vacuum trip to an incorrect setpoint.
Analysis: The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiating events cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations. Using the Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, the finding was determined to have very low safety significance, because the finding did not contribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipment or functions would not be available following a reactor trip. The cause of the finding was related to the human performance crosscutting component of resources in that the calibration procedure did not have clear instructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©]. This issue was entered into the licensees CAP as CR-GGN-2007-02756.
Enforcement: No violation of NRC requirements occurred. FIN 0500416/2007004-04.
Enclosure
 
4OA6 Meetings, Including Exit On August 17, 2007, the inspectors presented the results of Inspection Procedure 71111.02, Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments, and Inspection Procedure 71111.17, Permanent Plant Modifications, to Mr. M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations, and other members of licensee management. The licensee acknowledged the issues and observations presented. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.
On August 30, 2007, the inspectors briefed Mr. R. Brian, Site Vice President, and other members of the licensee's staff of the results of the inspection. The licensee acknowledged the findings presented. After completion of this biennial requalification cycle, the remaining examination results were forwarded to the inspectors for their review. After determining that there were no findings of significance, the inspectors conducted a teleconference exit with Mr. C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification), on October 1, 2007. The inspectors asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary.
No proprietary information was identified.
On October 10, 2007, the resident inspectors presented the inspection results to Mr. R. Brian and others who acknowledged the findings. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.
4OA7 Licensee-Identified Violations The following violations of very low significance (Green) were identified by the licensee and are violations of NRC requirements which meet the criteria of Section VI of the NRC Enforcement Policy, NUREG-1600, for being dispositioned as NCVs.
* TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on March 30, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement work instructions by installing the wrong limit switch settings on the actuator for the standby service water reactor heat removal heat exchanger inlet valve. As a result, the valve opened further than the required throttled position, diverting more standby service water flow to the reactor heat removal heat exchanger.
This resulted in a degraded flow to other Division I safety-related systems. This condition was discovered following investigation of degraded flow in the control room air conditioning system, which was identified during performance of System Operating Instruction 04-1-03-Z51-1, Control Room HVAC System, Revision 41, on July 2, 2007. This issue was documented in CRs-GGN-2007-03374 and CR-GGN-2007-03514. This finding is of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of operability.
Enclosure
* TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on September 5, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement an infrequently performed test or evolution procedure to lift and move a 29 ton recirculation system pump motor through the drywell. The procedure required redundant rigging so that the lift could be designated as single failure proof and not require a load path analysis. The individual directing the lift ordered the movement of the motor without redundant rigging through most of the planned drywell load path. The inappropriate movement was identified by individuals in the drywell during the move and by the test coordinator in the control room via a video monitor. This issue was documented in CR-GGN-2007-04382. This finding is of very low safety significance since there was no actual loss of operability.
ATTACHMENT: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION Enclosure
 
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION KEY POINTS OF CONTACT Licensee Personnel C. Abbott, Acting Manager, Quality Assurance K. Baker, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Barfield, Director, Engineering C. Bell, Senior Operations Instructor C. Bottemiller, Manager, Plant Licensing R. Brian, Vice President, Operations M. Causey, Senior Lead Technical Specialist R. Collins, Manager, Operations D. Cooper, Senior Operations Instructor D. Coulter, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing L. Eaton, Senior Lead Engineer B. Edwards, Minority Owner Specialist C. Ellsaesser, Manager, Maintenance R. Fuller, Engineer, Design Engineering K. Grillis, Senior Operations Instructor M. Guynn, Manager, Emergency Preparedness E. Harris, Manager, Corrective Action and Audits T. Harrellson, Senior Operations Instructor J. Hixon, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Jones, Manager, System Engineering D. Killingsworth, Reactor Operator M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations G. Lantz, Supervisor, Design Engineering M. Larson, Senior Licensing Engineer C. Mason, Quality Assurance Auditor E. Mathes, Shift Manager M. McAdory, Senior Operations Instructor D. McDirmid, Maintenance Rule Engineer J. Owens, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing M. Rasch, Senior Operations Instructor S. Reeves, Acting Operations Training Superintendent (Initial)
C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification)
C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification)
M. Rohrer, Manager, System Engineering F. Rosser, Supervisor, Radiation Protection D. Smith, Control Room Supervisor T. Tankersley, Manager, Training T. Thornton, Manager, Design Engineering K. Walker, Superintendent, Reactor Engineering D. Wilson, Supervisor, Design Engineering R. Wilson, Superintendent, Radiation Protection P. Worthington, Supervisor, Engineering AttachmentA-2NRC personnelW. Walker, Senior Project Engineer, Reactor Project Branch CR. Bywater, Senior Reactor Analyst, Region IVLIST OF ITEMS OPENED, CLOSED, AND DISCUSSEDOpened NoneOpened and Closed05000416/2007004-01NCVFailure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod DriveSystem05000416/2007004-02NCVFailure to Establish a Formal Procedure to MonitorOutdoor Air Temperatures05000416/2007004-03NCVFailure to Follow Procedures Caused Loss of Decay HeatRemoval in the Spent Fuel Pool05000416/2007004-04FINReactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss ofCondenser Vacuum Closed0500416/2007004-02 LERReactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss ofCondenser Vacuum Discussed NoneLIST OF DOCUMENTS REVIEWEDIn addition to the documents called out in the inspection report, the following documents wereselected and reviewed by the inspectors to accomplish the objectives and scope of theinspection and to support any findings:
M. Rohrer, Manager, System Engineering F. Rosser, Supervisor, Radiation Protection D. Smith, Control Room Supervisor T. Tankersley, Manager, Training T. Thornton, Manager, Design Engineering K. Walker, Superintendent, Reactor Engineering D. Wilson, Supervisor, Design Engineering R. Wilson, Superintendent, Radiation Protection P. Worthington, Supervisor, Engineering A-1              Attachment
AttachmentA-3Section 1R02:  Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments10 CFR 50.59 EvaluationsSE-2005-0003SE-2005-0006SE-2006-0003SE-2006-0004SE-2006-0005SE-2006-0006SE-2007-0002ProceduresNUMBERTITLEREVISIONEN-LI-100Process Applicability Determination 4EN-LI-10110 CFR 50.59 Review Program 310 CFR 50.59 Applicability Determinations/ScreensNUMBERTITLEREVISIONER-GG-2005-0090Develop Modification Package(s) for Raising Normal, HI,and HI-HI Level Setpoints for LPFWH's #4A/B/C and #3A/
 
