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| number = ML101440056
| number = ML101440056
| issue date = 05/21/2010
| issue date = 05/21/2010
| title = 06/08/2010 Notice of Public Meeting to Discuss Fire Protection Screening Criteria Identified at Browns Ferry and Their Implications to Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant - Docket Nos. 05000348 and 05000364
| title = Notice of Public Meeting to Discuss Fire Protection Screening Criteria Identified at Browns Ferry and Their Implications to Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant - Docket Nos. 05000348 and 05000364
| author name = Nease R
| author name = Nease R
| author affiliation = NRC/RGN-II/DRS/EB2
| author affiliation = NRC/RGN-II/DRS/EB2
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=Text=
=Text=
{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION II 245 PEACHTREE CENTER AVENUE NE, SUITE 1200 ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303-1257 May 21, 2010  
{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION II 245 PEACHTREE CENTER AVENUE NE, SUITE 1200 ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303-1257 May 21, 2010 Mr. J. Randy Johnson Vice President - Farley Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
 
7388 North State Highway 95 Columbia, AL 36319
Mr. J. Randy Johnson Vice President - Farley Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. 7388 North State Highway 95 Columbia, AL 36319  


==SUBJECT:==
==SUBJECT:==
PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS FIRE PROTECTION SCREENING CRITERIA IDENTIFIED AT BROWNS FERRY AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS TO   JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT - DOCKET NOS. 05000348 AND 05000364/2010  
PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS FIRE PROTECTION SCREENING CRITERIA IDENTIFIED AT BROWNS FERRY AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS TO JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT - DOCKET NOS. 05000348 AND 05000364/2010


==Dear Mr. Johnson:==
==Dear Mr. Johnson:==


The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) requests your participation in a Category 2 public meeting on June 8, 2010, in Atlanta, GA. The purpose of the meeting is to update you on recent NRC efforts to evaluate certain plants against screening criteria developed using Browns Ferry and other greater-than-Green findings related to fire protection; and to provide you an opportunity to update the NRC on how these criteria may have been addressed at your site. The meeting notice, which will be available on the NRC public web site, provides specific details regarding the logistics of the meeting.
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) requests your participation in a Category 2 public meeting on June 8, 2010, in Atlanta, GA. The purpose of the meeting is to update you on recent NRC efforts to evaluate certain plants against screening criteria developed using Browns Ferry and other greater-than-Green findings related to fire protection; and to provide you an opportunity to update the NRC on how these criteria may have been addressed at your site.
As documented in a letter dated April 19, 2010, the NRC recently issued a final significance determination for a fire protection inspection at Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant (ML101090503). One of the findings identified during this inspection dealt with multiple cable separation issues that was determined to have substantial safety significance. Subsequently, an NRC working group was created to identify the factors that led to the safety significance of the Browns Ferry finding, and to identify other plants that may have characteristics similar to those at Browns Ferry.
The meeting notice, which will be available on the NRC public web site, provides specific details regarding the logistics of the meeting.
As documented in a letter dated April 19, 2010, the NRC recently issued a final significance determination for a fire protection inspection at Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant (ML101090503).
One of the findings identified during this inspection dealt with multiple cable separation issues that was determined to have substantial safety significance. Subsequently, an NRC working group was created to identify the factors that led to the safety significance of the Browns Ferry finding, and to identify other plants that may have characteristics similar to those at Browns Ferry.
The focus of the working group was on protection and separation of safe shutdown equipment for scenarios that do not involve control room evacuation; therefore, the evaluation started with a screening question to determine whether a unit has potential issues with protection or separation. Subsequent to this entry condition, the working group conducted a review of the circumstances surrounding the historical greater-than-Green fire protection findings (including the findings at Browns Ferry) in order to identify the major contributing factors to the greater-than-Green findings. Eight screening criteria were identified as the more significant contributors to fire risk. The group then identified plants with known cable separation issues and further evaluated each of these plants against the eight additional screening criteria.
The focus of the working group was on protection and separation of safe shutdown equipment for scenarios that do not involve control room evacuation; therefore, the evaluation started with a screening question to determine whether a unit has potential issues with protection or separation. Subsequent to this entry condition, the working group conducted a review of the circumstances surrounding the historical greater-than-Green fire protection findings (including the findings at Browns Ferry) in order to identify the major contributing factors to the greater-than-Green findings. Eight screening criteria were identified as the more significant contributors to fire risk. The group then identified plants with known cable separation issues and further evaluated each of these plants against the eight additional screening criteria.
SNC 2 The working group utilized existing and readily-available information in their initial evaluation. Limited data gathering was only performed in a few cases. The evaluations were based on the results of the most recent triennial inspection along with inspector(s) knowledge of the site. The screening criteria are:
 
