ML12310A497: Difference between revisions

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| number = ML12310A497
| number = ML12310A497
| issue date = 11/05/2012
| issue date = 11/05/2012
| title = IR 05000382-12-008, July 16, 2012 - September 24, 2012, Waterford 3 "Biennial Baseline Inspection of the Identification and Resolution of Problems."
| title = IR 05000382-12-008, July 16, 2012 - September 24, 2012, Waterford 3 Biennial Baseline Inspection of the Identification and Resolution of Problems.
| author name = Kellar R L
| author name = Kellar R L
| author affiliation = NRC/RGN-IV/DRS
| author affiliation = NRC/RGN-IV/DRS
Line 309: Line 309:
{{a|4OA6}}
{{a|4OA6}}
==4OA6 Meetings==
==4OA6 Meetings==
Exit Meeting Summary On August 2, 2012, the team presented the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented. The inspector asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary. No proprietary information was identified. On August 23, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to William McKinney, Acting Director Nuclear Safety and Assurance, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.
 
=====Exit Meeting Summary=====
On August 2, 2012, the team presented the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented. The inspector asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary. No proprietary information was identified. On August 23, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to William McKinney, Acting Director Nuclear Safety and Assurance, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.


On September 24, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.
On September 24, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.

Revision as of 11:10, 14 February 2018

IR 05000382-12-008, July 16, 2012 - September 24, 2012, Waterford 3 Biennial Baseline Inspection of the Identification and Resolution of Problems.
ML12310A497
Person / Time
Site: Waterford Entergy icon.png
Issue date: 11/05/2012
From: Kellar R L
Division of Reactor Safety IV
To: Jacobs D
Entergy Operations
References
EA-12-198 IR-12-008
Download: ML12310A497 (50)


See also: IR 05000382/2012008

Text

November 5, 2012

EA-12-198 Donna Jacobs, Site Vice President, Operations Entergy Operations, Inc.

Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3 17265 River Road Killona, LA 70057-0751

SUBJECT: WATERFORD STEAM ELECTRIC STATION, UNIT 3 - NRC PROBLEM IDENTIFICATION AND RESOLUTION INSPECTION REPORT 05000382/2012008 AND NOTICE OF VIOLATION

Dear Ms. Jacobs:

On August 2, 2012, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) completed a Problem Identification and Resolution biennial inspection at your Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3. The enclosed inspection report documents the inspection results that were discussed on August 2, 2012, with Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of your staff. After additional in-office inspection, a final telephonic exit meeting was conducted on September 24, 2012 with Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of your staff.

This inspection was an examination of activities conducted under your license as they relate to problem identification and resolution and compliance with the Commission's rules and regulations and the conditions of your license. Within these areas, the inspection involved examination of selected procedures and representative records, observations of activities, and interviews with personnel.

Based on the inspection sample, the inspection team concluded that the implementation of the corrective action program and overall performance related to identifying, evaluating, and resolving problems at Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3, were adequate. Licensee identified problems were entered into the corrective action program at a low threshold.

Problems were generally prioritized and evaluated commensurate with the safety significance of the problems. Corrective actions were generally implemented in a timely manner commensurate with their importance to safety and addressed the identified causes of problems. Lessons learned from industry operating experience were generally reviewed and applied when appropriate. Audits and self-assessments were effectively used to identify problems and appropriate actions. Finally, the team determined that the station maintains a safety-conscious work environment where employees feel free to raise nuclear safety concerns without fear of retaliation. Five NRC identified findings of very low safety significance (Green) were identified during this inspection and are documented in the enclosed report. All five of these findings were determined to involve a violation of NRC requirements. The NRC is treating four of the five violations as non-cited violations (NCVs), consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy. Additionally, a licensee-identified violation, which was determined to be of very low safety significance, is listed in this report. One of the findings that the NRC evaluated under the risk significance determination process as having very low safety significance (Green) did not meet the criteria to be treated as a non-cited violation. The violation associated with this issue was evaluated in accordance with the NRC Enforcement Policy. The current version of this Policy is available on the NRC website at (http://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/enforcement/enforce-pol.html). This violation is cited in the enclosed Notice of Violation (Notice), and the circumstances surrounding it are described in detail in the subject inspection report. The violation is being cited in the Notice in accordance with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy because you failed to restore compliance in a reasonable period of time after the violation was previously identified as a non-cited violation.

You are required to respond to this letter and should follow the instructions specified in the enclosed Notice when preparing your response. This reply should be clearly marked as a

"Reply to a Notice of Violation; EA-12-198" and should specifically include a firm commitment as to when you will establish a design basis to determine the river level at which flood control measures were to be initiated for closing the water tight doors as required in Procedure OP-901-521, "Severe Weather and Flooding." If you have additional information that you believe the NRC should consider, you may provide it in your response to the Notice. The NRC review of your response to the Notice will also determine whether further enforcement action is necessary to ensure compliance with regulatory requirements." If you contest these non-cited violations, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your denial, to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington DC 20555-0001, with copies to: (1) the Regional Administrator, Region IV; (2) the Director, Office of Enforcement, United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001; and (3) NRC Resident Inspector Office at Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3. If you disagree with a cross-cutting aspect assignment in this report, you should provide a response within 30 days of the date of this inspection report, with the basis for your disagreement, to the Regional Administrator, Region IV; and the NRC Resident Inspector at Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3.

In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter, its enclosure, and your response will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRC's Agency wide Document Access and 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).

Sincerely,/RA/

Ray Kellar, P.E., Chief Technical Support Branch Division of Reactor Safety Docket No.: 50-382 License No: NPF-38

Enclosures:

1. Notice of Violation EA-12-198 2. Inspection Report 05000382/2012008

w/Attachments:

1. Supplemental Information 2. Information Request

cc w/enclosures: Electronic Distribution for Waterford 3 Regional Administrator (Elmo.Collins@nrc.gov) Deputy Regional Administrator (Art.Howell@nrc.gov) DRP Director (Kriss.Kennedy@nrc.gov)

Acting DRP Deputy Director (Barry.Westreich@nrc.gov)

DRS Acting Director (Tom.Blount@nrc.gov))

DRS Acting Deputy Director (Jeff.Clark@nrc.gov)

Senior Resident Inspector, Grand Gulf (Rich.Smith@nrc.gov) Senior Resident Inspector, Waterford 3 (Marlone.Davis@nrc.gov) Resident Inspector, Waterford 3 (Dean.Overland@nrc.gov)

Branch Chief, DRP/E (Don.Allen@nrc.gov)

Senior Project Engineer, DRP/E (Ray.Azua@nrc.gov)

Project Engineer (Jim.Melfi@nrc.gov) Project Engineer (Dan.Bradley@nrc.gov) Project Engineer (Rayomand.Kumana@nrc.gov)

Reactor Inspector (Matt.Young@nrc.gov)

WAT Administrative Assistant (Linda.Dufrene@nrc.gov)

Public Affairs Officer (Victor.Dricks@nrc.gov) Public Affairs Officer (Lara.Uselding@nrc.gov) Project Manager (Kaly.Kalyanam@nrc.gov)

Branch Chief, DRS/TSB (Ray.Kellar@nrc.gov)

RITS Coordinator (Marisa.Herrera@nrc.gov)

Regional Counsel (Karla.Fuller@nrc.gov)

Congressional Affairs Officer (Jenny.Weil@nrc.gov) OEMail Resource ROPreports RIV/ETA: OEDO (Cayetano.Santos@nrc.gov)

DRS/TSB STA (Dale.Powers@nrc.gov)

R:\_REACTORS\_WAT\2012\WAT2012008-PIR RPT-rls.docx ADAMS ACCESSION NUMBER ML12310A497 SUNSI Rev Compl. Yes No ADAMS Yes No Reviewer Initials RLS Publicly Avail. Yes No Sensitive Yes No Sens. Type Initials TL/SRI:DRP/C RI:DRP/E PE:DRP/C RI:DRS/EB1 ACES BC:DRP/E RSmith DOverland RKumana MYoung HGepford DAllen -e- -e- /RA/ /RA/ /RA/ /RA/ 10/23/2012 10/23/2012 10/13/2012 10/23/2012 10/26/2012 10/30/12 BC:DRS/TSB RKellar /RA/ 11/5/2012 OFFICIAL RECORD COPY Enclosure 1 NOTICE OF VIOLATION Entergy Operations, Inc. Docket No. 50-382 Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 2 License No. NPF-38 EA-12-198 During an NRC inspection conducted on July 16 through September 24, 2012, a violation of NRC requirements was identified. In accordance with the NRC Enforcement Policy, the violation is listed below:

Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, "Design Control," states, in part, that measures shall be established to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis, as defined in 10 CFR 50.2, are correctly translated into specifications, procedures, and instructions.

Contrary to the above, from March 10, 2011, to August 2, 2012, the licensee failed to establish measures to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis, as defined in 10 CFR 50.2, were correctly translated into specifications, procedures and instructions. Specifically, the licensee had not established a design basis to determine the river level at which flood control measures were to be initiated for closing the water tight doors as required in Procedure OP-901-521, "Severe Weather and Flooding."

This violation is associated with a Green Significance Determination Process finding.

Pursuant to the provisions of 10 CFR 2.201, Entergy Operations is hereby required to submit a written statement or explanation to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, ATTN: Document Control Desk, Washington, DC 20555-0001, with a copy to the Regional Administrator, Region IV, and a copy to the NRC Resident Inspector at the facility that is the subject of this Notice, within 30 days of the date of the letter transmitting this Notice of Violation (Notice). This reply should be clearly marked as a "Reply to a Notice of Violation; EA-12-198" and should include for each violation: (1) the reason for the violation or, if contested, the basis for disputing the violation or severity level, (2) the corrective steps that have been taken and the results achieved, (3) the corrective steps that will be taken, and (4) the date when full compliance will be achieved. Your response may reference or include previous docketed correspondence if the correspondence adequately addresses the required response. If an adequate reply is not received within the time specified in this Notice, an Order or a Demand for Information may be issued as to why the license should not be modified, suspended, or revoked, or why such other action as may be proper should not be taken. Where good cause is shown, consideration will be given to extending the response time.

If you contest this enforcement action, you should also provide a copy of your response, with the basis for your denial, to the Director, Office of Enforcement, United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001. Enclosure 1 Because your response will be made available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the NRC's document system (ADAMS), accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html, to the extent possible, it should not include any personal privacy, proprietary, or safeguards information so that it can be made available to the public without redaction. If personal privacy or proprietary information is necessary to provide an acceptable response, then please provide a bracketed copy of your response that identifies the information that should be protected and a redacted copy of your response that deletes such information. If you request withholding of such material, you must specifically identify the portions of your response that you seek to have withheld and provide in detail the bases for your claim of withholding (e.g., explain why the disclosure of information will create an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy or provide the information required by 10 CFR 2.390(b) to support a request for withholding confidential commercial or financial information). If safeguards information is necessary to provide an acceptable response, please provide the level of protection described in 10 CFR 73.21.

