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1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company Aiken, SC 29808

1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Page 1: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at

the Savannah River SiteT. R. La BoneD. J. HadlockWestinghouse Savannah River CompanyAiken, SC 29808

Page 2: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Outline

Some history on the use of PAS at SRS Why we developed a PAS program now

The current PAS program at SRS Evaluation of the Calendar Year 2003 data

Concurrent evaluation other aspects of the program

Dose Assignment from PAS What happened After the Presentation

Page 3: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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History of PAS Use at SRS

Prior to 2003 the use of PAS was not well received by RCO or Workers. Results were calculated in DAC (Pu-239)

Used MDC for determining DAC-hr exposure DAC-hrs for workers tracked manually (paper and

pencil) RCO only used PAS if someone held a gun to

their head

Page 4: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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History of PAS Use at SRS In 2002 we ran a pilot study in FB-Line for

bioassay associated with highly insoluble Pu. Included PAS

Still not well received, however there was light at the end of the tunnel. Put a minimum PAS program into existence; some PAS

equipment purchased.

PAS results were calculated only in DAC-hr Volume of sample no longer an issue Detectability based on counting equipment and PAS flow

rate.

Page 5: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Calculating DAC-hr from PAS

K

hrDAC

SR

BR

ALI

dpmhrDAC

2000

Where: dpm = Activity on filter paper

ALI = Annual Limit of Intake in dpm

BR = Worker Breathing Rate

SR = Sampling Rate of the sampler

K = Collection efficiency/self absorption

Page 6: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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The Light Becomes Brighter MDE is <2 DAC-hrs at 4 Lpm

Sufficient to determine if worker significantly exposed

Negates need to calculate DAC Used Pilot program to do a few jobs

Middle of nowhere; no power; large area; etc. Worked well

A few procedure revisions along with developing a DAC-hr tracking database maintained by the Central Counting Facility and we had a complete program.

Page 7: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Program Outline

Issue PAS to worker; up to six additional workers on one PAS.

In-Facility counting within 24-hrs to show <8 DAC-hrs, if not contact Internal Dosimetry.

Send to CCF and count after 120-hr decay. CCF results placed in tracking database.

Flags any person >8 DAC-hrs single sample or, Any person >40 DAC-hrs for CY. Report generated for all workers >4 DAC-hrs for CY.

Page 8: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Use of PAS by Facility41

8

273 32

3

94 65

15 35 11 13 5 1 2 2 2

1384

578

420

162

127

44 39 34 33 11 4 4 3 3

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

16002

47

-F

21

1-1

4H

30

0-M

72

4-7

E

22

1-H

67

7-T

73

0-2

B

66

1-6

E

10

5-K

ET

F

29

9-H

OH

BL

22

1-F

FB

L

Nu

mb

er

Measurements

Assignments

2846 assignments1259 measurements

Page 9: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Reason PAS SelectedLocation PAS Used Because Reason

247-F No Power in Facility convenience

211-14H Study to justify PPE selection of no respirators

representative

300-M Little power in facility (D&D work) convenience

724-7E Outdoor work; little power convenience

221-H Large work area convenience

677-T No power in facility convenience

730-2B Outdoor work in remote areas convenience

661-6E Heavy equipment ops convenience

105-K Fuel Cutting - fume hood with no respirators

representative

Page 10: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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SRS PAS Rules of Engagement An exposure of >8 DAC-hrs in one day will

trigger a special bioassay. An exposure of >40 DAC-hrs in a CY will

trigger a special bioassay. The special bioassay will be used to assign

dose unless the special bioassay cannot refute the exposure data.

In January, all cumulative exposures will be converted to dose using conservative DCFs.

Page 11: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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SRS PAS Rules of Engagement Doses between 10 and 100 mrem will be

reported as calculated. For doses >100 mrem, special bioassay

samples will be requested and analyzed before the dose is assigned.

Page 12: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Analysis of 2003 Results10

944

2115

95 7 5 36 5

1 2 2 04

1 2 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1

0

20

40

60

80

100

1201 4 7

10

13

16

19

22

25

28

31

34

37

40

43

46

Number of Times PAS Worn

Nu

mb

er

of

Wo

rke

rs

255 workers wore PAS1259 times

Page 13: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Probit Plot: 1259 Exposures Measured for 255 Workers

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Probits

Me

as

ure

d D

AC

-Ho

urs

Page 14: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Probit Plot: 2846 Exposures Assigned to 447 Workers

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

Probits

As

sig

ne

d D

AC

-Ho

urs

Page 15: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Cumulative CEDE for the 447 Workers – exposures >10 mrem from U.

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

2 3 4 5 6 7 8

Probits

CE

DE

(m

rem

)

Page 16: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Bottom Line Reviewed all workers with >4 DAC-hrs

cumulative exposure for CY 2003 Excluded the DAC-hr exposure for those events

where a special bioassay was performed (3 workers).

Assigned dose based on conservative dose conversion factors

Sixteen workers assigned a dose ranging from about 11 to 45 mrem. All assigned dose was from Uranium exposure

(assumed Class Y)

End of 7/14/04 AMUG Session Talk.

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Then What Happened? Phone Call the Next Morning

Non-HP Management was ‘concerned’ about the impact to the workers of being exposed internally and disagreed with our programmatic approach.

The assignment of dose to the workers for CY03 was put on hold.

