98-6085. Biweekly Notice; Applications and Amendments to Facility Operating Licenses Involving No Significant Hazards Considerations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 47 (Wednesday, March 11, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 11913-11931]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-6085]
    
    
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    NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
    
    
    Biweekly Notice; Applications and Amendments to Facility 
    Operating Licenses Involving No Significant Hazards Considerations
    
    I. Background
    
        Pursuant to Public Law 97-415, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory 
    Commission (the Commission or NRC staff) is publishing this regular 
    biweekly notice. Public Law 97-415 revised section 189 of the Atomic 
    Energy Act of 1954, as amended (the Act), to require the Commission to 
    publish notice of any amendments issued, or proposed to be issued, 
    under a new provision of section 189 of the Act. This provision grants 
    the Commission the authority to issue and make immediately effective 
    any amendment to an operating license upon a determination by the 
    Commission that such amendment involves no significant hazards 
    consideration, notwithstanding the pendency before the Commission of a 
    request for a hearing from any person.
        This biweekly notice includes all notices of amendments issued, or 
    proposed to be issued from February 13, 1998, through February 27, 
    1998. The last biweekly notice was published on February 25, 1998 (63 
    FR 9589).
    
    Notice of Consideration of Issuance of Amendments to Facility 
    Operating Licenses, Proposed No Significant Hazards Consideration 
    Determination, and Opportunity for a Hearing
    
        The Commission has made a proposed determination that the following 
    amendment requests involve no significant hazards consideration. Under 
    the Commission's regulations in 10 CFR 50.92, this means that operation 
    of the facility in accordance with the proposed amendment would not (1) 
    involve a significant increase in the probability or consequences of an 
    accident previously evaluated; or (2) create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously evaluated; 
    or (3) involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety. The basis 
    for this proposed determination for each amendment request is shown 
    below.
        The Commission is seeking public comments on this proposed 
    determination. Any comments received within 30 days after the date of 
    publication of this notice will be considered in making any final 
    determination.
        Normally, the Commission will not issue the amendment until the 
    expiration of the 30-day notice period. However, should circumstances 
    change during the notice period such that failure to act in a timely 
    way would result, for example, in derating or shutdown of the facility, 
    the Commission may issue the license amendment before the expiration of 
    the 30-day notice period, provided that its final determination is that 
    the amendment involves no significant hazards consideration. The final 
    determination will consider all public and State comments received 
    before action is taken. Should the Commission take this action, it will 
    publish in the Federal Register a notice of issuance and provide for 
    opportunity for a hearing after issuance. The Commission expects that 
    the need to take this action will occur very infrequently.
        Written comments may be submitted by mail to the Chief, Rules and 
    Directives Branch, Division of Administration Services, Office of 
    Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 
    20555-0001, and should cite the publication date and page number of 
    this Federal Register notice. Written comments may also be delivered to 
    Room 6D22, Two White Flint North, 11545 Rockville Pike, Rockville, 
    Maryland from 7:30 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. Federal workdays. Copies of 
    written comments received may be examined at the NRC Public
    
    [[Page 11914]]
    
    Document Room, the Gelman Building, 2120 L Street, NW., Washington, DC. 
    The filing of requests for a hearing and petitions for leave to 
    intervene is discussed below.
        By April 10, 1998, the licensee may file a request for a hearing 
    with respect to issuance of the amendment to the subject facility 
    operating license and any person whose interest may be affected by this 
    proceeding and who wishes to participate as a party in the proceeding 
    must file a written request for a hearing and a petition for leave to 
    intervene. Requests for a hearing and a petition for leave to intervene 
    shall be filed in accordance with the Commission's ``Rules of Practice 
    for Domestic Licensing Proceedings'' in 10 CFR Part 2. Interested 
    persons should consult a current copy of 10 CFR 2.714 which is 
    available at the Commission's Public Document Room, the Gelman 
    Building, 2120 L Street, NW., Washington, DC and at the local public 
    document room for the particular facility involved. If a request for a 
    hearing or petition for leave to intervene is filed by the above date, 
    the Commission or an Atomic Safety and Licensing Board, designated by 
    the Commission or by the Chairman of the Atomic Safety and Licensing 
    Board Panel, will rule on the request and/or petition; and the 
    Secretary or the designated Atomic Safety and Licensing Board will 
    issue a notice of a hearing or an appropriate order.
        As required by 10 CFR 2.714, a petition for leave to intervene 
    shall set forth with particularity the interest of the petitioner in 
    the proceeding, and how that interest may be affected by the results of 
    the proceeding. The petition should specifically explain the reasons 
    why intervention should be permitted with particular reference to the 
    following factors: (1) the nature of the petitioner's right under the 
    Act to be made a party to the proceeding; (2) the nature and extent of 
    the petitioner's property, financial, or other interest in the 
    proceeding; and (3) the possible effect of any order which may be 
    entered in the proceeding on the petitioner's interest. The petition 
    should also identify the specific aspect(s) of the subject matter of 
    the proceeding as to which petitioner wishes to intervene. Any person 
    who has filed a petition for leave to intervene or who has been 
    admitted as a party may amend the petition without requesting leave of 
    the Board up to 15 days prior to the first prehearing conference 
    scheduled in the proceeding, but such an amended petition must satisfy 
    the specificity requirements described above.
        Not later than 15 days prior to the first prehearing conference 
    scheduled in the proceeding, a petitioner shall file a supplement to 
    the petition to intervene which must include a list of the contentions 
    which are sought to be litigated in the matter. Each contention must 
    consist of a specific statement of the issue of law or fact to be 
    raised or controverted. In addition, the petitioner shall provide a 
    brief explanation of the bases of the contention and a concise 
    statement of the alleged facts or expert opinion which support the 
    contention and on which the petitioner intends to rely in proving the 
    contention at the hearing. The petitioner must also provide references 
    to those specific sources and documents of which the petitioner is 
    aware and on which the petitioner intends to rely to establish those 
    facts or expert opinion. Petitioner must provide sufficient information 
    to show that a genuine dispute exists with the applicant on a material 
    issue of law or fact. Contentions shall be limited to matters within 
    the scope of the amendment under consideration. The contention must be 
    one which, if proven, would entitle the petitioner to relief. A 
    petitioner who fails to file such a supplement which satisfies these 
    requirements with respect to at least one contention will not be 
    permitted to participate as a party.
        Those permitted to intervene become parties to the proceeding, 
    subject to any limitations in the order granting leave to intervene, 
    and have the opportunity to participate fully in the conduct of the 
    hearing, including the opportunity to present evidence and cross-
    examine witnesses.
        If a hearing is requested, the Commission will make a final 
    determination on the issue of no significant hazards consideration. The 
    final determination will serve to decide when the hearing is held.
        If the final determination is that the amendment request involves 
    no significant hazards consideration, the Commission may issue the 
    amendment and make it immediately effective, notwithstanding the 
    request for a hearing. Any hearing held would take place after issuance 
    of the amendment.
        If the final determination is that the amendment request involves a 
    significant hazards consideration, any hearing held would take place 
    before the issuance of any amendment.
        A request for a hearing or a petition for leave to intervene must 
    be filed with the Secretary of the Commission, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory 
    Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, Attention: Rulemakings and 
    Adjudications Staff, or may be delivered to the Commission's Public 
    Document Room, the Gelman Building, 2120 L Street, NW., Washington DC, 
    by the above date. A copy of the petition should also be sent to the 
    Office of the General Counsel, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 
    Washington, DC 20555-0001, and to the attorney for the licensee.
        Nontimely filings of petitions for leave to intervene, amended 
    petitions, supplemental petitions and/or requests for a hearing will 
    not be entertained absent a determination by the Commission, the 
    presiding officer or the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board that the 
    petition and/or request should be granted based upon a balancing of 
    factors specified in 10 CFR 2.714(a)(1) (i)-(v) and 2.714(d).
        For further details with respect to this action, see the 
    application for amendment which is available for public inspection at 
    the Commission's Public Document Room, the Gelman Building, 2120 L 
    Street, NW., Washington, DC, and at the local public document room for 
    the particular facility involved.
    
    Commonwealth Edison Company, Docket Nos. STN 50-456 and STN 50-457, 
    Braidwood Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, Will County, Illinois
    
        Date of amendment request: January 14, 1998, which superseded the 
    September 3, 1997, submittal.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendments would 
    revise the Technical Specifications to reduce the allowable Unit 1 
    Reactor Coolant System Dose Equivalent Iodine-131 from 0.35 
    microCuries/gram to 0.05 microCuries/gram thru the end of Unit 1, Cycle 
    7.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. The proposed change does not involve a significant increase 
    in the probability or consequences of an accident previously 
    evaluated.
        Generic Letter 95-05, ``Voltage-Based Repair Criteria For 
    Westinghouse Steam Generator Tubes Affected By Outside Diameter 
    Stress Corrosion Cracking,'' allows lowering of the RCS [Reactor 
    Coolant System] DE-131 [Dose Equivalent Iodine-131] activity as a 
    means for accepting higher projected leak rates if justification for 
    equivalent I-131 below 0.35 microCuries/gram is provided. Four 
    methods for determining the impact of a release of activity to the 
    public were reviewed to provide this justification. These four 
    methods are as follows:
    
    Method 1: NRC NUREG 0800, Standard Review Plan (SRP) Methodology
    
    [[Page 11915]]
    
    Method 2: Methodology described in a report by J.P. Adams and C.L. 
    Atwood, ``The Iodine Spike Release Rate During a Steam Generator 
    Tube Rupture,'' Nuclear Technology, Vol. 94, p. 361 (1991) using 
    Braidwood Station reactor trip data.
    Method 3: Methodology described in a report by J.P. Adams and C.L. 
    Atwood, ``The Iodine Spike Release Rate During a Steam Generator 
    Tube Rupture,'' Nuclear Technology, Vol. 94, p. 361 (1991) using 
    normalized industry reactor trip data.
    Method 4: Methodology described in a draft EPRI Report TR-103680, 
    Revision 1, November 1995, ``Empirical Study of Iodine Spiking in 
    PWR Plants''.
    