0ER-GG-2005-0255Unit 1 Instrument Air Vibration Trips 0ER-GG-2005-0280Evaluation of Alternate ASCO Solenoid Replacement PNHTX821027 for Original LB-X-821027 0ER-GG-2006-0236Removal of Control Rod Drive Relief Valves 1C11F025A/Bfor Seal Purge Flow 0ER-GG-2003-0018-047 Spent Fuel Cask Handling Crane 1T31E001 ProcessApplicability Determination/Screening 0ER-GG-2003-0018-049 Cold Proof Test of Spent Fuel Cask Crane ProcessApplicability Determination/Screening 0ER-GG-2006-0237-000Revise the in-service inspection requirements for HighEnergy Break Exclusion Region (BER) 0DRN J606.0Document Revision Notice ER-GG-2006-0116-000Approved Alternate Replacement Solenoid Valve 15ER-GG-2005-0323-000Engineering Request; I&C TRM surveillance Reduction 0ER-GG-2006-0116-000Evaluate ASCO solenoid Valve replacement E51 ReactorCore Isolation Cooling System 0ER-GG-2006-0220-001Set up Valve to Eliminate Negative Margin 0
NRC personnel W. Walker, Senior Project Engineer, Reactor Project Branch C R. Bywater, Senior Reactor Analyst, Region IV LIST OF ITEMS OPENED, CLOSED, AND DISCUSSED Opened None Opened and Closed 05000416/2007004-01      NCV      Failure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod Drive System 05000416/2007004-02      NCV      Failure to Establish a Formal Procedure to Monitor Outdoor Air Temperatures 05000416/2007004-03      NCV      Failure to Follow Procedures Caused Loss of Decay Heat Removal in the Spent Fuel Pool 05000416/2007004-04      FIN      Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum Closed 0500416/2007004-02       LER      Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum Discussed None LIST OF DOCUMENTS REVIEWED In addition to the documents called out in the inspection report, the following documents were selected and reviewed by the inspectors to accomplish the objectives and scope of the inspection and to support any findings:
AttachmentA-4ER-GG-2007-0048-000Setpoint Change for Bus 15AA and 16AB UndervoltageRelay TimersER-GG-2007-0003-000Provide Temporary Weld Repair for CRD Flow ControlValve, 1C11F002A 0ER-GG-2006-0262-000Increase the Reset Value for Safeguard Switchgear andBattery Rooms Air Handling Unit Fan Discharge Temper 0ER-GG-2005-0242-000Install Second Mechanical Gag Identical to the ExistingMechanical Gag to Ensure That Valves 1P71F298 0MiscellaneousNUMBERTITLEREVISIONGNRI-2006/00006Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 - Issuance ofAmendment Re: Adoption of Approved GenericChanges to the TechnicalSpecifications (TAC NO. MC6651) 0GNRO-2005/00016License Amendment Request, Adoption of NRCApproved Generic Changes to the Improved TechnicalSpecifications, Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 0TSTF-400Clarify Surveillance Requirement on Bypass of DieselGenerator Automatic Trips 0NUREG-0871Supplement 7Safety Evaluation Report Related to the Operation ofGrand Gulf Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2 0LO-GLO 2007-0124Permanent Plant Modifications and 50.59 ProgramReviews (Pre-NRC) Self-Assessment 0LBD-2005-081LBD Change Form 0 CRsCR-GGN-2005-03193CR-GGN-2006-02777CR-GGN-2006-01510CR-GGN-2005-03231CR-GGN-2006-01237Section 1R11: Licensed Operator RequalificationProcedures01-S-04-2, "Licensed Operator Requalification Training"01-S-02-17, "Administration of Annual Exam"01-S-02-20, "Preparing, Conducting, and Review of Simulator Evaluations" AttachmentA-5Job Performance Measures (JPMs)GJPM-OPS-R2731, "Transfer of electrical loads from Service Transformer 21 to ServiceTransformer 11," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-L62-1, "Startup Static Inverter 1Y81," Revision 01GJPM-OPS-Z5101, "Secure Control Room Standby Fresh Air Unit," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-G3311, "Align RWCU for Vessel Level Control," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-C61-2, "Perform Attachment IV of Shutdown from Remote Shutdown Panel,ONEP," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-C10181, "Rotate Operating CRD Pumps," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-EAL19, "Emergency Event Classification JPM, Control Room Evacuation,"Revision 2GJPM-OPS-B2110, "Operate Turbine Pressure Control / SRVs," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-E1201, "Startup Shutdown Cooling B," Revision 1GJPM-OPS-N2101, "RFPT HPU Shutdown, Revision 00GJPM-OPS-R2108, "Reset Undervoltage Lockouts on BOP Buses," Revision 00GJPM-OPS-EAL07, "Emergency Event Classification JPM," Revision 3ScenariosGSMS-LOR-AEX25, "Spurious RCIC Isolation Due to Failed RHR Temperature Switch; RFPT APump Trip; Feedwater Line A Break in the Drywell, Revision 07GSMS-LOR-AXE21, Drifting/Stuck Rod; RFPT Trip; Feedwater Line Break in Drywell; ATWS,Revision 05GSMS-LOR-AEX01, A C@ level instrument failure/FW heater 6A tube leak/FW line rupture indrywell, Revision 04GSMS-LOR-AEX16, Control rod drift; EHC leak; ATWS, Revision 06 AttachmentA-6Written ExaminationsLOR-2006-Cycle 3-Exam 1LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1LOR-2006-Cycle 1-Exam 1LOR-2006-Cycle 6-Exam 1LOR-2006-Cycle 7-Exam 1LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1MiscellaneousGGNS Operating Test Walk Through Results (Weeks 1-4)2007 Annual JPM Selection (Weeks 1-6)GLO-2007-0122, Licensed Operator Requalification Training Inspection Assessment, June 4-7, 2007Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Operations Training Corporate Assessment, February 15, 2007Remediation Package for Crew Failure on Simulator CRsCR-GGN-2005-03352 dated 09/08/2005, "Operating Experience Report on Weaknesses inOperator Fundamentals"CR-GGN-2006-02308 dated 05/30/2006, "Members of the Emergency Response OrganizationOverdue on Training"CR-GGN-2005-05124 dated 11/30/2005, "Watchstanders Not Fully E-Plan Qualified"CR-GGN-2005-03099 dated 08/11/2005, "2005 Biennial Exam Failures"Section 1R12: Maintenance RuleProceduresEN-DC-203, "Maintenance Rule Program," Revision 0EN-DC-204, "Maintenance Rule Scope and Basis," Revision 0EN-DC-205, "Maintenance Rule Monitoring," Revision 0EN-DC-206, "Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Process," Revision 0Maintenance Rule Failure Database for System C11GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, July 2007GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, September 2007Maintenance Rule System Notebook AttachmentA-7CRs (C11)CR-GGN-2006-2923CR-GGN-2006-2117CR-GGN-2007-2024CR-GGN-2007-2882CR-GGN-2007-3162CRs (M41)CR-GGN-2006-02920CR-GGN-2006-03502CR-GGN-2006-03999CR-GGN-2007-02498CR-GGN-2007-02563Section 1R13: Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work ControlProcedures01-S-18-6, "Risk Assessment of Maintenance Activities," Revision 518-S-01-1, "Planning Guidelines," Revision 2EN-WM-101, "On-Line Work Management Process," Revision 1EN-WM-102, "Work Implementation and Closeout," Revision 0Work Order 86316Work Order 51085228 CRCR-GGN-2007-04214Section 1R15: Operability DeterminationsEN-OP-104, "Operability Determinations," Revision 2EN-LI-102, "Corrective Action Process," Revision 10Drawing M-1086, "P&ID High Pressure Core Spray System," Revision 30System Design Criteria SDC-E22, "High Pressure Core Spray System E22," Revision 2System Operating Instruction 04-S-01-Z51-1, "Control Room HVAC System," Revision 42 CRsCR-GGN-2007-3374CR-GGN-2007-3385CR-GGN-2007-3514Section 1R17A: Permanent Plant ModificationsEngineering Report ER-GG-2004-0230-001-00, "Replacement of E31 Riley TemperatureSwitches with NUS Model A076MA," Revision 1QP-367.0, "Seismic Qualification Review Package for Riley Temperature Switch Model 86"Trentec Test Plan 1S001.0 Revision 1, "NUS Temperature Switch Seismic Qualification TestProcedure" AttachmentA-8Seismic Qualification Report 1S001.0, Revision 0, Appendix H Dynamic Qualification Records for Temperature Switch, GE, October 1988Drawing GE-NE 164C5687Leak Detection Temperature Monitor Qualification Report, "NUS-A076QA," Revision 0Work Order 86886Work Order 86312 CRsCR-GGN-2007-3495CR-GGN-2007-3502Section 1R17B: Permanent Plant ModificationsEngineering RequestsNUMBERTITLEREVISIONER-GG-2005-0323-000Engineering Request; I&C TRM Surveillance Reduction 0ER-GG-2006-0099Engineering Evaluation on Greater than 95°F Outdoor AirTemp.0ER-GG-92-0002Evaluation of Safety Related Electrical Equipment in VariousRooms With Elevated Post LOCA Temperatures 2ER-GG-2004-0219-000Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCOThermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/Model 0 ER-GG-2003-0018-006Evaluate 150-Ton Cask Handling Crane 0ER-GG-2005-0009-001Modification of Cask Handling Crane 0ER-GG-2005-0110-000Remove the Division I and II Diesel Trip on Low ControlPressure During a LOCA 0ER-GG-2006-0161-000Use of Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel Fuel 0ER-GG-2004-0219-000Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCOThermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/model 0ER-GG-2003-0234-000Extend Frequency of DG Fuel Oil Storage Tank Cleaning 0
A-2                                  Attachment
AttachmentA-9ER-GG-2003-0234-001Extend Frequency of Division II Dg Fuel Oil Storage Tank Cleaning 0ER-GG-2005-0318-000Basis for the Div 1/2 Governor Replacement 0CalculationsNUMBERTITLEREVISIONEC 3.8.5Engineering Calculation SSW Pumphouse HVAC 0M3.8.005Standby Service Water Pump House Ventilation System 0MC-Q1P75-90190Diesel Fuel Storage Requirements for the Division 1 and 2Diesel Generators 2DrawingsNUMBERTITLEREVISION3NC3188, Sht. 5Dresser Flow Control, Consolidated Safety Relief Valve 0FSK-S-1061B-080-GHBC-185/HBD-254, SSW from HBC-84 to PSV F031A &Drain from PSV F031A 11MiscellaneousNUMBERTITLEREVISIONLDC 2001-059Licensing Document Change Surveillance Change inFrequency March 15, 2001M-204.0Standard for Fabrication and Installation of Nuclear Service Piping 1GGNS-MS-03Mechanical Standard for Piping Class Sheets 1Work OrdersNUMBERTITLEREVISION 50326445 0 8392506CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1 8392606CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1 10486006CH1000-V-0038 DFO- Receipt Analyses 1 10486106CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1
 
AttachmentA-10 CRsCR-GGN-2004-00076CR-GGN-2006-03977CR-GGN-2006-04035CR-GGN-2007-01405CR-GGN-2007-04070CR-GGN-2007-04076CR-GGN-2007-04076CR-GGN-2007-04077CR-GGN-2007-04082CR-GGN-2007-04082Section 1R19: Postmaintenance TestingDrawing FSK-I-999-280-G, "Division 2 Diesel Generator Lube Oil Tubing Run," Revision 4ENS-MA-114, "Post Maintenance Testing," Revision 5Work Orders 112187 116201 119863 66378 86886 88931 89465 93109 CRsCR-GGN-2007-3584CR-GGN-2007-4193Section 1R20: Refueling and Outage ActivitiesProcedures03-1-01-3, "Plant Shutdown," Revision 11503-1-01-1, "Cold Shutdown to Generator Carrying Minimum Load," Revision 138EN-OP-102, "Protective and Caution Tagging," Revision 6EN-MA-118, "Foreign Material Exclusion," Revision 2M-1085A, "Residual Heat Removal System," Revision 67M-1085C, "Residual Heat Removal System," Revision 1701-S-06-26, "Post-Trip Analysis," Revision 1601-S-06-58, "Infrequently Performed Test or Evolution," Revision 001-S-06-7, "Containment and Drywell Access Control," Revision 104EN-HU-103, "Human Performance Error Review," Revision 0 CRsCR-GGN-2007-4128CR-GGN-2007-4163CR-GGN-2007-4175CR-GGN-2007-4177CR-GGN-2007-4201CR-GGN-2007-4321CR-GGN-2007-4382CR-GGN-2007-4576Section 1R22: Surveillance TestingProcedure 01-S-06-12, "GGNS Surveillance Test Program," Revision 109Procedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, "LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test," Revision 107Procedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, "APRM Time Response Testing," Revision 3 AttachmentA-11Procedure 06-OP-1E51-Q-0003, "RCIC Quarterly Pump Operability Verification," Revision 121Procedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, "Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-Month Functional Test,"Revision 112Procedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, "Daily Operating Logs," Revision 114Procedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, "Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test,"Revision 100Section 4OA3: Event FollowupProcedures07-S-53-N32-N035-1, "Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip,"Revision 00107-S-53-N32-N035-1, "Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip,"Revision 00207-S-53-N32-N035-1, "Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip,"Revision 00305-1-02-V-9 "Loss of Instrument Air," Revision 34 05-1-02-III-3, "Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate," Revision 106 CRsCR-GGN-2007-02756LIST OF ACRONYMSCAPcorrective action programCRcondition report FPCCUfuel pool cooling and cleanup GGNSGrand Gulf Nuclear Station NCVnoncited violation SSCstructure, system, and component TSTechnical Specification UFSARUpdated Final Safety Analysis Report}}
Section 1R02: Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments 10 CFR 50.59 Evaluations SE-2005-0003                      SE-2006-0004                    SE-2007-0002 SE-2005-0006                      SE-2006-0005 SE-2006-0003                      SE-2006-0006 Procedures NUMBER                                    TITLE                          REVISION EN-LI-100          Process Applicability Determination                             4 EN-LI-101          10 CFR 50.59 Review Program                                     3 10 CFR 50.59 Applicability Determinations/Screens NUMBER                                    TITLE                            REVISION ER-GG-2005-       Develop Modification Package(s) for Raising Normal, HI,           0 0090              and HI-HI Level Setpoints for LPFWH's #4A/B/C and #3A/
ER-GG-2005-       Unit 1 Instrument Air Vibration Trips                             0 0255 ER-GG-2005-       Evaluation of Alternate ASCO Solenoid Replacement PN              0 0280              HTX821027 for Original LB-X-821027 ER-GG-2006-       Removal of Control Rod Drive Relief Valves 1C11F025A/B            0 0236              for Seal Purge Flow ER-GG-2003-       Spent Fuel Cask Handling Crane 1T31E001 Process                  0 0018-047          Applicability Determination/Screening ER-GG-2003-       Cold Proof Test of Spent Fuel Cask Crane Process                  0 0018-049          Applicability Determination/Screening ER-GG-2006-       Revise the in-service inspection requirements for High            0 0237-000          Energy Break Exclusion Region (BER)
DRN J606.0        Document Revision Notice ER-GG-2006-0116-000                    15 Approved Alternate Replacement Solenoid Valve ER-GG-2005-       Engineering Request; I&C TRM surveillance Reduction               0 0323-000 ER-GG-2006-       Evaluate ASCO solenoid Valve replacement E51 Reactor              0 0116-000          Core Isolation Cooling System ER-GG-2006-       Set up Valve to Eliminate Negative Margin                         0 0220-001 A-3                                Attachment
 
ER-GG-2007-       Setpoint Change for Bus 15AA and 16AB Undervoltage 0048-000          Relay Timers ER-GG-2007-       Provide Temporary Weld Repair for CRD Flow Control              0 0003-000          Valve, 1C11F002A ER-GG-2006-       Increase the Reset Value for Safeguard Switchgear and 0262-000          Battery Rooms Air Handling Unit Fan Discharge Temper             0 ER-GG-2005-       Install Second Mechanical Gag Identical to the Existing 0242-000          Mechanical Gag to Ensure That Valves 1P71F298                   0 Miscellaneous NUMBER                                    TITLE                          REVISION GNRI-2006/00006        Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 - Issuance of            0 Amendment Re: Adoption of Approved Generic Changes to the Technical Specifications (TAC NO. MC6651)
GNRO-2005/00016        License Amendment Request, Adoption of NRC                  0 Approved Generic Changes to the Improved Technical Specifications, Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 TSTF-400              Clarify Surveillance Requirement on Bypass of Diesel        0 Generator Automatic Trips NUREG-0871            Safety Evaluation Report Related to the Operation of        0 Supplement 7          Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2 LO-GLO 2007-0124      Permanent Plant Modifications and 50.59 Program              0 Reviews (Pre-NRC) Self-Assessment LBD-2005-081          LBD Change Form                                             0 CRs CR-GGN-2005-03193                  CR-GGN-2006-01510                CR-GGN-2006-01237 CR-GGN-2006-02777                  CR-GGN-2005-03231 Section 1R11: Licensed Operator Requalification Procedures 01-S-04-2, Licensed Operator Requalification Training 01-S-02-17, Administration of Annual Exam 01-S-02-20, Preparing, Conducting, and Review of Simulator Evaluations A-4                                Attachment
 