In accordance with 10 CFR 19.11, you may be required to post this Notice within two working days of receipt.

Dated this 5th day of November, 2012 Enclosure 2 U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION IV Docket: 50-382 License: NPF-38 Report: 05000382/2012008 Licensee: Entergy Operations, Inc.

Facility: Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3 Location: 17265 River Road Killona, LA 70057-0751 Dates: July 16 through September 24, 2012 Team Leader: R. Smith, Senior Resident Inspector, Grand Gulf Inspectors: D. Overland, Resident Inspector, Waterford 3 R. Kumana, Project Engineer M. Young, Reactor Inspector Approved By: Ray Kellar, P.E., Chief Technical Support Branch Division of Reactor Safety Enclosure 2

SUMMARY OF FINDINGS

IR 05000382/2012008; July 16, 2012 -September 24, 2012; Waterford 3 "Biennial Baseline Inspection of the Identification and Resolution of Problems."

The team inspection was performed by one senior resident inspector, one resident inspector, one reactor inspector, and one project engineer. One cited violation and four non-cited violations of very low safety significance (Green) were identified during this inspection. The significance of most findings is indicated by their color (Green, White, Yellow, 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 review. The NRC's program for overseeing the safe operation of commercial nuclear power reactors is described in NUREG 1649, "Reactor Oversight Process," Revision 4, dated December 2006. Identification and Resolution of Problems The team reviewed approximately 350 condition reports, work orders, engineering evaluations, root and apparent cause evaluations, and other supporting documentation to determine if problems were being properly identified, characterized, and entered into the corrective action program for evaluation and resolution. The team reviewed a sample of system health reports, self-assessments, audits, trending reports and metrics, and various other documents related to the corrective action program.

Based on these reviews, the team concluded that the licensee's corrective action program and its other processes to identify and correct nuclear safety problems were adequate to support nuclear safety. However, the team noted at times the licensee staff did not always use the corrective action program for problems that were perceived as minor. The team also noted several challenges in correcting adverse conditions in a timely manner. Further, the licensee had several long-standing issues, which had been in the corrective action process for over a year without resolution.

The licensee appropriately evaluated industry operating experience for relevance to the facility and entered applicable items in the corrective action program. However, there was one example where the licensee failed to enter an information notice into their corrective action program for evaluation of a condition adverse to quality. The licensee used industry operating experience when performing root cause and apparent cause evaluations. The licensee performed effective quality assurance audits and self-assessments, as demonstrated by self-identification of poor corrective action program performance and identification of ineffective corrective actions.

Finally, the team determined that the station continued to maintain a safety-conscious work environment. Employees felt free to raise nuclear safety concerns to the attention of management without fear of retaliation.

2

A. NRC-Identified and Self-Revealing Findings

Cornerstone: Initiating Events

Green.

The team identified a non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," for a failure to follow Procedure EN-OP-115, "Conduct of Operations". Specifically, the licensee failed to ensure that control room operators knew the status of equipment at all times.

While interviewing the person responsible for tracking plant deficiencies, the inspectors discovered that the licensee had two separate governing procedures.

These two instructions had different definitions for categories of plant deficiencies and different databases for tracking them. The inspectors then interviewed the on-shift operators in the control room and reviewed both databases. The inspectors identified several issues, including lack of knowledge by the control room operators about which procedure to use, failure to track deficiencies in both databases, and inadequate classification of deficiencies. The inspectors determined that in March 2010, the licensee changed their process for tracking deficiencies to be consistent with their fleet reporting process. However, the licensee did not revise the procedure and did not train all affected personnel on the new process. As a result, control room operators did not have a complete and accurate knowledge of all plant deficiencies. This finding was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03732. The failure to ensure that operators were aware of the status of all plant equipment was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the procedure quality attribute of the Initiating Events Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during shutdown as well as power operations. Specifically, the licensee failed to implement a procedure designed to ensure operators were aware of deficiencies in the instrumentation, controls, and operation of nuclear plant systems. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Initiating Events Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because it did not cause a reactor trip and did not cause the loss of mitigation equipment relied upon to transition the plant from the onset of the trip to a stable shutdown condition. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, work practices component, in that the licensee failed to define and effectively communicate expectations regarding procedural compliance, and personnel did not follow procedures H.4.b] (Section 4OA2.5.d).

Green.

The inspectors identified a non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Actions," because the licensee failed to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective actions to preclude repetition. Specifically, the licensee failed to assure that the cause of the condition was determined and corrective action taken to preclude repetition related to a contractor's non-compliance with site procedural requirements. The corrective actions include developing additional training and provisions to provide additional contractor oversight. This finding was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Reports CR-WF3-2012-03769 and CR-WF3-2012-03772.

The failure to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective action to preclude repetition was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because if left uncorrected, it could lead to more significant consequences; therefore, it is a finding.

Specifically, failure to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective action to prevent recurrence can result in recurrence of the condition. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Initiating Events Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because the finding did not cause a reactor trip and the loss of mitigation equipment relied upon to transition the plant from the onset of the trip to a stable shutdown condition. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance, work practice component, in that the licensee failed to follow guidance in the root cause evaluation procedure when developing appropriate corrective actions to prevent repetition H.4(b) (Section 4OA2.5.e).

Cornerstone: Mitigating Systems

Green.

The team identified a Green non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," for a failure to follow the Operability Determination Process. Specifically, the licensee failed to determine the operability of the emergency diesel generators immediately upon discovery without delay and in a controlled manner using the best information available in response to NRC Information Notice 2010-04. The licensee completed an evaluation of the information notice that indicated that Waterford 3 was vulnerable and susceptible to the issue, but the licensee failed to issue a condition report as required by their procedure. The failure to initiate a condition report resulted in the licensee's failure to perform an operability determination of the emergency diesel generators as required by, EN-OP-104," Operability Determination Process," Revision 6. In the evaluation, the licensee considered the fact that they had an "Action Request" in their system to add routine thermography inspections within the voltage regulator cabinets to their preventative maintenance program as being adequate. The action request was not completed when the inspection team reviewed the issue. The inspectors questioned whether there was an operability concern for the emergency diesel generators. The licensee recognized their failure to perform an operability determination. They performed a prompt operability determination based on no observed degradation in performance and declared the emergency diesel generators operable. In addition, they plan to conduct the thermography inspections during the next scheduled emergency diesel generator surveillance. This finding was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03761. The failure to promptly perform an operability determination of the emergency diesel generators in response to NRC Information Notice 2010-04 was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the equipment performance attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, the licensee failed to promptly determine the operability of the diesel generators after obtaining information of a potential condition adverse to quality. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609,

Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because it was not a deficiency affecting the design or qualification of the system, it did not represent a loss of system or function, and it was a Technical Specification system, but did not represent an actual loss of function of a single train for greater than it allowed outage time. Specifically, the licensee performed an operability determination in response to the inspectors' questions and determined the emergency diesel generators were operable based on a review of surveillance data and maintenance records. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the problem identification and resolution area, operating experience component, in that the licensee failed to systematically collect, evaluate, and communicate to affected internal stakeholders in a timely manner relevant internal and external operating experience P.2.a] (Section 4OA2.5.a).

Green.

The team identified a non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Action," for the failure to take timely corrective action for a condition adverse to quality. Specifically, from May 2011, through August 2012, the licensee failed to restore a degraded condition, which included a corrective action to perform a new design analysis for the emergency feedwater pump AB after the removal of heat trace circuit 1-8C, despite having a reasonable amount of time to complete it. Currently, plant operators are required once per shift to perform temperature verifications of the heat trace to ensure condensation does not form in the steam supply pipe to the turbine driven pump and to maintain emergency feedwater pump AB in an operable but degraded status until the design analysis is complete. This finding was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03754. The team determined that the failure to complete the corrective action of performing a new design analysis to determine if emergency feedwater pump AB required a design modification based on the analysis in a timely manner was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it affected the equipment performance attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, failure to implement this corrective action could result in reduced reliability of the emergency feedwater pump AB. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green)because it affected the design or qualification of mitigating systems, structures, and components; however, the systems, structures, and components maintained operability. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, resources component, in that the licensee failed to minimize a long-standing equipment issue adequately to assure nuclear safety H.2(a) (Section 4OA2.5.b).

Green.

The team identified a cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, "Design Control", for the failure to establish measures to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis as defined in 10 CFR 50.2 are correctly translated into procedures. Specifically, the licensee has not determined a basis for the level at which flood control measures are initiated, two years after receiving a non-cited violation for the same deficiency.

As an interim compensatory measure for a previous violation of inadequate technical specifications, the licensee modified their flooding procedure to include an action to start shutting flood control doors at a river level of 24 feet instead of 27 feet. The licensee recognized the need to establish a basis for initiating these actions at 24 feet, and issued a corrective action to track completion. The licensee extended the due date several times and had not completed it by the arrival of the inspection team. The inspection team questioned why the licensee had not completed the calculation to justify their basis for their compensatory measures, noting that it had been over two years since the original violation was identified. The inspectors verified through walk-downs, procedure reviews, and historical data that the licensee's use of 24 feet did not represent an immediate operability concern, and that the current river level was sufficiently low to allow time for the licensee to correct the deficiency. This finding was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as condition report CR-WF3-2012-03752. The failure to complete the corrective action to establish a basis for flood control measures in a timely manner was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the protection from external events attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, the licensee failed to verify through calculations or analysis that the actions taken to secure flood doors could be completed in time to protect safety-related equipment from flooding due to a levee failure. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609,

Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power", the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green)because it did not involve the loss or degradation of equipment or function specifically designed to mitigate a seismic, flooding, or severe weather initiating event. Specifically, the inspectors confirmed that the licensee could reasonably ensure the flood control doors could perform their safety function. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, resources component in that the licensee failed to maintain long term plant safety by maintenance of design margins and ensuring engineering backlogs low enough to support safety. H.2.a] (Section 4OA2.5.c).

B. Licensee-Identified Violations

A violation of very low safety significance, which was identified by the licensee, has been reviewed by the inspectors. Corrective actions taken by the licensee have been entered into the licensee's corrective action program. This violation and associated corrective action tracking numbers are listed in Section 4OA7 of this report.

2

REPORT DETAILS

OTHER ACTIVITIES (OA)

4OA2 Problem Identification and Resolution

The team based the following conclusions on the sample of corrective action documents that were initiated in the assessment period, which ranged from May 1, 2010, to the end of the on-site portion of this inspection on August 2, 2012.

