ML13184A232

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
EA-13-068, Dresden Nuclear Power Station, Units 2 and 3; Report Nos. 05000237/2013407; 05000249/2013407(DRS) and Results of Investigation Report No. 3-2012-020
ML13184A232
Person / Time
Site: Dresden  Constellation icon.png
Issue date: 07/03/2013
From: Shear G
Division of Reactor Safety III
To: Pacilio M
Exelon Generation Co, Exelon Nuclear
References
3-2012-020, EA-13-068
Download: ML13184A232 (7)


See also: IR 05000237/2013407

Text

UNITED STATES

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

Region III

2443 Warrenville Road, Suite 210

Lisle IL 60532-4352

July 3, 2013

EA-13-068

Mr. Michael J. Pacilio

Senior Vice President, Exelon Generation Company, LLC

President and Chief Nuclear Officer, Exelon Nuclear

4300 Winfield Road

Warrenville, IL 60555

SUBJECT: DRESDEN NUCLEAR POWER STATION, UNITS 2 AND 3; REPORT

NOS. 05000237/2013407; 05000249/2013407(DRS) AND RESULTS OF

INVESTIGATION REPORT NO. 3-2012-020

Dear Mr. Pacilio:

This letter refers to the investigation conducted from June 6, 2012, to March 29, 2013, at the

Dresden Nuclear Power Station, Units 2 and 3 (Dresden Station). The purpose of the

investigation was to determine if a Senior Reactor Operator (SRO), an Equipment Operator

(EO), and/or any other personnel at the Dresden Station knew that a former SRO planned to

commit a violent crime and willfully failed to report that SRO for aberrant behavior. A factual

summary of the NRC investigation is enclosed.

Based on the results of the NRC investigation, an apparent violation with several

examples was identified, although only one example was deemed willful. This apparent

violation is being considered for escalated enforcement action in accordance with the NRC

Enforcement Policy. The current Enforcement Policy is included on the NRCs Web site at

http://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/enforcement/enforce-pol.html.

The NRCs requirements for reactor licensee access authorizations programs are contained in

Section 73.56 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR). The NRC requirements

applicable to this issue include the following:

10 CFR 73.56(a)(2) requires that a licensee establish, implement and maintain its

access authorization program in accordance with the requirements of this section.

10 CFR 73.56(f)(1) requires that licensee and applicant access authorization programs

must include a behavioral observation program that is designed to detect behaviors or

activities that may constitute an unreasonable risk to the health and safety of the public

and common defense and security, including a potential threat to commit radiological

sabotage. Licensees, applicants and contractors or vendors must ensure that the

individuals specified in paragraph (b)(1) and, if applicable, (b)(2) of this section are

subject to behavioral observation.

M. Pacilio -2-

10 CFR 73.56(f)(3) states, in part, that individuals who are subject to an access

authorization program under this section shall at a minimum, report any concerns arising

from behavioral observation, including, but not limited to, concerns related to any

questionable behavior patterns or activities of others to the reviewing official, his or her

supervisor, or other management personnel designated in their site procedures and that

the recipient of the report shall, if other than the reviewing official, promptly convey the

report to the reviewing official, who shall reassess the reported individuals unescorted

access or unescorted access authorization status.

The apparent violation examples involve:

1. A former EO, who had unescorted access to the Dresden Station, willfully failed to report

to a supervisor observed concerns arising from observed behavior indicating a change

of behavior in two other former individuals who had unescorted access to the

Dresden Station as required by 10 CFR 73.56(a)(2), 73.56(f)(1), and 73.56(f)(3), when

the other individuals attempted to recruit him in their plans to commit a violent crime.

2. A former SRO, who had unescorted access to the Dresden Station, failed to report to a

supervisor observed concerns arising from observed behavior indicating a change of

behavior in another former individual who had unescorted access to the Dresden Station

as required by 10 CFR 73.56(a)(2), 73.56(f)(1), and 73.56(f)(3), when the other

individual attempted to recruit him in his plans to commit a violent crime.

3. A former SRO, who had unescorted access to the Dresden Station, failed to report to a

supervisor observed concerns arising from observed behavior indicating a change of

behavior in another former individual who had unescorted access to the Dresden Station

as required by 10 CFR 73.56(a)(2), 73.56(f)(1), and 73.56(f)(3), when the other

individual went along with his plans to commit a violent crime.

