ML14182A644: Difference between revisions

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{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES
{{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION REGION IV 1600 E. LAMAR BLVD. ARLINGTON, TX 76011-4511
                            NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
 
                                                REGION IV
July 1, 2014  
                                          1600 E. LAMAR BLVD.
                                        ARLINGTON, TX 76011-4511
                                            July 1, 2014
Adam C. Heflin, President and
Adam C. Heflin, President and
   Chief Executive Officer  
   Chief Executive Officer
Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation
P.O. Box 411
Burlington, KS 66839
SUBJECT:        WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC
                TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION
                REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION
Dear Mr. Heflin:
The purpose of this letter is to notify you that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC),
Region IV staff will conduct a triennial fire protection baseline inspection at the Wolf Creek
Generating Station in October and November 2014. The inspection team will be comprised of
four reactor inspectors from the NRC Region IV office. The inspection will be conducted in
accordance with Inspection Procedure 71111.05T, Fire Protection (Triennial), the NRCs
baseline fire protection inspection procedure.
The schedule for the inspection is as follows:
    *  Information gathering visit:    September 30 - October 1, 2014
    *  Onsite inspection:              October 20 - 24, 2014
                                        November 3 - 7, 2014
The purpose of the information gathering visit is to obtain information and documentation
needed to support the inspection and to become familiar with the fire protection program, fire
protection features, post-fire safe shutdown capabilities, plant layout, and mitigating strategies
to address Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for Interim Safeguards and Security
Compensatory Measures, dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).
The team leader will participate in the information gathering visit to select the fire areas for
evaluation, identify additional documents needed to support the inspection, obtain unescorted
access, and meet with the key personnel who will support the inspection. The fire area
selection will require a walkdown of candidate fire areas in company with key personnel from
your staff. The enclosure to this letter provides an initial list of the documents the team will need
for their review. We request that your staff transmit copies of the documents listed in the


Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation
A. Heflin                                        -2-
P.O. Box 411
enclosure to the NRC Region IV office for team use in preparation for the inspection. Please
Burlington, KS  66839
send this information so that it will arrive in the NRC Region IV office by the dates listed in the
SUBJECT: WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION
enclosure.
REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION
During the information gathering visit, the team leader will also discuss the following inspection
Dear Mr. Heflin:
support administrative details: office space size and location, specific documents requested to
be made available to the team in their office spaces, arrangements for reactor site access, and
The purpose of this letter is to notify you that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC),  
the availability of knowledgeable plant engineering and licensing organization personnel to
Region IV staff will conduct a triennial fire protection baseline inspection at the Wolf Creek
serve as points of contact during the inspection.
Generating Station in October and November 2014. The inspection team will be comprised of  
We request that during the onsite inspection weeks, you ensure that copies of analyses,
four reactor inspectors from the NRC Region IV office. The inspection will be conducted in accordance with Inspection Procedure 71111.05T, "Fire Protection (Triennial)," the NRC's baseline fire protection inspection procedure.  
evaluations, or documentation regarding the implementation and maintenance of the fire
protection program, including post-fire safe shutdown capability, be readily accessible to the
team for their review. Of specific interest for the fire protection portion of the inspection are
those documents that establish that your fire protection program satisfies the NRC regulatory
requirements and conforms to applicable NRC and industry fire protection guidance. For
the B.5.b portion of the inspection, those documents implementing your mitigating strategies
and demonstrating the management of your commitments for the strategies are of specific
interest. Also, please ensure that appropriate personnel are available to support the team at the
site during the inspection. These personnel should be knowledgeable of the plant systems
required to achieve and maintain safe shutdown conditions from inside and outside the control
room, the electrical aspects of the post-fire safe shutdown analyses, the reactor plant fire
protection systems, and the fire protection program and its implementation.
This letter does not contain new or amended information collection requirements subject to the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). Existing information collection
requirements were approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control
number 3150-0011. The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a request for information or an information collection requirement unless the
requesting document displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget control
number.
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRCs Rules of Practice, a copy of this letter and its
enclosure will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document
Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRCs document system
(ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at
http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).


A. Heflin                                    -3-
The schedule for the inspection is as follows:  
Your cooperation and support during this inspection will be appreciated. If you have questions
concerning this inspection or the inspection teams information or logistical needs, please
contact John M. Mateychick, the team lead inspector, in the Region IV office at (817) 200-1560
or John.Mateychick@nrc.gov.
                                              Sincerely,
                                              /RA/
                                              John L. Dixon, Jr., Acting Branch Chief
                                              Engineering Branch 2
                                              Division of Reactor Safety
Docket No.: 50-482
License No.: NPF-42
Enclosure:
Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request
cc w/encl:
Electronic Distribution to Wolf Creek Generating Station


* Information gathering visitSeptember 30 - October 1, 2014  
                  Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request
* Onsite inspection:  October 20 - 24, 2014      November 3 - 7, 2014
Please provide the following documentation (items 1 - 5) prior to the onsite information
The purpose of the information gathering visit is to obtain information and documentation
gathering visit, preferably no later than September 19, 2014. Whenever practical, please
needed to support the inspection and to become familiar with the fire protection program, fire  
provide copies electronically. Please provide an index of the requested documents which
protection features, post-fire safe shutdown capabilities, plant layout, and mitigating strategies
includes a brief description of the document and the numerical heading associated with the
to address Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, "Order for Interim Safeguards and Security Compensatory Measures," dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).  
request (i.e., where it can be found in the list of documents requested).
1. The current version of the fire protection program and fire hazards analysis.
The team leader will participate in the information gathering visit to select the fire areas for
2. Post-fire safe shutdown analysis and the supporting calculations that demonstrate
evaluation, identify additional documents needed to support the inspection, obtain unescorted
    acceptable plant response.
access, and meet with the key personnel who will support the inspection.  The fire area  
3. Licensing basis documents for fire protection (safety evaluation reports, pertinent sections of
selection will require a walkdown of candidate fire areas in company with key personnel from your staff. The enclosure to this letter provides an initial list of the documents the team will need
    the final safety analysis report, exemptions, deviations, letters to/from the NRC regarding fire
for their review. We request that your staff transmit copies of the documents listed in the
    protection/fire safe shutdown, etc.).
 