.1 Assessment of the Corrective Action Program Effectiveness

a. Inspection Scope

The team reviewed approximately 350 corrective action documents, including associated root cause, apparent cause, and direct cause evaluations, out of approximately 17,000 corrective action documents that were issued between May 1, 2010, and August 2, 2012, to determine if problems were being properly identified, characterized, and entered into the corrective action program for evaluation and resolution. The team reviewed a sample of system health reports, operability determinations, self-assessments, trending reports and metrics, and various other documents related to the corrective action program.

The team evaluated the licensee's efforts in establishing the scope of problems by reviewing selected logs, work requests, self-assessments results, audits, system health reports, action plans, and results from surveillance tests and preventive maintenance tasks. The team reviewed work requests and attended the licensee's daily Condition Review Group, (which is the management review committee meeting to assess the reporting threshold, prioritization efforts, and significance determination process), as well as observing the interfaces with the operability assessment and work control processes when applicable. The team's review included verifying the licensee considered the full extent of cause and extent of condition for problems, as well as how the licensee assessed generic implications and previous occurrences. The team assessed the timeliness and effectiveness of corrective actions, completed or planned, and looked for additional examples of similar problems. The team conducted interviews with plant personnel to identify other processes that may exist where problems may be identified and addressed outside the corrective action program. The team also reviewed corrective action documents that addressed past NRC-identified violations to ensure that the corrective action addressed the issues as described in the inspection reports. The inspectors reviewed a sample of corrective actions closed to other corrective action documents to ensure that corrective actions were still appropriate and timely.

The team considered risk insights from both the NRC's and Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3's risk assessments to focus the sample selection and plant tours on risk significant systems and components. The team selected the component cooling water and auxiliary component cooling water systems as risk significant systems to review. The samples reviewed by the team focused on, but were not limited to, these systems. The team also expanded their review to include five years of evaluations involving the emergency feedwater system to determine whether problems were being effectively addressed. The team conducted a walk-down of these systems to assess whether problems were identified and entered into the corrective action program. b.

Assessments 1. Assessment - Effectiveness of Problem Identification The team concluded in most cases that the licensee identified issues and adverse conditions and entered them into the corrective action program in accordance with the licensee's corrective action program guidance and NRC requirements. The team determined that the licensee generally was identifying problems at a low threshold and entering them into the corrective action program.

The team identified one condition adverse to quality that was not placed in the corrective action program. The licensee wrote approximately 17,000 condition reports during the two-year period of review. The team noted that this high rate of condition report generation is generally a sign of a healthy corrective action program. The following issues were noted by the team:

  • Through the review of NRC information notices over the assessment period, the team identified that the licensee failed to enter one information notice applicable to Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3's emergency diesel generator voltage regulators into their corrective action program. The team documented this as a Green non-cited violation in Section 4OA2.5.a of this report.
  • The team identified that some main control room deficiencies, although identified by white identification tags, had not been entered into the licensee's corrective action program. The team documented this as a Green non-cited violation in Section 4OA2.5.d of this report.
  • The licensee self-identified a failure to initiate condition reports that resulted in missed operability assessments on two occasions when the emergency feedwater pump AB heat trace fell below the required temperature per the operating instruction. The team documented this as a licensee identified violation in Section

4OA7 of this report.

2.

Assessment - Effectiveness of Prioritization and Evaluation of Issues The team concluded that generally the licensee effectively prioritized and evaluated conditions adverse to quality. The team found that even with the high number of condition reports initiated on a daily basis, the licensee's daily action review committee pre-screening and the management review committees effectively assessed each condition adverse to quality. The following are issues the team identified or reviewed during the inspection:

  • The licensee's extent of condition review for an incorrect preventive maintenance classification of a limit switch identified additional incorrect classifications. However, the team identified that the licensee failed to initiate a separate condition report to document these additional errors and, therefore, failed to ensure the testing requirements for each of the newly identified components were met until challenged by the team. This was documented in Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03557.
  • The team identified that the licensee performed an inadequate apparent cause evaluation of a failure of the security diesel generator. The evaluation identified one cause as being an incorrect maintenance classification. When the licensee found the component was properly classified in its preventative maintenance optimization program, the licensee did not revise their apparent cause. Instead, they determined other corrective actions to address security equipment issues.
  • The team identified that the apparent cause evaluation for inservice testing failures of the main feed isolation valves was determined to be incorrect. The licensee first determined that the failure was the result of moisture intrusion in the hydraulic fluid. However, additional failures and a subsequent root cause analysis showed that the failure mechanism was actually interior varnishing. This was identified by review of external operating experience that was available, but missed during the initial apparent cause evaluation.
  • The team identified a minor violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, that is not subject to enforcement action in accordance with the NRC's Enforcement Policy. The licensee downgraded a Category A condition report to Category B without obtaining approval of the condition review group as required by Procedure EN-L1-102, "Corrective Action Program." This was documented in Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03325.
  • The team reviewed roll up Condition Report CR-WF3-2011-07610, which identified that the quality of six previous causal analyses was inadequate.
  • The team identified that the licensee categorized many conditions adverse to quality on the diesel fire pump as Category D. Although their process allowed this, they could have identified and corrected non-conforming trends in the diesel fire pumps more effectively with a higher prioritization. This was documented in Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03747.
  • The team determined that the licensee categorized a problem with the steam generator feedwater pump B requiring manual operation as an "Operator Burden" when it could have met the definition of an "Operator Workaround," which carried a higher level of prioritization in the licensee work planning process.
  • The team reviewed a licensee failure to frequently and regularly review a degraded and nonconforming condition associated with the reactor coolant pump N-9000 stage seals as required by Procedure EN-OP-104, "Operability Determination Process". This is an example of the licensee not thoroughly evaluating problems, such that the resolutions address causes and extent of conditions, as necessary. This was documented in NRC Inspection Report 05000382/2011002 as a Green non-cited violation.

The team reviewed a number of condition reports that involved operability reviews to assess the quality, timeliness, and prioritization of operability assessments. In general, both immediate and prompt operability assessments reviewed were adequately completed in a timely manner.

3.

Assessment - Effectiveness of Corrective Actions Overall, the team concluded that the licensee generally developed appropriate corrective actions to address problems. However, the team identified a number of corrective actions associated with conditions adverse to quality that were not completed in a timely manner:

  • The team identified that the licensee failed to take timely corrective actions to correct a design basis analysis for the emergency feedwater pump AB after the removal of required heat trace on the steam supply piping. The team documented this as a Green non-cited violation in Section 4OA2.5.b of this report.
  • The team identified that the licensee failed to take timely corrective actions to establish a basis through analysis for the initiation of flood control measures at a river level of 24 feet. The team documented this as a Green cited violation in Section 4OA2.5.c of this report.
  • The team identified that the licensee failed to have a GMPO/Director approve a due date extension on a long-term corrective action from CR-WF3-2011-00887 (Corrective Action 13), which is not permitted by Procedure EN-LI-102, "Corrective Action Program". This resulted in a minor violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, that is not subject to enforcement action in accordance with NRC's Enforcement Policy. The corrective action was to complete an engineering analysis to determine the scope of modifications needed for the steam driven emergency feedwater turbine steam supply piping. This was documented in Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03461.
  • The team identified a failure to complete a corrective action to validate data for work hours for security personnel. This resulted in a minor violation of 10 CFR 26.205.e that is not subject to enforcement action in accordance with the NRC's Enforcement Policy. This was documented in Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03729.
  • The team reviewed a licensee failure to take or perform effective corrective actions for boric acid leaks for the past seven years. This is an example of the licensee's failure to effectively correct identified boric acid leaks in a timely manner. This was documented in NRC Inspection Report 05000382/2010006 as a Green non-cited violation.

.2 Assessment of the Use of Operating Experience

a. Inspection Scope

The team examined the licensee's program for reviewing industry operating experience, including reviewing the governing procedure and self-assessments. The team reviewed a sample of 10 condition reports examining operating experience documents that had been issued during the assessment period to determine whether the licensee had appropriately evaluated the notification for relevance to the facility. The team then examined whether the licensee had entered those items into their corrective action program and assigned actions to address the issues. The team reviewed a sample of root cause evaluations and corrective action documents to verify whether the licensee had appropriately included industry-operating experience.

b.

Assessment Overall, the team determined that the licensee was adequately evaluating industry operating experience for relevance to the facility, based on reviewing a sample of 10 condition reports examining industry operating experience. The licensee entered all but one applicable item in the corrective action program in accordance with station procedures. The team concluded that the licensee was evaluating industry operating experience when performing root cause and apparent cause evaluations. Both internal and external operating experiences were being incorporated into lessons learned for training and pre-job briefs. The following are issues the team identified or reviewed during the inspection:

  • The team identified through the review of NRC information notices over the assessment period that the licensee had failed to enter one information notice applicable to Waterford 3 emergency diesel generator voltage regulators into their corrective action program. In response, the licensee did a complete audit of all NRC information notices issued during the assessment period and found no other discrepancies. The team documented this as a Green non-cited violation in Section 4OA2.5.a of this report.
  • The team reviewed three examples from this assessment period of the licensee's failure in the use of operating experience, resulting in the licensee not implementing and institutionalizing operating experience through changes to station processes, procedures, equipment, and training programs. o The team reviewed a licensee failure to implement a preventative maintenance activity to replace dry cooling tower process analog control cards based on internal and industry-wide operating experience that documented previous failures of process analog control cards due to age-related degradation after 15 years. This was documented in NRC Inspection Report 05000382/2011004 as a Green non-cited violation. o The team reviewed a licensee failure to identify that varnish deposits were causing the main feedwater isolation valve to fail its inservice testing. This resulted from the licensee's failure to use relevant external operating experience to identify that other sites experienced similar failures of feedwater isolation valves due to varnish deposits on the interior surfaces. This was documented in NRC Inspection Report 05000382/2011005 as a Green non-cited violation. o The team reviewed a licensee failure to evaluate the internal condition of the condensate and refueling water storage pool structures through performance of appropriate preventative maintenance after previous documented industry-wide operating experience of concrete degradation due to boric acid. This was documented in Inspection Report 05000382/2011003 as a Green non-cited violation.

.3 Assessment of Self-Assessments and Audits

a. Inspection Scope

The team reviewed a sample size of 22 licensee self-assessments, surveillances, and audits to assess whether the licensee was regularly identifying performance trends and effectively addressing them. The team reviewed audit reports to assess the effectiveness of assessments in specific areas. The team evaluated the use of self- and third party assessments, the role of the quality assurance department, and the role of the performance improvement group related to licensee performance. The specific self-assessment documents reviewed are listed in the Attachment.

b. Assessment The team concluded that the licensee had an effective self-assessment process. Licensee management was involved with developing tactical self-assessments. The team determined that self-assessments were self-critical and thorough enough to identify deficiencies. The following are issues the team reviewed during the inspection:

  • The team reviewed a licensee self-assessment of plant status and configuration control performed in March 2012. This self-assessment was an opportunity for the site to identify and address the issues associated with control room deficiencies documented in Section 4OA2.5.d of this report, but the assessment did not discuss them.
  • The team reviewed the licensee's failure to perform an adequate risk assessment associated with the maintenance window for the turbine driven emergency feedwater pump. This is an example of the licensee's failure to use independent and self-assessments because the licensee performed a probabilistic risk assessment model update in April 2009, but failed to identify an assumption crediting operator actions that were not in procedures. This was documented in NRC Inspection Report 05000382/2011007 as a Green non-cited violation.

