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Re: US Energy Dep't cites nuclear lab over safety



Excuse me, but UC is liable for fines as a DOE contractor under
Price-Anderson.  DOE decided not to fine them.  The interesting thing is DOE
tends to over-react in a major way for corporate contractors (as if to say "
we better find someone guilty, or they'll come after us).  I've seen DOE
fines on issues that were NOT violations in the NRC world.  So is UC being
let off easy?  Or is it justified in this case?

BTW, I agree that DOE has screwed up as a self-regulator at the weapons
facilities and should, at a minimum, be audited by a 3rd party.  However,
the accelerator facilities seem to have done ok.

Wes

Wesley M. Dunn
HPLF@cfu.net
semi-retired in Iowa

----- Original Message -----
From: "William V Lipton" <liptonw@dteenergy.com>
To: "Multiple recipients of list" <radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu>
Sent: Monday, January 29, 2001 6:02 AM
Subject: Re: US Energy Dep't cites nuclear lab over safety


> This is just one more indication that DOE facilities should be subject to
NRC
> regulation; or, as a minimum, to some equivalent  3rd party regulation.
They should
> NOT be exempt from fines.
>
> The opinions expressed are strictly mine.
> It's not about dose, it's about trust.
>
> Bill Lipton
> liptonw@dteenergy.com
>
> Sandy Perle wrote:
>
> > US Energy Dep't cites nuclear lab over safety
> >
> > WASHINGTON, Jan 24 (Reuters) - The U.S. Department of Energy on
> > Wednesday said it had cited the University of California for nuclear
> > safety violations at the Los Alamos National Laboratory but imposed
> > no monetary penalty.
> >
> > The violations stemmed from a March 2000 event in which eight
> > government workers were exposed to airborne plutonium at the nation's
> > premiere nuclear laboratory, which has been rocked by security
> > scandals over the past two years.
> >
> > The department's National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA)
> > issued the preliminary notice of violation on Jan. 19, a day after
> > the government renewed for three years the University of California's
> > contract to keep running the laboratory.
> >
> > The contract renewal has prompted pointed questions by Rep. Billy
> > Tauzin, chairman of the House Energy Committee, who had been urging
> > the department to delay signing the contract until Congress and the
> > new administration has been fully briefed.
> >
> > A DOE spokeswoman said the notice of violation would have no affect
> > on the contract renewal, although the NNSA had emphasized the need
> > for "increased attention" to safety issues while it was negotiating
> > the contract with the university.
> >
> > "Those are separate issues, and the contract has been signed," she
> > said.
> >
> > "The NNSA as it was negotiating on the extension of the contract took
> > steps to ensure that there would be increased attention to the
> > importance of safety issues during the duration of contract," she
> > said.
> >
> > Among the lab's recent security problems was the case of former
> > scientist Wen Ho Lee, who pleaded guilty to downloading nuclear
> > secrets onto an unclassified computer, and the disappearance of two
> > computer hard drives containing nuclear secrets, which later turned
> > up behind a copy machine.
> >
> > COULD HAVE FACED FINE OF $605,000
> >
> > The department said the lab was exempt from civil penalties under
> > federal law, but if it was not it would have faced a civil penalty of
> > $605,000, based on the significance of the events.
> >
> > In addition to the March 2000 incident, the preliminary notice of
> > violation also listed several events at the laboratory in which
> > nuclear facilities were operated outside the limits and controls set
> > by facility safety documents.
> >
> > "Our goal is to avoid such incidents by being proactive and making
> > safety an integral part of every operation," said John Gordon,
> > administrator of the NNSA, who issued the notice of violation to the
> > university.
> >
> > Tauzin this week asked Gordon for more information about the
> > preliminary notice of violation, and a spokesman said the infractions
> > included one worker being exposed to radiation 18 times higher than
> > the dose not to be exceeded in one year.
> >
> > In its statement on Wednesday, DOE conceded up to three workers may
> > have received exposures that exceeded the annual regulatory limit set
> > for this work, while one worker's exposure had been estimated at five
> > times over the annual limit.
> >
> > No immediate adverse health consequences resulted from the exposure,
> > the department said, and involved workers were put on temporary work
> > restrictions to limit any additional exposures.
> >
> > In the citation, NNSA also mentioned problems with work controls at a
> > second facility where Los Alamos perform experiments, saying they
> > "represented an unacceptable trend in the operation and maintenance
> > of nuclear facilities."
> >
> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> > Sandy Perle                                     Tel:(714) 545-0100 /
(800) 548-5100
> > Director, Technical                             Extension 2306
> > ICN Worldwide Dosimetry Service         Fax:(714) 668-3149
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> >
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> > ICN Worldwide Dosimetry Website: http://www.dosimetry.com
> >
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