: 1. A relatively large number of operator manual actions (OMAs) used to mitigate cable separation issues. 2. A single fire that could affect more than one unit. A multi-unit site with significant cross-unit distribution of safety-related and safe shutdown electrical loads while at power may necessitate multi-unit shutdowns for a fire in a single area, making operator response more complex. 3. The use of thermoplastic cable insulation. In postulated fires, damage to such cables occurs at lower temperature and longer distances from the fire source, compared to the more commonly used thermoset cables. 4. Limited documentation of cable routing within the plant. Licensees possessing limited information regarding the routing of all cables could result in higher reliance on safe shutdown strategies with elevated risk. 5. A Self-Induced Station Black-Out (SISBO) strategy (isolating on-site power to basically everything except the protected train to prevent spurious actuations) for fires in areas without adequate cable separation. This strategy may unnecessarily remove equipment that may not be damaged by the fire and therefore might otherwise be available for safe shutdown. The working group considered this strategy sufficiently important that they decided to double-weight this criterion. The SISBO strategy was only considered where the entire plant was de-energized downstream of the startup transformers. Plants that had breaker realignments due to coordination problems or limited equipment isolation were not considered as using the SISBO strategy. 6. Use of complex OMAs. Complex OMAs are those which require several steps to restore a function or require coordination between more than one operator in different locations.
SNC                                                 2 The working group utilized existing and readily-available information in their initial evaluation.
Whether or not operators would have sufficient time to complete the OMAs was also a consideration when determining if the OMAs could be implemented in a fire scenario. 7. Mitigation of a fire requires cross-tying electrical or mechanical systems from multiple units in order to achieve safe shutdown for a fire in a single area. 8. Symptom-based fire response procedures with complex OMAs. Requiring operators to identify and diagnose multiple equipment damage scenarios in order to select the appropriate responses increases the complexity and operator stress involved, potentially reducing the reliability of the OMAs. Also, because of the potential for fragmented responses through use of these procedures, initial actions may be disrupted by later operator actions.
Limited data gathering was only performed in a few cases. The evaluations were based on the results of the most recent triennial inspection along with inspector(s) knowledge of the site. The screening criteria are:
: 1. A relatively large number of operator manual actions (OMAs) used to mitigate cable separation issues.
: 2. A single fire that could affect more than one unit. A multi-unit site with significant cross-unit distribution of safety-related and safe shutdown electrical loads while at power may necessitate multi-unit shutdowns for a fire in a single area, making operator response more complex.
: 3. The use of thermoplastic cable insulation. In postulated fires, damage to such cables occurs at lower temperature and longer distances from the fire source, compared to the more commonly used thermoset cables.
: 4. Limited documentation of cable routing within the plant. Licensees possessing limited information regarding the routing of all cables could result in higher reliance on safe shutdown strategies with elevated risk.
: 5. A Self-Induced Station Black-Out (SISBO) strategy (isolating on-site power to basically everything except the protected train to prevent spurious actuations) for fires in areas without adequate cable separation. This strategy may unnecessarily remove equipment that may not be damaged by the fire and therefore might otherwise be available for safe shutdown. The working group considered this strategy sufficiently important that they decided to double-weight this criterion. The SISBO strategy was only considered where the entire plant was de-energized downstream of the startup transformers. Plants that had breaker realignments due to coordination problems or limited equipment isolation were not considered as using the SISBO strategy.
: 6. Use of complex OMAs. Complex OMAs are those which require several steps to restore a function or require coordination between more than one operator in different locations.
Whether or not operators would have sufficient time to complete the OMAs was also a consideration when determining if the OMAs could be implemented in a fire scenario.
: 7. Mitigation of a fire requires cross-tying electrical or mechanical systems from multiple units in order to achieve safe shutdown for a fire in a single area.
: 8. Symptom-based fire response procedures with complex OMAs. Requiring operators to identify and diagnose multiple equipment damage scenarios in order to select the appropriate responses increases the complexity and operator stress involved, potentially reducing the reliability of the OMAs. Also, because of the potential for fragmented responses through use of these procedures, initial actions may be disrupted by later operator actions.
In addition to the entry condition of having potential issues with protection or separation, the working group preliminarily determined that your plant may share the conditions described in criteria 1, 2, 3, 6, and 8 above.
In addition to the entry condition of having potential issues with protection or separation, the working group preliminarily determined that your plant may share the conditions described in criteria 1, 2, 3, 6, and 8 above.
SNC 3  During the June 8, 2010 public meeting the NRC staff will be available to discuss these screening criteria in more detail and will provide you with an opportunity to present any information on the applicability of these criteria to your plant. For example, these criteria may have been identified and appropriately mitigated through your plant's transition to NFPA 805. It would be beneficial if an individual familiar with your fire protection safe shutdown program and fire PRA attended the meeting.