        The effect of reducing the RCS DE I-131 activity limit on the 
    amount of activity released to the environment remains unchanged 
    when the maximum site allowable primary-to-secondary leak rate is 
    proportionately increased and the iodine release rate spike factor 
    is assumed to be 500 in accordance with the SRP. With an RCS DE I-
    131 activity limit of 1.0 microCuries/gram, the maximum site 
    allowable leakage limit was calculated, in accordance with the NRC 
    SRP methodology, to be 6.64 gpm at room temperature and pressure. 
    ComEd has evaluated the reduction of the RCS DE I-131 activity to 
    0.05 microCuries/gram along with the increase of the allowable 
    leakage to 132.8 gpm at room temperature and pressure and has 
    concluded:
    
    --assuming a spike factor of 500, the maximum activity released is 
    not changed, and
    --the offsite dose, including the iodine spiking factor, will be 
    less than the 10 CFR 100 limits.
    
        Based on the NRC SRP methodology for dose assessments and 
    assuming the iodine spike factor of 500 is applicable at the new 
    0.05 microCuries/gram RCS DE I-131 activity limit, the Control Room 
    dose, the Low Population Zone dose, and the dose at the Exclusion 
    Area Boundary continue to satisfy the appropriately small fraction 
    of the 10 CFR 100 dose limits.
        An evaluation of the Control Room dose, attributed to an MSLB 
    accident concurrent with steam generator primary-to-secondary 
    leakage at the maximum site allowable limit, was performed in 
    support of a license amendment request for application of a 1.0 volt 
    Interim Plugging Criteria. This evaluation concluded that the 
    activity released to the environment during an eight (8) hour time 
    period from an MSLB accident (812 Curies for a Pre-accident iodine 
    spike and 888 Curies for an accident-initiated iodine spike) is 
    bounded by the activity released to the environment from the Loss of 
    Coolant design basis accident (1290 Curies). Therefore, the Control 
    Room dose, due to the MSLB accident scenario, is bounded by the 
    existing Loss of Coolant Accident (LOCA) analysis. The maximum site 
    allowable primary-to-secondary leakage is limited by the offsite 
    dose at the Exclusion Area Boundary due to an accident-initiated 
    spike.
        The report by J.P. Adams and C.L. Atwood, ``The Iodine Spike 
    Release Rate During a Steam Generator Tube Rupture,'' Nuclear 
    Technology, Vol. 94, p. 361 (1991), concluded that the NRC SRP 
    methodology, which specifies a release rate spike factor of 500 for 
    iodine activity from the fuel rod to the RCS, is conservative when 
    the RCS DE I-131 concentration is greater than 0.3 microCuries/gram. 
    In order to evaluate whether a release rate spike factor of 500 is 
    conservative below 0.3 microCuries/gram, actual operating data from 
    the previous reactor trips of Braidwood Units 1 and 2, with and 
    without fuel defects, were reviewed and analyzed using the 
    methodology presented in Section II.C of the Adams and Atwood report 
    (Method 2). The same five data screening criteria described in the 
    Adams and Atwood report were applied to the Braidwood data to ensure 
    consistency and validity when comparing the Braidwood results to the 
    data in the Adams and Atwood report. Of the reactor trip events at 
    Braidwood Units 1 and 2, seventeen (17) met the five data screening 
    criteria.
        Seven (7) of the seventeen (17) Braidwood trips occurred during 
    cycles with no fuel defects. In all seven of these instances, the 
    calculated spike factor was much less than the spike factor of 500 
    assumed in the NRC SRP methodology. Braidwood Unit 1 Cycle 7 is 
    currently operating with no fuel defects and an RCS DE I-131 
    activity of approximately 3E-4 microCuries/gram. The seven previous 
    trips with no fuel defects had steady-state iodine values that are 
    reasonably close to the current operating conditions. It is 
    therefore reasonable to conclude that, assuming continued operation 
    with little to no fuel defects, the calculated spike factors from 
    these events would reflect an actual event for Unit 1 Cycle 7, i.e. 
    the spike factor will be less than 500.
        Since some of the Braidwood spike factors were greater than 500 
    when the RCS DE I-131 activity prior to the accident was less than 
    0.3 microCuries/gram, ComEd examined the conservatisms in the 
    current release rate calculation. The primary reason for the high 
    spiking factors contained in the Adams and Atwood report (up to 
    12,000), is not because the absolute post-trip release rate is high 
    (factor numerator), but rather because the steady-state release rate 
    (factor denominator) is low. The Braidwood specific data resulted in 
    six (6) events with a calculated release rate spike factor greater 
    than 500. It is not expected based upon the Unit 1 Cycle 7 fuel 
    conditions that a spiking factor greater than 500 would occur. The 
    revised RCS DE I-131 activity limit will also ensure that the 
    operating cycle will not continue if significant fuel defects 
    develop.
        In order to evaluate the Braidwood specific data against the NRC 
    SRP methodology, the release rate for a steady-state RCS DE I-131 
    activity of 1.0 microCuries/gram was calculated. Using the Braidwood 
    specific data, the pre-trip steady-state release rate is 27.5 Ci/hr. 
    Using a release rate spike factor of 500 for the accident-initiated 
    spike, the post-trip maximum release rate would be 13,733 Ci/hr (SRP 
    Methodology). The highest post-trip iodine release rate from the 
    Braidwood trip data, Event 15, was 1335 Ci/hr, it is important to 
    remember that this number is determined by conservatively increasing 
    the post-trip RCS DE I-131 activity by a factor of three (3), in 
    accordance with the Adams and Atwood report.
        The purpose of this amendment request is to reduce the TS 
    [Technical Specification] RCS DE I-131 limit by a factor of twenty 
    as compared to the original TS RCS DE I-131 limit of 1.0 
    microCuries/gram. By decreasing the TS RCS DE I-131 activity by a 
    factor of twenty the maximum iodine release rate is 686.7 Ci/hr, 
    (13,733 Ci/hr divided by 20). Two (2) of the seventeen (17) 
    Braidwood data points exceed this value. Both occurred during cycles 
    with fuel defects. Braidwood Unit 1 is currently operating with no 
    fuel defects. Fifteen (15) of the 168 data points in the Adams and 
    Atwood report exceed 686.7 Ci/hr. For the combined database of 185 
    data points, of which 17 exceeded 686.7 Ci/hr, only two of these 
    seventeen (17) data points had a pre-trip RCS DE I-131 activity 
    below 0.05 microCuries/gram. The 95% confidence prediction for the 
    combined data sets bounded one (1) of these two (2) data points. 
    This data indicates that the possibility for a post-trip iodine fuel 
    release rate to exceed 686.7 Ci/hr, when the pre-trip RCS DE I-131 
    concentration is at or below 0.05 microCuries/gram, is small. The 
    conservatisms mentioned in the following sections will reduce the 
    possibility of exceeding a small fraction of the 10 CFR 100 limits 
    should a fuel release greater than 686.7 Ci/hr occur.
        If the Braidwood data were plotted with the Adams and Atwood 
    data, the conclusions of the Adams and Atwood report would not be 
    compromised. Where the Braidwood data contains spike factors greater 
    than 500, the RCS DE I-131 concentrations are below 0.05 
    microCuries/gram. Since the Braidwood data includes very few data 
    points near 0.05 microCuries/gram (the requested new TS limit), it 
    is appropriate to use the Braidwood database combined with the Adams 
    and Atwood database near 0.05 microCuries/gram to determine if a 
    spike factor of 500 is appropriate. The combined databases contain 
    seventy-nine (79) data points with a Pre-Trip RCS DE I-131 activity 
    between 0.01 microCuries/gram and 0.10 microCuries/gram. Sixty-two 
    (62) of these seventy-nine (79) data points (78%) have spike factors 
    less than 500. Using the entire Braidwood database combined with the 
    Adams and Atwood database, 141 of the 185 data points (76%) have an 
    iodine spike factor less than 500. Therefore, it is reasonable to 
    assume that a spike factor of 500 would not be exceeded for a 
    majority of the events if an MSLB accident were to occur while the 
    RCS DE I-131 activity is at or below 0.05 microCuries/gram. The 
    highest spike factor seen in the Adams and Atwood report near a Pre-
    Trip RCS DE I-131 activity of 0.05 microCuries/gram was 773 (at 0.05 
    microCuries/gram). The corresponding release rate for this event was 
    368 Ci/hr which is less than the calculated Braidwood maximum 
    release rate of 686.7 Ci/hr.
        The predominant factors in calculating the offsite dose are the 
    post-trip iodine release rate from the fuel and the flowrate at 
    which the activity is being released to the environment, not whether 
    the spike factor is greater than or less than 500. The post-trip DE 
    I-131 release rate will determine the level of activity in the RCS 
    that will be released. The flowrate will determine at what rate this
    
