ML14352A187

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Press Release-I-14-042: NRC Proposes $3,500 Fine Against Virginia Engineering Company
ML14352A187
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Issue date: 12/18/2014
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Office of Public Affairs Region I
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Press Release-I-14-042
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See also: see also:Press Release-I-14-042

Text

No: I-14-042 December 18, 2014

CONTACT: Diane Screnci 610-337-5330

Neil Sheehan 610-337-5331

NRC Proposes $3,500 Fine Against Virginia Engineering Company

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has proposed a $3,500 civil penalty for a Fredericksburg,

Va., engineering firm for failing to obtain required approvals from the NRC prior to performing work

on numerous occasions in Washington, D.C., and at a U.S. Marine Corps base in Virginia. The work

involved portable nuclear gauges used for such purposes as measuring the density of soil at

construction sites.

The enforcement action against Dominion Engineering Associates Inc. is based on an

investigation conducted by the NRCs Office of Investigations between April 22, 2013, and Jan. 31,

2014.

Virginia is an Agreement State, which means that under an agreement with the NRC, it

oversees the use of nuclear materials within its borders that otherwise would be regulated by the NRC.

However, such activities performed at federal facilities within Agreement States, as well as at any sites

in Non-Agreement States or in the District of Columbia, are under the jurisdiction of the NRC. As such,

those activities must be approved by the NRC under a process known as reciprocity.

Dominion Engineering did not adhere to this reciprocity requirement and used portable nuclear

gauges on approximately 42 occasions between Nov. 19, 2010, and April 17, 2013, in Washington,

D.C., and at the Marine Corps base in Quantico, Va. The locations in the District of Columbia and the

base are areas of exclusive federal jurisdiction.

Dominion Engineerings failure to file for reciprocity interfered with the NRCs ability to

inspect the companys activities and ensure these gauges were being appropriately used, NRC Region

I Administrator Dan Dorman said.

In a letter issued on Aug. 11, 2014, the NRC provided Dominion Engineering the opportunity to

respond to the apparent violation by attending a predecisional enforcement conference or in writing.

The company wrote to the NRC on Sept. 1, 2014, to acknowledge that the apparent violation occurred.

The firm also stated it had implemented several corrective actions. These actions include obtaining a

non-nuclear gauge to conduct work in areas of exclusive federal jurisdiction and in areas not authorized

by the companys Virginia nuclear materials license.