SNC                                                3 During the June 8, 2010 public meeting the NRC staff will be available to discuss these screening criteria in more detail and will provide you with an opportunity to present any information on the applicability of these criteria to your plant. For example, these criteria may have been identified and appropriately mitigated through your plants transition to NFPA 805. It would be beneficial if an individual familiar with your fire protection safe shutdown program and fire PRA attended the meeting.
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room (PDR) or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of the Agencywide Document Access Management System (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room (PDR) or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of the Agencywide Document Access Management System (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).
Should you have any questions concerning this meeting, please contact me at 404-997-4530.
Should you have any questions concerning this meeting, please contact me at 404-997-4530.
Sincerely,       /RA/ Rebecca L. Nease, Chief Engineering Branch 2 Division of Reactor Safety Docket Nos.: 50-348, 50-364 License Nos.: NPF-2, NPF-8 cc: See page 4 SNC 4  cc w/encl: B. D. McKinney, Jr. Regulatory Response Manager Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
Sincerely,
 
                                                /RA/
T. D. Honeycutt Regulatory Response Supervisor Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
Rebecca L. Nease, Chief Engineering Branch 2 Division of Reactor Safety Docket Nos.: 50-348, 50-364 License Nos.: NPF-2, NPF-8 cc: See page 4
 
Todd L. Youngblood Plant Manager Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Electronic Mail Distribution Jeffrey T. Gasser Executive Vice President Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution Mark Ajluni, Licensing Manager Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
P.O. Box 1295 Bin - 048 Birmingham, AL  35201-1295 L. Mike Stinson Vice President Fleet Operations Support Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
 
Paula Marino Vice President Engineering Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
 
Moanica Caston Vice President and General Counsel Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution Chris Clark Commissioner Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution
 
John G. Horn Site Support Manager Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
 
Ted V. Jackson Emergency Response and Radiation Program Manager Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution Tom W. Pelham Performance Improvement Supervisor Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution
 
