Emergency preparedness and the licensing process for commercial nuclear power reactors: oversight hearings before the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs, House of Representatives, Ninety-eighth Congress, first sessionU.S. Government Printing Office, 1985 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
adequate Atomic Safety CARNEY Chairman COHALAN Committee concern County Executive County's decision developed DIETCH DIRCKS documents earthquake emer emergency evacuation Emergency Management Agency emergency planning zone emergency preparedness emergency response plan evacuation plan evaluation event exercise experts facilities Federal Emergency Management FEMA FEMA's gency health and safety hearing implementation Intervenors issue KRIMM Licensing Board licensing process LILCO Long Island MARKEY MARLENEE memorandum NRC staff NRC's Nuclear Generating Station nuclear plant nuclear power plant Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office offsite emergency onsite operating license Orange County Oversight and Investigations participation PATTERSON personnel planning and preparedness population powerplant problems proceeding protective action question radiation Radiological Emergency Response reactor regulations request requirements Safety and Licensing San Diego County San Onofre Nuclear seismic Shoreham plant Southern California Edison specific submitted Suffolk County testimony Thank Three Mile Island tion utility
Fréquemment cités
Page 313 - No operating license for a nuclear power reactor will be issued unless a finding is made by NRC that 'the state of onsite and offsite emergency preparedness provides reasonable assurance that adequate protective measures can and will be taken in the event of a radiological emergency.
Page 277 - Federal agencies, and criteria for determining when protective measures should be considered within and outside the site boundary to protect health and safety and prevent damage to property; D. Procedures for notifying, and agreements reached with local, State, and Federal officials and agencies...
Page 373 - NRC finds that the state of emergency preparedness does not provide reasonable assurance that appropriate protective measures can and will be taken in the event of a radiological emergency and if the deficiencies are not corrected within four months of that finding, the Commission will determine whether the reactor shall be shut down until such deficiencies are remedied or whether other enforcement action is appropriate.
Page 111 - Plan submitted by the applicant provides reasonable assurance that the public health and safety is not endangered by the operation of the facility.
Page 377 - July 1, 1981, the nuclear power reactor licensee shall demonstrate that administrative and physical means have been established for alerting and providing prompt instructions to the public within the plume exposure pathway EPZ.
Page 151 - Cohalan signed Resolution No. 262-1982 on March 25, 1982 and four days later, by Executive Order, established a Steering Committee consisting of both County personnel and outside experts to oversee the plan's development. The Committee, chaired by Deputy County Executive Frank R. Jones, proceeded to gather a team of nationallyrecognized experts including: Fred Finlayson, Ph.D., of Finlayson and Associates, an expert in the consequences of radiological accidents; Edward P. Radford, MD, Professor of...
Page 235 - Planning Basis for the Development of State and Local Government Radiological Emergency Response Plans in Support of Light Water Nuclear Power Plants, US Nuclear Regulatory Commission, December 1978.
Page 354 - To prevent nuclear accidents as serious as Three Mile Island, fundamental changes will be necessary in the organization, procedures, and practices — and above all — in the attitudes of the Nuclear 'Regulatory Commission and, to the extent that the institutions we investigated are typical, of the nuclear industry.
Page 316 - National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurement (N'CRP) and the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP) and remain consistent with occupational radiation protection standards in effect worldwide.
Page 314 - Each licensee who is authorized to possess and/or operate a nuclear power reactor shall submit to NRC within 60 days of the effective date of this amendment the radiological emergency response plans of State and local governmental entities in the United States that are wholly or partially within a plume exposure pathway EPZ, as well as the plans of State governments wholly or partially within an ingestion pathway...