    [[Page 11916]]
    
    activity is released to the environment. Method 3, which used an 
    approach in the Adams and Atwood report, concluded that, at a 95% 
    confidence of a 85 percentile, the post-trip iodine release rate was 
    bounded by 0.608 Ci/hr-MWe. For Braidwood Station, which has a MWe 
    rating of 1175, the post-trip iodine release rate, at a 95% 
    confidence of a 85 percentile, should not exceed 714 Ci/hr. Two (2) 
    of the seventeen (17) reactor trips from Braidwood exceeded 714 Ci/
    hr. These two (2) reactor trips had post-trip iodine release rates 
    of 1335 Ci/hr (spike factor of 3471) and 802 Ci/hr (spike factor of 
    1483). Both occurred during cycles with fuel defects. Braidwood Unit 
    1 is currently operating with no fuel defects.
        In the fourth method, the results from a Draft Electric Power 
    Research Institute (EPRI) Report TR-103680, Rev. 1, November 1995, 
    ``Empirical Study of Iodine Spiking In PWR Power Plants'' were 
    applied. The objective of the EPRI study was to quantify the iodine 
    spiking in a postulated Main Steam Line Break/Steam Generator Tube 
    Rupture (MSLB/SGTR) accident sequences. In the EPRI report, an 
    iodine spike factor between 40 and 150 was determined to match data 
    from existing plant trips. The maximum iodine spike factor value of 
    150 was applied to a steady-state equilibrium RCS DE I-131 activity 
    of 0.33 microCuries/gram. The resulting two-hour average iodine 
    concentration for a postulated MSLB/SGTR accident sequence was 
    determined to be 3.1 microCuries/gram. Since the EPRI report is 
    based on industry data and the EPRI method predicted a post-accident 
    iodine activity, which is a small fraction of the activity predicted 
    by the NRC SRP methodology, it can be expected that, for the 
    proposed 0.05 microCuries/gram limit under an MSLB/SGTR accident 
    sequence, the post-accident iodine activity would typically be a 
    small fraction of the RCS DE I-131 activity predicted by the NRC SRP 
    methodology. For Braidwood, using the SRP methodology with an RCS DE 
    I-131 activity of 1.0 microCuries/gram and a spike factor of 500, 
    the Post-Trip RCS activity two hours after the event would be near 
    38 microCuries/gram. At an RCS DE I-131 activity of 0.05 
    microCuries/gram, it would require a spike factor of nearly 10,000 
    to obtain a Post-Trip RCS DE I-131 activity near 38 microCuries/
    gram. With a Post-Trip RCS DE I-131 activity of 38 microCuries/gram, 
    an increase in the allowable leak rate could impact the 10 CFR 100 
    limits. To accommodate for an increase in the allowable leak rate by 
    a factor of twenty, the resultant activity would need to be below 
    1.9 microCuries/gram. Two (2) of the seventeen (17) post-trip data 
    points from Braidwood exceeded 1.9 microCuries/gram. Both occurred 
    during cycles with fuel defects. Braidwood Unit 1 is currently 
    operating with no fuel defects. The conservatisms mentioned below 
    will reduce the possibility of exceeding a small fraction of the 10 
    CFR 100 limits should the post-trip iodine exceed 1.9 microCuries/
    gram.
        Based on evaluations by the four methods above, Braidwood can 
    conclude that the current methodology (Method 1) used to predict 
    iodine spiking is conservative. Although dose projections indicate 
    with confidence that the iodine spiking factor limit will be met, 
    the conservatisms in the offsite dose calculation and current 
    Braidwood Unit 1 operating conditions listed below, provide added 
    assurance that the 10 CFR 100 limits, General Design Criteria (GDC) 
    19 criteria, and the requirements of NRC Generic Letter 95-05 will 
    be satisfied if the iodine spike factor exceeds 500 or the post-trip 
    fuel release rate exceeds 686.7 Ci/hr.
        As further assurance that the 10 CFR 100 and GDC 19 limits are 
    not exceeded, several conservatisms are inherent to the offsite dose 
    calculation. These conservatisms include, but are not limited to:
        1. The meteorological data used is at the fifth percentile. It 
    is expected that the actual dispersion of the iodine would result in 
    less exposure at the site boundary than the 30 Rem limit of 10 CFR 
    100.
        2. Iodine partitioning is not accounted for in the faulted SG. 
    With the high pH of the secondary water, some partitioning is 
    expected to occur. An iodine partition factor of 0.1 is more 
    realistic (per Table 15.1-3 of Reference 8 [the Braidwood Updated 
    Final Safety Analysis Report]) than the 1.0 valued (no partitioning) 
    used in the offsite dose calculation. This reduces calculated dose 
    by 90%.
        3. The activity in the RCS is not expected to increase 
    instantaneously with the spike in iodine released from the defective 
    fuel.
        4. The results from the Braidwood tube pull data indicate that 
    the projected Interim Plugging Criteria leak rate is conservative.
        In addition, the current Braidwood Unit 1 operating conditions 
    provide defense in depth and provide further assurance that the 10 
    CFR 100 and GDC 19 limits will not be exceeded:
        1. Braidwood Unit 1 is currently operating with a debris 
    resistant fuel design which is less likely to develop fuel defects.
        2. As evidenced by industry data, if debris related fuel 
    failures are going to occur they are most likely to be occur early 
    in the cycle. Braidwood Unit 1 has operated approximately 6 months 
    into its current cycle and has seen no signs of fuel defects. 
    Therefore, fuel failure prior to completion of the current cycle is 
    not likely.
        3. The RCS DE I-131 activity is likely to be less than the TS 
    limit. With the current Braidwood Unit 1 RCS DE I-131 activity near 
    3E-4 microCuries/gram with no fuel defects, the spike factor is 
    expected to be considerably smaller than the 500 value.
        4. It is unlikely, for the short time period this amendment is 
    being requested (remainder of Cycle 7), that an accident-initiated 
    iodine spike for Braidwood Unit 1 would be greater than the NRC SRP 
    assumed value.
        5. Primary-to-secondary leakage is likely to be less than the TS 
    limit (150 gpd) in each of the four SGs prior to the event. 
    Currently, minimal primary-to-secondary leakage (less than 5 gpd) 
    exists at Braidwood Unit 1.
        These proposed changes do not result in a significant increase 
    in the consequences of an accident previously analyzed.
        The RCS DE I-131 activity limit is not considered as a precursor 
    to any accident. Therefore, this proposed change does not result in 
    a significant increase in the probability of an accident previously 
    analyzed.
        2. The proposed change does not create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        The changes proposed in this amendment request conservatively 
    reduce the Unit 1 RCS DE I-131 activity limit at which action needs 
    to be taken. The changes do not directly affect plant operation. 
    These changes will not result in the installation of any new 
    equipment or systems or the modification of any existing equipment 
    or systems. No new operating procedures, conditions or 
    configurations will be created by this proposed amendment.
        Accordingly, this proposed change does not create the 
    possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any accident 
    previously evaluated.
        3. The proposed change does not involve a significant reduction 
    in a margin of safety.
        NRC Generic Letter 95-05 allows lowering of the RCS dose 
    equivalent iodine as a means for accepting higher projected leakage 
    rates provided justification for the RCS DE I-131 activity below 
    0.35 microCuries/gram is provided. Four methods for determining the 
    fuel rod iodine release rates and spike factors during an accident 
    were reviewed. Each of these methods utilized actual industry data, 
    including Braidwood Units 1 and 2, for pre-and post-reactor trip RCS 
    DE I-131 activities. Each of the methods demonstrated that the 
    actual fuel rod iodine release rates are a small fraction of the 
    release rate as calculated using the NRC SRP methodology. Although 
    these values are a small fraction of that determined by the NRC SRP 
    Method, Braidwood is also requesting an increase in the allowable 
    primary-to-secondary leak rate during MSLB. By decreasing the TS RCS 
    DE I-131 activity limit by a factor of twenty and increasing the 
    allowable leak rate by a factor of twenty, the activity released to 
    the public would be equal to or less than the activity calculated by 
    the SRP method for each of the seventeen reactor trip events 
    reviewed at Braidwood. The predicted end-of-cycle 7 leak rate is 
    122.3 gpm (Room T/P [temperature and pressure]). The calculated site 
    boundary dose due to this leakage is 27.63 Rem. This dose meets the 
    requirements of 10 CFR 100 and GDC 19. All design basis and off-site 
    dose calculation assumptions remain satisfied. This proposed change 
    would not result in a reduction in a margin of safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    requested amendments involve no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: Wilmington Public Library, 201 
    S. Kankakee Street, Wilmington, Illinois 60481.
        Attorney for licensee: Michael I. Miller, Esquire; Sidley and 
    Austin, One First National Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60603.
    
    [[Page 11917]]
    
        NRC Project Director: Robert A. Capra.
    
    Commonwealth Edison Company, Docket Nos. STN 50-454 and STN 50-455, 
    Byron Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, Ogle County, Illinois
    
    Docket Nos. STN 50-456 and STN 50-457, Braidwood Station, Unit Nos. 1 
    and 2, Will County, Illinois
    