Cynthia A. Sanders Radioactive Materials Program Manager Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution James C. Hardeman Environmental Radiation Program Manager Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution William D. Oldfield Principal Licensing Engineer Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Electronic Mail Distribution Senior Resident Inspector U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant U.S. NRC 7388 N. State Highway 95 Columbia, AL  36319 Mr. Mark Culver Chairman Houston County Commission P. O. Box 6406 Dothan, AL  36302
 
(cc cont'd - See page 5)
SNC 5  (cc cont'd) James A. Sommerville Program Coordination Branch Chief Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution


James L. McNees, CHP Director Office of Radiation Control Alabama Dept. of Public Health P. O. Box 303017 Montgomery, AL   36130-3017 State Health Officer Alabama Dept. of Public Health Electronic Mail Distribution  
SNC                                      4 cc w/encl:                                John G. Horn B. D. McKinney, Jr.                        Site Support Manager Regulatory Response Manager                Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Electronic Mail Distribution              Electronic Mail Distribution T. D. Honeycutt                            Ted V. Jackson Regulatory Response Supervisor            Emergency Response and Radiation Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Program Manager Electronic Mail Distribution              Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Todd L. Youngblood                        Electronic Mail Distribution Plant Manager Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant            Tom W. Pelham Electronic Mail Distribution              Performance Improvement Supervisor Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Jeffrey T. Gasser                          Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Executive Vice President                  Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Electronic Mail Distribution              Cynthia A. Sanders Radioactive Materials Program Manager Mark Ajluni, Licensing Manager            Environmental Protection Division Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Georgia Department of Natural Resources P.O. Box 1295                              Electronic Mail Distribution Bin - 048 Birmingham, AL 35201-1295                  James C. Hardeman Environmental Radiation Program Manager L. Mike Stinson                            Environmental Protection Division Vice President                            Georgia Department of Natural Resources Fleet Operations Support                  Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Electronic Mail Distribution              William D. Oldfield Principal Licensing Engineer Paula Marino                              Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Vice President                            Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Engineering                                Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.
Electronic Mail Distribution              Senior Resident Inspector U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Moanica Caston                            Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Vice President and General Counsel        U.S. NRC Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. 7388 N. State Highway 95 Electronic Mail Distribution              Columbia, AL 36319 Chris Clark                                Mr. Mark Culver Commissioner                              Chairman Georgia Department of Natural Resources    Houston County Commission Electronic Mail Distribution               P. O. Box 6406 Dothan, AL 36302 (cc contd - See page 5)


F. Allen Barnes Director Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution  
SNC                                    5 (cc contd)
James A. Sommerville Program Coordination Branch Chief Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution James L. McNees, CHP Director Office of Radiation Control Alabama Dept. of Public Health P. O. Box 303017 Montgomery, AL 36130-3017 State Health Officer Alabama Dept. of Public Health Electronic Mail Distribution F. Allen Barnes Director Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution


_________________________
_________________________                       G SUNSI REVIEW COMPLETE OFFICE             RII:DRS         RII:DRS         RII:DRS         RII:DRS         RII:DRP     RII:DRP SIGNATURE         RA               RA               RA               RA NAME               STAPLES         NEASE           CHRISTENSEN SHAEFFER DATE                   5/20/2010       5/21/2010       5/21/2010       5/21/2010 E-MAIL COPY?         YES         NO YES         NO YES         NO YES         NO YES     NO YES     NO  YES NO}}
G   SUNSI REVIEW COMPLETE OFFICE RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRP RII:DRP SIGNATURE RA RA RA RA   NAME STAPLES NEASE CHRISTENSEN SHAEFFER   DATE 5/20/2010 5/21/2010 5/21/2010 5/21/2010   E-MAIL COPY?     YES NO   YES NO   YES NO   YES NO   YES NO   YES NO  YES NO}}