4. An SRO, with unescorted access to the Dresden Station, failed to promptly

contact a reviewing official upon learning of questionable behavior as required by

10 CFR 73.56(a)(2), 73.56(f)(1), and 73.56(f)(3), when the SRO was informed by two

reactor operators about the questionable behavior of an EO.

Since the NRC has not made a final determination in this matter, no Notice of Violation is being

issued for this apparent violation at this time. The circumstances surrounding the apparent

violation, the significance of the issues, and the need for lasting and effective corrective action

were discussed with Mr. David Czufin and other members of your staff during an exit meeting

on June 4, 2013.

Before the NRC makes its enforcement decision, we are providing you an opportunity to either:

(1) respond to the apparent violation addressed in this letter within 30 days of the date of this

letter; (2) request a Predecisional Enforcement Conference (PEC); or (3) request Alternative

Dispute Resolution (ADR). Please contact Mr. Joseph Maynen at 630-829-9835 within ten days

of the date of this letter to notify the NRC of your intended response.

M. Pacilio -3-

If you choose to provide a written response, it should be clearly marked as Response to the

Apparent Violation in Report No. 05000237/2013407; 05000249/2013407(DRS) EA-13-068, and

should include, for the apparent violation: (1) the reason for the apparent violation, or, if

contested, the basis for disputing the apparent violation; (2) the corrective steps that have been

taken and the results achieved; (3) the corrective steps that will be taken to avoid further

violations; and (4) the date when full compliance will be achieved. If an adequate response is

not received within the time specified or an extension of time has not been granted by the NRC,

the NRC will proceed with its enforcement decision.

If you request a PEC, the conference will afford you the opportunity to provide your perspective

on the apparent violation and any other information that you believe the NRC should take into

consideration before making an enforcement decision. We encourage you to submit supporting

documentation as to the corrective actions you have taken at least one week prior to the

conference in an effort to make the conference more efficient and effective. The topics

discussed during the conference may include the following: (1) information to determine

whether violations occurred; (2) information to determine the significance of the violations;

(3) information related to the identification of the violations; and (4) information related to any

corrective actions taken or planned to be taken. In presenting your corrective actions, you

should be aware that the promptness and comprehensiveness of your actions, as well as your

prior enforcement history, will be considered in assessing any civil penalty for the apparent

violation. If a PEC is held, the NRC will issue a press release to announce the time and date of

the conference; however, it will be closed to public observation because the apparent violation

is based on an NRC OI Report that has not been publicly disclosed and pertains to whether an

individual committed wrongdoing.

In lieu of a PEC, you may also request ADR with the NRC in an attempt to resolve this issue.

The term ADR is used to generally encompass various techniques for resolving conflicts using

a neutral third party. The technique that the NRC has decided to employ is mediation.

Mediation is a voluntary, informal process in which a trained neutral (the mediator) works with

both parties to help them reach resolution. If the parties agree to use ADR, they select a

mutually agreeable neutral mediator who has no stake in the outcome and no power to make

decisions. Mediation gives parties an opportunity to discuss issues, clear up

misunderstandings, be creative, find areas of agreement, and reach a final resolution of the

issues. Additional information concerning the NRC's program can be obtained at

http://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/enforcement/adr.html. The Institute on Conflict

Resolution (ICR) at Cornell University has agreed to facilitate the NRC's program as a neutral

third party. Please contact ICR at 877-733-9415 within ten days of the date of this letter if you

are interested in pursuing resolution of this issue through ADR.

In addition, please be advised that the number and characterization of the apparent violation

described above may change as a result of further NRC review. You will be advised by

separate correspondence of the results of our deliberations on this matter.

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 NRCs Agency wide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS),

M. Pacilio -4-

accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To the extent

possible, any response should not include any personal privacy or proprietary information so

that it can be made available to the Public without redaction.

If you have any questions concerning this matter, please contact Mr. Maynen of my staff at

630-829-9835.