        Date of amendment request: September 24, 1997.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise Technical Specification Surveillance Requirement 4.3.4.2 to 
    change the frequency of turbine throttle and governor valve testing 
    from monthly to quarterly and incorporate corresponding administrative 
    changes. Bases 3/4.3.4 will be changed to update a referenced vendor 
    document and incorporate corresponding administrative changes.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        A. The proposed changes do not involve a significant increase in 
    the probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        The Bases change is a reference update, which is administrative 
    in nature. Additional administrative changes necessitated by a 
    change in the presentation of the surveillance requirements are 
    proposed. The changes are consistent with Generic Letter 93-05 and 
    NUREG-1366. This change reduces the frequency of testing that is 
    likely to cause transients or excessive wear of equipment. An 
    evaluation of these changes indicates that there will be a benefit 
    to plant safety. The evaluation, documented in NUREG-1366, 
    considered (1) unavailability of safety equipment due to testing, 
    (2) initiation of significant transients due to testing, (3) 
    actuation of engineered safety features that unnecessarily cycle 
    safety equipment, (4) importance to safety of that system or 
    component, (5) failure rate of that system or component, and (6) 
    effectiveness of the test in discovering the failure.
        As a result of the decrease in the testing frequencies, the risk 
    of testing causing a transient and equipment degradation will be 
    decreased, and the reliability of the equipment will not be 
    significantly decreased.
        The initial conditions and methodologies used in the accident 
    analyses remain unchanged. The proposed changes do not change or 
    alter the design assumptions for the systems or components used to 
    mitigate the consequences of an accident. Therefore, accident 
    analyses results are not impacted. Appropriate testing will continue 
    to assure that equipment and systems will be capable of performing 
    the intended function. The frequency of testing is not a precursor 
    for any analyzed accidents.
        Therefore, the proposed changes do not involve a significant 
    increase in the probability or consequences of an accident 
    previously evaluated.
        B. The proposed changes do not create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        The proposed changes modify allowable intervals between turbine 
    throttle and governor valve surveillance tests. The proposed changes 
    do not affect the design or operation of any system, structure, or 
    component in the plant. The safety functions of the related 
    structures, systems, or components are not changed in any manner, 
    nor is the reliability of any structure, system, or component 
    reduced by the revised surveillance or testing requirements. 
    Appropriate testing will continue to assure that the system is 
    capable of performing its intended function.
        The changes do not affect the manner by which the facility is 
    operated and do not change any facility design feature, structure, 
    system, or component. No new or different type of equipment will be 
    installed.
        The turbine valve testing surveillances will be changed to 
    account for a frequency change from monthly to quarterly for the 
    throttle valves and for the governor valves.
        Since there is no change to the facility or operating 
    procedures, and the safety functions and reliability of structures, 
    systems, or components are not affected, the proposed changes do not 
    create the possibility of a new or different kind of accident from 
    any accident previously evaluated.
        C. The proposed changes do not involve a significant reduction 
    in a margin of safety.
        All of the proposed Technical Specification changes are 
    compatible with plant operating experience and are consistent with 
    the guidance provided in Generic Letter 93-05 and NUREG-1366. The 
    changes reduce the frequency of testing that increases the risk of 
    transients and equipment degradation. There is no impact on safety 
    limits or limiting safety system settings. The Bases change is a 
    vendor reference update, which is administrative in nature.
        Certain reload designs can be such that power differences 
    between the top and bottom of the core are more sensitive to control 
    and can develop divergent xenon oscillations when the power 
    reduction occurs during the middle of core life. Near the end of 
    core life, stabilizing even larger differences in axial power 
    distribution becomes more of a problem because of the larger 
    temperature coefficient, lower boron concentration and larger 
    differential xenon transient. In the Safety Evaluation Report 
    related to the Prairie Island Amendment Numbers 86 and 79 in regard 
    to the discussion above, the NRC wrote, ``Based on the above, the 
    staff has concluded that the margin of safety is reduced when the 
    plant is undergoing turbine valve testing.''
        Since this amendment reduces the number of turbine tests while 
    still maintaining acceptable equipment reliability, the proposed 
    changes result in an increase in the margin of safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    requested amendments involve no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: For Byron, the Byron Public 
    Library District, 109 N. Franklin, P.O. Box 434, Byron, Illinois 61010; 
    for Braidwood, the Wilmington Public Library, 201 S. Kankakee Street, 
    Wilmington, Illinois 60481.
        Attorney for licensee: Michael I. Miller, Esquire; Sidley and 
    Austin, One First National Plaza, Chicago, Illinois 60603.
        NRC Project Director: Robert A. Capra.
    
    Detroit Edison Company, Docket No. 50-16, Enrico Fermi Atomic Power 
    Plant, Unit 1, Monroe County, Michigan
    
        Date of amendment request: December 15, 1997 (Reference NRC-97-
    0115).
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment will 
    revise License Condition A to delete references to letters dated May 
    17, 1985, July 23, 1986, September 15, 1986, September 25, 1987, 
    September 15, 1988, and December 22, 1988, and replace them with the 
    Enrico Fermi Atomic Power Plant, Unit 1, Safety Analysis Report (F1SAR) 
    as the licensing basis.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration using the standards in 10 CFR 50.92(c). The licensee's 
    analysis is presented below:
    
        (1) Does the proposed change significantly increase the 
    probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated?
        No, the proposed submittal of the F1SAR as the facility's 
    licensing basis document does not significantly increase the 
    probability of an accident. The F1SAR is a compilation of previously 
    submitted information and other information gathered on the 
    condition of the facility. Compilation of current information and 
    imposition of the new Fire Protection and Quality Assurance Program 
    requirements will not increase the probability of an accident. These 
    additional controls would reduce the probability of an event. The 
    proposed addition of a hypothetical secondary sodium accident 
    scenario identifies one possible previously unidentified potential 
    cause of a primary sodium release and/or liquid waste tank release. 
    The previous submittal assumed the cause of the primary sodium 
    release to be a fire or other catastrophic event. The cause of the 
    liquid waste tank rupture was assumed to be an earthquake. 
    Recognition of a cause being the reaction of secondary sodium does
    
    [[Page 11918]]
    
    not significantly increase the probability of a primary sodium 
    release or liquid waste release. A catastrophic event would still 
    need to occur to cause the postulated scenario, so there is no 
    discernible increase in the probability of the primary sodium or 
    liquid waste accident compared to the existing licensing basis. For 
    the reasons discussed above, substituting the F1SAR as the licensing 
    basis for Fermi 1 will not significantly increase the probability of 
    an accident.
        The proposed submittal of the F1SAR as the Fermi 1 licensing 
    basis document will have no impact on the consequences of an 
    accident. Consolidating current information on the plant and 
    previous submittals does not change the amount of radioactivity at 
    the facility or the potential magnitude of any release during an 
    accident. Since the potential accident source terms were not updated 
    as part of the submittal, the consequences of the accidents 
    contained in the F1SAR match the consequences in the previous 
    submittal. Though a new postulated hypothetical accident scenario 
    was added, the secondary sodium involved in that accident is not 
    radioactive, per previous submittals, and so the only potential 
    radiological consequences of that scenario occur if the primary 
    sodium or liquid waste is released and those consequences have 
    already been reviewed in the NRC safety analysis for Amendment No. 9 
    to the Fermi 1 license. Therefore, the adoption of the F1SAR as the 
    facility's licensing basis will not significantly increase the 
    consequences of an accident at Fermi 1.
        (2) Will the proposed amendment create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously analyzed?
        No, establishment of the F1SAR as the Fermi 1 licensing basis 
    document will not create a new type of accident. The F1SAR is mainly 
    a compilation of the previous licensing basis documents, information 
    on the facility condition and additional controls. It does not 
    involve operating in any new type of mode and so cannot create a new 
    or different type of accident. The new hypothetical secondary sodium 
    accident contained in the F1SAR is a sodium accident. One of the 
    existing licensing basis accidents is the primary sodium accident 
    resulting in release of the primary sodium and its activity. The 
    hypothetical secondary sodium accident as analyzed may lead to the 
    release of the primary sodium or liquid waste and so it is a 
    potential precursor of an already identified accident.
        (3) Will the proposed change significantly reduce the margin of 
    safety at the facility?
        No, adopting the new F1SAR as the licensing basis document for 
    Fermi 1 will not decrease the margin of safety. It will establish an 
    up-to-date licensing basis, so future changes can be appropriately 
    evaluated against an updated safety analysis report. The F1SAR 
    better describes the current condition of the plant. No physical 
    changes will be implemented based on the submittal of the F1SAR. 
    Some additional administrative requirements will be established in 
    the new Quality Assurance program and in the need to keep the F1SAR 
    updated biannually. No new types of accidents are discussed in the 
    F1SAR--the discussion of the hypothetical secondary sodium event is 
    a more detailed discussion of what potentially could happen during a 
    catastrophic event leading to a sodium reaction. A total primary 
    sodium release was already established as a licensing basis event. 
    Because the F1SAR will not, in itself, lead to physical changes, but 
    will be the new standard to which future changes are compared, 
    establishment of this updated document as the Fermi 1 licensing 
    basis will not significantly reduce the margin of safety of the 
    facility.
    
        NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on this 
    review, it appears that the three standards of 50.92(c) are satisfied. 
    Therefore, NRC staff proposes to determine that the amendment request 
    involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: Monroe County Library System, 
    3700 South Custer Road, Monroe, Michigan 48161.
        Attorney for licensee: John Flynn, Esquire, Detroit Edison Company, 
    2000 Second Avenue, Detroit, Michigan 48226.
        NRC Branch Chief: John W. N. Hickey.
    
    Duquesne Light Company, et al., Docket Nos. 50-334 and 50-412, Beaver 
    Valley Power Station, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, Shippingport, Pennsylvania
    
        Date of amendment request: December 19, 1997.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise the requirements for the source range neutron flux channels in 
    Mode 2 (Below P-6), 3, 4, and 5 to incorporate the guidance provided in 
    NUREG-1431, the NRC's Improved Standard Technical Specifications (ISTS) 
    with some modifications to address plant-specific design features. This 
    change would allow (1) the use of alternate detectors provided the 
    required functions are provided, and (2) plant cooldown with inoperable 
    detectors provided the shutdown margin accounts for the temperature 
    change. This change would also modify the Unit 2 Technical 
    Specifications (TS) Table 3.3-1 Channels To Trip and Minimum Channels 
    Operable requirements to 0 and 1, respectively. This portion of the 
    amendment would make these Unit 2 requirements consistent with the 
    current Unit 1 requirements. For both Units 1 and 2, TS Table 4.3-1 
    would be modified to include a notation exempting the alternate source 
    range detectors from surveillance testing until they are repaired for 
    operability.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. Does the change involve a significant increase in the 
    probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated?
        The proposed amendment would modify the reactor trip system 
    instrumentation requirements to permit the use of alternate 
    detectors in place of inoperable source range detectors. The 
    alternate detectors will be connected to the source range circuits 
    to provide the required indications and functions. The alternate 
    detectors are not required to be tested to satisfy the surveillance 
    requirements until they are connected to the source range circuits 
    and required to be operable. The alternate detectors must have the 
    accuracy and sensitivity required to adequately monitor changes in 
    the core reactivity levels. The alternate detectors will provide 
    neutron flux monitoring in place of the source range detectors thus 
    assuring core monitoring at a level consistent with the current 
    technical specification requirements. Therefore, there is no loss of 
    function or need for additional compensatory actions and the 
    operators can perform required plant evolutions while relying on the 
    alternate detectors.
        Two operable detectors are required when the control rods are 
    capable of withdrawal. Rod withdrawal and boron dilution add 
    positive reactivity which can significantly affect the reactivity 
    condition of the core, therefore, two monitors are required operable 
    during startup evolutions. Redundant detectors are required to 
    ensure that two source range neutron flux detectors are available to 
    detect changes in core reactivity. These changes provide those 
    indications and functions consistent with the current technical 
    specification requirements where at least two source range detectors 
    are operating and capable of providing the required functions. The 
    function of the source range detectors is to provide direct neutron 
    flux monitoring of the core to detect changes in reactivity which 
    would result in a loss of the required shutdown margin.
        One source range or alternate detector is required when the 
    control rods are fully inserted and are not capable of withdrawal. 
    Plant cooldown is recognized as a positive reactivity addition, 
    however, this is accounted for in the shutdown margin calculations. 
    The shutdown margin remains essentially unchanged and will be 
    available to preclude a criticality event during this evolution. 
    Inadvertent control rod withdrawal is not a concern, therefore, one 
    source range or alternate detector can adequately monitor the core 
    neutron flux. The action statements have been modified to address 
    the NUREG-1431 Improved Standard Technical Specification (ISTS) 
    requirements along with incorporating the ability to use alternate 
    detectors in place of the source range detectors.
        Bases 3/4.3.1 and 3/4.3.2, Protective and Engineered Safety 
    Features (ESF) Instrumentation, has been revised to include the 
    modifications to the source range detector requirements including 
    the use of alternate
    