Latest revision as of 20:11, 6 December 2019

Notice of Public Meeting to Discuss Fire Protection Screening Criteria Identified at Browns Ferry and Their Implications to Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant - Docket Nos. 05000348 and 05000364
ML101440056
Person / Time
Site: Farley  Southern Nuclear icon.png
Issue date: 05/21/2010
From: Nease R
NRC/RGN-II/DRS/EB2
To: Jerrica Johnson
Southern Nuclear Operating Co
References
Download: ML101440056 (6)


Text

UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION II 245 PEACHTREE CENTER AVENUE NE, SUITE 1200 ATLANTA, GEORGIA 30303-1257 May 21, 2010 Mr. J. Randy Johnson Vice President - Farley Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

7388 North State Highway 95 Columbia, AL 36319

SUBJECT:

PUBLIC MEETING TO DISCUSS FIRE PROTECTION SCREENING CRITERIA IDENTIFIED AT BROWNS FERRY AND THEIR IMPLICATIONS TO JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT - DOCKET NOS. 05000348 AND 05000364/2010

Dear Mr. Johnson:

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) requests your participation in a Category 2 public meeting on June 8, 2010, in Atlanta, GA. The purpose of the meeting is to update you on recent NRC efforts to evaluate certain plants against screening criteria developed using Browns Ferry and other greater-than-Green findings related to fire protection; and to provide you an opportunity to update the NRC on how these criteria may have been addressed at your site.

The meeting notice, which will be available on the NRC public web site, provides specific details regarding the logistics of the meeting.

As documented in a letter dated April 19, 2010, the NRC recently issued a final significance determination for a fire protection inspection at Browns Ferry Nuclear Plant (ML101090503).

One of the findings identified during this inspection dealt with multiple cable separation issues that was determined to have substantial safety significance. Subsequently, an NRC working group was created to identify the factors that led to the safety significance of the Browns Ferry finding, and to identify other plants that may have characteristics similar to those at Browns Ferry.

The focus of the working group was on protection and separation of safe shutdown equipment for scenarios that do not involve control room evacuation; therefore, the evaluation started with a screening question to determine whether a unit has potential issues with protection or separation. Subsequent to this entry condition, the working group conducted a review of the circumstances surrounding the historical greater-than-Green fire protection findings (including the findings at Browns Ferry) in order to identify the major contributing factors to the greater-than-Green findings. Eight screening criteria were identified as the more significant contributors to fire risk. The group then identified plants with known cable separation issues and further evaluated each of these plants against the eight additional screening criteria.

SNC 2 The working group utilized existing and readily-available information in their initial evaluation.

Limited data gathering was only performed in a few cases. The evaluations were based on the results of the most recent triennial inspection along with inspector(s) knowledge of the site. The screening criteria are:

1. A relatively large number of operator manual actions (OMAs) used to mitigate cable separation issues.
2. A single fire that could affect more than one unit. A multi-unit site with significant cross-unit distribution of safety-related and safe shutdown electrical loads while at power may necessitate multi-unit shutdowns for a fire in a single area, making operator response more complex.
3. The use of thermoplastic cable insulation. In postulated fires, damage to such cables occurs at lower temperature and longer distances from the fire source, compared to the more commonly used thermoset cables.
4. Limited documentation of cable routing within the plant. Licensees possessing limited information regarding the routing of all cables could result in higher reliance on safe shutdown strategies with elevated risk.
5. A Self-Induced Station Black-Out (SISBO) strategy (isolating on-site power to basically everything except the protected train to prevent spurious actuations) for fires in areas without adequate cable separation. This strategy may unnecessarily remove equipment that may not be damaged by the fire and therefore might otherwise be available for safe shutdown. The working group considered this strategy sufficiently important that they decided to double-weight this criterion. The SISBO strategy was only considered where the entire plant was de-energized downstream of the startup transformers. Plants that had breaker realignments due to coordination problems or limited equipment isolation were not considered as using the SISBO strategy.
6. Use of complex OMAs. Complex OMAs are those which require several steps to restore a function or require coordination between more than one operator in different locations.