4. The fire probabilistic risk assessment or portions of the plants individual plant examination
A. Heflin - 2 -
    for external events (IPEEE) report addressing fire events. Also, include the results of any
    post-IPEEE reviews and listings of actions taken/plant modifications conducted in response
enclosure to the NRC Region IV office for team
    to IPEEE information that relate to fire risk.
use in preparation for the inspection. Please send this information so that it will arrive in the NRC Region IV office by the dates listed in the enclosure.  
5. A copy of the documents that support your multiple spurious operation evaluations (i.e.,
    expert panel reports, evaluation packages, etc.).
Please provide the following documentation (items 6 - 50) prior to the week of
October 13, 2014, to support inspection preparation. Whenever practical, please provide copies
electronically. Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all
details are legible.
6. Plant layout and equipment drawings for fire areas that identify: (a) the physical plant
    locations of major hot standby and cold shutdown equipment; (b) plant fire area and/or fire
    zone delineation; (c) the locations of fire protection equipment, such as detection,
    suppression, and post-fire emergency lighting units; and (d) fire area boundaries. The
    specific documents needed to support inspection preparation will be discussed during the
    site visit.
7. Fire protection program implementing procedures (e.g., administrative controls, operator
    response procedures for fires, fire fighting procedures, etc.).
8. Operating procedures used for achieving and maintaining hot and cold shutdown conditions
    from the control room in the event of a fire outside the control room (III.G.2 areas).
9. Operating procedures used to implement an alternative shutdown capability with or without
    control room evacuation (III.G.3 areas).
10. A list of equipment used to achieve and maintain hot standby and cold shutdown in the
    event of a fire (safe shutdown equipment list).
                                                                                        Enclosure


11. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams showing the components used to achieve and
During the information gathering visit, the team leader will also discuss the following inspection  
    maintain hot standby and cold shutdown for normal and alternative shutdown. Please
support administrative details:  office space size and location, specific documents requested to
    provide one copy of the piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams for these systems of a
be made available to the team in their office spaces, arrangements for reactor site access, and the availability of knowledgeable plant engineering and licensing organization personnel to serve as points of contact during the inspection.  
    size sufficient to read all details. These should include the systems used for reactor coolant
    system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure control, decay heat removal, and reactivity
    control, including the essential support systems.
12. A listing, with descriptions, of design change packages performed since the last triennial fire
    protection inspection which were determined to impact fire protection and post-fire safe
    shutdowns.
13. Fire protection program change evaluations (Generic Letter 86-10 evaluations) performed
    since the last triennial fire protection inspection.
14. Procedures/instructions that control the configuration of the plants fire protection program,
    features, and post-fire safe shutdown methodology and system design. Also,
    procedures/instructions that govern the implementation of plant modifications, maintenance,
    and special operations and their impact on fire protection.
15. A listing of open and closed corrective action documents initiated since the last triennial fire
    protection inspection which relate to the fire protection program or equipment, including
    corrective actions for fire-induced circuit failures (both single and multiple spurious
    actuations) for the selected fire areas. Include the corrective action program document
    number, date, and subject.
16. A listing of the applicable codes and standards (with the versions/dates) related to the
    design of plant fire protection features and evaluations of any code deviations. Copies of
    these codes should be available for review.
17. Drawings of the portions of the emergency lighting system which support fire response.
18. Procedures used to remove smoke from safety-related areas and the engineering studies or
    calculations which support the design basis.
19. Drawings of communication systems credited in the license basis for firefighting and plant
    operations during fires where control room is occupied and/or evacuated.
20. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams for the fire water and sprinkler systems.
21. A listing of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures for alternative shutdown
    capability and fire barriers, detectors, pumps, and suppression systems. Also, include a list
    of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures which verify fuse and breaker
    coordination in accordance with the post-fire safe shutdown coordination analysis.
22. Maintenance rule performance criteria and a summary of the performance history for
    systems or functions monitored within the maintenance rule program that support the fire
    protection program or involve safe shutdown equipment over the period since the last
    triennial fire protection inspection.
                                                  -2-


23. Fire protection program requirements (e.g., limiting conditions for operation, surveillance test
We request that during the onsite inspection weeks, you ensure that copies of analyses,  
    requirements) covered by technical specifications, the technical requirements manual, the
evaluations, or documentation regarding the implementation and maintenance of the fire protection program, including post-fire safe shutdown capability, be readily accessible to the team for their review.  Of specific interest for the fire protection portion of the inspection are  
    updated final safety analysis report, or similar documents.
those documents that establish that your fire protection program satisfies the NRC regulatory
24. Internal and external self-assessments, audits, peer-assessments, or similar reviews related
requirements and conforms to applicable NRC and industry fire protection guidance. For
    to post-fire safe shutdown capability or the fire protection program completed since the last
the B.5.b portion of the inspection, those documents implementing your mitigating strategies
    triennial fire protection inspection.
and demonstrating the management of your commitments for the strategies are of specific interest. Also, please ensure that appropriate personnel are available to support the team at the  
25. A list of manual actions taken outside the control room which are credited to mitigate the
site during the inspection. These personnel should be knowledgeable of the plant systems
    consequences of fires in III.G.2 areas (non-alternative shutdown areas). The list should
required to achieve and maintain safe shutdown conditions from inside and outside the control
    group actions by the initiating fire area or zone and indicate where the action must take
room, the electrical aspects of the post-fire safe shutdown analyses, the reactor plant fire  
    place.
protection systems, and the fire protection program and its implementation.  
26. Electronic copies of operator study guides (i.e., lesson plan text and graphics) or design
This letter does not contain new or amended information collection requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).  Existing information collection
    basis documents that describe the purpose/function/operating characteristics of the safe
requirements were approved by the Offi
    shutdown systems (reactor coolant system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure
ce of Management and Budget under control number 3150-0011. The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a request for information or an information collection requirement unless the requesting document displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget control  
    control, decay heat removal, and reactivity control, including the essential support systems)
number.  
    and Fire Protection Systems (detection, suppression, and water supply).
27. Two copies of one-line diagrams of the AC and vital DC electrical distribution systems.
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRC's "Rules of Practice," a copy of this letter and its
    These should depict how power gets from the switchyard to the engineered safety feature
    loads (480V and 4160V).
28. A list of automatic and manually initiated gaseous fire suppression systems in the plant,
    giving their location and the key equipment being protected.
29. A list of repairs (and the procedure that controls the repairs) needed to reach and/or
    maintain hot or cold shutdown.
30. A list of high to low pressure interface valves.
31. Procedures governing the training and operation of the fire brigade.
32. Organization charts of site personnel down to the level of fire protection staff personnel.
33. A contact list of key site personnel who will be supporting this inspection, giving the office
    location and phone number onsite.
34. The team would like to observe an unannounced fire brigade drill in the plant, if possible,
    during the week of November 03, 2014. Please put us in contact with the appropriate
    personnel for planning fire brigade drills during the onsite information gathering trip.
35. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the alternative shutdown procedure with
    qualified operators in the plant during the week of October 20, 2014. The team would like to
    perform a walkthrough of a sample of manual actions required for other fires not requiring
    control room evacuation. Please put us in contact with the appropriate personnel for
    planning the walkthroughs during the onsite information gathering trip.
36. Procedures and data from the latest performance of the fire pump flow and pressure tests
    and the yard loop flow test along with available performance trending data.
                                                  -3-