    [[Page 11919]]
    
    source range detectors. The alternate detectors must provide 
    sufficient accuracy and sensitivity to adequately monitor changes in 
    core reactivity during Modes 2 (Below P-6), 3, 4, and 5.
        The operability requirements of the source range neutron flux 
    instrumentation will continue to be met when using an alternate 
    detector in place of a source range neutron flux detector. No 
    changes are being incorporated that would act to increase the 
    probability of a positive reactivity addition event, therefore, the 
    proposed change will not involve a significant increase in the 
    probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        2. Does the change create the possibility of a new or different 
    kind of accident from any accident previously evaluated?
        The function of the source range detectors is to provide direct 
    neutron flux monitoring of the core to detect positive reactivity 
    additions which would result in a loss of the required shutdown 
    margin. The alternate detectors must provide the accuracy and 
    sensitivity required to adequately monitor changes in the core 
    reactivity levels during shutdown and startup activities. The 
    alternate monitors will be connected to the source range circuits to 
    provide the required indications and functions. Therefore, there is 
    no loss of function or need for additional compensatory actions and 
    plant shutdown and startup activities can be continued while relying 
    on the alternate detectors.
        Control rod withdrawal is a method capable of providing rapid 
    positive reactivity addition with boron dilution being a much slower 
    positive reactivity addition method. With the control rods capable 
    of withdrawal, a rod withdrawal event could rapidly initiate core 
    criticality so redundant source range detectors are required 
    operable. This ensures adequate monitoring capability is available 
    to alert the operators of a rapid increase in the core reactivity 
    condition. The maximum reactivity addition due to the boron dilution 
    is slow enough to allow the operator to determine the cause and take 
    corrective action before the shutdown margin is lost. These changes 
    will not affect the operability or reliability of the source range 
    instrumentation to provide the required indications and functions. 
    Therefore, the proposed change will not create the possibility of a 
    new or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        3. Does the change involve a significant reduction in a margin 
    of safety?
        The proposed change will continue to ensure the required source 
    range instrumentation functions are available during shutdown and 
    startup conditions. This change will not reduce the reliability of 
    the source range detectors to monitor the core reactivity condition 
    and provide the appropriate indications or affect the required 
    shutdown margin. Plant operation will continue to be maintained 
    within the shutdown margin requirements of [Technical] Specification 
    3.1.1.1 and 3.1.1.2. The required indications and functions are 
    still maintained in accordance with current technical specification 
    requirements and the shutdown margin is unaffected, therefore, the 
    proposed change will not involve a significant reduction in a margin 
    of safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: B. F. Jones Memorial Library, 
    663 Franklin Avenue, Aliquippa, PA 15001.
        Attorney for licensee: Jay E. Silberg, Esquire, Shaw, Pittman, 
    Potts & Trowbridge, 2300 N Street, NW., Washington, DC 20037.
        NRC Project Director: John F. Stolz.
    
    Duquesne Light Company, et al., Docket No. 50-412, Beaver Valley Power 
    Station, Unit 2, Shippingport, Pennsylvania
    
        Date of amendment request: January 29, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise the Beaver Valley Power Station, Unit No. 2, Updated Final 
    Safety Analysis Report (UFSAR) calculated doses to address a non-
    conversative assumption regarding control room emergency pressurization 
    fan flow during the Locked Rotor accident and include new X/Q values in 
    calculating the Exclusion Area Boundary (EAB) and Low Population Zone 
    (LPZ) doses.
        This change is not the result of hardware changes to the plant or a 
    change in operating practices. It reflects corrected analysis results 
    only and allows correction of the licensing basis to reflect 
    conservative assumptions used in the revised dose analysis for a Locked 
    Rotor event.
        The proposed amendment would also revise USFAR Tables 15.0-13, 
    15.6-15 and 15.6-16 to modify calculation parameters and UFSAR Section 
    15.6.5.5 to include editorial changes to ensure that descriptions of 
    the Small Break Loss of Coolant Accident (SBLOCA) radiological 
    consequences are clear. The following items in the UFSAR description of 
    the SBLOCA radiological consequences analysis were changed: (1) a new 
    lower minimum control room emergency pressurization fan flow rate and 
    (2) a new lower minimum air bottle discharge rate.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. Does the change involve a significant increase in the 
    probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated?
    
    [Locked Rotor Accident]
    
        The proposed amendment would revise the calculated control room 
    doses for a Locked Rotor accident to address a non-conservative 
    assumption for the fan pressurization system flow rate. The proposed 
    amendment does not affect the capability of the control room 
    habitability system to maintain control room dose within the limits 
    of General Design Criterion (GDC) 19 in Appendix A of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations Title 10 Part 50. The control room habitability 
    system is an accident mitigation system and will continue to operate 
    as designed. The system has no accident prevention function nor does 
    it interact with systems that have such a function. The proposed 
    change does not alter plant systems, structures or components.
        The proposed amendment would also revise calculated offsite 
    doses resulting from a locked rotor accident. This change in doses 
    is not due to physical plant changes, but results mainly from use of 
    more conservative assumptions used in calculating doses.
        The proposed change does not affect the manner in which the 
    plant is operated. The physical plant equipment and operating 
    practices are not changed; therefore, the probability of an accident 
    previously evaluated remains unchanged.
        The performance requirements of the plant systems which are 
    required to minimize the radiological consequences of a Locked Rotor 
    accident remain unchanged. The proposed change slightly increases 
    calculated control room doses due to an analysis input change for 
    filtration fan flow rate. This slight increase remains below the 
    limits required by GDC 19. The proposed change does not involve a 
    significant increase in the consequences of an accident previously 
    evaluated since adequate control room radiation protection continues 
    to be provided to ensure actions can be taken to operate the plant 
    safely under accident conditions. The radiological consequences to 
    the environment from a Locked Rotor accident remain unchanged since 
    the performance of plant systems remains unchanged. Although 
    slightly increased, revised calculated offsite doses remain less 
    than 10 CFR 100 limits.
    [SBLOCA]
    
        The proposed amendment would revise the control room dose 
    analysis parameters for a Small Break Loss of Coolant Accident 
    (SBLOCA) to include more conservative assumptions for the 
    pressurization system flow rate. The proposed amendment does not 
    affect the capability of the control room habitability system to 
    maintain control room dose within the limits of General Design 
    Criterion (GDC) 19 in Appendix A of the Code of Federal Regulations 
    Title 10 Part 50. The control room habitability system is an 
    accident mitigation system and will continue to operate as designed. 
    The system has no accident prevention function nor does it interact 
    with systems that have such a function. The proposed change does not 
    alter plant systems, structures or components.
        The proposed change does not affect the manner in which the 
    plant is operated. The physical plant equipment and operating
    
    [[Page 11920]]
    
    practices are not changed; therefore, the probability of an accident 
    previously evaluated remains unchanged.
        The performance requirements of the plant systems which are 
    required to minimize the radiological consequences of a SBLOCA 
    remain unchanged. The proposed change slightly decreases calculated 
    control room doses due to analysis input changes. Calculated doses 
    remain below the limits required by GDC 19.
        Based on the above discussion, it is concluded that th[e] 
    proposed change[s] [do] not involve a significant increase in the 
    probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        2. Does the change create the possibility of a new or different 
    kind of accident from any accident previously evaluated?
    
    [Locked Rotor Accident]
    
        The proposed change does not alter the method of operating the 
    plant nor does it pose additional challenges to the design or 
    function of the control room habitability system. The control room 
    habitability system will continue to operate as designed. The 
    control room habitability system will continue to maintain the 
    control room dose consequences within the limits specified in GDC 
    19. Adequate control room radiation protection will continue to be 
    provided to ensure actions can be taken to operate the plants safely 
    under accident conditions. The proposed change to the control room 
    dose is only the result of a change in analysis input parameters. 
    Plant performance has not been modified in any way which affects 
    doses to the public.
    
    [SBLOCA]
    
        The proposed change does not alter the method of operating the 
    plant nor does it pose additional challenges to the design or 
    function of the control room habitability system. The control room 
    habitability system will continue to operate as designed. The 
    control room habitability system will continue to maintain the 
    control room dose consequences within the limits specified in GDC 
    19. Adequate control room radiation protection will continue to be 
    provided to ensure actions can be taken to operate the plants safely 
    under accident conditions. The proposed change to the control room 
    dose is only a result of an analysis being revised. Plant 
    performance has not been modified in any way which affects doses to 
    the public.
        Therefore, the proposed change[s] [do] not create the 
    possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any accident 
    previously evaluated. Although no new types of accidents are 
    created, the analysis represents a new methodology different than 
    any evaluated previously by the NRC.
        3. Does the change involve a significant reduction in a margin 
    of safety?
    