.4 Assessment of Safety-Conscious Work Environment

a. Inspection Scope

The inspection team conducted individual interviews with over 30 individuals from a cross-section of functional organizations: engineering, operations, maintenance, quality assurance, radiation protection, chemistry, security officers, and contract personnel. Both supervisory and non-supervisory personnel were included in these interviews. The team conducted these interviews to assess whether conditions existed that would challenge the establishment of a safety-conscious work environment (SCWE) at Waterford 3. The team also interviewed the Waterford 3 employee concerns program manager and reviewed the last two safety culture self-assessment documents. b. Assessment Overall, the team concluded that a safety-conscious work environment exists at Waterford Steam Electric Station, Unit 3. Employees demonstrated familiarity with the various avenues available to raise safety concerns. They appeared comfortable with submitting all nuclear safety issues. The team noted a potential vulnerability in the licensee's safety-conscious work environment from discussions with plant personnel. There was a perception among some members of the plant staff that management may use the condition report process to discipline workers when personnel errors were documented in the condition reports. Additionally, some personnel stated that they did not write condition reports, but rather they passed the comments along to supervisors who would enter them into the corrective action program.

Overall, most individuals were familiar with the employee concerns program and its location on site. There was visibility of the program throughout the site. Many of the individuals interviewed had knowledge of the employee concerns manager; however, no one interviewed indicated having direct interactions with the employee concerns manger during the inspection period. Personnel understood and were confident in the confidentiality of the program.

Site personnel have received initial and annual refresher training, which provided instruction on safety-conscious work environment policies. Many of the individuals interviewed were familiar with this training and with the overall message in the training. However, not everyone was familiar with the details of the policy. None of the individuals interviewed cited any examples of harassment, intimidation, retaliation or discrimination, or any negative reactions from management when individuals raised nuclear safety concerns. Finally, individuals indicated that if they were to believe unsafe conditions existed, they would feel comfortable stopping work without fear of retaliation, even if such actions would prolong an outage or extend a planned schedule.

.5 Specific Issues Identified During This Inspection

a. Failure to Promptly Determine the Operability of the Emergency Diesel Generators

Introduction.

The team identified a Green non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," for a failure to follow Procedure EN-OP-104, "Operability Determination Process." Specifically, the licensee failed to determine the operability of the emergency diesel generators immediately upon discovery without delay and in a controlled manner using the best information available in response to NRC Information Notice 2010-04.

Description.

The team reviewed the licensee's corrective actions taken in response to an NRC Information Notice. On February 26, 2010, the NRC issued Information Notice 2010-04, "Diesel Generator Voltage Regulation System Component [Failure] Due to Latent Manufacturing Defect." This information notice describes the failure of a linear power reactor in an emergency diesel generator voltage regulation system at a plant where the licensee's preventive maintenance program did not address the emergency diesel generator excitation system magnetic components. The licensee completed an evaluation of the information notice per Procedure EN-OE-100, "Operating Experience Program," on July 1, 2010. This evaluation indicated that Waterford 3 was vulnerable and susceptible to the issue, but the licensee failed to issue a condition report as required by their procedure. The failure to initiate a condition report resulted in the licensee's failure to perform an operability determination of the emergency diesel generators as required by Procedure EN-OP-104," Operability Determination Process," Revision 6.

In the evaluation, the licensee considered the fact that they had an "Action Request" in their system that addressed a similar concern to be an acceptable response to this information notice. Action Request 079684 was initiated on December 10, 2009, to address recommendations from an INPO assistance visit in 2007 and it included an action to add routine thermography inspections within the voltage regulator cabinets to their preventative maintenance program. The Entergy Nuclear Corporate Operating Experience group also reviewed this information notice on March 4, 2010. In response, they issued a specific action through their operating experience database to evaluate the information notice to each Entergy site. However, they failed to issue one to Waterford 3.

The licensee started routing Action Request 079684 for approval, but they stopped on March 15, 2010. The licensee attributed this to an incomplete turnover by departing personnel. No other approval actions were taken until April 16, 2012, when the request was routed to the next person in the approval process. Again, no further action was taken, and the action request was not completed when the inspection team reviewed the issue.

The inspectors questioned why there was no condition report generated and why the action request had not been completed more than two years after issuance. In particular, the inspectors questioned whether there was an operability concern for the emergency diesel generators. The licensee recognized their failure to issue a condition report and perform an operability determination. They performed a prompt operability determination based on operating data, work history, and no observed degradation in performance, and declared the emergency diesel generators operable. In addition, they plan to conduct the thermography during the next scheduled emergency diesel generator surveillance. The licensee initiated CR-WF3-2012-00596 and CR-WF3-2012-03761 to address the issue. They also initiated CR-HQN-2012-00857 to address the failure of the corporate organization to include Waterford 3 in their site-specific requests.

Analysis.

The failure to promptly perform an operability determination of the emergency diesel generators in response to NRC Information Notice 2010-04 was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the equipment performance attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, the licensee failed to promptly determine the operability of the diesel generators after obtaining information of a potential condition adverse to quality. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because it was not a deficiency affecting the design or qualification of the system, it did not represent a loss of system or function, and it was a Technical Specification system but did not represent an actual loss of function of a single train for greater than it allowed outage time. Specifically, the licensee performed an operability determination in response to the inspectors' questions and determined the emergency diesel generators were operable based on a review of surveillance data and maintenance records. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the problem identification and resolution area, operating experience component, in that the licensee failed to systematically collect, evaluate, and communicate to affected internal stakeholders in a timely manner relevant internal and external operating experience P.2.a].

Enforcement.

Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," states, in part, that activities affecting quality shall be prescribed by documented instructions, procedures, or drawings of a type appropriate to the circumstances and shall be accomplished in accordance with these instructions, procedures, or drawings. Licensee Procedure EN-OP-104, "Operability Determination Process," Revision 6, Section 5.1 step 13 required that an operability should be determined immediately upon discovery without delay and in a controlled manner using the best information available. Contrary to this requirement, from July 1, 2010, to July 25, 2012, the licensee failed to accomplish an activity affecting quality prescribed by documented instructions. Specifically, the licensee failed to determine the operability of the emergency diesel generators as required by Licensee Procedure EN-OP-104 in response to NRC Information Notice 2010-04. The licensee immediately determined the operability of the emergency diesel generators based on operating data and work history, and they established a reasonable basis for operability. This violation is being treated as an NCV, consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy, because it was of very low safety significance (Green) with no actual or potential safety consequences and was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03761 to address recurrence. (NCV 05000382/2012008-01, "Failure to Promptly Determine the Operability of the Emergency Diesel Generators") b. Failure to Take Corrective Action Associated with the Emergency Feedwater Pump AB

Introduction.

The team identified a Green non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Action," for the failure to take timely corrective action for a condition adverse to quality. Specifically, the licensee failed to restore a degraded condition, which included a corrective action to perform a new design analysis for the emergency feedwater pump AB after the removal of heat trace circuit 1-8C despite having a reasonable amount of time to complete it.

Description.

The team performed an in-depth review of corrective actions associated with the emergency feedwater system. The turbine driven emergency feedwater pump AB has steam piping that is maintained at a high temperature with a heat trace to prevent excessive condensation from developing, which could reduce the reliability of the pump to perform its design function. The licensee removed heat trace circuit 1-8C from a horizontal section of steam piping because the heat trace was not maintaining the piping above the required setpoint. In May 2011, the licensee determined that emergency feedwater pump AB was operable but degraded. A corrective action was initiated to perform a design analysis using RELAP to determine what modifications needed to be performed on the system to return the system to a fully operable status.

The team identified that the licensee extended the due date twice for the corrective action, first from February 23 to June 15, 2012, and then from June 15 until October 12, 2012. The last extension was approved due to lack of engineering resources resulting from other activities placed at a higher priority by Waterford 3 management. The team determined that from May 2011 to August 2012, a corrective action to perform a design analysis for the long-standing equipment issue of determining whether or not a plant modification is needed to maintain the system operable had not been performed in a timely manner. Currently, plant operators are required once per shift to perform temperature verifications of the heat trace to ensure condensation does not form in the steam supply pipe to the turbine driven pump and maintain emergency feedwater pump AB in an operable, but degraded, status until the design analysis is complete. The licensee has entered the concern into their corrective action program as Condition Report CR-WF3-2012-03754.

Analysis.

The team determined that the failure to complete the corrective action of performing a new design analysis to determine if emergency feedwater pump AB required a design modification based on the analysis in a timely manner was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it affected the equipment performance attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, failure to implement this corrective action could result in reduced reliability of the emergency feedwater pump AB. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because it affected the design or qualification of mitigating systems, structures, and components; however, the systems, structures, and components maintained operability. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, resources component, in that the licensee failed to minimize a long-standing equipment issue adequately to assure nuclear safety H.2(a).

Enforcement.

Title 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Action," states, in part, that measures be established to assure that conditions adverse to quality, such as failures, malfunction, deficiencies, deviations and non-conformances are promptly identified and corrected. Contrary to this requirement, from May 2011 through August 2012, the licensee failed to assure that measures were established to assure that a condition adverse to quality was promptly corrected. Specifically, the licensee failed to take prompt corrective action to restore a degraded condition by not performing a design analysis for emergency feedwater pump AB after heat trace circuit 1-8C was removed. Consequently, plant operators are required once per shift to perform temperature verifications of the heat trace to ensure condensation does not form in the steam supply pipe to the turbine driven pump and maintain emergency feedwater pump AB in an operable, but degraded, status until the design analysis is complete. This violation is being treated as an NCV, consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy because it was of very low safety significance (Green) with no actual or potential safety consequence and was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as CR-WF3-2012-03754 to address recurrence. (NCV 05000382/2012008-02, "Failure to Take Corrective Action Associated with Emergency Feedwater Pump AB") c. Failure to Take Timely Corrective Action to Establish a Basis for Flood Control Measures

Introduction.

The team identified a Green cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, "Design Control", for the failure to establish measures to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis as defined in 10 CFR 50.2 are correctly translated into procedures. Specifically, the licensee has not determined a basis for the level at which flood control measures are initiated, two years after receiving a non-cited violation for the same deficiency.