enclosure will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRC's document system (ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at 
37. The corrective actions taken to address the following previously identified issues:
http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).  
    a. FIN 05000482/2011007-01, Failure to Verify Isolation of Associated Circuits on Isolation
        Switches
    b. NCV 05000482/2011007-02, Inadequate Alternative Shutdown Procedure
    c. NCV 05000482/2011007-03, Failure to Ensure Post-Fire Safe Shutdown Components
        Remain Free of Fire Damage
    d. NCV 05000482/2011007-04, Procedure Inadequacies Related to Cold Shutdown
        Repairs
The following documents (items 38 - 50) involve B.5.b mitigating strategies.
38. License condition that incorporated the requirements issued to address Section B.5.b of
    NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security Compensatory
    Measures, dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).
39. A list of all modifications to regulatory commitments made to meet the requirements of
    Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security
    Compensatory Measures, dated February 25, 2002; the subsequently imposed license
    conditions; and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).
40. A list of procedures/guidelines which were revised or generated to implement the mitigation
    strategies. These could be extensive damage mitigation guidelines, severe accident
    management guidelines, emergency operating procedures, abnormal operating procedures,
    etc.
41. A matrix that shows the correlation between the mitigation strategies identified in Nuclear
    Energy Institute 06-12 and the site-specific procedures or guidelines that are used to
    implement each strategy.
42. A list of engineering evaluations/calculations that were used to verify engineering bases for
    the mitigation strategies.
43. Piping and instrumentation diagrams or simplified flow diagrams for systems relied upon in
    the mitigation strategies. These could be the type used for training.
44. A list of modification packages and simplified drawings/descriptions of modifications that
    were made to plant systems to implement the mitigation strategies.
45. Procedures used to inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to
    implement the mitigation strategies.
46. A list of B.5.b strategies, if any, which have implementing details that differ from that
    documented in the submittals to the NRC and the safety evaluation report.
47. Site general arrangement drawing(s) that show the majority of buildings/areas referenced in
    B.5.b documents.
                                                  -4-


48. Training records and lesson plans related to the B.5.b mitigating strategies.
 
49. Copies of Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) (e.g., with local fire departments) required
A. Heflin - 3 -
    to implement any mitigating strategies.
50. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the procedure implementing a sample
Your cooperation and support during this inspection will be appreciated. If you have questions concerning this inspection or the inspection team's information or logistical needs, please contact John M. Mateychick, the team lead inspector, in the Region IV office at (817) 200-1560
    mitigating strategy (to be selected by the inspector during the information gathering visit)
or John.Mateychick@nrc.gov.  
    and the inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to implement
    the mitigation strategies during the week of November 03, 2014. Please put us in contact
Sincerely, 
    with the appropriate personnel for planning the walkthrough during the onsite information
    gathering trip.
The following documentation needs (items 51 - 54) will be dependent upon sample selections
and will be finalized during discussions with your staff. Please provide the required documents
prior to the week of October 13, 2014. Whenever practical, please provide copies electronically.
Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all details are legible.
51. Pre-fire plans for the selected fire areas (areas to be selected by the team during the onsite
    information gathering trip).
52. List of identified fire-induced circuit failure configurations that could prevent operation or
    cause maloperation of equipment credited for safe shutdown in the event of a fire (for the
    selected fire areas). Include failure configurations associated with hot shorts, open circuits,
    or shorts to ground identified as potentially causing spurious or multiple spurious actuations
    or maloperations of this equipment.
53. Cable routing information for components and equipment credited for safe shutdown in the
    selected fire areas. This information request item will be discussed and finalized with your
    staff during the information gathering visit.
54. Drawings showing the location details for detection and suppression systems in the selected
    fire areas.
                                                    -5-


/RA/ 
John L. Dixon, Jr., Acting Branch Chief
Engineering Branch 2
Division of Reactor Safety
Docket No.:  50-482
License No.:  NPF-42


  Enclosure:  Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request
  ML14182A644
 
   SUNSI Review              ADAMS          Publicly Available      Non-Sensitive    Keyword:
  By: JMM                     Yes No     Non-Publicly Available  Sensitive         NRC-002
cc w/encl:    
OFFICE         RIV:DRS/SRI                                             C: EB2
Electronic Distribution to Wolf Creek Generating Station
NAME           JMateychick\tk                                           JDixon
 