Radiological Protection management concurred with our approach; DOE-SR Radiological Protection also concurred. A few days of e-mails and face to face discussion.

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So, What’s the Problem? Conference call with Managers on August 24

of 04. List of concerns: Summing PAS results (both + and -).

You must have an MDA; how can you see that small? 4 DAC-hr Action Level (10 mrem)

To low; can’t see that low of a dose. Why can’t we use in-vitro bioassay?

Our routine program must be deficient. Why are we required to assign this dose?

We didn’t do this at Rocky Flats!

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So, What’s the Problem? List of concerns (Cont.):

Why don’t we assign dose from a CAM? You don’t use the “CAM in the corner”.

Other Concerns brought up in conversation: If I had known workers were being exposed, I

would have had RCO do something to stop it. No one told our workers they would get internal

dose assigned when wearing a PAS. This started the long process of meetings

with Senior Managers to come to a resolution.

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Our Responses to Their Concerns Summing +/- PAS results

Explained the validity of this method Wrote white paper detailing our justification

Showed that use of a DL did not affect the end results.

End result was that we decided it was not worth fighting for (end result not changed). instituted calculating a DL for each PAS sample in the

database. Results <DL excluded from a worker’s total.

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Our Responses to Their Concerns Output from a worker’s annual exposure:

Page 22: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Our Responses to Their Concerns 4 DAC-hr Action Level (10 mrem)

SRS uses a threshold of 10 mrem for reporting internal dose from a bioassay sample; applied to PAS to eliminate reporting insignificant doses.

Strict reading of the regulations would lead one to believe that any dose should be reported. The real question, if you wanted to ask it, is why not less

than 4? Management decided they wanted doses reported

quarterly. Okay with us.

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Our Responses to Their Concerns Why can’t we use in-vitro bioassay?

Attempt made to say that if PAS could “see” the dose, then our bioassay program is deficient. Continuing problem of management/workers believing

that if their routine bioassay is negative, it means zero. Discussions on what a routine bioassay can or cannot

do for you. Have been trying to get this point across for years. Too

many energy units to absorb.

This concern was essentially dropped. Beating up your bioassay program is not a good career

path.

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Our Responses to Their Concerns Why are we required to assign this dose?

SRS is using PAS as a bioassay in some cases (e.g., Th-232, Pu-239SS). 10CFR835.702(b) states:

The results of individual external and internal dose monitoring that is performed but not required by §835.402, shall be recorded.

What is your definition of recorded? Write on an official document and file it away? Record the dose and apply the results to the workers

annual report card?

Page 25: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Our Responses to Their Concerns If we are going to assign dose from a PAS,

why don’t we assign dose from the CAM? A CAM, unlike a PAS, is not always

representative of the air the worker breathed. If a CAM triggers a special bioassay, and the

CAM is representative, the dose calculated from a CAM can be used if the bioassay cannot refute it. Typically special bioassay can see less than the dose

from the CAM and/or RCO is reluctant to call the CAM representative for the worker.

Page 26: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Our Responses to Their Concerns If I had known people were being exposed, I

would have had RCO do something about it. Discussions on what is or is not a significant

exposure. If a person is in a NPFF respirator; air sample shows

100 DAC-hr; exposure is 2 DAC-hr. Anything to be gained by going to a air-supplied hood?

Worn under the hood, exposure could be higher depending on how well the hood removal goes.

Zero exposure to radionuclides is not an achievable goal.

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Our Responses to Their Concerns No one told our workers they would get

internal dose assigned when wearing PAS. Hindsight: RCO should have explained this. To reduce worker ‘discomfort’ decided that the

2003 PAS doses were just practice. Real dose assignment will start in 2004

Developed a briefing sheet for RCO to use for worker briefing; became an Q&A to pass out. Facility RCO does briefing.

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The Heart of the Matter? In my opinion, there were two recurring points

that drove the majority of management’s concern: Internal dose is worse then external dose.

I realize that from a technical standpoint you are probably right but I still think it is worse. A rem is not a rem.

I don’t want to deal with workers angst about getting dose they never were assigned before; especially if it is internal.

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Revised Rules of Engagement An exposure of >8 DAC-hrs in one day will

trigger a special bioassay. An exposure of >40 DAC-hrs in a CY will

trigger a special bioassay. The special bioassay will be used to assign

dose unless the special bioassay cannot refute the exposure data.

Page 30: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Revised Rules of Engagement At the end of each Calendar Quarter, all

cumulative exposures based on counting results – not DAC-hrs, will be converted to dose using conservative DCFs. PAS results <DL are excluded Exposures >2.5 mrem are assigned

2.5 mrem/qtr equates to 10 mrem/yr. Aligns with the SRS method for assigning tritium doses.

Page 31: 1 An Update on the Evaluation of Personal Air Monitoring Data at the Savannah River Site T. R. La Bone D. J. Hadlock Westinghouse Savannah River Company

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Dose Calculation Output

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The End of the Line CY2004 doses from PAS were posted

2/24/05; 7 months to resolve. 30 workers assigned doses ranging from 3 - 28

mrem for the year. 21 workers had a dose assignment of 3 - 9 mrem.

Plan to post Q1 of CY2005 on April 15. No feedback from Field on whether anyone has

been upset by this information. May depend on whether they are touched by the

upcoming layoff.