    [Locked Rotor Accident]
    
        The slight increase in calculated control room dose as a result 
    of assuming increased fan flow does not result in exceeding the 
    limits prescribed in GDC 19. Calculated doses to the public are 
    slightly increased, but not as a result of physical changes. The 
    proposed change will not result in any additional challenges to 
    plant equipment including the fuel and reactor coolant system 
    pressure boundary since adequate control room radiation protection 
    will continue to be provided. The control room habitability system 
    will continue to provide adequate radiation protection to ensure 
    actions can be taken to operate the plant safely under accident 
    conditions. The offsite doses increase slightly; however, the 
    calculated dose results remain less than 10 CFR 100 limits. 
    Therefore, the proposed change does not involve a significant 
    reduction in a margin of safety.
    
    [SBLOCA]
    
        The slight decrease in calculated control room dose as a result 
    of the revised analysis does not result in exceeding the limits 
    prescribed in GDC 19. The proposed change will not result in any 
    additional challenges to plant equipment including the fuel and 
    reactor coolant system pressure boundary since adequate control room 
    radiation protection will continue to be provided. The control room 
    habitability system will continue to provide adequate radiation 
    protection to ensure actions can be taken to operate the plant 
    safely under accident conditions. [Therefore, the NRC staff 
    concludes that the revision to the SBLOCA analysis does not involve 
    a reduction in a margin of safety.]
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: B. F. Jones Memorial Library, 
    663 Franklin Avenue, Aliquippa, PA 15001.
        Attorney for licensee: Jay E. Silberg, Esquire, Shaw, Pittman, 
    Potts & Trowbridge, 2300 N Street, NW., Washington, DC 20037.
        NRC Project Director: John F. Stolz.
    
    Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation, Docket No. 50-410, Nine Mile Point 
    Nuclear Station, Unit 2 (NMP2), Oswego County, New York
    
        Date of amendment request: February 5, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise Technical Specifications (TSs) to update the terminology and 
    references to 10 CFR 50.55a(f) and (g) consistent with the 1989 edition 
    of Section XI of the American Society of Mechanical Engineer Boiler and 
    Pressure Vessel Code (ASME Code). These changes, in effect, provide for 
    consistency between (1) the NMP2 TS, (2) the second 10-year interval of 
    the Inservice Inspections (ISI) and Inservice Testing (IST) Program 
    Plans for NMP2, and (3) the requirement of 10 CFR 50.55a that the ISI/
    IST activities conducted during successive 10-year intervals comply 
    with the requirements in the latest edition and addenda of Section XI 
    of the ASME Code that was in effect 12 months before the start of the 
    10-year interval.
        Specifically, TS 4.0.5 would be changed to reference 10 CFR 
    50.55a(f) for the second 10-year IST Program and 10 CFR 50.55a(g) for 
    the second 10-year ISI Program. The proposed changes to TS Table 
    4.3.7.5-1 and TS 4.4.3.2.2 would replace the references to ASME Section 
    XI with references to criteria in the IST Program. The changes to TS 
    3.4.9.1 and 3.4.9.2 would add the phrase ``system leakage'' to notes 
    that identify testing conditions when the shutdown cooling mode loop 
    may be removed from service. Changes to TS 4.8.1.1.2.h.2 would correct 
    a typographical error for which a reference to ASME Code Section II 
    should refer to Section XI. Appropriate changes would be made to the TS 
    index. Editoral changes to several other TS (i.e., TS 3/4.4.6.1, TS 
    Figure 3.4.6.1-1, TS 3/4.10.7, TS Bases 3/4.4.6, TS Bases 3/4.10.7, and 
    TS Table 5.7.1-1) would make references to ``hydrostatic testing'' and 
    ``leak testing'' conform to the terminology to be used in the second 
    10-year ISI/IST Programs.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. The operation of Nine Mile Point Unit 2, in accordance with 
    the proposed amendment, will not involve a significant increase in 
    the probability or consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        The changes to the TS will ensure that TS reflect the correct 
    10CFR references and the terminology of the second NMP2 10-year ISI/
    IST program. The proposed revisions replace references to ASME 
    Section XI with references to criteria in the Inservice Testing 
    Program. The performance of system leakage testing is added to notes 
    that identify conditions when the shutdown cooling mode loop may be 
    removed from service. The other changes are editorial changes only 
    to ensure that TS reflect the second 10-year ISI/IST program. One of 
    the changes corrects a typographical error. These proposed changes 
    do not affect the inspections or tests performed under the ISI/IST 
    Program and will not result in any changes to the plant. None of the 
    precursors of previously evaluated accidents are affected and 
    therefore, the probability of an accident previously evaluated is 
    not increased.
        The changes will not affect the safety function of any equipment 
    covered by the ISI/IST program. Therefore, these changes will not 
    involve a significant increase in the consequences of an accident 
    previously evaluated.
        2. The operation of Nine Mile Point Unit 2, in accordance with 
    the proposed amendment, will not create the possibility of
    
    [[Page 11921]]
    
    a new or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        The changes to the TS will ensure that TS reflect the correct 
    10CFR references and the terminology of the second NMP2 10-year ISI/
    IST program. One of the changes corrects a typographical error. No 
    physical modification of the plant is involved and no changes to the 
    methods in which plant systems are operated are required. These 
    changes do no affect the inspections or tests performed under the 
    ISI/IST Program. The changes do not introduce any new failure modes 
    or conditions that may create a new or different accident. 
    Therefore, the changes do not by themselves create the possibility 
    of a new or different kind of accident [from any accident] 
    previously evaluated.
        3. The operation of Nine Mile Point Unit 2, in accordance with 
    the proposed amendment, will not involve a significant reduction in 
    a margin of safety.
        The changes to the TS will ensure that TS reflect the correct 
    10CFR references and the terminology of the second NMP2 10-year ISI/
    IST program. One of the changes corrects a typographical error. No 
    physical modification of the plant is involved and no changes to the 
    methods in which plant systems are operated are required. The 
    changes do not adversely affect any physical barrier to the release 
    of radiation to plant personnel or to the public. These changes do 
    not affect the inspections or tests performed under the ISI/IST 
    Program. Therefore, these changes do not involve a reduction in a 
    margin of safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: Reference and Documents 
    Department, Penfield Library, State University of New York, Oswego, New 
    York 13126.
        Attorney for licensee: Mark J. Wetterhahn, Esquire, Winston & 
    Strawn, 1400 L Street, NW., Washington, DC 20005-3502.
        NRC Project Director: S. Singh Bajwa.
    
    Philadelphia Electric Company, Docket Nos. 50-352 and 50-353, Limerick 
    Generating Station (LGS), Units 1 and 2, Montgomery County, 
    Pennsylvania
    
        Date of amendment request: January 27, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed changes to the LGS, 
    Units 1 and 2 Technical Specifications (TS) will revise the TS Table 
    3.6.3-1, ``Part A--Primary Containment Isolation Valves,'' by removing 
    the numerical maximum stroke time for penetration 210, ``HPCI [High 
    Pressure Coolant Injection] Turbine Exhaust,'' and adding a notation 
    that the isolation time is not required.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. The proposed Technical Specifications changes do not involve 
    a significant increase in the probability or consequences of an 
    accident previously evaluated.
        Changes to Technical Specifications regarding the removal of the 
    High Pressure Coolant Injection (HPCI) Turbine Exhaust Valve maximum 
    stroke times do not change the frequency or consequences of any 
    accident previously evaluated.
        The proposed changes do not change the function of the HPCI 
    system nor any safety function of the valve as described in the SAR 
    [Safety Analysis Report]. The isolation stroke times are not limits 
    upon important process variables that are found to be necessary to 
    reasonably protect the integrity of certain of the physical barriers 
    that guard against the uncontrolled release of radioactivity. The 
    stroke times do not detect or indicate an abnormal degradation of 
    the reactor coolant pressure boundary. The stroke times are not a 
    process variable, design feature, or operating restriction that is 
    an initial condition of a design basis accident or transient 
    analysis that either assumes the failure of or presents a challenge 
    to the integrity of a fission product barrier. The stroke times are 
    not part of a component that is part of the primary success path and 
    which functions or actuates to mitigate a design basis accident or 
    transient that either assumes the failure of or presents a challenge 
    to the integrity of a fission product barrier. The stroke times are 
    not a structure, system, or component which operating experience or 
    probabilistic risk assessment has shown to be significant to public 
    health and safety.
        Therefore, the changes will not increase the probability or 
    consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        2. The proposed Technical Specifications changes do not create 
    the possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any 
    accident previously evaluated.
        The proposed Technical Specifications changes regarding the 
    removal of the High Pressure Coolant Injection (HPCI) Turbine 
    Exhaust Valve maximum stroke times do not affect the probability of 
    a malfunction of equipment important to safety. Safety related HPCI 
    system operation occurs with the subject valve passively open. This 
    valve would only be manually closed under events where there was a 
    need to isolate the HPCI system from the suppression pool. The 
    manual closing of the valve may occur under these events and is 
    controlled by station procedures. Given that these procedurally 
    mandated valve isolations are all via remote manual means, valve 
    isolation time is not a critical parameter requiring specific 
    acceptance criteria.
        The Inservice Testing (IST) Program will still maintain an IST 
    program basis maximum stroke time for HV-055-1(2)F072 to establish 
    action and alert levels for valve performance monitoring. These 
    performance based values, in conjunction with diagnostic test 
    criteria, are used for motor operated valve material condition 
    monitoring and trending. Therefore, eliminating the subject maximum 
    isolation time requirement from TS will not increase the probability 
    of malfunction of the valve since the principal means of monitoring 
    valve performance remains unchanged.
        Therefore, these changes do not create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        3. The proposed Technical Specifications changes do not involve 
    a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        There is no defined margin of safety for remote manual valve 
    isolation times discussed in Technical Specification Bases. In 
    addition, the valve maximum stroke time will be retained in the IST 
    program.
        Therefore, the proposed changes do not involve a significant 
    reduction in a margin of safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: Pottstown Public Library, 500 
    High Street, Pottstown, PA 19464.
        Attorney for licensee: J. W. Durham, Sr., Esquire, Sr. V.P. and 
    General Counsel, Philadelphia Electric Company, 2301 Market Street, 
    Philadelphia, PA 19101.
        NRC Project Director: John F. Stolz.
    