Job Performance Measures (JPMs)
GJPM-OPS-R2731, Transfer of electrical loads from Service Transformer 21 to Service Transformer 11, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-L62-1, Startup Static Inverter 1Y81, Revision 01 GJPM-OPS-Z5101, Secure Control Room Standby Fresh Air Unit, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-G3311, Align RWCU for Vessel Level Control, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-C61-2, Perform Attachment IV of Shutdown from Remote Shutdown Panel, ONEP, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-C10181, Rotate Operating CRD Pumps, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-EAL19, Emergency Event Classification JPM, Control Room Evacuation, Revision 2 GJPM-OPS-B2110, Operate Turbine Pressure Control / SRVs, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-E1201, Startup Shutdown Cooling B, Revision 1 GJPM-OPS-N2101, RFPT HPU Shutdown, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-R2108, Reset Undervoltage Lockouts on BOP Buses, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-EAL07, Emergency Event Classification JPM, Revision 3 Scenarios GSMS-LOR-AEX25, Spurious RCIC Isolation Due to Failed RHR Temperature Switch; RFPT A Pump Trip; Feedwater Line A Break in the Drywell, Revision 07 GSMS-LOR-AXE21, Drifting/Stuck Rod; RFPT Trip; Feedwater Line Break in Drywell; ATWS, Revision 05 GSMS-LOR-AEX01, AC@ level instrument failure/FW heater 6A tube leak/FW line rupture in drywell, Revision 04 GSMS-LOR-AEX16, Control rod drift; EHC leak; ATWS, Revision 06 A-5                                Attachment
 
Written Examinations LOR-2006-Cycle 3-Exam 1        LOR-2006-Cycle 6-Exam 1          LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1        LOR-2006-Cycle 7-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 1-Exam 1 Miscellaneous GGNS Operating Test Walk Through Results (Weeks 1-4) 2007 Annual JPM Selection (Weeks 1-6)
GLO-2007-0122, Licensed Operator Requalification Training Inspection Assessment, June 4-7, 2007 Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Operations Training Corporate Assessment, February 15, 2007 Remediation Package for Crew Failure on Simulator CRs CR-GGN-2005-03352 dated 09/08/2005, Operating Experience Report on Weaknesses in Operator Fundamentals CR-GGN-2006-02308 dated 05/30/2006, Members of the Emergency Response Organization Overdue on Training CR-GGN-2005-05124 dated 11/30/2005, Watchstanders Not Fully E-Plan Qualified CR-GGN-2005-03099 dated 08/11/2005, 2005 Biennial Exam Failures Section 1R12: Maintenance Rule Procedures EN-DC-203, Maintenance Rule Program, Revision 0 EN-DC-204, Maintenance Rule Scope and Basis, Revision 0 EN-DC-205, Maintenance Rule Monitoring, Revision 0 EN-DC-206, Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Process, Revision 0 Maintenance Rule Failure Database for System C11 GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, July 2007 GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, September 2007 Maintenance Rule System Notebook A-6                                Attachment
 
CRs (C11)
CR-GGN-2006-2923                  CR-GGN-2007-2024                CR-GGN-2007-3162 CR-GGN-2006-2117                  CR-GGN-2007-2882 CRs (M41)
CR-GGN-2006-02920                CR-GGN-2006-03999                CR-GGN-2007-02563 CR-GGN-2006-03502                CR-GGN-2007-02498 Section 1R13: Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control Procedures 01-S-18-6, Risk Assessment of Maintenance Activities, Revision 5 18-S-01-1, Planning Guidelines, Revision 2 EN-WM-101, On-Line Work Management Process, Revision 1 EN-WM-102, Work Implementation and Closeout, Revision 0 Work Order 86316 Work Order 51085228 CR CR-GGN-2007-04214 Section 1R15: Operability Determinations EN-OP-104, Operability Determinations, Revision 2 EN-LI-102, Corrective Action Process, Revision 10 Drawing M-1086, P&ID High Pressure Core Spray System, Revision 30 System Design Criteria SDC-E22, High Pressure Core Spray System E22, Revision 2 System Operating Instruction 04-S-01-Z51-1, Control Room HVAC System, Revision 42 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3374                  CR-GGN-2007-3514 CR-GGN-2007-3385 Section 1R17A: Permanent Plant Modifications Engineering Report ER-GG-2004-0230-001-00, Replacement of E31 Riley Temperature Switches with NUS Model A076MA, Revision 1 QP-367.0, Seismic Qualification Review Package for Riley Temperature Switch Model 86" Trentec Test Plan 1S001.0 Revision 1, NUS Temperature Switch Seismic Qualification Test Procedure A-7                                Attachment
 
Seismic Qualification Report 1S001.0, Revision 0, Appendix H Dynamic Qualification Records for Temperature Switch, GE, October 1988 Drawing GE-NE 164C5687 Leak Detection Temperature Monitor Qualification Report, NUS-A076QA, Revision 0 Work Order 86886 Work Order 86312 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3495                  CR-GGN-2007-3502 Section 1R17B: Permanent Plant Modifications Engineering Requests NUMBER                                    TITLE                            REVISION ER-GG-2005-       Engineering Request; I&C TRM Surveillance Reduction               0 0323-000 ER-GG-2006-       Engineering Evaluation on Greater than 95°F Outdoor Air          0 0099              Temp.
ER-GG         Evaluation of Safety Related Electrical Equipment in Various      2 0002              Rooms With Elevated Post LOCA Temperatures ER-GG-2004-       Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCO                0 0219-000          Thermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/Model ER-GG-2003-       Evaluate 150-Ton Cask Handling Crane                             0 0018-006 ER-GG-2005-       Modification of Cask Handling Crane                               0 0009-001 ER-GG-2005-       Remove the Division I and II Diesel Trip on Low Control          0 0110-000          Pressure During a LOCA ER-GG-2006-       Use of Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel Fuel                               0 0161-000 ER-GG-2004-       Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCO                0 0219-000          Thermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/model ER-GG-2003-       Extend Frequency of DG Fuel Oil Storage Tank Cleaning             0 0234-000 A-8                                Attachment
 
ER-GG-2003-     Extend Frequency of Division II Dg Fuel Oil Storage Tank         0 0234-001        Cleaning ER-GG-2005-     Basis for the Div 1/2 Governor Replacement 0318-000                                                                          0 Calculations NUMBER                                  TITLE                            REVISION EC 3.8.5        Engineering Calculation SSW Pumphouse HVAC                       0 M3.8.005        Standby Service Water Pump House Ventilation System               0 MC-Q1P75-       Diesel Fuel Storage Requirements for the Division 1 and 2        2 90190          Diesel Generators Drawings NUMBER                                  TITLE                            REVISION 3NC3188, Sht. 5  Dresser Flow Control, Consolidated Safety Relief Valve           0 FSK-S-1061B-     HBC-185/HBD-254, SSW from HBC-84 to PSV F031A &                 11 080-G            Drain from PSV F031A Miscellaneous NUMBER                                  TITLE                            REVISION LDC 2001-059    Licensing Document Change Surveillance Change in            March 15, Frequency                                                    2001 M-204.0        Standard for Fabrication and Installation of Nuclear Service     1 Piping GGNS-MS-03      Mechanical Standard for Piping Class Sheets                       1 Work Orders NUMBER                                  TITLE                            REVISION 50326445                                                                         0 83925          06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses                             1 83926          06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses                             1 104860          06CH1000-V-0038 DFO- Receipt Analyses                             1 104861          06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses                             1 A-9                                Attachment
 
CRs CR-GGN-2004-00076                CR-GGN-2007-04070                CR-GGN-2007-04082 CR-GGN-2006-03977                CR-GGN-2007-04076                CR-GGN-2007-04082 CR-GGN-2006-04035                CR-GGN-2007-04076 CR-GGN-2007-01405                CR-GGN-2007-04077 Section 1R19: Postmaintenance Testing Drawing FSK-I-999-280-G, Division 2 Diesel Generator Lube Oil Tubing Run, Revision 4 ENS-MA-114, Post Maintenance Testing, Revision 5 Work Orders 112187                           66378                            89465 116201                           86886                            93109 119863                           88931 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3584                  CR-GGN-2007-4193 Section 1R20: Refueling and Outage Activities Procedures 03-1-01-3, Plant Shutdown, Revision 115 03-1-01-1, Cold Shutdown to Generator Carrying Minimum Load, Revision 138 EN-OP-102, Protective and Caution Tagging, Revision 6 EN-MA-118, Foreign Material Exclusion, Revision 2 M-1085A, Residual Heat Removal System, Revision 67 M-1085C, Residual Heat Removal System, Revision 17 01-S-06-26, Post-Trip Analysis, Revision 16 01-S-06-58, Infrequently Performed Test or Evolution, Revision 0 01-S-06-7, Containment and Drywell Access Control, Revision 104 EN-HU-103, Human Performance Error Review, Revision 0 CRs CR-GGN-2007-4128                  CR-GGN-2007-4177                CR-GGN-2007-4382 CR-GGN-2007-4163                  CR-GGN-2007-4201                CR-GGN-2007-4576 CR-GGN-2007-4175                  CR-GGN-2007-4321 Section 1R22: Surveillance Testing Procedure 01-S-06-12, GGNS Surveillance Test Program, Revision 109 Procedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test, Revision 107 Procedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, APRM Time Response Testing, Revision 3 A-10                              Attachment
 
Procedure 06-OP-1E51-Q-0003, RCIC Quarterly Pump Operability Verification, Revision 121 Procedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-Month Functional Test, Revision 112 Procedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, Daily Operating Logs, Revision 114 Procedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test, Revision 100 Section 4OA3: Event Followup Procedures 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 001 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 002 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 003 05-1-02-V-9 Loss of Instrument Air, Revision 34 05-1-02-III-3, Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate, Revision 106 CRs CR-GGN-2007-02756 LIST OF ACRONYMS CAP            corrective action program CR              condition report FPCCU          fuel pool cooling and cleanup GGNS            Grand Gulf Nuclear Station NCV            noncited violation SSC            structure, system, and component TS              Technical Specification UFSAR          Updated Final Safety Analysis Report A-11                              Attachment}}

Latest revision as of 02:13, 23 November 2019

IR 05000416-0-7004; 7/1/07 - 9/30/07; Grand Gulf Nuclear Station -- Integrated Resident and Regional Report; Maintenance Effectiveness, Permanent Plant Modifications, Refueling and Outage Activities, Event Follow-up
ML073060622
Person / Time
Site: Grand Gulf Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 11/02/2007
From: Hay M
NRC/RGN-IV/DRP/RPB-C
To: Brian W
Entergy Operations
References
IR-07-004
Download: ML073060622 (40)


Text

November 2, 2007 William R. Brian, Vice President of Operations Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Entergy Operations, Inc.

P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150

SUBJECT:

GRAND GULF NUCLEAR STATION - NRC INTEGRATED INSPECTION REPORT 05000416/2007004

Dear Mr. Brian:

On September 30, 2007, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed an inspection at your Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility. The enclosed integrated report documents the inspection findings, which were discussed on October 10, 2007, with you and other members of your staff.

The inspection examined activities conducted under your license as they relate to safety and compliance with the Commission's rules and regulations and with the conditions of your license.

The inspectors reviewed selected procedures and records, observed activities, and interviewed personnel.

This report documents four NRC identified and self-revealing findings of very low safety significance (Green). Three of these findings were determined to involve violations of NRC requirements; however, because of the very low safety significance and because they were entered into your corrective action program, the NRC is treating these findings as noncited violations (NCVs) consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy. If you contest these NCVs, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your denial, to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington DC 20555-0001; with copies to the Regional Administrator, U.S.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission Region IV, 611 Ryan Plaza Drive, Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011-4005; the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington DC 20555-0001; and the NRC Resident Inspector at the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station facility.