Sincerely,

/RA by Patrick L. Louden for

Gary L. Shear, Director

Division of Reactor Safety

Docket Nos. 50-237; 50-249

License Nos. DPR-19; DPR-25

Enclosure:

Factual Summary

of NRC Investigation

FACTUAL SUMMARY OF NRC INVESTIGATION

On June 6, 2012, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Office of Investigations (OI),

Region III Field Office, initiated an investigation to determine if a Senior Reactor Operator

(SRO), an Equipment Operator (EO), and/or any other personnel at the Dresden Nuclear Power

Station (Dresden Station) knew that a former SRO planned to commit a crime and willfully failed

to report that SRO for aberrant behavior. The investigation was completed on March 29, 2013,

and was documented in OI Report No. 3-2012-020.

During the investigation, it was determined that an EO knew that two former SROs planned to

commit a crime and deliberately failed to report that information for approximately a year to a

year and half, contrary to site procedures. Following the May 9, 2012 arrest of one of the former

SROs, the EO related to numerous individuals onsite, to the police, to the licensees

investigators, and to the NRC investigator, a generally consistent story about being approached

to participate in committing a violent crime by two former SROs at the Dresden Station. The EO

related having between two to three conversations with the two former SROs that included

discussions of the planned criminal activities, including preliminary planning and actions.

Although the EO expressed that he was disinterested in the plan and did not think that the

former SROs were serious, the EO was aware that one of the former SROs had taken several

steps towards enacting his plan, including plans to map out armored car routes, plans to obtain

a getaway vehicle, and obtaining body armor. Further, the EOs reported responses to the

SROs provided evidence that he thought that the SROs were potentially serious about

committing the planned crimes.

The EO acknowledged that he did not report what he knew to anyone during the time period

that preceded the arrest of one of the former SROs. The EO further acknowledged receiving

training on reporting creditable threats to the plant or the health and safety of the public.

ENCLOSURE

M. Pacilio -4-

accessible from the NRC Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html. To the extent

possible, any response should not include any personal privacy or proprietary information so

that it can be made available to the Public without redaction.

If you have any questions concerning this matter, please contact Mr. Maynen of my staff at

630-829-9835.

Sincerely,

/RA by Patrick L. Louden for/

Gary L. Shear, Director

Division of Reactor Safety

Docket Nos. 50-237; 50-249

License Nos. DPR-19; DPR-25

Enclosure:

Factual Summary

of NRC Investigation

DISTRIBUTION:

See next page

    • See previous concurrence

FILE NAME: G:\ORAIII\EICS\ENFORCEMENT\Cases\Enforcement Cases 2013\EA-13-068 Dresden

Carjacking\EA-13-068 Dresden Choice Letter (Rev 2).docx

OFFICE RIII RIII RIII D:OI

NAME Lougheed Maynen Rubic Goetz

Non-concur

DATE 06/12/13 06/17/13 06/14/13 06/17/13

OFFICE D:OE D:OGC RIII RIII

1 2

NAME Zimmerman Scott Orth Shear

Wray for Hair for

DATE 06/26/13 06/27/13 07/02/13 07/03/13

OFFICIAL FILE COPY

1 OE concurrence received via email from J. Wray on June 26, 2013.

2 OGC No Legal Objection received via email from C. Hair on June 27, 2013.

Letter to Michael J. Pacilio from Gary L. Shear dated July 3, 2013

SUBJECT: DRESDEN NUCLEAR POWER STATION, UNITS 2 AND 3; REPORT

NOS. 05000237/2013407; 05000249/2013407(DRS) AND RESULTS OF

INVESTIGATION REPORT NO. 3-2012-020

DISTRIBUTION:

Vivian Campbell

RidsNrrDorlLpl3-2 Resource

RidsNrrPMDresden

RidsNrrDirsIrib Resource

Chuck Casto

Cynthia Pederson

Steven Orth

Allan Barker

Carole Ariano

Linda Linn

DRPIII

DRSIII

Patricia Buckley

Tammy Tomczak

OEMAIL Resource

Robert Goetz

Scott Kryk

Nancy Hane

Patricia Lougheed

James Heller

Paul Pelke

Sarah Bakhsh

Magda Gryglak

ROPassessment.Resource@nrc.gov

Gerry Gulla

Nick Hilton

Mandy Halter

Catherine Scott

Christopher Hair