Description.

The team reviewed the licensee's corrective actions taken in response to a non-cited violation from 2010 documented as NCV 2010006-02, "Non-conservative Technical Specification 3.7.5 Action Statement." The licensee entered this violation into their corrective action program under CR-WF3-2010-03232 on May 24, 2010. The licensee determined that Technical Specification 3.7.5 "Flood Protection" was not required to be included in their technical specifications and submitted an amendment to move it to the Technical Requirements Manual. As an interim compensatory measure, the licensee modified their Procedure OP-901-521, "Severe Weather and Flooding" to include an action to start shutting flood control doors at a river level of 24 feet instead of 27 feet. The required actions included verifying that all flood control penetrations below a level of 30 feet were shut within 12 hours1.388889e-4 days <br />0.00333 hours <br />1.984127e-5 weeks <br />4.566e-6 months <br /> before the river was projected to reach 27 feet. There are seven flood control doors of varying sizes that are required to be shut and two valves that are required to be locked shut. Five of these doors and both valves are normally shut during power operations, but may be open during outages. Most of them require entry into the Radiologically Controlled Area and one requires entry into a locked room for access.

The licensee recognized the need to establish a basis for initiating these actions at 24 feet, and issued Corrective Action 18 (CA-18) in CR-WF3-2010-03232 on March 10, 2011, to formally evaluate and document whether 24 feet was an acceptable river level elevation at which to initiate flood control measures. The CA-18 due date was extended twice and on February 24, 2012, they determined that the methodology they intended to use was not acceptable. CA-18 was closed to Corrective Action 23 (CA-23)which directed the licensee to issue an engineering change using the methodology used in Waterford 3 UFSAR Section 2.4.3.7. The due date for CA-23 was itself extended to September 30, 2012.

The inspection team questioned why the licensee had not completed the calculation to justify their basis for their compensatory measures, noting that it had been over two years since the original violation was identified. The licensee initiated CR-WF3-2012-03752 to address this concern. The inspectors verified through walk-downs, procedure reviews, and historical data that the licensee's use of 24 feet did not represent an immediate operability concern and that the current river level was sufficiently low to allow time for the licensee to correct the deficiency.

Analysis.

The failure to complete the corrective action to establish a basis for flood control measures in a timely manner was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the protection from external events attribute of the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to ensure the availability, reliability, and capability of systems that respond to initiating events to prevent undesirable consequences. Specifically, the licensee failed to verify through calculations or analysis that the actions taken to secure flood doors could be completed in time to protect safety-related equipment from flooding due to a levee failure. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Mitigating Systems Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power", the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green)because it did not involve the loss or degradation of equipment or function specifically designed to mitigate a seismic, flooding, or severe weather initiating event. Specifically, the inspectors confirmed that the licensee could reasonably ensure the flood control doors could perform their safety function. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, resources component in that the licensee failed to maintain long term plant safety by maintenance of design margins and ensuring engineering backlogs low enough to support safety H.2.a].

Enforcement.

Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion III, "Design Control," states, in part, that measures shall be established to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis, as defined in 10 CFR 50.2, are correctly translated into specifications, procedures and instructions. Contrary to the above, from March 10, 2011, to August 2, 2012, the licensee failed to establish measures to assure that applicable regulatory requirements and the design basis, as defined in 10 CFR 50.2, were correctly translated into specifications, procedures and instructions.

Specifically, the licensee had not established a design basis to determine the river level at which flood control measures were to be initiated for closing the water tight doors, as required in Procedure OP-901-521, "Severe Weather and Flooding." The licensee demonstrated sufficient safety margin based on historical data and current river levels to provide assurance that this is not an immediate safety concern. Due to the licensee's failure to restore compliance within a reasonable time following previous NCV 05000382/2010006-02, this violation is being cited as a Notice of Violation consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the NRC Enforcement Policy. This is a violation of 10 CFR 50, Appendix B, Criterion III. A Notice of Violation is attached. (VIO 05000382/2012008-03, "Failure to Take Timely Corrective Action to Establish a Basis for Flood Control Measures") d. Failure to Ensure Operator Knowledge of Equipment Status

Introduction.

The team identified a Green non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," for a failure to follow Procedure EN-OP-115, "Conduct of Operations". Specifically, the licensee failed to ensure that control room operators knew the status of equipment at all times.

Description.

The team reviewed how the licensee was addressing deficiencies in plant instrumentation, controls, and equipment that impacted the ability of operators to properly operate the plant. This included a review of the licensee's program to identify, compensate for, and correct these plant deficiencies and a walk-down of the control room.

While interviewing the person responsible for tracking plant deficiencies, the inspectors discovered that the licensee had two separate governing procedures. The licensee used the Entergy Fleet Administrative Procedure EN-FAP-OP-006, "Operator Aggregate Impact Index Performance Indicator," to track several categories of plant deficiencies in a standardized spreadsheet. The licensee also had the local departmental Operating Instruction OI-002-000, "Annunciator, Control Room Instrumentation and Workarounds Status Control". This instruction had different definitions for categories of plant deficiencies and directed the use of a different database.

The inspectors then interviewed the on shift operators in the control room and reviewed both databases. The inspectors identified several issues:

  • The person responsible for tracking plant deficiencies was only using the fleet administrative procedure and was unaware of the operating instruction.
  • On one shift, the shift technical advisor believed the fleet administrative procedure was being used and was not aware of the operating instruction, while the control room supervisor believed the operating instruction was being used and was not aware of the fleet administrative procedure.
  • The database required by the operating instruction had not been maintained for two years.
  • The operating instruction did not have a category for "Operator Burdens"; however, the shift crew differentiated between "Operator Workarounds" and "Operator Burdens". In most cases, they chose the less conservative designation of "Operator Burden".
  • The fleet administrative procedure was intended for fleet performance reporting, not plant deficiency control. It does not direct any actions to address and correct plant deficiencies.
  • The operating instruction subcategorizes "Workarounds" by scheduling of resources rather than by risk significance or impact to operators. The fleet administrative procedure does not subcategorize "Operator Workarounds" or "Operator Burdens", but the licensee carried over this practice to the fleet administrative procedure spreadsheet. This could lead to improper prioritization of corrective actions.
  • The operating instruction directs identification of plant deficiencies through a review of work requests, but it does not require a review of condition reports.
  • Some plant deficiencies were not entered into either database.
  • Operators were using the same tags for "Control Room Deficiencies" and informal operator notes. These notes are not controlled by either procedure.
  • A list of plant deficiencies was not immediately available to control room operators.

The inspectors determined that when the fleet administrative procedure was issued in March 2010, the licensee changed their process for tracking deficiencies. The licensee Procedure W2.109, "Procedure Development, Review & Approval," is safety-related and requires implementation and maintenance of procedures and departmental instructions. This procedure prescribes a process for approving and revising procedures and instructions and conducting necessary training. When the licensee began tracking plant deficiencies per the fleet administrative procedure, the licensee did not revise the operating instruction to conform to the new process, and the licensee did not train all affected personnel on the new process. As a result, the operators did not maintain a consistent accurate list and were not aware of all plant deficiencies, and therefore were not aware of the status of all plant equipment. This was not in accordance with Procedure EN-OP-115, "Conduct of Operations," Revision 9, Section 5.13 step 1, which states that the status of plant equipment is known at all times by plant operators.

The licensee initiated CR-WF3-2012-03732 to address the issue. The licensee will revise the operating instruction to address the process issues and make the intended changes.

Analysis.

The failure to ensure that operators were aware of the status of all plant equipment was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because it was associated with the procedure quality attribute of the Initiating Events Cornerstone and affected the cornerstone objective to limit the likelihood of those events that upset plant stability and challenge critical safety functions during shutdown as well as power operations. Specifically, the licensee failed to implement a procedure designed to ensure operators were aware of deficiencies in the instrumentation, controls, and operation of nuclear plant systems. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Initiating Events Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because it did not cause a reactor trip and the loss of mitigation equipment relied upon to transition the plant from the onset of the trip to a stable shutdown condition. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance area, work practices component, in that the licensee failed to define and effectively communicate expectations regarding procedural compliance, and personnel did not follow procedures H.4.b].

Enforcement.

Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," states, in part, that activities affecting quality shall be prescribed by documented instructions, procedures, or drawings of a type appropriate to the circumstance and shall be accomplished in accordance with these instructions, procedures, or drawings. Procedure EN-OP-115, "Conduct of Operations," Revision 9, Section 5.13, step 1, states that the status of plant equipment is known at all times by plant operators. Contrary to this requirement, from March 2, 2010, to August 1, 2012, the licensee failed to accomplish an activity affecting quality in accordance with the documented instructions appropriate to the circumstance.

Specifically, the licensee failed to ensure operators knew the status of plant equipment at all times in accordance with Licensee Procedure EN-OP-115, "Conduct of Operations." The licensee has a corrective action to revise their operating instruction for tracking plant deficiencies, and none of the current plant deficiencies represents an immediate safety concern. This violation is being treated as an NCV, consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy, because it was of very low safety significance (Green) with no actual or potential safety consequences and was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as CR-WF3-2012-03732 to address recurrence.

(NCV 05000382/2012008-04, "Failure to Ensure Operator Knowledge of Equipment Status") e. Failure to Develop Effective Corrective Actions to Preclude Repetition

Introduction.

The inspectors identified a non-cited violation of 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Actions," because the licensee failed to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective actions to prevent recurrence. Specifically, the licensee failed to assure that the cause of the condition was determined and corrective action taken to preclude repetition associated with a contractor's non-compliance with site procedural requirements.

Description.

During refuel outage 16 in 2009, contract instrumentation and control technicians performed a functional test on a feedwater heater level switch according to work order instructions. Following restoration, a plant transient occurred because a valve was out of position (CR-WF3-2009-7420). The licensee determined that the event constituted a significant condition adverse to quality in accordance with guidance from Procedure EN-LI-102, "Corrective Action Process." During the valve manipulation, the work instructions called for concurrent verification. However the licensee's root cause analysis determined that the contract workers failed to perform concurrent verification as required by the procedure (NCV 2011003-04). The contract workers knew the procedural requirement, but they behaved inappropriately when they chose not to follow the instructions. The licensee's root cause analysis did not determine why the contract workers chose not to follow the procedure. The licensee's corrective action to preclude repetition (CAPR) of this significant condition adverse to quality (SCAQ) was to release the contract workers for not following the procedure and prohibit them from future work at Entergy sites. No actions to preclude repetition that addressed the underlying cause of the failure to perform concurrent verification were taken. The team identified that despite guidance provided in Procedure EN-LI-118, Attachment 9.9, "Root Cause Evaluation Process," which states that discipline of individuals is not an appropriate CAPR, disciplinary action was the only CAPR identified in the root cause for CR-WF3-2009-07420 performed on January 7, 2010.