Entergy Operations, Inc. In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's Rules of Practice, a copy of this letter, its enclosure, and your response (if any) will be made available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRCs document system (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).

Sincerely,

/RA/

Michael C. Hay, Chief Project Branch C Division of Reactor Projects Docket: 50-416 License: NPF-29

Enclosure:

Inspection Report 05000416/2007004 w/

Attachment:

Supplemental Information cc w/

Enclosure:

Senior Vice President President Entergy Nuclear Operations Claiborne County Board of Supervisors P.O. Box 31995 P.O. Box 339 Jackson, MS 39286-1995 Port Gibson, MS 39150 Senior Vice President and COO General Manager, Plant Operations Entergy Operations, Inc. Grand Gulf Nuclear Station P.O. Box 31995 Entergy Operations, Inc.

Jackson, MS 39286-1995 P.O. Box 756 Port Gibson, MS 39150 Vice President, Operations Support Entergy Services, Inc. Senior Manager P.O. Box 31995 Nuclear Safety & Licensing Jackson, MS 39286-1995 Entergy Services, Inc.

P.O. Box 31995 Chief Jackson, MS 39286-1995 Energy & Transportation Branch Environmental Compliance and Manager, Licensing Enforcement Division Entergy Operations, Inc.

Mississippi Department of P.O. Box 756 Environmental Quality Port Gibson, MS 39150 P.O. Box 10385 Jackson, MS 39289-0385

Entergy Operations, Inc. Attorney General Department of Justice Conrad S. Burnside, Chief State of Louisiana Technological Hazards Branch P.O. Box 94005 National Preparedness Division Baton Rouge, LA 70804-9005 DHS/FEMA 3003 Chamblee Tucker Road Office of the Governor Atlanta, GA 30341 State of Mississippi Jackson, MS 39205 Director Nuclear Safety & Licensing Attorney General Entergy Operations, Inc.

Assistant Attorney General 1340 Echelon Parkway State of Mississippi Jackson, MS 39213-8298 P.O. Box 22947 Jackson, MS 39225-2947 Director, Nuclear Safety Assurance Entergy Operations, Inc.

State Health Officer P.O. Box 756 State Board of Health Port Gibson, MS 39150 P.O. Box 139 Jackson, MS 39205 Richard Penrod, Senior Environmental Scientist, State Liaison Officer Lisa R. Hammond Office of Environmental Services Technological Hazards Branch Northwestern State University National Preparedness Division Russsell Hall, Room 201 FEMA Region VI Natchitoches, LA 71497 800 N. Loop 288 Denton, TX 76209

Entergy Operations, Inc. Electronic distribution by RIV:

Regional Administrator (EEC)

DRP Director (ATH)

DRS Director (DDC)

DRS Deputy Director (RJC1)

Senior Resident Inspector (AJB6)

Branch Chief, DRP/C (MCH2)

Senior Project Engineer, DRP/C (WCW)

Team Leader, DRP/TSS (CJP)

RITS Coordinator (MSH3)

Only inspection reports to the following:

DRS STA (DAP)

D. Pelton, OEDO RIV Coordinator (DLP)

ROPreports GG Site Secretary (NAS2)

SUNSI Review Completed: MCH ADAMS: : Yes No Initials: MCH

Publicly Available Non-Publicly Available Sensitive : Non-Sensitive R:\_REACTORS\GG\2007\GG2007-04RP-AJB.wpd ML073060622 RIV:RI:DRP/C SPE:DRP/E C:SPE:DRP/C C:DRS/EB1 C:DRS/PSB AJBarrett GBMiller WCWalker WBJones MPShannon

/RA - E/ /RA/ /RA/ /RA/ /RA KBrooks for/

11/01/07 10/29/07 11/01/07 10/29/07 10/30/07 C:DRS/OB C:DRS/EB2 C:DRP/C ATGody LJSmith MCHay

/RA BLarson for/ /RA Dpowers for/ /RA/

11/01/07 10/29/07 11/02/07 OFFICIAL RECORD COPY T=Telephone E=E-mail F=Fax

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION IV Docket: 50-416 Licenses: NPF-29 Report No.: 05000416/2007004 Licensee: Entergy Operations, Inc.

Facility: Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Location: Waterloo Road Port Gibson, Mississippi 39150 Dates: July 1 through September 30, 2007 Inspectors: A. Barrett, Resident Inspector D. Bollock, Project Engineer G. A. George, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 S. Garchow, Operations Engineer B. Henderson, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 G. Miller, Senior Resident Inspector J. Reynoso, Reactor Inspector, Engineering Branch 1 T. Stetka, Senior Operations Engineer E. Uribe, NSPDP Approved By: Michael C. Hay, Chief Project Branch C Division of Reactor Projects Enclosure

SUMMARY

OF FINDINGS IR05000416/2007004; 7/1/07 - 9/30/07; Grand Gulf Nuclear Station -- Integrated Resident and Regional Report; Maintenance Effectiveness, Permanent Plant Modifications, Refueling and Outage Activities, Event Follow-up.

This report covered a 3-month period of inspection by resident inspectors and regional office inspectors. These inspection activities identified four Green findings, three of which were noncited violations. The significance of most findings is indicated by their color (Green, White, Yellow, or Red) using Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process.

Findings for which the significance determination process does not apply may be Green or be assigned a severity level after NRC management's review. The NRCs program for overseeing the safe operation of commercial nuclear power reactors is described in NUREG-1649, Reactor Oversight Process, Revision 3, dated July 2000.

A. NRC-Identified and Self-Revealing Findings Cornerstone: Mitigating Systems

  • Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, Design Control, for the failure to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into an instruction or procedure. The licensee established a new Updated Final Safety Analysis Report maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F. If outside air temperatures exceeded 102.5°F, safety-related equipment, which are located in rooms that are cooled by outdoor air (i.e., standby service water pump room), would be operationally challenged. The inspectors identified that no instruction or procedure was established to monitor high outside temperature or subsequent actions established in the event the design basis temperature limit is exceeded.

The inspectors determined that the finding was more than minor because the finding affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of the standby service water system that responds to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded.

The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in determining not to establish a procedure or instruction to monitor high outside temperature for design limits on the standby service water pump room H.1(b) (Section 1R17).

  • Green. The inspectors identified a noncited violation of 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) for the failure to adequately monitor the performance of the control rod drive system. Specifically, the licensee failed to adequately perform a functional failure determination for a degraded flow control valve. Following licensee Enclosure

review of this condition the system was placed in the maintenance rule (a)(1) monitoring status.

This finding was more than minor since the degraded control rod drive flow control valve caused the system to be placed in the (a)(1) monitoring status.

This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with decision making because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions H.1(b) (Section 1R12).

The finding is more than minor, since it affects the human performance attribute of the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using the Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, the finding has a very low safety significance since it only represents a degradation of the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with work practices because licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure H.4(b)

(Section 1R20).

Cornerstone: Initiating Events

  • Green. A self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure to properly calibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition. This issue was entered into the licensees corrective action program as Condition Report CR-GGN-2007-02756.

The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiating events cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations.

Using the Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 Enclosure

worksheet, the finding was determined to have very low safety significance because the finding did not contribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipment or functions would not be available following a reactor trip. The cause of the finding was related to the human performance crosscutting component of resources in that the calibration procedure did not provide clear instructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©] (Section 4OA3).

B. Licensee-Identified Violations Violations of very low safety significance which were identified by the licensee have been reviewed by the inspectors. Corrective actions taken or planned by the licensee have been entered into the licensee's corrective action program. These violations and corrective actions are listed in Section 4OA7 of this report.

Enclosure

REPORT DETAILS Summary of Plant Status Grand Gulf Nuclear Station (GGNS) began the inspection period at full rated thermal power.

On August 21, 2007, the reactor experienced an automatic reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feedpump turbine controller. Following troubleshooting and repairs, the reactor was restarted on August 22, 2007, and reached full power on August 26, 2007. On August 26, 2007, the reactor recirculation Pump B motor tripped due to a ground fault, causing the plant to experience an unplanned power reduction to 58 percent power. The plant remained at approximately 58 percent power and in single loop operation until September 1, 2007, when the reactor was shutdown to replace the failed motor. On September 14, 2007, the plant started up from the outage and reached full power on September 18, 2007. The plant remained at or near full rated thermal power for the remainder of the inspection period.

1. REACTOR SAFETY Cornerstones: Initiating Events, Mitigating Systems, Barrier Integrity 1R01 Adverse Weather Protection (71111.01)

.1 Readiness For Seasonal Susceptibilities

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors completed a review of the licensee's readiness for seasonal susceptibilities involving extreme high temperatures. The inspectors: (1) reviewed plant procedures, the Updated Final Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR), and Technical Specifications (TS) to ensure that operator actions defined in adverse weather procedures maintained the readiness of essential systems; (2) walked down portions of the three systems listed below to ensure that adverse weather protection features were sufficient to support operability, including the ability to perform safe shutdown functions; (3) evaluated operator staffing levels to ensure the licensee could maintain the readiness of essential systems required by plant procedures; and (4) reviewed the corrective action program (CAP) to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to adverse weather conditions.

C August 6, 2007, standby service water system C August 8, 2007, turbine building cooling water system C August 9, 2007, plant service water system Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:

C Procedure 05-1-02-VI-2, Hurricanes, Tornadoes, and Severe Weather, Revision 108 C Procedure ENS-EP-302, Severe Weather Response, Revision 4 Enclosure

C SDC-P41, System Design Criteria for Standby Service Water System P41, Revision 3 C Procedure 04-1-01-P43-1, Turbine Building Cooling Water System, Revision 44 C Procedure 04-1-01-P44-1, Plant Service Water/ Radial Well System, Revision 84 The inspectors completed one sample.

1R02 Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments (71111.02)

a. Inspection Scope From August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed the effectiveness of the licensees implementation of changes to the facility structures, systems, and components; risk-significant normal and emergency operating procedures; test programs; and the UFSAR report in accordance with 10 CFR 50.59, Changes, Tests, and Experiments.

The inspectors reviewed seven 10 CFR 50.59 safety evaluations performed by the licensee since the last NRC inspection of the 10 CFR 50.59 process. The evaluations were reviewed to verify that licensee personnel had appropriately considered the conditions under which the licensee may make changes to the facility or procedures or conduct tests or experiments without prior NRC approval. In addition, the inspectors reviewed fifteen 10 CFR 50.59 screenings, in which licensee personnel determined that evaluations were not required, to ensure that the exclusion of a full evaluation was consistent with the requirements of 10 CFR 50.59.

The inspectors reviewed a sample of recent licensee condition reports (CRs) related to the 10 CFR 50.59 process to determine whether the licensee had identified problems and entered them into the CAP at the appropriate threshold.

The inspection procedure specifies that the inspectors review a minimum sample of five licensee safety evaluations and a combination of ten applicability determinations or screenings. The inspectors completed a review of seven licensee safety evaluations and fifteen applicability/screenings.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

Enclosure

1R04 Equipment Alignment (71111.04)

.1 Partial System Walkdowns

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) walked down portions of the two listed risk important systems and reviewed plant procedures and documents to verify that critical portions of the selected systems were correctly aligned; and (2) compared deficiencies identified during the walkdown to the licensee's UFSAR and CAP to ensure problems were being identified and corrected.

C July 23, 2007, and July 26, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of the control rod drive Train A system following a system maintenance outage.

C July 31, 2007, the inspectors walked down portions of the reactor core isolation cooling system following a system maintenance outage.

Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:

C Procedure 04-1-01-C11-1, System Operating Instruction - Control Rod Drive Hydraulic System, Revision 128 C System Piping Diagram M-1081A, Control Rod Drive Hydraulic System, Revision 38 C Procedure 04-1-01-E51-1, System Operating Instruction - Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 124 C System Piping Diagram M-1083A, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 33 C System Piping Diagram M-1083B, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling System, Revision 36 C Vendor Manual 460000182, Reactor Core Isolation Cooling The inspectors completed two samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

Enclosure

1R05 Fire Protection (71111.05)

a. Inspection Scope Quarterly Inspection The inspectors walked down the six listed plant areas to assess the material condition of active and passive fire protection features and their operational lineup and readiness.

The inspectors: (1) verified that transient combustibles and hot work activities were controlled in accordance with plant procedures; (2) observed the condition of fire detection devices to verify they remained functional; (3) observed fire suppression systems to verify they remained functional and that access to manual actuators were unobstructed; (4) verified that fire extinguishers and hose stations were provided at their designated locations and that they were in a satisfactory condition; (5) verified that passive fire protection features (electrical raceway barriers, fire doors, fire dampers, steel fire proofing, penetration seals, and oil collection systems) were in a satisfactory material condition; (6) verified that adequate compensatory measures were established for degraded or inoperable fire protection features and that the compensatory measures were commensurate with the significance of the deficiency; and (7) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected fire protection problems.

C Secondary Alarm Station C Control Room Emergency Dormitory (Room 1OC604)

C Technical Support Center (Room 1OC608)

C Upper Relay Room (Room 1OC703)

C Instrument Motor Generator Room (Room 1OC707)

C Drywell, All Elevations (1A112)

Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:

C Procedure 10-S-03-4, Control of Combustible Material, Revision 14 C Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Fire Pre-Plans, Revision 15 C Procedure 01-S-10-1, Fire Protection Plan, Revision 102 C Procedure 10-S-03-9, Control of Fire Pre-Plans, Revision 2 The inspectors completed six samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R11 Licensed Operator Requalification (71111.11)

.1 Biennial Inspection The licensed operator requalification program involves two training cycles that are conducted over a two year period. In the first cycle, the annual cycle, the operators are Enclosure

administered an operating test consisting of job performance measures and scenarios.

In the second part of the training cycle, the biennial cycle, operators are administered an operating test and a written examination. The inspectors reviewed the results of the biennial cycle of the requalification program.

a. Inspection Scope To assess the performance effectiveness of the licensed operator requalification program, the inspectors conducted personnel interviews, reviewed samples of both the operating and written examinations, observed ongoing operating examination activities, and reviewed personnel records.

The inspectors interviewed five licensee personnel, consisting of three operators, an instructor, and a training supervisor to determine their understanding of the policies and practices for administering requalification examinations. The inspectors also reviewed operator performance on the written and operating examinations. These reviews included observations of portions of the operating examination by the inspectors. The operating examinations observed included five job performance measures and two scenarios that were used in the current biennial requalification cycle. These observations allowed the inspectors to assess the licensee's effectiveness in conducting the operating test to ensure operator mastery of the training program content.

The results of these examinations were reviewed to determine the effectiveness of the licensees appraisal of operator performance and to determine if feedback of performance analyses into the requalification training program was being accomplished.

The inspectors interviewed members of the training department to assess the responsiveness of the licensed operator requalification program to incorporate the lessons learned from both plant and industry events. Examination results were also assessed to determine if they were consistent with the guidance contained in NUREG 1021, Operator Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors, Revision 9, and NRC Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix I, Operator Requalification Human Performance Significance Determination Process. Forty-three out of fifty licensed operators passed the written examination. The seven operators (four reactor operators and three senior operators) that failed the written examination were remediated and successfully re-examined.

The inspectors also reviewed the licensees program for maintaining active operator licenses and ensuring the medical fitness of the licensed operators. The inspectors sampled records to ensure that all operators have active licenses and that any licenses reactivated since the last inspection were current. The inspectors also reviewed a sampling of licensed operator medical records to verify that the required physical examinations are being performed.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

Enclosure

.2 Quarterly Inspection

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors observed testing and training of senior reactor operators and reactor operators to assess training, operator performance, and the evaluator's critique.

Specifically, the inspectors observed the training Scenario GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises (EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4),

Revision 5, involved a crane boom crashing into a service water valve room at the standby service water basins and a subsequent feedwater line break outside containment. The scenario then led to an anticipated transient without scram (greater than 4 percent power) due to a blockage in the scram discharge volume. Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:

C GSMS-LOR-00195-G5, Licensed Operator Requal: Emergency Plan Exercises (EP-2, EP-2A, EP-3, EP-4), Revision 5 C Training Procedure 14-S-02-20, Preparing, Conducting and Review of Simulator Evaluations, Revision 4 The inspectors completed one sample.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R12 Maintenance Effectiveness (71111.12)

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the following maintenance rule scoped systems that have displayed performance problems to: (1) verify the appropriate handling of structure, system, and component (SSC) performance or condition problems; (2) verify the appropriate handling of degraded SSC functional performance; (3) evaluate the role of work practices and common cause problems; and (4) evaluate the handling of SSC issues reviewed under the requirements of the maintenance rule, 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, and the TSs.
  • containment cooling system Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed two samples.

Enclosure

b. Findings Introduction. The inspectors identified a Green noncited violation (NCV) of 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) for the failure to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance.

Description. On May 23, 2006, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2006-2117 in response to a crack in the body of control rod drive system flow control Valve B. While reviewing failure evaluations for the control rod drive system, the inspectors noted the licensee did not consider the crack in the flow control valve to be a functional failure for the valves maintenance rule function to provide maximum flow to the reactor vessel. The licensees determination that the crack was not a functional failure was based on the valves continued ability to open and provide flow. The inspectors challenged the assumptions used in the analysis, noting the evaluation only used an estimated as-found leak rate and failed to consider the pressure changes on the crack that would result from fully opening the valve or continued crack propagation. In response to the inspectors concerns, the licensee initiated CR-GGN-2007-2361 and after further evaluation reclassified the degraded condition as a functional failure. The licensee also initiated CR-GGN-2007-3004 to evaluate the need for increased monitoring and goal setting for the control rod drive system.

Analysis. Using NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0612, Appendix E, Example 7.b, the inspectors determined the finding was more than minor since the failure of the control rod drive flow control valve caused the system to be placed in (a)(1) monitoring status.

This finding was characterized under the significance determination process as having a very low safety significance, because the maintenance rule aspect of the finding did not cause an actual loss of safety function of the system, nor did it cause a component to become inoperable. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with decision making, because licensee personnel failed to use conservative assumptions and did not verify the validity of the underlying assumptions used in making safety-significant decisions H.1(b).

Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(1) requires, in part, that licensees shall monitor the performance or condition of SSCs within the scope of the rule against licensee established goals in a manner sufficient to provide reasonable assurance that the SSCs are capable of fulfilling their intended safety functions. 10 CFR Part 50.65(a)(2) requires, in part, that the monitoring specified in paragraph (a)(1) is not required where it has been demonstrated that the performance or condition of an SSC is being effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate preventive maintenance such that the SSC remains capable of performing its intended function. Contrary to the above, the licensee failed to demonstrate the performance or condition of the control rod drive system had been effectively controlled through the performance of appropriate scheduled maintenance. Specifically, the licensee failed to appropriately account for the failure of the Train B flow control valve on May 23, 2006, which demonstrated that the performance of the system was not being effectively controlled and goal setting and monitoring was required. Because this finding was of very low safety significance and has been entered in the CAP as CR-GGN-2007-3004, this violation is being treated as Enclosure

an NCV, consistent with Section IV.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy:

NCV 05000416/2007004-01, Failure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod Drive System.

1R13 Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control (71111.13)

.2 Emergent Work Control

a. Inspection Scope For the work activities listed below, the inspectors: (1) verified that the licensee performed actions to minimize the probability of initiating events and maintained the functional capability of mitigating systems and barrier integrity systems; (2) verified that emergent work-related activities such as troubleshooting, work planning/scheduling, establishing plant conditions, aligning equipment, tagging, temporary modifications, and equipment restoration did not place the plant in an unacceptable configuration; and, (3) reviewed the corrective action process to determine if the licensee identified and corrected risk assessment and emergent work control problems.

The inspectors completed two samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R15 Operability Evaluations (71111.15)

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) reviewed plant status documents such as operator shift logs, emergent work documentation, deferred modifications, and standing orders in order to determine if an operability evaluation was warranted for degraded components; (2) referred to the UFSAR and design basis documents in order to review the technical adequacy of licensee operability evaluations; (3) evaluated compensatory measures associated with operability evaluations; (4) determined degraded component impact on any TS; (5) used the significance determination process to evaluate the risk significance of degraded or inoperable equipment; and (6) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with degraded components.

Enclosure

  • CR-GGN-2007-03374, Control Room Air Conditioning System Flow Degraded Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed two samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R17 Permanent Plant Modifications (71111.17)

.1 Annual Inspection

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed key affected parameters associated with energy needs, materials/replacement components, timing, heat removal, control signals, equipment protection from hazards, operations, flow paths, pressure boundary, ventilation boundary, structures, process medium properties, licensing basis, and failure modes for the modification listed below. The inspectors verified that: (1) modification preparation, staging, and implementation did not impair emergency/abnormal operating procedure actions, key safety functions, or operator response to loss of key safety functions; (2) postmodification testing maintained the plant in a safe configuration during testing by verifying that unintended system interactions will not occur, that SSC performance characteristics still meet the design basis, ascertaining the appropriateness of modification design assumptions, and that the modification test acceptance criteria has been met; and (3) the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with permanent plant modifications.

The inspectors reviewed a modification that replaced obsolete Riley temperature switches with NUS switches. The inspectors ensured that the design bases, licensing bases, and performance capability of risk significant SSCs were not degraded by the modification. The inspection included a review of the engineering request, system drawings, and work package and observation of the field work during installation of the modification. The inspectors also reviewed the results of the post maintenance testing.

  • July 11, 2007, Riley temperature switch replacement with NUS temperature switch.

Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed one sample.

Enclosure

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

.2 Biennial Inspection

a. Inspection Scope From August 13-17, 2007, the inspectors reviewed seven permanent plant modification packages and associated documentation, such as implementation reviews, safety evaluation applicability determinations, and screenings, to verify that they were performed in accordance with regulatory requirements and plant procedures. The inspectors also reviewed the procedures governing plant modifications to evaluate the effectiveness of the program for implementing modifications to risk-significant SSCs, such that these changes did not adversely affect the design and licensing basis of the facility. Further, the inspectors interviewed the cognizant design and system engineers for the identified modifications as to their understanding of the modification packages and process.

The inspectors evaluated the effectiveness of the licensees corrective action process to identify and correct problems concerning the performance of permanent plant modifications by reviewing a sample of related CRs.

The inspection procedure specifies inspector-review of a required minimum sample of five permanent plant modifications. The inspectors completed review of seven permanent plant modifications.

b. Findings Introduction. The inspectors identified a Green, NCV of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, Design Control, for the failure to translate the monitoring and subsequent actions associated with exceeding the maximum outdoor design basis temperature into a formal instruction or procedure. The maximum outdoor design basis temperature was derived from analysis for the standby service water pump room to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals.

Description. The inspectors reviewed licensee Evaluation ER-GG-2006-0099-000, Greater than 95°F Outdoor Air Temperature. This licensee evaluation was a result of a 2005 NRC question associated with outdoor air temperatures. In June 2006, the licensee evaluation evaluated the effects of high outdoor air temperature, exceeding the UFSAR 95°F maximum outdoor temperature, on standby service water pump room ventilation system and safety-related equipment in that room. The results of the evaluation concluded that outdoor air temperature could reach 102.5°F before the safety related equipment in the standby service water pump room would be challenged. The UFSAR was updated to reflect the new maximum outdoor air temperature of 102.5°F.