Whether or not operators would have sufficient time to complete the OMAs was also a consideration when determining if the OMAs could be implemented in a fire scenario.

7. Mitigation of a fire requires cross-tying electrical or mechanical systems from multiple units in order to achieve safe shutdown for a fire in a single area.
8. Symptom-based fire response procedures with complex OMAs. Requiring operators to identify and diagnose multiple equipment damage scenarios in order to select the appropriate responses increases the complexity and operator stress involved, potentially reducing the reliability of the OMAs. Also, because of the potential for fragmented responses through use of these procedures, initial actions may be disrupted by later operator actions.

In addition to the entry condition of having potential issues with protection or separation, the working group preliminarily determined that your plant may share the conditions described in criteria 1, 2, 3, 6, and 8 above.

SNC 3 During the June 8, 2010 public meeting the NRC staff will be available to discuss these screening criteria in more detail and will provide you with an opportunity to present any information on the applicability of these criteria to your plant. For example, these criteria may have been identified and appropriately mitigated through your plants transition to NFPA 805. It would be beneficial if an individual familiar with your fire protection safe shutdown program and fire PRA attended the meeting.

In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room (PDR) or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of the Agencywide Document Access Management System (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).

Should you have any questions concerning this meeting, please contact me at 404-997-4530.

Sincerely,

/RA/

Rebecca L. Nease, Chief Engineering Branch 2 Division of Reactor Safety Docket Nos.: 50-348, 50-364 License Nos.: NPF-2, NPF-8 cc: See page 4

SNC 4 cc w/encl: John G. Horn B. D. McKinney, Jr. Site Support Manager Regulatory Response Manager Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Electronic Mail Distribution Electronic Mail Distribution T. D. Honeycutt Ted V. Jackson Regulatory Response Supervisor Emergency Response and Radiation Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Program Manager Electronic Mail Distribution Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Todd L. Youngblood Electronic Mail Distribution Plant Manager Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Tom W. Pelham Electronic Mail Distribution Performance Improvement Supervisor Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Jeffrey T. Gasser Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Executive Vice President Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Electronic Mail Distribution Cynthia A. Sanders Radioactive Materials Program Manager Mark Ajluni, Licensing Manager Environmental Protection Division Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. Georgia Department of Natural Resources P.O. Box 1295 Electronic Mail Distribution Bin - 048 Birmingham, AL 35201-1295 James C. Hardeman Environmental Radiation Program Manager L. Mike Stinson Environmental Protection Division Vice President Georgia Department of Natural Resources Fleet Operations Support Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Electronic Mail Distribution William D. Oldfield Principal Licensing Engineer Paula Marino Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Vice President Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Engineering Electronic Mail Distribution Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc.

Electronic Mail Distribution Senior Resident Inspector U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Moanica Caston Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant Vice President and General Counsel U.S. NRC Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc. 7388 N. State Highway 95 Electronic Mail Distribution Columbia, AL 36319 Chris Clark Mr. Mark Culver Commissioner Chairman Georgia Department of Natural Resources Houston County Commission Electronic Mail Distribution P. O. Box 6406 Dothan, AL 36302 (cc contd - See page 5)

SNC 5 (cc contd)

James A. Sommerville Program Coordination Branch Chief Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution James L. McNees, CHP Director Office of Radiation Control Alabama Dept. of Public Health P. O. Box 303017 Montgomery, AL 36130-3017 State Health Officer Alabama Dept. of Public Health Electronic Mail Distribution F. Allen Barnes Director Environmental Protection Division Georgia Department of Natural Resources Electronic Mail Distribution

_________________________ G SUNSI REVIEW COMPLETE OFFICE RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRS RII:DRP RII:DRP SIGNATURE RA RA RA RA NAME STAPLES NEASE CHRISTENSEN SHAEFFER DATE 5/20/2010 5/21/2010 5/21/2010 5/21/2010 E-MAIL COPY? YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO YES NO