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DOE/NNSA Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) Capabilities Overview

DOE/NNSA Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) Capabilities Overview. Hans Oldewage Training and Outreach Coordinator RAP Region 4 (505) 845-7728. DOE/NNSA Mission.

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DOE/NNSA Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) Capabilities Overview

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  1. DOE/NNSA Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) Capabilities Overview Hans Oldewage Training and Outreach Coordinator RAP Region 4 (505) 845-7728

  2. DOE/NNSA Mission Ensure capabilities are in place to provide an appropriate response to nuclear or radiological emergencies within the United States or abroad.

  3. DOE/NNSA Emergency Response Assets • Expert technical advice from the DOE/NNSA complex in response to: • Nuclear weapon accidents and incidents • Possible acts of nuclear terrorism • Lost or stolen radioactive materials • Radiological accidents • Provide access to expertise in nuclear weapons design, nuclear/radiological materials characterization, and radiological detection and characterization • Deployable capabilities, configured for a rapid response to any nuclear/radiological accident or incident

  4. FRMAC AMS Emergency Response Officer Nuclear Incident Team SRT JTOT ARG Office of Emergency Operations National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center CRISIS CONSEQUENCE NARAC Search Response Team Federal Radiological Monitoring Assessment Center Joint Technical Operations Team Radiation Emergency Assistance Center / Training Site REAC/TS Accident Response Group Aerial Measuring System Radiological Assistance Program NRAT RAP NRAT Nuclear / Radiological Advisory Team

  5. Radiological Assistance Program (RAP) Mission Provide first-responder radiological assistance to protect the health and safety of the general public and the environment. Assist other Federal, State, Tribal and local agencies in the detection, identification and analysis, and response to events involving the use of radiological/nuclear material.

  6. Radiological Assistance Program RAP is organized on a regional basis to foster a timely response capability and coordination between DOE and other Federal, State, tribal, and local emergency response elements: • Eight geographical DOE regions plus a National Capitol Region • Each DOE region is managed by a Regional Response Coordinator (RRC)

  7. DOE Regional Map and Coordinating Offices 8 5 1 8 6 7 (0)NCR 2 3 2 4 7 2 U.S. Virgin Islands

  8. RAP Team Configuration • Each region has a minimum of 3 teams • RAP teams consist of trained employees from DOE and DOE contractors/facilities • Each team consists of 8 members; one Team Leader, one Team Captain, one Senior Scientist, and five Health Physics Survey/Support personnel • Additional personnel are available, such as Public Information Officers, industrial hygienists, transportation specialists, logistics support, etc.

  9. RAP Team Response • Fully mobilized within 2 hours of notification • On-scene arrival within 6 hours of notification • Deployment by dedicated response vehicles, charter air service, or commercial air

  10. RAP Team Capabilities • Detection and identification of radioactive materials • Monitoring to characterize the radiation environment • Assessment and evaluation (hazards and risks) • Mitigative advice/consultation • ‘Hot Line’ support; personnel for monitoring, decon, and material recovery • Public Information support

  11. Standard Response Equipment • PPE (gloves, booties, respirators, coveralls, dosimetry, etc.) • Communications and Logistics gear (hand-held radios, GPS, cell phones, satellite phones, lap tops, etc.)

  12. Standard Response Equipment • Alpha Detection • Beta Detection

  13. Standard Response Equipment • Gamma Detection • Neutron Detection

  14. Standard Response Equipment • Gamma spectroscopy systems (NaI and HPGe) • Air samplers (high and low volume)

  15. Radionuclide Identification Room temperature (NaI) Spectrum Liquid Nitrogen Cooled (HPGe) Spectrum Most “Room Temperature” Units do NOT have the Resolution to Identify Many Complicated Isotopes

  16. DOE Triage System • The DOE Triage System provides rapid scientific evaluation to any responder • Provides reach-back capability to tap into National Laboratory gamma spectroscopy scientists • Possible “trip-wire” for other assets • Initiate by calling: 202-586-8100 • Send data to: triage.data@hq.doe.gov • triage.data@llnl.gov • triage.data@lanl.gov