In addition to the new maximum outdoor temperature limit, the engineering evaluation concluded that actions may be necessary to prevent challenges to the operability of the Enclosure

safety-related equipment in the standby service water pump room if the outdoor temperature exceeded 102.5°F. Those actions included initiating a CR to evaluate the condition of the safety-related equipment when outdoor temperatures exceeded the maximum limit, monitoring outdoor air temperatures when temperature were near the maximum limit, and taking specific actions to return the standby service water pump room temperature to within design limits.

The inspectors requested to review documentation that implemented the above actions that would control deviations of the UFSAR maximum outdoor air temperature limit. The licensee stated that there was no formally documented procedure to monitor temperatures or take necessary actions to prevent challenges. A formally documented procedure was never implemented because the licensee assumed, based on historical weather data, that outdoor temperatures will never exceed the new maximum outdoor temperature limit.

The inspectors concluded that the lack of a specific instruction or procedure could affect the monitoring and subsequent actions for areas containing safety-related equipment which use outdoor air for cooling. In the event the maximum analyzed outdoor temperature limit for the safety-related service water pump room is exceeded, a planned systematic action is necessary to assure the equipment would perform to meet its functional goals.

Through followup discussions with the licensee staff, the inspectors were told, during the resolution of the 2005 NRC question, the engineering and operations departments made a cognizant decision not to establish a written procedure to continually monitor outdoor air temperatures. The decision was based on historical weather data and the perceived difficulty of continually monitoring and evaluating conditions when outdoor air temperature was near or exceeded 102.5°F. Although no formal written procedure existed to monitor temperatures, the licensee staff did direct the chemistry group to inform the licensing manager and control room should 1 hour1.157407e-5 days <br />2.777778e-4 hours <br />1.653439e-6 weeks <br />3.805e-7 months <br /> average temperature readings exceed 102.5°F.

Analysis. The inspectors determined that failure to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure is a performance deficiency. The finding was more than minor because it affects the mitigating system cornerstone objective of ensuring the reliability of systems, standby service water, that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable conditions. Using the Phase 1 worksheet in Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, this finding is determined to be of very low safety significance (Green) because there was no actual loss of a safety function, and the design basis limits had not been exceeded. The inspectors determined that the finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area human performance decision making because the licensee failed to use conservative assumptions in not establishing an instruction or procedure to monitor high outdoor air temperatures and for followup actions to ensure the standby service water system meets its functional goals H.1(b).

Enforcement. 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, states, in part, measures shall be established to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis Enclosure

are correctly translated into specifications, drawings, procedures, and instructions.

These measures shall include provisions to assure that appropriate quality standards are specified and included in design documents and that deviations from such standards are controlled. Contrary to this, on June 28, 2006, the licensee failed to translate a design basis limit for outdoor air temperature into a formal instruction or procedure to monitor outdoor air temperatures during extreme high temperature weather to ensure the standby service water pump room design basis limit would not be exceeded.

Subsequent actions in the event the design basis temperature is exceeded were also not established. Because this finding is of very low safety significance and has been entered in the licensees CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04076, this violation is being treated as a NCV consistent with Section VI.A of the NRC Enforcement Policy: NCV 05000416/2007004-02, Failure to Establish a Formal Instruction or Procedure to Monitor Outdoor Air Temperatures.

1R19 Postmaintenance Testing (71111.19)

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors selected the six listed postmaintenance test activities of risk significant systems or components. For each item, the inspectors: (1) reviewed the applicable licensing basis and/or design-basis documents to determine the safety functions; (2) evaluated the safety functions that may have been affected by the maintenance activity; and (3) reviewed the test procedure to ensure it adequately tested the safety function that may have been affected. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that acceptance criteria were met, plant impacts were evaluated, test equipment was calibrated, procedures were followed, jumpers were properly controlled, test data results were complete and accurate, test equipment was removed, the system was properly re-aligned, and deficiencies during testing were documented. The inspectors also reviewed the UFSAR to determine if the licensee identified and corrected problems related to postmaintenance testing.
  • WO 116201, Control Room Air Conditioning Flow Test
  • WO 88931, Control Room Air Conditioning System Outage
  • WO 66378, Installation of Vibration Sensor on Control Room Air Conditioning Motors Enclosure

Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed six samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R20 Refueling and Outage Activities (71111.20)

a. Inspection Scope For the outages listed below, the inspectors reviewed the following risk significant refueling items or outage activities to verify defense in depth commensurate with the outage risk control plan and compliance with the TSs: (1) tagging/clearance activities; (2) electrical power; (3) decay heat removal; (4) inventory control; (5) reactivity control; (6) heatup and cooldown activities; (7) restart activities; and (8) licensee identification and implementation of appropriate corrective actions associated with refueling and outage activities.
  • Forced Outage 07-02: August 21 through August 22,2007
  • Forced Outage 07-03: September 1, through September 14, 2007 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed two samples.

b. Findings

Introduction:

A Green, self-revealing NCV of TS 5.4.1(a), was identified involving the failure to follow the system operating instructions to align valves in the fuel pool cooling and cleanup (FPCCU) system, causing both FPCCU pumps to trip and a subsequent loss of fuel pool cooling.

Description:

On August 23, 2007, the plant began a control rod blade disposal project to dispose of spent control rods using an underwater cutting machine. During this process, the FPCCU heat exchangers and drain tank were isolated to keep irradiated particulate from plating out on the components, preventing an increase in radiological dose rates in the heat exchanger area. On the evening of September 1, 2007, the heat exchangers were realigned to lower pool temperatures overnight so that control rod disposal could continue on the following day without the heat exchangers in service. The operator performing this task failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System, Revision 54, causing a high discharge pressure alarm to annunciate in the control room and a subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps.

Referencing the procedure, the valves should have been manipulated in a specific order. The order is (1) open G41F011A(B) [inlet valve], (2) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve], and then (3) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve]. Contrary to what the procedure Enclosure

required, the order that the manipulations were made was (1) open G41F011A(B) [inlet valve], (2) close G41F012A(B) [bypass valve], and then (3) open G41F013A(B) [outlet valve]. This out of sequence manipulation caused the high discharge pressure on the outlet of the fuel pool cooling pumps and subsequent trip of both FPCCU pumps.

Following the event, control room operators promptly restored fuel pool cooling. The inspectors verified that fuel pool temperature did not exceed the 140 oF limit as specified by the Technical Requirements Manual, Section 6.7.4.

Analysis: The performance deficiency associated with this finding was that the operators failed to implement the FPCCU system operating instructions for system alignment. The finding is more than minor because it affects the human performance attribute of the barrier integrity cornerstone and affects the cornerstone objective to provide reasonable assurance that physical design barriers protect the public from radionuclide releases caused by accidents or events. Using NRC Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, inspectors determined that the finding has a very low safety significance since it only affects the radiological barrier function provided by the spent fuel pool system. The cause of this finding has a crosscutting aspect in the area of human performance associated with work practices because licensee personnel failed to follow the correct sequence of valve manipulations required by procedure H.4(b).

Enforcement: TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978.

Regulatory Guide 1.33 recommends procedures for fuel storage pool purification and cooling system. Contrary to the above, operators failed to follow System Operating Instruction 04-1-01-G41, Fuel Pool Cooling and Cleanup System, Revision 54, resulting in both FPCCU pumps tripping and a subsequent loss of spent fuel pool cooling. Because this violation was of very low safety significance and was entered into the licensee's CAP as CR-GGN-2007-04284, this violation is being treated as an NCV consistent with Section VI.A.1 of the NRC Enforcement Policy:

NCV 05000416/2007004-03, Failure to Follow Procedure Causes a Loss of Decay Heat Removal in the Spent Fuel Pool.

1R22 Surveillance Testing (71111.22)

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, procedure requirements, and TSs to ensure that the six listed surveillance activities demonstrated that the SSCs tested were capable of performing their intended safety functions. The inspectors either witnessed or reviewed test data to verify that the following significant surveillance test attributes were adequate: (1) preconditioning; (2) evaluation of testing impact on the plant; (3) acceptance criteria; (4) test equipment; (5) procedures; (6) jumper/lifted lead controls; (7) test data; (8) testing frequency and method demonstrated TS operability; (9) test equipment removal; (10) restoration of plant systems; (11) fulfillment of ASME Code requirements; (12) updating of performance indicator (PI) data; (13) engineering evaluations, root causes, and bases for returning tested SSCs not meeting the test acceptance criteria were correct; (14) reference setting data; and, (15) annunciator and Enclosure

alarm setpoints. The inspectors also verified that the licensee identified and implemented any needed corrective actions associated with the surveillance testing.

  • July 17, 2007, local leak rate test of containment isolation Valve E12F028A per Procedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test, Revision 107
  • July 23, 2007, average power range monitor testing per Procedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, APRM Time Response Testing, Revision 3
  • August 8, 2007, hot restart of standby diesel generator per Procedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-month Functional Test, Revision 112
  • August 17, 2007, review of licensee leak detection measurement per Procedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, Daily Operating Logs, Revision 114
  • August 25, 2007, radiation meter response testing per Procedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test, Revision 100 Documents reviewed by the inspectors are listed in the attachment.

The inspectors completed six samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

1R23 Temporary Plant Modifications (71111.23)

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors reviewed the UFSAR, plant drawings, procedure requirements, and TSs to ensure that the temporary modification listed below was properly implemented. The inspectors: (1) verified that the modification did not have an adverse effect on system operability/availability; (2) verified that the installation was consistent with modification documents; (3) ensured that the post-installation test results were satisfactory and that the impact of the temporary modification on permanently installed SSCs was supported by the test; (4) verified that the modification was identified on control room drawings and that appropriate identification tags were placed on the affected drawings; and, (5) verified that appropriate safety evaluations were completed. The inspectors verified that the licensee identified and implemented any needed corrective actions associated with Enclosure

temporary modifications.

  • July 18, 2007, temperature alarm set point raised for safety relief Valve B21F041B tailpipe temperature sensor Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:
  • EC1994, Temporarily Raise Setpoint for 1B21F041B Tailpipe Temperature Alarm to Prevent Masking of New Alarms, Revision 0
  • WO 116172 The inspectors completed one sample.
b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

Cornerstone: Emergency Preparedness 1EP6 Drill Evaluation (71114.06)

a. Inspection Scope For the emergency drill listed below, which contributes to the Drill/Exercise Performance and emergency response organization performance indicators, the inspectors: (1) observed the training evolution to assess classification, notification, and protective action requirement development activities; (2) compared inspector identified weaknesses and deficiencies against licensee identified findings to determine whether the licensee is properly identifying failures; and (3) determined whether licensee performance is in accordance with the guidance of the Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) 99-02, Voluntary Submission of Performance Indicator Data, acceptance criteria.
  • July 11, 2007, the inspectors observed the licensees emergency response organization in the simulator, the Emergency Response Facility, the Technical Support Center, and the Operations Support Center respond to a loss of reactor coolant and an unisolable main steam line break in the auxiliary building tunnel, leading to an unmonitored radiological release to the atmosphere.

Documents reviewed by the inspectors included:

  • Drill Emergency Notification Forms
  • Procedure 10-S-01-1, Activation of the Emergency Plan, Revision 116 The inspectors completed one sample.

Enclosure

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

Cornerstone: Occupational Radiation Safety

4. OTHER ACTIVITIES 4OA2 Identification and Resolution of Problems (71152)

.1 Routine Review of Identification and Resolution of Problems

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors performed a daily screening of items entered into the licensee's CAP.