The failure to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective action to preclude repetition had no actual consequences on nuclear plant safety. However, the failure to determine the cause of the condition adverse to quality and take corrective action to preclude repetition from an ineffective CAPR has the ability to lead to more significant safety consequences. The licensee documented this violation in Condition Reports CR-WF3-2012-03769 and CR-WF3-2012-03772. The corrective actions include developing additional training and provisions to provide additional contractor oversight.

Analysis.

The failure to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to quality and take corrective action to preclude repetition was a performance deficiency. The performance deficiency was more than minor because if left uncorrected, it could lead to more significant consequences, therefore it is a finding. Specifically, failure to determine the cause of a significant condition adverse to qualify and take corrective action to prevent recurrence can result in recurrence of the condition. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Attachment 4, "Initial Characterization of Findings," the issue was determined to affect the Initiating Events Cornerstone. In accordance with NRC Inspection Manual Chapter 0609, Appendix A, "The Significance Determination Process (SDP) for Findings at Power," the issue was determined to have very low safety significance (Green) because the finding did not cause a reactor trip and the loss of mitigation equipment relied upon to transition the plant from the onset of the trip to a stable shutdown condition. This finding had a cross-cutting aspect in the human performance, work practice component, in that the licensee failed to follow guidance in the root cause evaluation procedure when developing appropriate corrective actions to prevent repetition H.4(b).

Enforcement.

Title 10 CFR Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion XVI, "Corrective Action," states, in part, in the case of significant conditions adverse to quality, the measures shall assure that the cause of the condition is determined and corrective action taken to preclude repetition. Contrary to this requirement, on January 7, 2010, for a significant condition adverse to quality, the licensee failed to take measures to assure that the cause of the condition was determined and corrective actions taken to preclude repetition. Specifically, the licensee did not determine the underlying cause of the failure of the site contract workers to comply with licensee's procedural requirements nor were corrective actions taken to preclude repetition of the condition. The licensee's corrective actions to address this problem include developing additional training and provisions to provide additional contractor oversight. This violation is being treated as an NCV, consistent with Section 2.3.2 of the Enforcement Policy because it was of very low safety significance (Green) with no actual or potential safety consequence and was entered into the licensee's corrective action program as CR-WF3-2012-03769 and CR-WF3-2012-03772 to address recurrence. (NCV 05000382/2012008-05, "Failure to Develop Effective Corrective Actions to Preclude Repetition")

4OA6 Meetings

Exit Meeting Summary

On August 2, 2012, the team presented the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented. The inspector asked the licensee whether any materials examined during the inspection should be considered proprietary. No proprietary information was identified. On August 23, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to William McKinney, Acting Director Nuclear Safety and Assurance, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.

On September 24, 2012, the team exited with the revised characterization of the inspection results to Keith Nichols, Director of Engineering, and other members of the licensee staff. The licensee acknowledged the issues presented.

4OA7 Licensee-Identified Violations

The following violation of very low safety significance (Green) was identified by the licensee and is a violation of NRC requirements, which meets the criteria of Section VI of the NRC Enforcement Policy, NUREG-1600, for being dispositioned as an NCV.

  • Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations Part 50, Appendix B, Criterion V, "Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings," states, in part, that activities affecting quality shall be prescribed by documented instructions, procedures, or drawings and shall be accomplished in accordance with these instructions, procedures, or drawings. Contrary to this requirement, on May 10 and May 12, 2011, the licensee failed to accomplish an activity affecting quality as prescribed by the documented procedure. Specifically, the licensee failed to perform operability reviews when heat trace circuit 1-8C fell below the operating instruction temperature on the steam supply piping to the emergency feedwater pump in accordance with Procedure EN-OP-104, "Operability Determination Process". The team determined that this finding was of very low safety significance (Green) because it affected the design or qualification of a mitigating system structure component; however, the system structure component maintained its operability.

The emergency feed water pump AB was declared inoperable on May 14, 2011; however, subsequent evaluation declared the pump operable but degraded.

This was documented in the licensee's corrective action program as Condition Reports CR-WF3-2011-03599 and CR-WF3-2011-03600.

ATTACHMENTS:

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION

KEY POINTS OF CONTACT

Licensee Personnel

S. Adams, Planning Scheduling and Outage Manger
J. Bourgeois, Acting Chemistry Manager
E. Brauner, Supervision of System Engineering
K. Cook, General Manager, Plant Operations
G. Fey, Emergency Planning Manager
S. Fontenot, Acting Corrective Actions and Assessment Manager
R. Gilmore, Engineering and Components Manager
J. Gumnick, Radiation Protection Manager
D. Jacobs, Site Vice President, Operations
J. Jarrell, Assistant Operations Shift Manager
B. Lanka, Manager, System Engineering Manager
B. Lindsey, Maintenance Manager
M. Mason, Acting Licensing Manager
W. McKinney, Acting Director Nuclear Safety and Assurance
K. Nichols, Director of Engineering
R. Porter, Design Engineering Manager
D. Rieder, Quality Assurance Supervisor
K. Rockwood, Acting Technical Training Supervisor
T. Sanders, Security Superintendant
P. Stanton, Design Engineering Supervisor

NRC Personnel

R. Kumana, Project Engineer
R. Smith, Team Leader/Senior Resident Inspector
D. Overland, Resident Inspector
M. Young, Reactor Inspector

Attachment 1

LIST OF ITEMS OPENED, CLOSED, AND DISCUSSED

Opened

05000382/2012008-03 VIO Failure to Take Timely Corrective Action to Establish a Basis for Flood Control Measures (Section 4OA2.5.c)

Opened and Closed

05000382/2012008-01 NCV Failure to Promptly Determine the Operability of the Emergency Diesel Generators (Section 4OA2.5.a)
05000382/2012008-02 NCV Failure to Take Corrective Action Associated with Emergency Feedwater Pump AB (Section 4OA2.5.b)
05000382/2012008-04 NCV Failure to Ensure Operator Knowledge of Equipment Status (Section 4OA2.5.d)
05000382/2012008-05 NCV Failure to Develop Effective Corrective Actions to Preclude Repetition (Section 4OA2.5.e)