  17. RAP Contact Information 24 Hour HQ Emergency Response Officer 202-586-8100

  18. RAP Region 4 Contact Information 24 Hour Region 4 Contact (Transportation Emergency Control Center): 505-845-4667 RAP Region 4 RRC (FED): Kent Gray (kent.gray@nnsa.doe.gov) Office: (505) 845-6300 Cell: (505) 629-3238 RAP Region 4 CRC (Sandia Labs): Richard Stump (rbstump@sandia.gov) Office: (505) 844-5943 Cell: (505) 238-0491

  19. Mobile Deployable Detection Unit (MDDU) Overview

  20. Mobile Detection Deployment Program Mission • Expand National programs to bridge infrastructure gaps in preventive rad/nuc detection capabilities during heightened alert states, intelligent driven events, high risk events NSSEs and SEAR1-4. Provide equipment and training for force multiplication to these events. • DNDO Funded, DOE First Responder managed and executed.

  21. Equipment • Mobile • Radiation Solutions Incorporated (RSI) – 701 (3 or 5 each) • Backpack • Thermo Packeye (11 or 22 each) • Handheld RIID • Thermo IdentiFinder (4 or 8 each) • Ortec Detective DX (2 or 4 each) • PRDs • Mini Rad-D (24 or 48 each)

  22. Equipment • ID PRDs • Thermo Interceptor (11 or 22 each) • Computer system/wireless connectivity • Toughbooks (3 or 5 each) • Handheld Radios • Motorola XTS 5000 (12 or 16 each)

  23. Equipment

  24. Requesting the MDDU • Any civil authority, Federal, State, Local or Tribal, may make a request for the MDDU to the regional RAP team. • The RAP team elevates the request to DOE/NA-42. • The decision to authorize the use of MDDU assets is then made by DNDO and NA-42.

  25. Joint Technical Operations Team (JTOT) • Rapidly deployable response for nuclear terrorism incident resolution • Includes locating, access, diagnostics, render safe or destruction, containment and effects, and transportation preparation capabilities • Home team available at LANL, SNL, LLNL

  26. NARAC (National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center) • Real-time computer predictions for atmospheric transport and dispersion of radioactive materials • Computer model calculations based on: • Real-time weather data • Terrain database • 3-D transport and diffusion model • NARAC products: • Ground deposition plots • Instantaneous and time-integrated dose • Airborne concentrations

  27. (National Atmospheric Release Advisory Center) NARAC • Response timeline for initial plots: • 5-10 minutes for NARAC supported sites • 1 hour for non-supported sites • NARAC products provide information to Decision Makers to: • assess dose and surface contamination downwind • deploy field teams • plan for AMS surveys • develop protective action recommendations

  28. Aerial Measuring System • Radiological detectors mountable in helicopters and fixed wing aircraft • Provides search capability and radiation mapping over large areas around an accident or incident scene 28

  29. Federal Radiological Monitoring and Assessment Center • Provides the operational framework for coordinating all federal off-site radiological monitoring and assessment activities in support of the Lead Federal Agency and affected States • Coordinates and provides quality controlled data and interpretations in an understandable format • Multi-agency center initially managed by DOE

  30. Consequence Management Home Team Mission • Provide early data assessment resources • Function as conduit for data products such as NARAC predictive maps • Interpret early radiological measurements • Collect radiological data • Provide a platform for collection of situational awareness information and to define objectives • Provide technical guidance for worker and public protection • Provide logistical support for deployed teams • Activate thru HQ ERO 202-586-8100 RAPTER 2011 30

  31. REAC/TS (Radiological Emergency Assistance Center / Training Site) • Provides 24-hour medical consultation or direct advice on health issues associated with radiation accidents • Provides a deployable team of health professionals or provides patient care at REAC/TS • Designated as a WHO Collaboration Center for Radiation Emergency Assistance • Provides DTPA and Prussian Blue for treatment of internal contamination • Provides training programs for health professionals

  32. Accident Response Group • Technical response for accidents or significant incidents involving U.S. nuclear weapons in DoD or DOE custody • Composed of nuclear scientists, engineers, and weapons designers capable of covering all weapons in the US inventory • Deploys via commercial or military air using a time-phase approach

  33. Accident Response Group • Uses highly specialized equipment and personnel to provide advice to DoD Explosive Ordnance Disposal teams for: • collection and identification of components • weapons safing and recovery • packaging damaged weapons • transportation, storage and disposal of damaged weapons

  34. Questions?

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