Fatigue Management Rule Russell Smith Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Museum Presentation Intermuseum Conservation Association.
Advertisements

Site Safety Plans PFN ME 35B.
Emergency Preparedness and Response
Course Material Overview of Process Safety Compliance with Standards
CIP Cyber Security – Security Management Controls
PER
Lock Out/Tag Out Training Lock-Out/Tag-Out OSHA Definition. Lockout/Tagout (LOTO) refers to specific practices and procedures to safeguard employees.
1 Component Design Basis Inspection (CDBI) Graydon Strong 6/17/14.
10 CFR Part 26, Subpart I Managing Fatigue 10 CFR Part 26, Subpart I Managing Fatigue Kamishan O. Martin, Human Factors Engineer Office of Nuclear Reactor.
Cost Case Studies of Selected NRC Regulatory Requirements September 19 th, 2013.
Vermont Yankee Presentation to VSNAP 7/17/13 VY/Entergy Fukushima Response Update Bernard Buteau.
Conversation on the Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Standards (CFATS) and Critical Infrastructure Protection Chemical-Terrorism Vulnerability Information.
MODULE “PROJECT MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL” EMERGENCY PLANNING SAFE DECOMMISSIONING OF NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS Project BG/04/B/F/PP , Programme “Leonardo.
School for drafting regulations Nuclear Safety Decommissioning Vienna, 2-7 December 2012 Tea Bilic Zabric.
1 10 CFR Part 26 Subpart I Managing Fatigue Kamishan Martin Human Factors Engineering June 23, 2010 HPRCT conference.
Spill Prevention and Control Regulatory Requirements Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response (HAZWOPER) –29 CFR –Covers spill response.
LAUSD INJURY AND ILLNESS PREVENTION PROGRAM FOR SUPERVISORS AND EMPLOYEES As required by California Code of Regulations, Title 8, Section 3203.
Responsible CarE® Employee health and Safety Code David Sandidge Director, Responsible Care American Chemistry Council June 2010.
Article 42. – Emergency Safety Interventions ESI Regulations K.A.R and As Passed by the Kansas State Board of Education 2.
TRAINING AND DRILLS. Training and Drills Ensure A comprehensive, coordinated, and documented program as an integral part of the emergency management program.
Developing a Chemical Risk Management Program
WHS Management Plans.
Safety and Loss Control
Protection Against Occupational Exposure
OH&S Management System
MTO Enforcement Program April, 2006 Hours of Service.
Process Safety Management
Safety and Health Program Section B of the Forest Activities Code.
Quality Assurance Program National Enrichment Facility Warren Dorman September 19, National Energy and Environmental Conference.
Copyright  Business & Legal Reports, Inc. BLR’s Safety Training Presentations Spill Prevention and Control.
Copyright ©2000 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. SPCC Safety Training Presentations Spill Prevention and Control.
NHUG - Boston - 08/04/20101 Considerations for Operability of Chillers and Chilled Water Systems NHUG Summer Meeting August 4, 2010 Tim Mitchell Component.
October Training 8 HR Ref. Content Overhead Utilities Risk Assessments Task Safety Environmental Analysis Health and Safety Plan Components of a HASP Questions?
Best Practices: Financial Resource Management February 2011.
1293 Airport Road, Beaver, WV Phone: (304) Fax: (304) HAZWOPER MEDICAL SURVEILLANCE International.