  SIGNATURE         /RA/                                                   /RA/
 
DATE           6/19/14                                                 7/1/14
                                     
Request for Information to: Adam Heflin from John Dixon, dated July 1, 2014
 
SUBJECT: WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC
 
            TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION
  Enclosure Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request
            REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION
Please provide the following documentation (items 1 - 5) prior to the onsite information gathering visit, preferably no later than September 19, 2014.  Whenever practical, please provide copies electronically.  Please provide an index of the requested documents which includes a brief description of the document and the numerical heading associated with the
Electronic distribution by RIV:
request (i.e., where it can be found in the list of documents requested). 
Regional Administrator (Marc.Dapas@nrc.gov)
 
Deputy Regional Administrator (Kriss.Kennedy@nrc.gov)
Acting DRP Director (Troy.Pruett@nrc.gov)
1. The current version of the fire protection program and fire hazards analysis.
Acting DRP Deputy Director (Michael.Hay@nrc.gov)
2. Post-fire safe shutdown analysis and the supporting calculations that demonstrate acceptable plant response. 
DRS Director (Anton.Vegel@nrc.gov)
DRS Deputy Director (Jeff.Clark@nrc.gov)
3. Licensing basis documents for fire protection (safety evaluation reports, pertinent sections of
Senior Resident Inspector (Charles.Peabody@nrc.gov)
the final safety analysis report, exemptions, deviations, letters to/from the NRC regarding fire protection/fire safe shutdown, etc.).
Resident Inspector (Raja.Stroble@nrc.gov)
WC Administrative Assistant (Carey.Spoon@nrc.gov)
4. The fire probabilistic risk assessment or portions of the plant's individual plant examination for external events (IPEEE) report addressing fire events.  Also, include the results of any post-IPEEE reviews and listings of actions taken/plant modifications conducted in response to IPEEE information that relate to fire risk. 
Branch Chief, DRP/B (Neil.OKeefe@nrc.gov)
Senior Project Engineer, DRP/B (David.Proulx@nrc.gov)
5. A copy of the documents that support your multiple spurious operation evaluations (i.e., expert panel reports, evaluation packages, etc.). 
Project Engineer, DRP/B (Fabian.Thomas@nrc.gov)
Please provide the following documentation (items 6 - 50) prior to the week of  October 13, 2014, to support inspection preparation.  Whenever practical, please provide copies
Public Affairs Officer (Victor.Dricks@nrc.gov)
electronically.  Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all
Public Affairs Officer (Lara.Uselding@nrc.gov)
details are legible. 
Project Manager (Fred.Lyon@nrc.gov)
 
Branch Chief, DRS/TSB (Geoffrey.Miller@nrc.gov)
6. Plant layout and equipment drawings for fire areas that identify: (a) the physical plant locations of major hot standby and cold shutdown equipment; (b) plant fire area and/or fire
RITS Coordinator (Marisa.Herrera@nrc.gov)
zone delineation; (c) the locations of fire protection equipment, such as detection,
Regional Counsel (Karla.Fuller@nrc.gov)
suppression, and post-fire emergency lighting units; and (d) fire area boundaries.  The
Technical Support Assistant (Loretta.Williams@nrc.gov)
specific documents needed to support inspection preparation will be discussed during the
Congressional Affairs Officer (Jenny.Weil@nrc.gov)
site visit.
RIV/ETA: OEDO (Yen-Ju.Chen@nrc.gov)
7. Fire protection program implementing procedures (e.g., administrative controls, operator response procedures for fires, fire fighting procedures, etc.). 
8. Operating procedures used for achieving and maintaining hot and cold shutdown conditions from the control room in the event of a fire outside the control room (III.G.2 areas).
9. Operating procedures used to implement an al
ternative shutdown capability with or without
control room evacuation (III.G.3 areas).
10. A list of equipment used to achieve and maintain hot standby and cold shutdown in the event of a fire (safe shutdown equipment list). 
 
  - 2 -    11. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams showing the components used to achieve and maintain hot standby and cold shutdown for normal and alternative shutdown.  Please
 
provide one copy of the piping and instrumentat
ion (flow) diagrams for these systems of a size sufficient to read all details.  These should include the systems used for reactor coolant system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure
control, decay heat removal, and reactivity control, including the essential support systems.
12. A listing, with descriptions, of design change packages performed since the last triennial fire protection inspection which were determined to impact fire protection and post-fire safe
shutdowns. 
13. Fire protection program change evaluations (Generic Letter 86-10 evaluations) performed since the last triennial fire protection inspection.
14. Procedures/instructions that control the configuration of the plant's fire protection program, features, and post-fire safe shutdown methodology and system design.  Also,
procedures/instructions that govern the implementation of plant modifications, maintenance, and special operations and their impact on fire protection.
15. A listing of open and closed corrective action documents initiated since the last triennial fire protection inspection which relate to the fire protection program or equipment, including
corrective actions for fire-induced circuit failures (both single and multiple spurious
actuations) for the selected fire areas.  Include the corrective action program document
number, date, and subject.
16. A listing of the applicable codes and standards (with the versions/dates) related to the design of plant fire protection features and evaluations of any code deviations.  Copies of
these codes should be available for review.
17. Drawings of the portions of the emergency lighting system which support fire response. 
18. Procedures used to remove smoke from safety-related areas and the engineering studies or calculations which support the design basis.
19. Drawings of communication systems credited in the license basis for firefighting and plant operations during fires where control room is occupied and/or evacuated.
20. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams for the fire water and sprinkler systems.
 
21. A listing of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures for alternative shutdown capability and fire barriers, detectors, pumps, and suppression systems.  Also, include a list of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures which verify fuse and breaker coordination in accordance with the post-fire safe shutdown coordination analysis.
   
22. Maintenance rule performance criteria and a summary of the performance history for systems or functions monitored within the maintenance rule program that support the fire
protection program or involve safe shutdown equipment over the period since the last triennial fire protection inspection.
 