This assessment was accomplished by reviewing work orders and condition reports and attending corrective action review and work control meetings. The inspectors:

(1) verified that equipment, human performance, and program issues were being identified by the licensee at an appropriate threshold and that the issues were entered into the CAP; (2) verified that corrective actions were commensurate with the significance of the issue; and, (3) identified conditions that might warrant additional follow-up through other baseline inspection procedures.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

4OA3 Event Follow-up (71153)

.1 Personnel Performance During Nonroutine Evolutions, Events, and Transients

a. Inspection Scope The inspectors: (1) reviewed operator logs, plant computer data, and/or strip charts for the below listed evolutions to evaluate operator performance in coping with nonroutine events and transients; (2) verified that operator actions were in accordance with the response required by plant procedures and training; and (3) verified that the licensee has identified and implemented appropriate corrective actions associated with personnel performance problems that occurred during the events sampled.
  • On July 7, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with a loss of instrument air following a break in a supply line in the turbine building.

The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-V-9, Loss of Instrument Air, Revision 34.

  • On August 21, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with a reactor scram due to the failure of a reactor feed pump controller.

Enclosure

  • On August 26, 2007, the inspectors reviewed operator performance associated with an unplanned trip of the reactor recirculation Pump B motor due to a ground fault in the motor windings. The inspectors reviewed plant parameters, operator logs, and operator actions associated with off-normal event Procedure 05-1-02-III-3, Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate, Revision 106.

The inspectors completed three samples.

b. Findings No findings of significance were identified.

.2 (Closed) LER 05000416/2007-02, Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum

Introduction:

A Green self-revealing finding was identified involving the failure to properly calibrate the main condenser hydraulic vacuum switch that established a higher trip setpoint that would prematurely actuate an automatic turbine trip and reactor scram for a degraded main condenser vacuum condition.

Description:

On May 19, 2007, a failure occurred in the high pressure condenser expansion joint between the main turbine and condenser resulting in condenser air inleakage, and lowering condenser vacuum. Operators entered the loss of condenser vacuum Off-Normal-Event Procedure (ONEP), and reduced reactor power from 100 percent to 78 percent in order to reduce condenser load. As condenser vacuum was decreasing the operators made the decision to manually scram the reactor prior to reaching the automatic turbine trip setpoint of 21 inches Hg vacuum; however, the automatic turbine trip occurred at 24.9 inches Hg vacuum as trended by the plant data server. It was determined that the main condenser vacuum trip setpoint was calibrated incorrectly during the previous Refueling Outage RF15. During the investigation, the licensee determined that the as-found trip setpoint of the main condenser vacuum switch was set to trip at 25.89 inches Hg vacuum.

On April 10, 2007, nearing the end of Refueling Outage RF15, plant personnel discovered that the main condenser vacuum switch had not been calibrated. This was discovered after the turbine had been placed on the turning gear. The calibration methodology required that primary oil (from the turbine lube oil system) be disconnected from the switch so that instrument air could be used to simulate turbine lube oil pressure. The technicians were concerned that a significant amount of oil could be lost if the primary oil was disconnected with the turbine on the turning gear. In order to continue with plant startup, engineering revised the calibration procedure to use an adjustment to the speed simulation screw, instead of removing the primary oil supply line. The revised procedure required the speed simulation screw to be turned to the full down position. The technicians adjusted the speed simulation screw to be flush with the stem nut on the actuator, but did not set the screw to the full down position. This Enclosure

caused the main condenser switch calibration to set the vacuum trip to an incorrect setpoint.

Analysis: The finding was more than minor because it was associated with the initiating events cornerstone attribute of equipment performance and affected the associated cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during power operations. Using the Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Significance Determination Process, Phase 1 worksheet, the finding was determined to have very low safety significance, because the finding did not contribute to the likelihood that mitigating equipment or functions would not be available following a reactor trip. The cause of the finding was related to the human performance crosscutting component of resources in that the calibration procedure did not have clear instructions detailing the methodology to adjust the speed simulation screw to the required position [H.2©]. This issue was entered into the licensees CAP as CR-GGN-2007-02756.

Enforcement: No violation of NRC requirements occurred. FIN 0500416/2007004-04.

Enclosure

4OA6 Meetings, Including Exit On August 17, 2007, the inspectors presented the results of Inspection Procedure 71111.02, Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments, and Inspection Procedure 71111.17, Permanent Plant Modifications, to Mr. M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations, and other members of licensee management. The licensee acknowledged the issues and observations presented. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.

On August 30, 2007, the inspectors briefed Mr. R. Brian, Site Vice President, and other members of the licensee's staff of the results of the inspection. The licensee acknowledged the findings presented. After completion of this biennial requalification cycle, the remaining examination results were forwarded to the inspectors for their review. After determining that there were no findings of significance, the inspectors conducted a teleconference exit with Mr. C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification), on October 1, 2007. The inspectors asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary.

No proprietary information was identified.

On October 10, 2007, the resident inspectors presented the inspection results to Mr. R. Brian and others who acknowledged the findings. The licensee confirmed that the inspectors retained no proprietary information.

4OA7 Licensee-Identified Violations The following violations of very low significance (Green) were identified by the licensee and are violations of NRC requirements which meet the criteria of Section VI of the NRC Enforcement Policy, NUREG-1600, for being dispositioned as NCVs.

  • TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on March 30, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement work instructions by installing the wrong limit switch settings on the actuator for the standby service water reactor heat removal heat exchanger inlet valve. As a result, the valve opened further than the required throttled position, diverting more standby service water flow to the reactor heat removal heat exchanger.

This resulted in a degraded flow to other Division I safety-related systems. This condition was discovered following investigation of degraded flow in the control room air conditioning system, which was identified during performance of System Operating Instruction 04-1-03-Z51-1, Control Room HVAC System, Revision 41, on July 2, 2007. This issue was documented in CRs-GGN-2007-03374 and CR-GGN-2007-03514. This finding is of very low safety significance because there was no actual loss of operability.

Enclosure

  • TS 5.4.1(a) requires written procedures to be implemented as recommended by Regulatory Guide 1.33, Revision 2, Appendix A, February 1978. Appendix A recommends procedures for performing maintenance that can affect the performance of safety-related equipment. Contrary to this requirement, on September 5, 2007, maintenance personnel failed to properly implement an infrequently performed test or evolution procedure to lift and move a 29 ton recirculation system pump motor through the drywell. The procedure required redundant rigging so that the lift could be designated as single failure proof and not require a load path analysis. The individual directing the lift ordered the movement of the motor without redundant rigging through most of the planned drywell load path. The inappropriate movement was identified by individuals in the drywell during the move and by the test coordinator in the control room via a video monitor. This issue was documented in CR-GGN-2007-04382. This finding is of very low safety significance since there was no actual loss of operability.

ATTACHMENT: SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION Enclosure

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION KEY POINTS OF CONTACT Licensee Personnel C. Abbott, Acting Manager, Quality Assurance K. Baker, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Barfield, Director, Engineering C. Bell, Senior Operations Instructor C. Bottemiller, Manager, Plant Licensing R. Brian, Vice President, Operations M. Causey, Senior Lead Technical Specialist R. Collins, Manager, Operations D. Cooper, Senior Operations Instructor D. Coulter, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing L. Eaton, Senior Lead Engineer B. Edwards, Minority Owner Specialist C. Ellsaesser, Manager, Maintenance R. Fuller, Engineer, Design Engineering K. Grillis, Senior Operations Instructor M. Guynn, Manager, Emergency Preparedness E. Harris, Manager, Corrective Action and Audits T. Harrellson, Senior Operations Instructor J. Hixon, Engineer, Design Engineering D. Jones, Manager, System Engineering D. Killingsworth, Reactor Operator M. Krupa, General Manager, Plant Operations G. Lantz, Supervisor, Design Engineering M. Larson, Senior Licensing Engineer C. Mason, Quality Assurance Auditor E. Mathes, Shift Manager M. McAdory, Senior Operations Instructor D. McDirmid, Maintenance Rule Engineer J. Owens, Licensing Specialist, Plant Licensing M. Rasch, Senior Operations Instructor S. Reeves, Acting Operations Training Superintendent (Initial)

C. Roberts, Operations Training Superintendent (Requalification)

M. Rohrer, Manager, System Engineering F. Rosser, Supervisor, Radiation Protection D. Smith, Control Room Supervisor T. Tankersley, Manager, Training T. Thornton, Manager, Design Engineering K. Walker, Superintendent, Reactor Engineering D. Wilson, Supervisor, Design Engineering R. Wilson, Superintendent, Radiation Protection P. Worthington, Supervisor, Engineering A-1 Attachment

NRC personnel W. Walker, Senior Project Engineer, Reactor Project Branch C R. Bywater, Senior Reactor Analyst, Region IV LIST OF ITEMS OPENED, CLOSED, AND DISCUSSED Opened None Opened and Closed 05000416/2007004-01 NCV Failure to Monitor Performance of the Control Rod Drive System 05000416/2007004-02 NCV Failure to Establish a Formal Procedure to Monitor Outdoor Air Temperatures05000416/2007004-03 NCV Failure to Follow Procedures Caused Loss of Decay Heat Removal in the Spent Fuel Pool 05000416/2007004-04 FIN Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum Closed 0500416/2007004-02 LER Reactor SCRAM due to Turbine Trip caused by Loss of Condenser Vacuum Discussed None LIST OF DOCUMENTS REVIEWED In addition to the documents called out in the inspection report, the following documents were selected and reviewed by the inspectors to accomplish the objectives and scope of the inspection and to support any findings:

A-2 Attachment

Section 1R02: Evaluations of Changes, Tests, or Experiments 10 CFR 50.59 Evaluations SE-2005-0003 SE-2006-0004 SE-2007-0002 SE-2005-0006 SE-2006-0005 SE-2006-0003 SE-2006-0006 Procedures NUMBER TITLE REVISION EN-LI-100 Process Applicability Determination 4 EN-LI-101 10 CFR 50.59 Review Program 3 10 CFR 50.59 Applicability Determinations/Screens NUMBER TITLE REVISION ER-GG-2005- Develop Modification Package(s) for Raising Normal, HI, 0 0090 and HI-HI Level Setpoints for LPFWH's #4A/B/C and #3A/

ER-GG-2005- Unit 1 Instrument Air Vibration Trips 0 0255 ER-GG-2005- Evaluation of Alternate ASCO Solenoid Replacement PN 0 0280 HTX821027 for Original LB-X-821027 ER-GG-2006- Removal of Control Rod Drive Relief Valves 1C11F025A/B 0 0236 for Seal Purge Flow ER-GG-2003- Spent Fuel Cask Handling Crane 1T31E001 Process 0 0018-047 Applicability Determination/Screening ER-GG-2003- Cold Proof Test of Spent Fuel Cask Crane Process 0 0018-049 Applicability Determination/Screening ER-GG-2006- Revise the in-service inspection requirements for High 0 0237-000 Energy Break Exclusion Region (BER)

DRN J606.0 Document Revision Notice ER-GG-2006-0116-000 15 Approved Alternate Replacement Solenoid Valve ER-GG-2005- Engineering Request; I&C TRM surveillance Reduction 0 0323-000 ER-GG-2006- Evaluate ASCO solenoid Valve replacement E51 Reactor 0 0116-000 Core Isolation Cooling System ER-GG-2006- Set up Valve to Eliminate Negative Margin 0 0220-001 A-3 Attachment

ER-GG-2007- Setpoint Change for Bus 15AA and 16AB Undervoltage 0048-000 Relay Timers ER-GG-2007- Provide Temporary Weld Repair for CRD Flow Control 0 0003-000 Valve, 1C11F002A ER-GG-2006- Increase the Reset Value for Safeguard Switchgear and 0262-000 Battery Rooms Air Handling Unit Fan Discharge Temper 0 ER-GG-2005- Install Second Mechanical Gag Identical to the Existing 0242-000 Mechanical Gag to Ensure That Valves 1P71F298 0 Miscellaneous NUMBER TITLE REVISION GNRI-2006/00006 Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 - Issuance of 0 Amendment Re: Adoption of Approved Generic Changes to the Technical Specifications (TAC NO. MC6651)