1 CIP Cyber Security – Personnel & Training Steve Garn CIP Compliance Workshop Baltimore, MD August 19-20, 2009 © ReliabilityFirst Corporation.
School for drafting regulations Nuclear Safety Operation Vienna, 26 November -7 December 2012 Tea Bilic Zabric.
Overview of WECC and Regulatory Structure
Division of Risk Management State of Florida Loss Prevention Program.
NRC Region I Lessons Learned Steve Barr Senior Emergency Preparedness Inspector Region I US Nuclear Regulatory Commission 2010 NRC Region I Joint Exercise.
OBSERVED IN ORO REVIEWS COMPLIANCE ISSUES: OBSERVED IN ORO REVIEWS David A. Weber, Ph.D., FACNP Acting Chief Officer Office of Research.
1 RIC 2009 NFPA 805 Regulatory Infrastructure Development Steven A. Laur, PE Sr. Tech Adv. Risk-Informed Initiatives NRC Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation.
Operational Focus Bias for Action Alignment Engagement Ownership Empowerment Continuous Improvement OUR CORE VALUES Our Core Values Operational Focus Bias.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA Safety Standards for Research Reactors W. Kennedy Research Reactor Safety Section Division of Nuclear Installation.
National Public Health Performance Standards Local Assessment Instrument Essential Service:6 Enforce Laws and Regulations that Protect Health and Ensure.
WISHA, 7/23/04 Employee Medical and Exposure Records Chapter WAC Employer Responsibilities.
IAEA Training Course on Safety Assessment of NPPs to Assist Decision Making Diablo Canyon NPP Maintenance Rule Program Workshop Information IAEA Workshop.
Emergency Actions Emergency Actions are composed of two actions. 1) Tornado & Severe Weather 2) Emergency Evacuation.
May 5, 2016 May 5, Reporting obligations for  Investment banks,  Stockbrokers and dealers  FM and Investment advisers 2. Publication financial.
APWU Tentative Highlights of the New Collective Bargaining Agreement.
By Annick Carnino (former Director of IAEA Division of Nuclear Installations Safety) PIME, February , 2012.
Office of Management and Enterprise Services Central Purchasing Division Keith Gentry Contract Manager
- HEMIC Facility Inspections. Common Losses A fire breaks out in a 16 story office building An employee had the tips of two fingers amputated Could these.
Planning meetingCertification audit, stage 1 Pre-audit (optional) Document review Prior to every certification audit a planning meeting is conducted where.
Response to NRC Information Requests for NTTF Recommendation 9.3 Sue Perkins-Grew Director, Emergency Preparedness NEI.
OH&S Management System
NIEP Evaluation PO&A “How-to” Guide and Issue Classification
Hot Work Loss Prevention Program
Mitigation of Beyond Design Basis Events (MBDBE) Rule Implementation
OH&S Management System
DOE Approach to Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) in Safety Standards Office of Worker Safety and Health Policy (AU-11)
NRC Cyber Security Regulatory Overview
Welcome to Surry Power Station 2018 Fall Outage Processing
Management of Change Report Errors to Management.
Regulatory Oversight of HOF in Finland
TRTR Briefing September 2013
LAUSD INJURY AND ILLNESS PREVENTION PROGRAM FOR SUPERVISORS AND EMPLOYEES As required by California Code of Regulations, Title 8, Section 3203.
Emergency & Crisis Management​ GROUP HSE RULE (CR-GR-HSE-701)
Permit to Work Process​ HSE GROUP RULE (CR-GR-HSE-402)
Presentation transcript:

Fatigue Management Rule Russell Smith Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI)

Implementation of the Rule  The rule was published in the Federal Register on March 31, 2008  Fatigue rule portion of rule (Subpart I) will be required to be implemented prior to October 1, 2009

Implementation Guidance  NEI 06-11, Managing Personnel Fatigue at Nuclear Power Reactor Sites  NRC Regulatory Guide 5.73

Purpose of the Rule  To establish requirements for managing worker fatigue at operating power plants.  Fatigue is defined in the rule as the degradation in an individual’s cognitive and motor functioning resulting from inadequate rest.

Applicability for Fatigue Management  All persons who are granted unescorted access to nuclear power reactor protected areas, and  All persons who are required to physically report to the Technical Support Center or Emergency Operations Facility, in accordance with the site Emergency Plan and procedures. Fatigue management requirements, with exception of work hour controls, apply to the following individuals:

Applicability for Work Hour Restrictions  Operating personnel operating (or directing operations for) systems and components that are risk significant  Maintenance personnel working on (or directing activities for) systems and components that are risk significant  Health Physics or Chemistry personnel performing duties which are part of the on-site emergency response organization minimum shift complement  Fire Brigade Leader  Security personnel

Policy and Procedure  The licensee program shall establish a policy for the management of fatigue for all individuals who are subject to the licensee’s Fitness-For-Duty (FFD) program and incorporate the guidance into the site or corporate written FFD policy  The licensee program shall develop, implement, and maintain procedures for subpart I requirements

Covered Work means the following: Operating or on-site directing of the operation of systems and components that a risk-informed evaluation process has shown to be significant to public health and safety, Performing maintenance or on-site directing of the maintenance of structures, systems, and components (SSCs) that a risk-informed evaluation process has shown to be significant to public health and safety,

Covered work (continued): Performing Health Physics or Chemistry duties required as a member of the on-site emergency response organization minimum shift complement, Performing the duties of a Fire Brigade member who is responsible for understanding the effects of fire and fire suppressants on safe shutdown capability, and Performing security duties as an armed security force officer, alarm station operator, response team leader, or watchperson, hereinafter referred to as Security personnel.

Work hours means the amount of time an individual performs duties for the licensee. This includes all work hours, with the following exceptions: Shift turnover time. Within-shift break and rest periods in which there is reasonable opportunity and accommodations for restorative sleep (e.g., a nap) may be excluded. Incidental duties performed off-site provided the total duration of the work does not exceed a nominal 30 minutes during any single break period may be excluded.

Day-off means a calendar day in which an individual does not start a work shift. On-site means within the owner-controlled area of the nuclear power plant. Maintenance means the following on-site maintenance activities: modification, surveillance, post-maintenance testing, and corrective and preventive maintenance. DEFINITIONS:

Shift Cycle means a series of consecutive work shifts and days off that is planned by the licensee to repeat regularly, thereby constituting a continuous shift schedule. A shift cycle cannot exceed 6 weeks for the purposes of calculating days off. Unit outage means that the reactor unit is disconnected from the electrical grid. DEFINITIONS:

Work Hours Restrictions  Ceilings  Breaks  Minimum Days Off

Ceilings – Online and Outages 16 work hours in any 24-hour period 26 work hours in any 48-hour period 72 work hours in any 7-day period

Breaks – Online and Outages 10-hour break between work periods One 34-hour break every 9 days

Minimum Days Off - Online

Minimum Days Off - Outage

Waivers  A licensee may grant waivers to the individual work hour limits provided: A Security Shift Manager determines that a waiver is necessary to maintain site security; or An Operations Shift Manager determines that a waiver is necessary to mitigate or prevent a condition adverse to safety; or A senior level manager with requisite signature authority makes either determination

Administrative Requirements

Proposed Rule – Self Declaration  If an individual declares he/she is too fatigued to safely perform their duties during any part of the working tour, a fatigue assessment must be performed – May forego the fatigue assessment if a 10-hour rest break is given before the individual returns to work  If an individual is working under a waiver, and declares he/she is too fatigued to safely perform their duties, they MUST be removed from risk significant duty

Fatigue Assessments  Required For: – FOR CAUSE – SELF DECLARATION – POST EVENT – FOLLOW UP  Fatigue Assessments – IDENTIFICATION OF CONDITIONS – SUPERVISORY ASSESSMENT

Training Requirements General Employee Supervisor – Waivers Supervisors and FFD Personnel – Fatigue Assessments

REVIEWS Licensees shall evaluate the effectiveness of their control of work hours of individuals who are subject to this section. At a minimum, licensees shall conduct the reviews once per calendar year.

REPORTING  Licensees shall report on work hours in the annual FFD program performance report. The number of instances in which each work hour control was waived for individuals not working on outage activities. The number of instances in which each work hour control was waived for individuals working on outage activities.

REPORTING  Licensees shall report on work hours in the annual FFD program performance report. A summary that shows the distribution of waiver use among the individuals within each category. A summary of corrective actions, if any, resulting from the analyses of these data, including fatigue assessments.

RECORDS and AUDITS  Licensees shall retain the records for at least three years or until the completion of all related legal proceedings, whichever is later.  Licensees shall audit the fatigue management program every 24 months.