- 3 -  23. Fire protection program requirements (e.g., limiting conditions for operation, surveillance test
requirements) covered by technical specifications, the technical requirements manual, the updated final safety analysis report, or similar documents.
24. Internal and external self-assessments, audits, peer-assessments, or similar reviews related to post-fire safe shutdown capability or the fire protection program completed since the last
triennial fire protection inspection.
25. A list of manual actions taken outside the control room which are credited to mitigate the consequences of fires in III.G.2 areas (non-alternative shutdown areas).  The list should group actions by the initiating fire area or zone and indicate where the action must take
place. 
26. Electronic copies of operator study guides (i.e., lesson plan text and graphics) or design basis documents that describe the purpose/function/operating characteristics of the safe shutdown systems (reactor coolant system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure
control, decay heat removal, and reactivity control, including the essential support systems)
and Fire Protection Systems (detection, suppression, and water supply).
27. Two copies of one-line diagrams of the AC and vital DC electrical distribution systems.  These should depict how power gets from the switchyard to the engineered safety feature
loads (480V and 4160V). 
28. A list of automatic and manually initiated gaseous fire suppression systems in the plant, giving their location and the key equipment being protected. 
29. A list of repairs (and the procedure that controls the repairs) needed to reach and/or maintain hot or cold shutdown.
30. A list of high to low pressure interface valves.
31. Procedures governing the training and operation of the fire brigade.
 
32. Organization charts of site personnel down to the level of fire protection staff personnel.
 
33. A contact list of key site personnel who will be supporting this inspection, giving the office location and phone number onsite.
34. The team would like to observe an unannounced fire brigade drill in the plant, if possible, during the week of November 03, 2014.  Please put us in contact with the appropriate
personnel for planning fire brigade drills during the onsite information gathering trip.
35. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the alternative shutdown procedure with qualified operators in the plant during the week of October 20, 2014.  The team would like to
perform a walkthrough of a sample of manual actions required for other fires not requiring
control room evacuation.  Please put us in contact with the appropriate personnel for
planning the walkthroughs during the onsite information gathering trip.
36. Procedures and data from the latest performance of the fire pump flow and pressure tests and the yard loop flow test along with available performance trending data.
 
- 4 -  37. The corrective actions taken to address the following previously identified issues:
a. FIN 05000482/2011007-01, "Failure to Verify Isolation of Associated Circuits on Isolation
Switches"
b. NCV 05000482/2011007-02, "Inadequate Alternative Shutdown Procedure"
c. NCV 05000482/2011007-03, "Failure to Ensure Post-Fire Safe Shutdown Components Remain Free of Fire Damage"
d. NCV 05000482/2011007-04, "Procedure Inadequacies Related to Cold Shutdown
Repairs"
The following documents (items 38 - 50) involve B.5.b mitigating strategies.
38. License condition that incorporated the requirements issued to address Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, "Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security Compensatory
 
Measures," dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).
39. A list of all modifications to regulatory
commitments made to meet the requirements of Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, "Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security
Compensatory Measures," dated February 25, 2002; the subsequently imposed license
conditions; and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).
40. A list of procedures/guidelines which were revised or generated to implement the mitigation strategies.  These could be extensive damage mitigation guidelines, severe accident management guidelines, emergency operating procedures, abnormal operating procedures,
etc. 
41. A matrix that shows the correlation between the mitigation strategies identified in Nuclear Energy Institute 06-12 and the site-specific procedures or guidelines that are used to implement each strategy.
42. A list of engineering evaluations/calculations that were used to verify engineering bases for the mitigation strategies.
43. Piping and instrumentation diagrams or simplified flow diagrams for systems relied upon in the mitigation strategies.  These could be the type used for training.
44. A list of modification packages and simplified drawings/descriptions of modifications that were made to plant systems to implement the mitigation strategies.
45. Procedures used to inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to implement the mitigation strategies.
46. A list of B.5.b strategies, if any, which have implementing details that differ from that documented in the submittals to the NRC and the safety evaluation report.
47. Site general arrangement drawing(s) that show the majority of buildings/areas referenced in
B.5.b documents.
 
- 5 -  48. Training records and lesson plans related to the B.5.b mitigating strategies.
49. Copies of Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) (e.g., with local fire departments) required to implement any mitigating strategies.
50. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the procedure implementing a sample mitigating strategy (to be selected by the inspector during the information gathering visit)
and the inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to implement the mitigation strategies during the week of November 03, 2014.  Please put us in contact with the appropriate personnel for planning the walkthrough during the onsite information
gathering trip.
The following documentation needs (items 51 - 54) will be dependent upon sample selections
and will be finalized during discussions with your staff.  Please provide the required documents prior to the week of October 13, 2014.  Whenever practical, please provide copies electronically.  Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all details are legible. 
51. Pre-fire plans for the selected fire areas (areas to be selected by the team during the onsite
information gathering trip). 
52. List of identified fire-induced circuit failure configurations that could prevent operation or cause maloperation of equipment credited for safe shutdown in the event of a fire (for the
selected fire areas).  Include failure configurations associated with hot shorts, open circuits, or shorts to ground identified as potentially causing spurious or multiple spurious actuations or maloperations of this equipment.
53. Cable routing information for components and equipment credited for safe shutdown in the selected fire areas.  This information request item will be discussed and finalized with your
staff during the information gathering visit.
54. Drawings showing the location details for detection and suppression systems in the selected fire areas.
 