    Southern California Edison Company, et al., Docket Nos. 50-361 and 50-
    362, San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, Unit Nos. 2 and 3, San 
    Diego County, California
    
        Date of amendment requests: June 30, 1997.
        Description of amendment requests: The licensee proposes to delete 
    SONGS Unit 2 License Condition 2.C.(19)b, ``Shift Manning,'' and revise 
    SONGS Units 2 and 3 Technical Specifications (TS) 3.3.1, ``Reactor 
    Protective Instrumentation (RPS)-Operating,'' TS 3.3.2, ``Reactor 
    Protective Instrumentation (RPS)-Shutdown,'' TS 3.3.5, ``Engineered 
    Safety Features Actuation System (ESFAS) Instrumentation,'' TS 3.3.10, 
    ``Fuel Handling Isolation Signal (FHIS),'' TS 3.3.11, ``Post Accident 
    Monitoring Instrumentation,'' TS 3.4.7, ``RCS Loops--Mode 5, Loops 
    Filled,'' TS 3.4.12.1, ``Low Temperature Overpressure Protection (LTOP) 
    System,'' TS 3.7.5, ``Auxiliary Feedwater (AFW) System,'' TS Section 
    5.5.2.10, ``Inservice Testing Program,'' and TS Section 5.5.2.11, 
    ``Steam
    
    [[Page 11922]]
    
    Generator (SG) Tube Surveillance Program.'' The proposed changes are 
    required to either: reinstate provisions of the SONGS Units 2 and 3 TS, 
    revised as part of NRC Amendment Numbers 127 and 116, make corrections 
    to the TS, or remove information inadvertently added that is not 
    applicable.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        1. The proposed change does not involve a significant increase 
    in the probability or consequences of an accident previously 
    evaluated.
        Proposed Technical Specification Change Number NPF-10/15-475 
    (PCN-475) addresses modifications to the Technical Specifications 
    for San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station (SONGS) Units 2 and 3 
    approved by NRC Amendment Nos. 127 and 116. NRC Amendment Numbers 
    127 and 116 approved changes to adopt the recommendations of NUREG-
    1432, ``Standard Technical Specifications Combustion Engineering 
    Plants,'' requested through Proposed Technical Specification Change 
    Number NPF-10/15-299 (PCN-299). The proposed changes were identified 
    during drafting of the procedure changes required to implement NRC 
    Amendment Numbers 127 and 116, and during the self-assessment 
    performed by Southern California Edison (SCE).
        The proposed change is required to either: reinstate provisions 
    of the SONGS Units 2 and 3 Technical Specifications, revised as part 
    of NRC Amendment Numbers 127 and 116, for SONGS Units 2 and 3, make 
    corrections to the Technical Specifications, or remove information 
    inadvertently added that is not applicable.
        Proposed Change 1 would delete License Condition 2.C.(19)b for 
    SONGS Unit 2 only. Presently, overtime restrictions are specified in 
    both the license condition and the Topical Report. Through NRC 
    Amendment Numbers 127 and 116, the shift manning requirements were 
    modified and subsequently moved to the Section 5.5.2.e, with details 
    moved to the Topical Report.
        In addition, in the NRC's Safety Evaluation Report related to 
    the ``Issuance of Amendment for San Onofre Nuclear Generating 
    Station, Unit No. 2 (TAC No. M86191) and Unit No. 3 (TAC No. 
    M86192),'' dated February 9, 1996, it is stated that the staff has 
    determined on a generic basis, that specific overtime limits need 
    not be specified in technical specifications, as they are not 
    required by 10 CFR 50.36 (c)(5). The staff also concluded that 
    control of this matter through administrative procedures provides 
    reasonable assurance that personnel overtime would not jeopardize 
    safe plant operation and that specific overtime limits and 
    associated procedures could be described in the UFSAR, or other 
    licensee controlled documents incorporated in the UFSAR by reference 
    for which further changes can be made pursuant to 10 CFR 50.59.
        Retaining a separate license condition provides no function, is 
    inconsistent with the Topical Report, and therefore, should be 
    deleted. There can be no increase in the probability or consequences 
    of any accident previously evaluated as a result of this change, as 
    the change does not revise or reduce commitments, it is solely for 
    clarity.
        Proposed change 2 would revise TS 3.3.1, ``Reactor Protective 
    Instrumentation (RPS)--Operating,'' to delete the exception of the 
    power range neutron flux channels from Surveillance Requirement (SR) 
    3.3.1.7. TS 3.3.1 requires that four RPS trip and operating bypass 
    removal channels for each function covered by this specification be 
    operable in the applicable Modes. SR 3.3.1.7 requires that a channel 
    functional test be performed on each RPS channel, except the power 
    range neutron flux channels. Therefore, the proposed change would 
    delete the exception to SR 3.3.1.7 for the power range neutron flux 
    channels. Under the former Technical Specifications, the power range 
    neutron flux channels were not exempt from the channel functional 
    test.
        Proposed change 3 would revise SR 3.3.2.5 of TS 3.3.2, ``Reactor 
    Protective Instrumentation (RPS)-Shutdown.'' SR 3.3.2.5 requires 
    that the RPS response time be verified within limits every 24 months 
    on a staggered test basis. SR 3.3.1.13 of TS 3.3.1 also requires 
    that response time tests be performed every 24 months on a staggered 
    test basis. However, neutron detectors presently are excluded from 
    response time testing in Modes 1 and 2. Therefore, the proposed 
    change will add a note to SR 3.3.2.5 to allow exclusion of neutron 
    detectors from response time testing. Under the former Technical 
    Specifications, the neutron detectors were exempt from response time 
    testing.
        Proposed change 4 would revise SR 3.3.5.4. SR 3.3.5.4 requires 
    that a channel calibration of the Recirculation Actuation Signal 
    (RAS), including the bypass removal function, be performed. However, 
    a bypass removal function is not part of the RAS design. A change is 
    required therefore, to delete the bypass removal function, as it is 
    not a part of the RAS function. Because the RAS function does not 
    utilize the bypass removal function, eliminating the words from the 
    SR cannot increase the probability or consequences of any accident 
    previously evaluated as a result of this change.
        Proposed change 5 would revise Technical Specification (TS) 
    3.3.10, ``Fuel Handling Isolation Signal (FHIS).'' Specifically, the 
    proposed change would revise the allowable value specified in SR 
    3.3.10.2 for the required FHIS monitor, from ``less than or equal to 
    6E4 cpm above background,'' to ``Sufficiently high to prevent 
    spurious alarms/trips, yet sufficiently low to assure an alarm/trip 
    should an inadvertent release occur.''
        The 6E4 cpm setpoint does not provide adequate margin above and 
    beyond background during a normal refueling outage. Thus, the 
    proposed setpoint, which can be set greater than the highest ambient 
    background level, but remains well below the calculated monitor 
    response to a fuel handling accident, would provide that margin, and 
    was previously specified in the former Technical Specifications.
        The proposed change would permit relocation of the allowable 
    value for the monitors from the Technical Specifications to the 
    administrative control procedures. This change is consistent with 
    the existing Containment Airborne Radiation Monitor Specification. 
    This change will not prevent the radiation monitors from performing 
    their intended function following a design basis accident.
        The consequences of a Fuel Handling Accident inside the FHB have 
    been evaluated, assuming no FHB isolation. The results of the 
    calculation indicated off-site, and control room doses with control 
    room isolation within three minutes, are well within the limits 
    established by the NRC guidelines.
        Compliance with this statement would provide suitable 
    confirmation that the monitors will be capable of performing their 
    intended function, and is further justified by the fact that no 
    credit was given to the monitors in the radiological dose analysis.
        This change will not involve a significant increase in the 
    probability of any accident previously evaluated because the 
    setpoint is not an accident initiator. The consequences of an 
    accident would not be increased either as the administrative value 
    would be set sufficiently low to assure an alarm/trip should an 
    inadvertent release occur. The actual values would be 
    administratively controlled by quality-affecting procedures (i.e., 
    changes to procedures will be evaluated under 10 CFR 50.59).
        In addition, a typographical error in SR 3.3.10.3 would be 
    corrected. The SR Note would be revised to refer to ``initiation 
    relay,'' not ``ignition relay.'' This change will not involve a 
    significant increase in the probability of any accident previously 
    evaluated because it corrects a typographical error only.
        Proposed change 6 would revise Function 6 of Table 3.3.11-1. 
    Currently, Function 6 refers to Containment Sump Water Level (wide 
    range). However, Function 6 is the combined function of the wide 
    range emergency sump level transmitters, and the containment area 
    level transmitters. Therefore, the description of the combination 
    should not be the description of the function of the single 
    transmitter. There can be no increase in the probability or 
    consequences of any accident previously evaluated as a result of 
    this change, as the change does not revise or reduce commitments, it 
    is solely for clarity.
        Proposed change 7 would revise Surveillance Requirement 3.4.7.2 
    of TS 3.4.7. The change would remove an inconsistency between what 
    is specified in the Limiting Condition for Operation (LCO), and what 
    is required to be verified by the SR. The proposed change 
    conservatively removes the inconsistency by revising SR 3.4.7.2 to 
    specify that the required steam generator secondary side water level 
    be verified greater than 50% (wide range). This change is for 
    clarity only, and is consistent with existing station procedures and 
    operation of the facility.
        Proposed change 8 would revise TS 3.4.12.1, ``Low Temperature 
    Overpressure
    
    [[Page 11923]]
    