Attachment 1

LIST OF DOCUMENTS REVIEWED

PROCEDURES

NUMBER TITLE REVISIONEN-LI-104 Self-Assessment and Benchmark Process 8
EN-LI-102 Corrective Action Process 19
EN-LI-118 Root Cause Evaluation Process 17
EN-LI-119 Apparent Cause Evaluation (ACE) Process 15
EN-OP-104 Operability Determination Process 6
EN-QV-100 Conduct of Nuclear Oversight 7
EN-QV-102 Quality Control Inspection Program 1
EN-QV-108 QA Surveillance Process 9
EN-MA-101 Fundamentals of Maintenance 10
OP-901-310 Loss of Train A Safety Bus 308
OP-903-115 Train A Integrated Emergency Diesel Generator / Engineering Safety Features Test
ME-007-005 Time Delay Relay Setting Check, Adjustment and Functional Test
16
EN-TQ-201 Systematic Approach to Training Process 12
EN-TQ-201 Systematic Approach to Training Process 13
TM-OP-100 Operations Training Manual 16
EN-TQ-114 Licensed Operator Requalification Training Program Description
EN-TQ-126 Inprocessing Training Program 6
Attachment 1 NUMBER TITLE REVISIONEN-TQ-126 Inprocessing Training Program 8
EN-TQ-107 General Employee Training 7
EN-EC-100 Guidelines For Implementation Of The Employee Concerns Program
EN-MA-133 Control of Scaffolding 8
OP-002-007 Freeze Protection and Temperature Maintenance 18
EN-IS-102 Confined Space Program 8
OP-903-046 Emergency Feed Pump Operability Check 309
EN-NE-G-013 Human Reliability Analysis for PSA Models 1
OP-009-003 Emergency Feedwater 304
EN-FAP-OP-006 Operator Aggregate Impact Index Performance Indicator 0
OI-002-000 Operator Instruction Annunciator, Control Room Instrumentation and Workarounds Status Control
304
EN-OP-137 Licensed Operator Candidate Selection Process 2
EN-LI-125 NRC Cross-Cutting Analysis and Trending 1
EN-OE-100 Operating Experience Program 14
EN-LI-118-06 Common Cause Analysis (CCA) 3
OP-002-007 Freeze Protection and Temperature Maintenance 18
OP-903-053 Fire Protection System Pump Operability Test 17
UNT-005-013 Fire Protection Program 12
EN-FAP-LI-001 Condition Review Group (CRG) 3
Attachment 1 NUMBER TITLE REVISIONEN-FAP-LI-003 Corrective Action Review Board (CARB) Process 8
EN-HU-103 Human Performance Error Reviews 7
EN-HU-106 Procedure and Work Instruction Use and Adherence 0
EN-PL-202 Personnel Expectations Related to Fatigue Management 0
EN-TQ-113 Initial Licensed Operator Training Program Description 7
OP-100-014 Technical Specification and Technical Requirements Compliance
317
OP-901-521 Severe Weather and Flooding 305
EN-OE-100 Operating Experience Program 14
EN-FAP-AD-001 Fleet Administrative Procedure (FAP) Process 0
EN-AD-101-01 NMM Procedure Writer Manual 9
EN-AD-101 Procedure Process 14
EN-PL-155 Entergy Nuclear Change Management 4
W2.109 Procedure Development, Review & Approval 13
EN-NS-102 Fitness For Duty Program 9
EN-NS-117 Fitness For Duty Processes 6
EN-OM-123-02 Working Hour Limits eSOMS Users Guide 1
EN-OM-123 Fatigue Management Program 4
EN-PL-202 Personnel Expectations Related to Fatigue Management 0
EN-OP-115 Conduct of Operations
Attachment 1 CALCULATIONS
NUMBER TITLE REVISION
EC-C97-003 Probabilistic Evaluation of Tornado Missile Strike for Waterford 3 Nuclear Station 0, Change 1EC-M00-004 Thermal-Hydraulic Calculation for the EFW Steam Supply Valves (MS-401A(B)) and Lines 0 Calculation No.
MNQ3-5 Flooding Analysis Outside Containment 4
EC-M99-010 Minimum Flow for DCT Sump Pump 0-2
134669-G-07 Scour Analysis and Scour Protection Design from a Hypothetical Levee Break 1
DRAWINGS
NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION G-153 Feedwater, Condensate & Air Evacuation Systems
G-151 Flow Diagram Main & Extraction Steam System 43 G-924 HVAC - Water Treatment Bldg. & Fire Pump House 6
G1370 Fire Protection Turbine Bldg. 2
OTHER DOCUMENTS
NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
QS-2012-W3-008 QA Follow-up Surveillance of Category A Condition Reports initiated during April 2012 1
QS-2012-W3-007 QA Follow-up review of
EN-QV-126 required issues initiated January, February, and March 2012 1
QS-2011-W3-015 QA Follow-up Surveillance of Category A Condition Reports initiated during September, 2011 July 26, 2011
QS-2011-W3-012 QA Follow-up Surveillance of the 2011 Corrective Action Program (CAP) Audit September 12, 2011
Attachment 1 NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
QS-2011-W3-009 QA Follow-up Surveillance of Quality Assurance Finding
CR-WF3-2011-3084 1
QS-2011-W3-008 QA Follow-up Surveillance of Category A Condition Reports Initiated During May 2011 June 13, 2011
QS-2011-W3-007 QA Follow-up Surveillance of Category A Condition Reports Initiated During April 2011 1
QS-2011-W3-006 QA Follow-up to Category A Condition Reports for January and February 2011 1
LO-WLO-2011-0007 Quality of Causal Analysis Focused Assessment October 13, 2011
LO-WLO-2011-0053 Maintenance Training Focused Self-Assessment (I&C, Mechanical, Electrical) July 29, 2011
LO-WLO-2011-0124 Quality Assurance Self-Assessment Report December 9, 2011
LO-WLO-2012-0015 Snapshot Assessment / Benchmark On: PME Performance May 23, 2012
LO-WLO-2012-0030 Snapshot Assessment / Benchmark On: Maintenance - Advanced Qualifications February 6, 2012 OE34343-20111008 Seismic Monitoring Systems Failed to Actuate During a Seismic Event September 1, 2011 OE35212-20120211 Extraction Steam System Carbon Steel Reducer found Below Design Minimum Wall due to Unpredicted Flow-Accelerated Corrosion November 3, 2011 OE34934-20120107 Nuclear Regulatory Commission Red Finding Root Cause Analysis Results December 9, 2011
LO-WLO-2010-00143 Licensed Operator Requal 71111.11 Pre-Inspection Assessment March 3, 2011
WLO-2011-00018 Evaluate the Effectiveness of Waterford 3 Shift Manager/STA Training Program November 3, 2011 LOR/STAR Biennial Written Exam Worksheet Examination #
WWEX-LOR-11046R/S Examination #
WEX-LOR-11043R/S 2011
Attachment 1 NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
Site Broadcast RCA Drain Limitations February 16, 2012
Waterford 3 - 2010 Employee Concerns Data Analysis
Waterford 3 - 2011 Employee Concerns Data Analysis
FCBT-GET-PATSS Entergy Fleet Specific Plant Access Training 17
Training Review Group Meeting Minutes June 9, 2010
WLP-TRNC-SATR Focused SAT Review 2
2nd
QTR 2010 Instructor Continuing Training Kickoff
LO-WLO-2010-0059 Waterford 3 Equipment Reliability and Core Business Focused Self Assessment May 27-29, 2010
LO-WLO-2010-0091 WF3 IST Program Focused Self Assessment August 20-24, 2010
LO-WLO-2011-0041 Snapshot Assessment/Benchmark on:
Relief Valve Program October 26, 2011
WH-TB-11-5-A2 Evaluation Summary:
Evaluation of Downstream Sump Debris Effects in Support of
GSI-191 June 14, 2011
TB-11-5 Assessment of
WCAP-16406-P-A Abrasive Wear Model and Recommendations March 1, 2011
WH-TB-10-4-A2 Evaluation Summary:
CEDM Upper Pressure Housing Venting August 17, 2010
TB-10-4 Potential for Stress Corrosion Cracking in Control Element Drive Mechanism Upper Pressure Housing April 12, 2010
SD-EFW Emergency Feedwater 11
DCP-3506 Auxiliary Steam Test Connection for EFW Pump A/B March 12, 1997
Attachment 1 NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
DCP-3506 Auxiliary Steam Test Connection for EFW Pump A/B July 24, 1998
DCP-3506 Auxiliary Steam Test Connection for EFW Pump A/B February 25, 1999
DCP-3506 Auxiliary Steam Test Connection for EFW Pump A/B May 26, 1999
DC-3526 EFW Heat Trace Reliability Improvements September 3, 1999
EC 37263 Replacement of MCC DCT Cubicle Compartments 0
Operability Assistance Tool
STI-WO-275977 CS117A, Shutdown Cooling Heat Exchanger Discharge Stop Check Valve Leakage Test 0
EC 31375 Clarify Safety Function and Leakage Criteria for
CS-111A(B) and
CS-117A(B) Draft W3-DBD-003 Emergency Feedwater System 301
CRG Report for Tuesday July 31, 2012
CRG Report for Thursday August 2, 2012
Operational Focus July 31, 2012
Operational Focus August 2, 2012
LO-WLO-2010-00061 Status of the Safety Conscious Work Environment in Security July 6, 2010
LO-WLO-2012-006 Operations Assessment of Plant Status and Configuration Control March 1, 2012
Attachment 1 NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
LPL-EQA-4.2B Environmental Qualification Assessment on Allis-Chalmers Form Wound Motors Used in the Waterford SES Unit No. 3
NRC
IN 2010-04 Diesel Generator Voltage Regulation System Component Due to Latent Manufacturing Defect February 26, 2010
NRC-IN-2010-04-A2-WF3-0002-001 Entergy OE A2 Evaluation Summary July 1, 2010
OP-903-053 V134 Fire Protection System Pump Operability Test January 9, 2008
OP-903-053 V135 Fire Protection System Pump Operability Test June 18, 2009
ER-W3-2002-0429-000 Diesel Fire Pump Louvers 0
WSES-FSAR-UNIT-3 Updated Final Safety Analysis Report
OP-903-053 V136 Fire Protection System Pump Operability Test August 25, 2011
W3-DBD-018 Fire Protection 0
NPF-38 Waterford Operating License
W3-DBD-037 Nuclear Island and Building Design - RCB 1
Ltr from A H Wern Waterford SES Unit No. 3 Levee Stability Analysis December 7, 1972
TS 3.7.5 Flood Protection NA W3F1-2011-0018 License Amendment Request to Relocate Technical Specifications to the Technical Requirements Manual Waterford Steam Electric Station Unit 3
November 21, 2011
AR079684 Scope Revision to PMID 6718 incorporate EPRI Recommend Pdm December 12, 2009
Attachment 1 NUMBER
TITLE
REVISION/ DATE
Annual Work Hour Review & Fatigue Assessment Summary 2010
Annual Work Hour Review & Fatigue Assessment Summary 2011 ODMI SI MTRP0001 Auto Vent 0
ODMI LPSI A Gas Accumulation 14
Entergy System Policies &