 
 
ML14182A644  SUNSI Review By: JMM ADAMS Yes    No Publicly Available  Non-Publicly Available Non-Sensitive Sensitive Keyword: NRC-002 OFFICE RIV:DRS/SRI C: EB2 NAME JMateychick\tk  JDixon SIGNATURE   /RA/ /RA/ DATE 6/19/14 7/1/14
  Request for Information to: Adam Heflin from John Dixon, dated July 1, 2014  
SUBJECT: WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION  
Electronic distribution by RIV
: Regional Administrator (Marc.Dapas@nrc.gov)  
Deputy Regional Administrator (Kriss.Kennedy@nrc.gov) Acting DRP Director (Troy.Pruett@nrc.gov) Acting DRP Deputy Director (Michael.Hay@nrc.gov)  
DRS Director (Anton.Vegel@nrc.gov)  
DRS Deputy Director (Jeff.Clark@nrc.gov)
Senior Resident Inspector (Charles.Peabody@nrc.gov)  
Resident Inspector (Raja.Stroble@nrc.gov) WC Administrative Assistant (Carey.Spoon@nrc.gov)  
 
Branch Chief, DRP/B (Neil.OKeefe@nrc.gov)  
Senior Project Engineer, DRP/B (David.Proulx@nrc.gov)  
Project Engineer, DRP/B (Fabian.Thomas@nrc.gov) Public Affairs Officer (Victor.Dricks@nrc.gov) Public Affairs Officer (Lara.Uselding@nrc.gov)  
 
Project Manager (Fred.Lyon@nrc.gov)  
Branch Chief, DRS/TSB (Geoffrey.Miller@nrc.gov)  
RITS Coordinator (Marisa.Herrera@nrc.gov)  
Regional Counsel (Karla.Fuller@nrc.gov) Technical Support Assistant (Loretta.Williams@nrc.gov) Congressional Affairs Officer (Jenny.Weil@nrc.gov)  
RIV/ETA: OEDO (Yen-Ju.Chen
@nrc.gov)
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 02:55, 4 November 2019

Notification of an NRC Triennial Fire Protection Baseline Inspection NRC Inspection Report 05000482/2014008 and Request for Information
ML14182A644
Person / Time
Site: Wolf Creek Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation icon.png
Issue date: 07/01/2014
From: John Dixon
NRC/RGN-IV/DRS/EB-2
To: Heflin A
Wolf Creek
J. Mateychick
References
IR-14-008
Download: ML14182A644 (10)


See also: IR 05000482/2014008

Text

UNITED STATES

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

REGION IV

1600 E. LAMAR BLVD.

ARLINGTON, TX 76011-4511

July 1, 2014

Adam C. Heflin, President and

Chief Executive Officer

Wolf Creek Nuclear Operating Corporation

P.O. Box 411

Burlington, KS 66839

SUBJECT: WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC

TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION

REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION

Dear Mr. Heflin:

The purpose of this letter is to notify you that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC),

Region IV staff will conduct a triennial fire protection baseline inspection at the Wolf Creek

Generating Station in October and November 2014. The inspection team will be comprised of

four reactor inspectors from the NRC Region IV office. The inspection will be conducted in

accordance with Inspection Procedure 71111.05T, Fire Protection (Triennial), the NRCs

baseline fire protection inspection procedure.

The schedule for the inspection is as follows:

  • Information gathering visit: September 30 - October 1, 2014
  • Onsite inspection: October 20 - 24, 2014

November 3 - 7, 2014

The purpose of the information gathering visit is to obtain information and documentation

needed to support the inspection and to become familiar with the fire protection program, fire

protection features, post-fire safe shutdown capabilities, plant layout, and mitigating strategies

to address Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for Interim Safeguards and Security

Compensatory Measures, dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).

The team leader will participate in the information gathering visit to select the fire areas for

evaluation, identify additional documents needed to support the inspection, obtain unescorted

access, and meet with the key personnel who will support the inspection. The fire area

selection will require a walkdown of candidate fire areas in company with key personnel from

your staff. The enclosure to this letter provides an initial list of the documents the team will need

for their review. We request that your staff transmit copies of the documents listed in the

A. Heflin -2-

enclosure to the NRC Region IV office for team use in preparation for the inspection. Please

send this information so that it will arrive in the NRC Region IV office by the dates listed in the

enclosure.

During the information gathering visit, the team leader will also discuss the following inspection

support administrative details: office space size and location, specific documents requested to

be made available to the team in their office spaces, arrangements for reactor site access, and

the availability of knowledgeable plant engineering and licensing organization personnel to

serve as points of contact during the inspection.

We request that during the onsite inspection weeks, you ensure that copies of analyses,

evaluations, or documentation regarding the implementation and maintenance of the fire

protection program, including post-fire safe shutdown capability, be readily accessible to the

team for their review. Of specific interest for the fire protection portion of the inspection are

those documents that establish that your fire protection program satisfies the NRC regulatory

requirements and conforms to applicable NRC and industry fire protection guidance. For

the B.5.b portion of the inspection, those documents implementing your mitigating strategies

and demonstrating the management of your commitments for the strategies are of specific

interest. Also, please ensure that appropriate personnel are available to support the team at the

site during the inspection. These personnel should be knowledgeable of the plant systems

required to achieve and maintain safe shutdown conditions from inside and outside the control

room, the electrical aspects of the post-fire safe shutdown analyses, the reactor plant fire

protection systems, and the fire protection program and its implementation.

This letter does not contain new or amended information collection requirements subject to the

Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). Existing information collection

requirements were approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control

number 3150-0011. The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to

respond to, a request for information or an information collection requirement unless the

requesting document displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget control

number.

In accordance with 10 CFR 2.390 of the NRCs Rules of Practice, a copy of this letter and its

enclosure will be available electronically for public inspection in the NRC Public Document

Room or from the Publicly Available Records (PARS) component of NRCs document system

(ADAMS). ADAMS is accessible from the NRC Web site at

http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html (the Public Electronic Reading Room).

A. Heflin -3-

Your cooperation and support during this inspection will be appreciated. If you have questions

concerning this inspection or the inspection teams information or logistical needs, please

contact John M. Mateychick, the team lead inspector, in the Region IV office at (817) 200-1560

or John.Mateychick@nrc.gov.

Sincerely,

/RA/

John L. Dixon, Jr., Acting Branch Chief

Engineering Branch 2

Division of Reactor Safety

Docket No.: 50-482

License No.: NPF-42

Enclosure:

Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request

cc w/encl:

Electronic Distribution to Wolf Creek Generating Station

Triennial Fire Protection Inspection Documentation Request

Please provide the following documentation (items 1 - 5) prior to the onsite information

gathering visit, preferably no later than September 19, 2014. Whenever practical, please

provide copies electronically. Please provide an index of the requested documents which

includes a brief description of the document and the numerical heading associated with the

request (i.e., where it can be found in the list of documents requested).