GNRO-2005/00016 License Amendment Request, Adoption of NRC 0 Approved Generic Changes to the Improved Technical Specifications, Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Unit 1 TSTF-400 Clarify Surveillance Requirement on Bypass of Diesel 0 Generator Automatic Trips NUREG-0871 Safety Evaluation Report Related to the Operation of 0 Supplement 7 Grand Gulf Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2 LO-GLO 2007-0124 Permanent Plant Modifications and 50.59 Program 0 Reviews (Pre-NRC) Self-Assessment LBD-2005-081 LBD Change Form 0 CRs CR-GGN-2005-03193 CR-GGN-2006-01510 CR-GGN-2006-01237 CR-GGN-2006-02777 CR-GGN-2005-03231 Section 1R11: Licensed Operator Requalification Procedures 01-S-04-2, Licensed Operator Requalification Training 01-S-02-17, Administration of Annual Exam 01-S-02-20, Preparing, Conducting, and Review of Simulator Evaluations A-4 Attachment

Job Performance Measures (JPMs)

GJPM-OPS-R2731, Transfer of electrical loads from Service Transformer 21 to Service Transformer 11, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-L62-1, Startup Static Inverter 1Y81, Revision 01 GJPM-OPS-Z5101, Secure Control Room Standby Fresh Air Unit, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-G3311, Align RWCU for Vessel Level Control, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-C61-2, Perform Attachment IV of Shutdown from Remote Shutdown Panel, ONEP, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-C10181, Rotate Operating CRD Pumps, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-EAL19, Emergency Event Classification JPM, Control Room Evacuation, Revision 2 GJPM-OPS-B2110, Operate Turbine Pressure Control / SRVs, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-E1201, Startup Shutdown Cooling B, Revision 1 GJPM-OPS-N2101, RFPT HPU Shutdown, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-R2108, Reset Undervoltage Lockouts on BOP Buses, Revision 00 GJPM-OPS-EAL07, Emergency Event Classification JPM, Revision 3 Scenarios GSMS-LOR-AEX25, Spurious RCIC Isolation Due to Failed RHR Temperature Switch; RFPT A Pump Trip; Feedwater Line A Break in the Drywell, Revision 07 GSMS-LOR-AXE21, Drifting/Stuck Rod; RFPT Trip; Feedwater Line Break in Drywell; ATWS, Revision 05 GSMS-LOR-AEX01, AC@ level instrument failure/FW heater 6A tube leak/FW line rupture in drywell, Revision 04 GSMS-LOR-AEX16, Control rod drift; EHC leak; ATWS, Revision 06 A-5 Attachment

Written Examinations LOR-2006-Cycle 3-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 6-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 2-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 7-Exam 1 LOR-2006-Cycle 1-Exam 1 Miscellaneous GGNS Operating Test Walk Through Results (Weeks 1-4) 2007 Annual JPM Selection (Weeks 1-6)

GLO-2007-0122, Licensed Operator Requalification Training Inspection Assessment, June 4-7, 2007 Grand Gulf Nuclear Station Operations Training Corporate Assessment, February 15, 2007 Remediation Package for Crew Failure on Simulator CRs CR-GGN-2005-03352 dated 09/08/2005, Operating Experience Report on Weaknesses in Operator Fundamentals CR-GGN-2006-02308 dated 05/30/2006, Members of the Emergency Response Organization Overdue on Training CR-GGN-2005-05124 dated 11/30/2005, Watchstanders Not Fully E-Plan Qualified CR-GGN-2005-03099 dated 08/11/2005, 2005 Biennial Exam Failures Section 1R12: Maintenance Rule Procedures EN-DC-203, Maintenance Rule Program, Revision 0 EN-DC-204, Maintenance Rule Scope and Basis, Revision 0 EN-DC-205, Maintenance Rule Monitoring, Revision 0 EN-DC-206, Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Process, Revision 0 Maintenance Rule Failure Database for System C11 GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, July 2007 GGNS Maintenance Rule (a)(1) Systems Report, September 2007 Maintenance Rule System Notebook A-6 Attachment

CRs (C11)

CR-GGN-2006-2923 CR-GGN-2007-2024 CR-GGN-2007-3162 CR-GGN-2006-2117 CR-GGN-2007-2882 CRs (M41)

CR-GGN-2006-02920 CR-GGN-2006-03999 CR-GGN-2007-02563 CR-GGN-2006-03502 CR-GGN-2007-02498 Section 1R13: Maintenance Risk Assessments and Emergent Work Control Procedures 01-S-18-6, Risk Assessment of Maintenance Activities, Revision 5 18-S-01-1, Planning Guidelines, Revision 2 EN-WM-101, On-Line Work Management Process, Revision 1 EN-WM-102, Work Implementation and Closeout, Revision 0 Work Order 86316 Work Order 51085228 CR CR-GGN-2007-04214 Section 1R15: Operability Determinations EN-OP-104, Operability Determinations, Revision 2 EN-LI-102, Corrective Action Process, Revision 10 Drawing M-1086, P&ID High Pressure Core Spray System, Revision 30 System Design Criteria SDC-E22, High Pressure Core Spray System E22, Revision 2 System Operating Instruction 04-S-01-Z51-1, Control Room HVAC System, Revision 42 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3374 CR-GGN-2007-3514 CR-GGN-2007-3385 Section 1R17A: Permanent Plant Modifications Engineering Report ER-GG-2004-0230-001-00, Replacement of E31 Riley Temperature Switches with NUS Model A076MA, Revision 1 QP-367.0, Seismic Qualification Review Package for Riley Temperature Switch Model 86" Trentec Test Plan 1S001.0 Revision 1, NUS Temperature Switch Seismic Qualification Test Procedure A-7 Attachment

Seismic Qualification Report 1S001.0, Revision 0, Appendix H Dynamic Qualification Records for Temperature Switch, GE, October 1988 Drawing GE-NE 164C5687 Leak Detection Temperature Monitor Qualification Report, NUS-A076QA, Revision 0 Work Order 86886 Work Order 86312 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3495 CR-GGN-2007-3502 Section 1R17B: Permanent Plant Modifications Engineering Requests NUMBER TITLE REVISION ER-GG-2005- Engineering Request; I&C TRM Surveillance Reduction 0 0323-000 ER-GG-2006- Engineering Evaluation on Greater than 95°F Outdoor Air 0 0099 Temp.

ER-GG Evaluation of Safety Related Electrical Equipment in Various 2 0002 Rooms With Elevated Post LOCA Temperatures ER-GG-2004- Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCO 0 0219-000 Thermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/Model ER-GG-2003- Evaluate 150-Ton Cask Handling Crane 0 0018-006 ER-GG-2005- Modification of Cask Handling Crane 0 0009-001 ER-GG-2005- Remove the Division I and II Diesel Trip on Low Control 0 0110-000 Pressure During a LOCA ER-GG-2006- Use of Ultra Low Sulfur Diesel Fuel 0 0161-000 ER-GG-2004- Develop Design Change Package to Change Four AGCO 0 0219-000 Thermal Relief Valves to Alternate Brand Name/model ER-GG-2003- Extend Frequency of DG Fuel Oil Storage Tank Cleaning 0 0234-000 A-8 Attachment

ER-GG-2003- Extend Frequency of Division II Dg Fuel Oil Storage Tank 0 0234-001 Cleaning ER-GG-2005- Basis for the Div 1/2 Governor Replacement 0318-000 0 Calculations NUMBER TITLE REVISION EC 3.8.5 Engineering Calculation SSW Pumphouse HVAC 0 M3.8.005 Standby Service Water Pump House Ventilation System 0 MC-Q1P75- Diesel Fuel Storage Requirements for the Division 1 and 2 2 90190 Diesel Generators Drawings NUMBER TITLE REVISION 3NC3188, Sht. 5 Dresser Flow Control, Consolidated Safety Relief Valve 0 FSK-S-1061B- HBC-185/HBD-254, SSW from HBC-84 to PSV F031A & 11 080-G Drain from PSV F031A Miscellaneous NUMBER TITLE REVISION LDC 2001-059 Licensing Document Change Surveillance Change in March 15, Frequency 2001 M-204.0 Standard for Fabrication and Installation of Nuclear Service 1 Piping GGNS-MS-03 Mechanical Standard for Piping Class Sheets 1 Work Orders NUMBER TITLE REVISION 50326445 0 83925 06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1 83926 06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1 104860 06CH1000-V-0038 DFO- Receipt Analyses 1 104861 06CH1000-V-0038 DFO Receipt Analyses 1 A-9 Attachment

CRs CR-GGN-2004-00076 CR-GGN-2007-04070 CR-GGN-2007-04082 CR-GGN-2006-03977 CR-GGN-2007-04076 CR-GGN-2007-04082 CR-GGN-2006-04035 CR-GGN-2007-04076 CR-GGN-2007-01405 CR-GGN-2007-04077 Section 1R19: Postmaintenance Testing Drawing FSK-I-999-280-G, Division 2 Diesel Generator Lube Oil Tubing Run, Revision 4 ENS-MA-114, Post Maintenance Testing, Revision 5 Work Orders 112187 66378 89465 116201 86886 93109 119863 88931 CRs CR-GGN-2007-3584 CR-GGN-2007-4193 Section 1R20: Refueling and Outage Activities Procedures 03-1-01-3, Plant Shutdown, Revision 115 03-1-01-1, Cold Shutdown to Generator Carrying Minimum Load, Revision 138 EN-OP-102, Protective and Caution Tagging, Revision 6 EN-MA-118, Foreign Material Exclusion, Revision 2 M-1085A, Residual Heat Removal System, Revision 67 M-1085C, Residual Heat Removal System, Revision 17 01-S-06-26, Post-Trip Analysis, Revision 16 01-S-06-58, Infrequently Performed Test or Evolution, Revision 0 01-S-06-7, Containment and Drywell Access Control, Revision 104 EN-HU-103, Human Performance Error Review, Revision 0 CRs CR-GGN-2007-4128 CR-GGN-2007-4177 CR-GGN-2007-4382 CR-GGN-2007-4163 CR-GGN-2007-4201 CR-GGN-2007-4576 CR-GGN-2007-4175 CR-GGN-2007-4321 Section 1R22: Surveillance Testing Procedure 01-S-06-12, GGNS Surveillance Test Program, Revision 109 Procedure 06-OP-1E12-Q-0005, LPCI/RHR Subsystem A MOV Functional Test, Revision 107 Procedure 06-IC-1C51-R-0004, APRM Time Response Testing, Revision 3 A-10 Attachment

Procedure 06-OP-1E51-Q-0003, RCIC Quarterly Pump Operability Verification, Revision 121 Procedure 06-OP-1P75-R-0004, Standby Diesel Generator 12: 18-Month Functional Test, Revision 112 Procedure 06-OP-1000-D-0001, Daily Operating Logs, Revision 114 Procedure 06-OP-1D17-Q-0015, Main Steam Line Radiation Monitor Functional Test, Revision 100 Section 4OA3: Event Followup Procedures 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 001 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 002 07-S-53-N32-N035-1, Loop Calibration Instruction - Turbine Hydraulic Low Vacuum Trip, Revision 003 05-1-02-V-9 Loss of Instrument Air, Revision 34 05-1-02-III-3, Reduction in Recirculation System Flow Rate, Revision 106 CRs CR-GGN-2007-02756 LIST OF ACRONYMS CAP corrective action program CR condition report FPCCU fuel pool cooling and cleanup GGNS Grand Gulf Nuclear Station NCV noncited violation SSC structure, system, and component TS Technical Specification UFSAR Updated Final Safety Analysis Report A-11 Attachment