Procedures

Workplace Violence and Weapons 1
EN-IS-111 General Industrial Safety Requirements 11
PS-011-102 Personnel Access Control 308
PS-011-103 Vehicle Access Control 303
PS-011-110 Security Owner Controlled Area Vehicle and Personnel Access Control 010
Waterford 3 Accreditation Board Report September 2010
CONDITION REPORTS
CR-WF3-2012-03424
CR-WF3-2012-03461
CR-WF3-2012-03479
CR-WF3-2012-03495
CR-WF3-2012-03557
CR-WF3-2012-03596
CR-WF3-2012-03701
CR-WF3-2012-03729
CR-WF3-2012-03732
CR-WF3-2012-03736
CR-WF3-2012-03744
CR-WF3-2012-03745
CR-WF3-2012-03747
CR-WF3-2012-03752
CR-WF3-2012-03754
CR-WF3-2012-03761
CR-WF3-2012-03657
CR-WF3-2012-03658
CR-WF3-2012-03659
CR-WF3-2012-03660
CR-WF3-2012-03661
CR-WF3-2012-03662
CR-WF3-2012-03663
CR-WF3-2012-03664
CR-WF3-2012-03665
CR-WF3-2012-03666
CR-WF3-2012-03667
CR-WF3-2012-03668
CR-WF3-2012-03669
CR-WF3-2012-03670
CR-WF3-2012-03671
CR-WF3-2012-03672
CR-WF3-2012-03736
CR-WF3-2012-03709
CR-WF3-2012-03710
CR-WF3-2012-03711
CR-WF3-2012-03712
CR-WF3-2012-03713
CR-WF3-2012-03714
Attachment 1 CONDITION REPORTS
CR-WF3-2012-03715
CR-WF3-2012-03716
CR-WF3-2012-03717
CR-WF3-2012-03718
CR-WF3-2012-03719
CR-WF3-2012-03720
CR-WF3-2012-03721
CR-WF3-2012-03722
CR-WF3-2012-03723
CR-WF3-2012-03724
CR-WF3-2012-03725
CR-WF3-2012-03726
CR-WF3-2012-03727
CR-WF3-2012-03728
CR-WF3-2012-03729
CR-WF3-2012-03730
CR-WF3-2012-03731
CR-WF3-2012-03732
CR-WF3-2012-03733
CR-WF3-2012-03734
CR-WF3-2012-03735
CR-WF3-2012-03736
CR-WF3-2012-03737
CR-WF3-2012-03738
CR-WF3-2012-03739
CR-WF3-2012-03740
CR-WF3-2012-03741
CR-WF3-2012-03742
CR-WF3-2010-03235
CR-WF3-2011-07469
CR-WF3-2009-07420
CR-WF3-2010-01166
CR-WF3-2010-03660
CR-WF3-2010-07223
CR-WF3-2010-06219
CR-WF3-2010-02721
CR-WF3-2011-06832
CR-WF3-2011-00679
CR-WF3-2011-01927
CR-WF3-2011-03163
CR-WF3-2011-07602
CR-WF3-2011-03636
CR-WF3-2011-03190
CR-WF3-2011-06205
CR-WF3-2011-04481
CR-WF3-2011-01356
CR-WF3-2011-07605
CR-WF3-2011-02005
CR-WF3-2011-07606
CR-WF3-2011-06254
CR-WF3-2011-07610
CR-WF3-2011-02927
CR-WF3-2011-03084
CR-WF3-2011-00458
CR-WF3-2011-01737
CR-WF3-2012-01048
CR-WF3-2012-00015
CR-WF3-2012-00351
CR-WF3-2012-06832
CR-WF3-2012-01419
CR-WF3-2012-03496
CR-WF3-2010-02940
CR-HQN-2006-00605
CR-WF3-2011-07845
CR-WF3-2011-03522
CR-WF3-2011-03523
CR-WF3-2011-03525
CR-WF3-2011-03526
CR-WF3-2011-03527
CR-WF3-2011-08044
CR-WF3-2011-08045
CR-WF3-2011-08046
CR-WF3-2011-08048
CR-WF3-2011-08049
CR-WF3-2011-08050
CR-WF3-2010-07466
CR-WF3-2011-00553
CR-WF3-2011-06203
CR-WF3-2011-07610
CR-WF3-2011-06204
CR-WF3-2011-08150
CR-WF3-2011-03550
CR-WF3-2011-05841
CR-WF3-2011-07603
CR-WF3-2011-06852
CR-WF3-2011-03350
CR-WF3-2011-05841
CR-WF3-2011-06850
CR-WF3-2012-00013
CR-WF3-2012-00021
CR-WF3-2012-00014
CR-WF3-2012-00818
CR-WF3-2012-01477
CR-WF3-2007-01955
CR-WF3-2012-00837
CR-WF3-2012-01476
CR-WF3-2010-06760
CR-WF3-2011-00217
CR-WF3-2010-02278
CR-WF3-2011-06653
CR-WF3-2012-00024
CR-WF3-2010-01330
CR-WF3-2010-03660
CR-WF3-2010-03050
CR-WF3-2011-03636
CR-WF3-2009-00655
CR-WF3-2009-1276
CR-WF3-2008-04000
CR-WF3-2011-00415
CR-WF3-2011-04935
CR-WF3-2012-00530
CR-WF3-2000-01334
CR-WF3-2012-01334
CR-WF3-2012-03495
CR-WF3-2012-00632
CR-WF3-2011-01737
CR-WF3-2010-07223
CR-WF3-2010-06219
CR-WF3-2011-00458
CR-WF3-2011-00836
CR-WF3-2012-02902
CR-WF3-2012-03190
CR-WF3-2010-04364
CR-WF3-2012-03736
CR-WF3-2012-03461
CR-WF3-2010-03235
CR-WF3-2010-03564
CR-WF3-2010-00686
CR-WF3-2010-02857
CR-WF3-2009-00802
CR-WF3-2010-00341
CR-WF3-2010-02584
CR-WF3-2012-01576
CR-WF3-2012-01581
CR-WF3-2012-00569
Attachment 1 CONDITION REPORTS
CR-WF3-2012-02314
CR-WF3-2011-03807
CR-WF3-2012-03424
CR-WF3-2011-00544
CR-WF3-2011-08043
CR-WF3-2010-04199
CR-WF3-2011-00934
CR-WF3-2011-08047
CR-WF3-2011-01168
CR-WF3-2011-04562
CR-WF3-2011-01965
CR-WF3-2011-00987
CR-WF3-2011-08140
CR-WF3-2011-02546
CR-WF3-2010-05595
CR-WF3-2011-03811
CR-WF3-2012-01044
CR-WF3-1999-00708
CR-WF3-2011-00836
CR-WF3-2011-07603
CR-WF3-2012-00659
CR-WF3-2012-01045
CR-WF3-2011-06573
CR-WF3-2011-06254
CR-WF3-2010-02672
CR-WF3-2011-06870
CR-WF3-2012-01380
CR-HQN-2010-00503
CR-WF3-2012-00507
CR-WF3-2012-03067
CR-WF3-2011-03524
CR-WF3-2012-00507
CR-WF3-2009-04155
CR-WF3-2010-02135
CR-WF3-2010-00213
CR-WF3-2010-00036
CR-HQN-2012-00857
CR-WF3-2006-03416
CR-WF3-2007-04464
CR-WF3-2009-02487
CR-WF3-2009-03499
CR-WF3-2009-04155
CR-WF3-2010-00812
CR-WF3-2010-00890
CR-WF3-2010-02302
CR-WF3-2010-02721
CR-WF3-2010-02927
CR-WF3-2010-03099
CR-WF3-2010-03565
CR-WF3-2010-03588
CR-WF3-2010-03595
CR-WF3-2010-04344
CR-WF3-2010-04352
CR-WF3-2010-04634
CR-WF3-2010-04641
CR-WF3-2010-04659
CR-WF3-2010-04785
CR-WF3-2010-05141
CR-WF3-2010-05927
CR-WF3-2010-05929
CR-WF3-2010-07232
CR-WF3-2010-07276
CR-WF3-2010-07362
CR-WF3-2010-07552
CR-WF3-2011-00030
CR-WF3-2011-00553
CR-WF3-2011-00786
CR-WF3-2011-01897
CR-WF3-2011-01965
CR-WF3-2011-02546
CR-WF3-2011-03350
CR-WF3-2011-03465
CR-WF3-2011-03618
CR-WF3-2011-04230
CR-WF3-2011-05320
CR-WF3-2011-05779
CR-WF3-2011-05840
CR-WF3-2011-06166
CR-WF3-2011-06303
CR-WF3-2011-06573
CR-WF3-2011-06701
CR-WF3-2011-07443
CR-WF3-2011-07462
CR-WF3-2011-08055
CR-WF3-2011-08060
CR-WF3-2011-08081
CR-WF3-2011-08150
CR-WF3-2012-00315
CR-WF3-2012-00632
CR-WF3-2012-00659
CR-WF3-2012-00772
CR-WF3-2012-00797
CR-WF3-2012-00891
CR-WF3-2012-01139
CR-WF3-2012-01173
CR-WF3-2012-01503
CR-WF3-2012-01581
CR-WF3-2012-01605
CR-WF3-2012-01660
CR-WF3-2012-02046
CR-WF3-2012-02315
CR-WF3-2012-03232
CR-WF3-2012-03479
CR-WF3-2012-03596
CR-WF3-2012-03701
CR-WF3-2012-03732
CR-WF3-2012-03747
CR-WF3-2012-03752
CR-WF3-2012-03764
CR-WF3-2011-02519
CR-WF3-2012-01956
CR-WF3-2009-02172
CR-WF3-2011-03582
CR-WF3-2012-03325
CR-WF3-2009-05353
CR-WF3-2011-05625
CR-WF3-2012-03729
CR-WF3-2010-02672
CR-WF3-2011-06203
CR-WF3-2012-03761
CR-WF3-2010-03232
CR-WF3-2011-07415
CR-ANO-C-2011-00441
CR-WF3-2010-03809
CR-WF3-2011-08059
CR-WF3-2010-07466
CR-WF3-2010-04638
CR-WF3-2011-08308
CR-WF3-2011-00594
CR-WF3-2010-05046
CR-WF3-2012-00746
CR-WF3-2012-01507
CR-WF3-2010-06531
CR-WF3-2012-01014
Attachment 1
WORK ORDERS
248856
52230980
289449
275977
196828
262164
283919
256250 64753
205779
296253
303342
296271
305641
52340992
2356683
52371026
52376231
52389001
254348
257755
246482
254493
263585
286950
261413
279127
298743 28810
287883
245561
52382399
52351187
254203
Attachment 2 Information Request June 11, 2012 Biennial Problem Identification and Resolution Inspection - Waterford 3 Nuclear Generating Station Inspection Report
2012008
This inspection will cover the period from May 1, 2010, to June 1, 2012.
All requested information should be limited to this period unless otherwise specified.
To the extent possible, the requested information should be provided electronically in Adobe PDF or Microsoft Office format.
Lists of documents should be provided in Microsoft Excel or a similar sortable format.
A supplemental information request will likely be sent during the week of July 9, 2012.
Please provide the following no later than June 30, 2012:
1. Document Lists Note: for these summary lists, please include the document/reference number, the document title or a description of the issue, initiation date, and current status.
Please include long text descriptions of the issues. a. Summary list of all corrective action documents related to significant conditions adverse to quality that were opened, closed, or evaluated during the period b. Summary list of all corrective action documents related to conditions adverse to quality that were opened or closed during the period c. Summary lists of all corrective action documents which were upgraded or downgraded in priority/significance during the period d. Summary list of all corrective action documents that subsume or "roll up" one or more smaller issues for the period e. Summary lists of operator workarounds, engineering review requests and/or operability evaluations, temporary modifications, and control room and safety system deficiencies opened, closed, or evaluated during the period f. Summary list of plant safety issues raised or addressed by the Employee Concerns Program (or equivalent)

g. Summary list of all Apparent Cause Evaluations completed during the period h. Summary list of all Root Cause Evaluations planned or in progress, but not complete at the end of the period

2. Full Documents, with Attachments a. Root Cause Evaluations completed during the period Attachment 2 b. Quality assurance audits performed during the period c. All audits/surveillances performed during the period of the Corrective Action Program, of individual corrective actions, and of cause evaluations d. Corrective action activity reports, functional area self-assessments, and non-NRC third party assessments completed during the period (do not include INPO assessments) e. Corrective action documents generated during the period for the following: i. NCV's and Violations issued to Waterford 3

ii. LER's issued by Waterford 3 f. Corrective action documents generated for the following, if they were determined to be applicable to Waterford 3 (for those that were evaluated, but determined not to be applicable, provide a summary list): i. NRC Information Notices, Bulletins, and Generic Letters issued or evaluated during the period ii. Part 21 reports issued or evaluated during the period iii. Vendor safet iv. y information letters (or equivalent) issued or evaluated during the period v. Other external events and/or Operating Experience evaluated for applicability during the period g. Corrective action documents generated for the following: i. Emergency planning drills and tabletop exercises performed during the period ii. Maintenance preventable functional failures which occurred or were evaluated during the period iii. Adverse trends in equipment, processes, procedures, or programs which were evaluated during the period iv. Action items generated or addressed by plant safety review committees during the period

Attachment 2 3. Logs and Reports a. Corrective action performance trending/tracking information generated during the period and broken down by functional organization

b. Corrective action effectiveness review reports generated during the period

c. Current system health reports or similar information d. Radiation protection event logs during the period

e. Security event logs and security incidents during the period (sensitive information can be provided by hard copy during first week on site) f. Employee Concern Program (or equivalent) logs (sensitive information can be provided by hard copy during first week on site) g. List of training deficiencies, requests for training improvements, and simulator deficiencies for the period

4. Procedures a. Corrective action program procedures, to include initiation and evaluation procedures, operability determination procedures, apparent and root cause evaluation/determination procedures, and any other procedures which implement the corrective action program at Waterford 3

b. Quality Assurance program procedures c. Employee Concerns Program (or equivalent) procedures d. Procedures which implement/maintain a Safety-Conscious Work Environment

5. Other a. List of risk significant components and systems b. Organization charts for plant staff and long-term/permanent contractors
Attachment 2 Note: "Corrective action documents" refers to condition reports, notifications, action requests, cause evaluations, and/or other similar documents, as applicable to Waterford 3.
As it becomes available, but no later than June 30, 2012, this information should be uploaded on the Certrec IMS website.
When these documents have been compiled (and by June 30, 2012), please download these documents onto a CD or DVD and sent it via overnight carrier to:
Richard L. Smith
U.S. NRC Resident Inspector Office 7003 Bald Hill Road Port Gibson,
MS 39150
Please note that the NRC is not able to accept electronic documents on thumb drives or other similar digital media.
However, CDs and DVDs are acceptable.