1. The current version of the fire protection program and fire hazards analysis.

2. Post-fire safe shutdown analysis and the supporting calculations that demonstrate

acceptable plant response.

3. Licensing basis documents for fire protection (safety evaluation reports, pertinent sections of

the final safety analysis report, exemptions, deviations, letters to/from the NRC regarding fire

protection/fire safe shutdown, etc.).

4. The fire probabilistic risk assessment or portions of the plants individual plant examination

for external events (IPEEE) report addressing fire events. Also, include the results of any

post-IPEEE reviews and listings of actions taken/plant modifications conducted in response

to IPEEE information that relate to fire risk.

5. A copy of the documents that support your multiple spurious operation evaluations (i.e.,

expert panel reports, evaluation packages, etc.).

Please provide the following documentation (items 6 - 50) prior to the week of

October 13, 2014, to support inspection preparation. Whenever practical, please provide copies

electronically. Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all

details are legible.

6. Plant layout and equipment drawings for fire areas that identify: (a) the physical plant

locations of major hot standby and cold shutdown equipment; (b) plant fire area and/or fire

zone delineation; (c) the locations of fire protection equipment, such as detection,

suppression, and post-fire emergency lighting units; and (d) fire area boundaries. The

specific documents needed to support inspection preparation will be discussed during the

site visit.

7. Fire protection program implementing procedures (e.g., administrative controls, operator

response procedures for fires, fire fighting procedures, etc.).

8. Operating procedures used for achieving and maintaining hot and cold shutdown conditions

from the control room in the event of a fire outside the control room (III.G.2 areas).

9. Operating procedures used to implement an alternative shutdown capability with or without

control room evacuation (III.G.3 areas).

10. A list of equipment used to achieve and maintain hot standby and cold shutdown in the

event of a fire (safe shutdown equipment list).

Enclosure

11. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams showing the components used to achieve and

maintain hot standby and cold shutdown for normal and alternative shutdown. Please

provide one copy of the piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams for these systems of a

size sufficient to read all details. These should include the systems used for reactor coolant

system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure control, decay heat removal, and reactivity

control, including the essential support systems.

12. A listing, with descriptions, of design change packages performed since the last triennial fire

protection inspection which were determined to impact fire protection and post-fire safe

shutdowns.

13. Fire protection program change evaluations (Generic Letter 86-10 evaluations) performed

since the last triennial fire protection inspection.

14. Procedures/instructions that control the configuration of the plants fire protection program,

features, and post-fire safe shutdown methodology and system design. Also,

procedures/instructions that govern the implementation of plant modifications, maintenance,

and special operations and their impact on fire protection.

15. A listing of open and closed corrective action documents initiated since the last triennial fire

protection inspection which relate to the fire protection program or equipment, including

corrective actions for fire-induced circuit failures (both single and multiple spurious

actuations) for the selected fire areas. Include the corrective action program document

number, date, and subject.

16. A listing of the applicable codes and standards (with the versions/dates) related to the

design of plant fire protection features and evaluations of any code deviations. Copies of

these codes should be available for review.

17. Drawings of the portions of the emergency lighting system which support fire response.

18. Procedures used to remove smoke from safety-related areas and the engineering studies or

calculations which support the design basis.

19. Drawings of communication systems credited in the license basis for firefighting and plant

operations during fires where control room is occupied and/or evacuated.

20. Piping and instrumentation (flow) diagrams for the fire water and sprinkler systems.

21. A listing of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures for alternative shutdown

capability and fire barriers, detectors, pumps, and suppression systems. Also, include a list

of maintenance and surveillance testing procedures which verify fuse and breaker

coordination in accordance with the post-fire safe shutdown coordination analysis.

22. Maintenance rule performance criteria and a summary of the performance history for

systems or functions monitored within the maintenance rule program that support the fire

protection program or involve safe shutdown equipment over the period since the last

triennial fire protection inspection.

-2-

23. Fire protection program requirements (e.g., limiting conditions for operation, surveillance test

requirements) covered by technical specifications, the technical requirements manual, the

updated final safety analysis report, or similar documents.

24. Internal and external self-assessments, audits, peer-assessments, or similar reviews related

to post-fire safe shutdown capability or the fire protection program completed since the last

triennial fire protection inspection.

25. A list of manual actions taken outside the control room which are credited to mitigate the

consequences of fires in III.G.2 areas (non-alternative shutdown areas). The list should

group actions by the initiating fire area or zone and indicate where the action must take

place.

26. Electronic copies of operator study guides (i.e., lesson plan text and graphics) or design

basis documents that describe the purpose/function/operating characteristics of the safe

shutdown systems (reactor coolant system makeup, reactor coolant system pressure

control, decay heat removal, and reactivity control, including the essential support systems)

and Fire Protection Systems (detection, suppression, and water supply).

27. Two copies of one-line diagrams of the AC and vital DC electrical distribution systems.

These should depict how power gets from the switchyard to the engineered safety feature

loads (480V and 4160V).

28. A list of automatic and manually initiated gaseous fire suppression systems in the plant,

giving their location and the key equipment being protected.

29. A list of repairs (and the procedure that controls the repairs) needed to reach and/or

maintain hot or cold shutdown.

30. A list of high to low pressure interface valves.

31. Procedures governing the training and operation of the fire brigade.

32. Organization charts of site personnel down to the level of fire protection staff personnel.

33. A contact list of key site personnel who will be supporting this inspection, giving the office

location and phone number onsite.

34. The team would like to observe an unannounced fire brigade drill in the plant, if possible,

during the week of November 03, 2014. Please put us in contact with the appropriate

personnel for planning fire brigade drills during the onsite information gathering trip.

35. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the alternative shutdown procedure with

qualified operators in the plant during the week of October 20, 2014. The team would like to

perform a walkthrough of a sample of manual actions required for other fires not requiring

control room evacuation. Please put us in contact with the appropriate personnel for

planning the walkthroughs during the onsite information gathering trip.

36. Procedures and data from the latest performance of the fire pump flow and pressure tests

and the yard loop flow test along with available performance trending data.

-3-

37. The corrective actions taken to address the following previously identified issues:

a. FIN 05000482/2011007-01, Failure to Verify Isolation of Associated Circuits on Isolation

Switches

b. NCV 05000482/2011007-02, Inadequate Alternative Shutdown Procedure

c. NCV 05000482/2011007-03, Failure to Ensure Post-Fire Safe Shutdown Components

Remain Free of Fire Damage

d. NCV 05000482/2011007-04, Procedure Inadequacies Related to Cold Shutdown

Repairs

The following documents (items 38 - 50) involve B.5.b mitigating strategies.

38. License condition that incorporated the requirements issued to address Section B.5.b of

NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security Compensatory

Measures, dated February 25, 2002, and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).

39. A list of all modifications to regulatory commitments made to meet the requirements of

Section B.5.b of NRC Order EA-02-026, Order for NRC Interim Safeguards and Security

Compensatory Measures, dated February 25, 2002; the subsequently imposed license

conditions; and 10 CFR 50.54(hh)(2).

40. A list of procedures/guidelines which were revised or generated to implement the mitigation

strategies. These could be extensive damage mitigation guidelines, severe accident

management guidelines, emergency operating procedures, abnormal operating procedures,

etc.

41. A matrix that shows the correlation between the mitigation strategies identified in Nuclear

Energy Institute 06-12 and the site-specific procedures or guidelines that are used to

implement each strategy.

42. A list of engineering evaluations/calculations that were used to verify engineering bases for

the mitigation strategies.

43. Piping and instrumentation diagrams or simplified flow diagrams for systems relied upon in

the mitigation strategies. These could be the type used for training.

44. A list of modification packages and simplified drawings/descriptions of modifications that

were made to plant systems to implement the mitigation strategies.

45. Procedures used to inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to

implement the mitigation strategies.

46. A list of B.5.b strategies, if any, which have implementing details that differ from that

documented in the submittals to the NRC and the safety evaluation report.

47. Site general arrangement drawing(s) that show the majority of buildings/areas referenced in

B.5.b documents.

-4-

48. Training records and lesson plans related to the B.5.b mitigating strategies.

49. Copies of Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) (e.g., with local fire departments) required

to implement any mitigating strategies.

50. The team would like to perform a walkthrough of the procedure implementing a sample

mitigating strategy (to be selected by the inspector during the information gathering visit)

and the inventory equipment (hoses, fittings, pumps, etc.) required to be used to implement

the mitigation strategies during the week of November 03, 2014. Please put us in contact

with the appropriate personnel for planning the walkthrough during the onsite information

gathering trip.

The following documentation needs (items 51 - 54) will be dependent upon sample selections

and will be finalized during discussions with your staff. Please provide the required documents

prior to the week of October 13, 2014. Whenever practical, please provide copies electronically.

Drawings should be provided as paper copies of sufficient size such that all details are legible.

51. Pre-fire plans for the selected fire areas (areas to be selected by the team during the onsite

information gathering trip).

52. List of identified fire-induced circuit failure configurations that could prevent operation or

cause maloperation of equipment credited for safe shutdown in the event of a fire (for the

selected fire areas). Include failure configurations associated with hot shorts, open circuits,

or shorts to ground identified as potentially causing spurious or multiple spurious actuations

or maloperations of this equipment.

53. Cable routing information for components and equipment credited for safe shutdown in the

selected fire areas. This information request item will be discussed and finalized with your

staff during the information gathering visit.

54. Drawings showing the location details for detection and suppression systems in the selected

fire areas.

-5-

ML14182A644

SUNSI Review ADAMS Publicly Available Non-Sensitive Keyword:

By: JMM Yes No Non-Publicly Available Sensitive NRC-002

OFFICE RIV:DRS/SRI C: EB2

NAME JMateychick\tk JDixon

SIGNATURE /RA/ /RA/

DATE 6/19/14 7/1/14

Request for Information to: Adam Heflin from John Dixon, dated July 1, 2014

SUBJECT: WOLF CREEK GENERATING STATION - NOTIFICATION OF AN NRC

TRIENNIAL FIRE PROTECTION BASELINE INSPECTION (NRC INSPECTION

REPORT 05000482/2014008) AND REQUEST FOR INFORMATION

Electronic distribution by RIV:

Regional Administrator (Marc.Dapas@nrc.gov)

Deputy Regional Administrator (Kriss.Kennedy@nrc.gov)

Acting DRP Director (Troy.Pruett@nrc.gov)

Acting DRP Deputy Director (Michael.Hay@nrc.gov)

DRS Director (Anton.Vegel@nrc.gov)

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

Senior Resident Inspector (Charles.Peabody@nrc.gov)

Resident Inspector (Raja.Stroble@nrc.gov)

WC Administrative Assistant (Carey.Spoon@nrc.gov)

Branch Chief, DRP/B (Neil.OKeefe@nrc.gov)

Senior Project Engineer, DRP/B (David.Proulx@nrc.gov)

Project Engineer, DRP/B (Fabian.Thomas@nrc.gov)

Public Affairs Officer (Victor.Dricks@nrc.gov)

Public Affairs Officer (Lara.Uselding@nrc.gov)

Project Manager (Fred.Lyon@nrc.gov)

Branch Chief, DRS/TSB (Geoffrey.Miller@nrc.gov)

RITS Coordinator (Marisa.Herrera@nrc.gov)

Regional Counsel (Karla.Fuller@nrc.gov)

Technical Support Assistant (Loretta.Williams@nrc.gov)

Congressional Affairs Officer (Jenny.Weil@nrc.gov)

RIV/ETA: OEDO (Yen-Ju.Chen@nrc.gov)