    Protection (LTOP) System.'' Specifically, the Applicability would be 
    revised to clarify the Mode 6 applicability. The Applicability 
    should read ``Mode 6 when the head is on the reactor vessel and the 
    RCS is not vented.'' This change is intended to clarify the 
    Applicability of TS 3.4.12.1 in Mode 6, and also reflects the 
    previous requirements of former TS 3/4.4.8.3.1, ``Overpressure 
    Protection Systems RCS Temperature less than or equal to 256'F.'' 
    This change is editorial only and there can be no increase in the 
    probability or consequences of any accident previously evaluated as 
    a result of this change.
        Proposed change 9 would revise SR 3.7.5.3 and SR 3.7.5.4 of TS 
    3.7.5, ``Auxiliary Feedwater (AFW) System.'' Presently, SR 3.7.5.3 
    requires that AFW automatic valves actuate to their correct position 
    on an actual or simulated signal when in Mode 1, 2, or 3 (except 
    valves HV-8200 and HV-8201) and SR 3.7.5.4 requires that each AFW 
    pump starts automatically on an actual or simulated signal when in 
    Mode 1, 2, or 3. The Bases, however, for these SRs makes it clear 
    that the tests are a refueling surveillance which should be 
    performed in Mode 5. The proposed change will delete the reference 
    to Modes 1, 2, and 3 from both SR 3.7.5.3 and 3.7.5.4.
        The intent of the wording for the SR is to perform the test in 
    Mode 5 in order to demonstrate the operability of the system in 
    Modes 1, 2, and 3. This change would also be consistent with the 
    former SRs which previously specified that the surveillances were 
    required to be performed at least once per refueling interval during 
    shutdown. Therefore, there can be no increase in the probability or 
    consequences of any accident previously evaluated as a result of 
    this change.
        Proposed change 10 would revise Section 5.5.2.10, ``Inservice 
    Testing Program.'' The change will clarify that this section applies 
    not only to the Inservice Testing Program, but includes the 
    Inservice Inspection Program as well. This change is editorial in 
    that it correctly identifies the intent of this section. As this is 
    an editorial change only, there can be no increase in the 
    probability or consequences of any accident previously evaluated as 
    a result of this change.
        Proposed change 11 would revise Section 5.5.2.11 to correct 
    typographical errors. A table is provided that identifies 
    supplemental sampling requirements for steam generator tube 
    inspections. However, the table is numbered incorrectly. The 
    proposed change would correct the table number.
        In addition, under the table heading ``Action Required'' for 
    both the first ``1st Sample Inspection'' and ``2nd Sample 
    Inspection,'' for result C-3, notification is to be made to the NRC, 
    and an incorrect reference to 10 CFR 50.72 is made. The proper 
    notification is pursuant to 10 CFR 50.73. The proposed change would 
    correct this reference. Also under the ``Action Required'' heading 
    for the ``1st Sample Inspection'' for Result C2, is a typographical 
    error. It is currently written, ``Plug defective tubes and inspect 
    an additional 25 tubes in this SG.'' However, the statement should 
    read, ``Plug defective tubes and inspect an additional 2S tubes in 
    this SG.'' The proposed requirement is consistent with the 
    requirement of the former TS 3/4.4.4, ``Steam Generators.''
        Operation of the facility would remain unchanged as a result of 
    the proposed changes as the changes correct typographical errors. 
    Therefore, the proposed change will not involve a significant 
    increase in the probability or consequences of any accident 
    previously evaluated.
        2. The proposed change does not create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        The proposed changes would either: reinstate provisions of the 
    former SONGS Units 2 and 3 Technical Specifications, make 
    corrections to the Technical Specifications, or remove information 
    inadvertently added that is not applicable to SONGS Units 2 and 3.
        Proposed change 1 deletes the SONGS Unit 2 license condition 
    regarding shift manning requirements as it conflicts with the 
    requirements contained in the revised Technical Specifications and 
    the Topical Report. Operation of the facility would remain unchanged 
    as a result of the proposed changes and could not create the 
    possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any 
    previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 2 would revise TS 3.3.1, ``Reactor Protective 
    Instrumentation (RPS)-Operating,'' to delete the exception of the 
    power range neutron flux channels from Surveillance Requirement (SR) 
    3.3.1.7. SR 3.3.1.7 requires that a channel functional test be 
    performed on each RPS channel, except the power range neutron flux 
    channels. Therefore, the proposed change would delete the exception 
    to SR 3.3.1.7 for the power range neutron flux channels. This change 
    will not create the possibility of a new or different kind of 
    accident from any previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 3 would revise SR 3.3.2.5 of TS 3.3.2, ``Reactor 
    Protective Instrumentation (RPS)-Shutdown.'' SR 3.3.2.5 requires 
    that the RPS response time be verified within limits every 24 months 
    on a staggered test basis. SR 3.3.1.13 of TS 3.3.1 also requires 
    that response time tests be performed every 24 months on a staggered 
    test basis. However, neutron detectors presently are excluded from 
    response time testing in Modes 1 and 2. Therefore, the proposed 
    change will add a note to SR 3.3.2.5 to allow exclusion of neutron 
    detectors from response time testing. The proposed change will not 
    create the possibility of a new or different kind of accident from 
    any previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 4 would revise Surveillance Requirement (SR) 
    3.3.5.4. A change is required to delete the bypass removal function, 
    as it is not a part of the RAS function. Because the RAS function 
    does not utilize the bypass removal function, eliminating the words 
    from the SR cannot create the possibility of a new or different kind 
    of accident from any previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 5 revises the FHIS the monitor allowable value. 
    The value would be controlled by administrative procedures. This 
    change would not alter the design and operational interface between 
    the FHIS and existing plant equipment. As such, the monitors would 
    continue to operate and perform their intended safety function to 
    isolate the FHB following a design basis accident as before. In 
    addition, the Note to SR 3.3.10.3 would be corrected to read ``* * * 
    verification of the proper operation of each initiation relay.'' 
    Therefore, operation of the facility in accordance with this 
    proposed change will not create the possibility of a new or 
    different kind of accident from any accident previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 6 revises the name of Function 6 of Table 
    3.3.11-1. Currently, Function 6 refers to Containment Sump Water 
    Level (wide range), and is more correctly specified as the 
    Containment Water Level (wide range). The proposed change cannot 
    create the possibility of a new or different kind of accident from 
    any accident previously evaluated as the change only revises the 
    name of an instrument and is solely for clarity.
        Proposed change 7 would remove an inconsistency between what is 
    specified in the LCO, and what is required to be verified by the SR. 
    The proposed change conservatively removes the inconsistency by 
    revising SR 3.4.7.2 to specify that the required steam generator 
    secondary side water level be verified greater than 50% (wide 
    range). This change is for clarity only, is consistent with existing 
    station procedures, and consistent with operation of the facility. 
    The proposed change cannot create the possibility of a new or 
    different kind of accident from any accident previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 8 would revise TS 3.4.12.1, ``Low Temperature 
    Overpressure Protection (LTOP) System.'' Specifically, the 
    Applicability would be revised to clarify the Mode 6 applicability. 
    The Applicability should read ``Mode 6 when the head is on the 
    reactor vessel and the RCS is not vented.'' This change is intended 
    to clarify the Applicability of TS 3.4.12.1 in Mode 6, and also 
    reflects the previous requirements of former TS 3/4.4.8.3.1, 
    ``Overpressure Protection Systems RCS Temperature less than or equal 
    to 256 deg.F.'' This change is editorial only and cannot create the 
    possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any accident 
    previously evaluated.
        Proposed change 9 would revise SR 3.7.5.3 and SR 3.7.5.4 of TS 
    3.7.5, ``Auxiliary Feedwater (AFW) System,'' to delete the 
    requirements that the SRs be performed in Mode 1, 2, or 3. The 
    intent of the wording for the SR is to perform the test in Mode 5 in 
    order to demonstrate the operability of the system in Modes 1, 2, 
    and 3. This change would also be consistent with the former SRs 
    which previously specified that the surveillances were required to 
    be performed at least once per refueling interval during shutdown. 
    Therefore, the proposed change cannot create the possibility of a 
    new or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        Proposed change 10 would revise Section 5.5.2.10, ``Inservice 
    Testing Program.'' The change will clarify that this section applies
    
    [[Page 11924]]
    
    not only to the Inservice Testing Program, but includes the 
    Inservice Inspection Program as well. This change is editorial in 
    that it correctly identifies the intent of this section. As this is 
    an editorial change only, and cannot create the possibility of a new 
    or different kind of accident from any accident previously 
    evaluated.
        Proposed change 11 would revise Section 5.5.2.11 to correct 
    typographical errors. A table is provided that identifies 
    supplemental sampling requirements for steam generator tube 
    inspections. Operation of the facility in accordance with this 
    proposed change will not create the possibility of a new or 
    different kind of accident from any previously evaluated.
        3. The proposed change does not involve a significant reduction 
    in a margin of safety.
        The proposed changes will either: reinstate provisions of the 
    SONGS Units 2 and 3 Technical Specifications, make corrections to 
    the Technical Specifications, or remove information inadvertently 
    added that is not applicable to SONGS Units 2 and 3. Operation of 
    the facility would remain unchanged as a result of the proposed 
    change. Therefore, the proposed change will not involve a 
    significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 1 deletes the SONGS Unit 2 license condition 
    regarding shift manning requirements as it conflicts with the 
    requirements contained in the revised Technical Specifications and 
    the Topical Report. The NRC staff has concluded that control of 
    overtime restrictions through administrative procedures provides 
    reasonable assurance that personnel overtime would not jeopardize 
    safe plant operation and that specific overtime limits and 
    associated procedures could be described in the UFSAR, or other 
    licensee controlled documents incorporated in the UFSAR by reference 
    for which further changes can be made pursuant to 10 CFR 50.59. 
    Therefore, the proposed change will not involve a significant 
    reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 2 would revise TS 3.3.1, ``Reactor Protective 
    Instrumentation (RPS)--Operating,'' to delete the exception of the 
    power range neutron flux channels from Surveillance Requirement (SR) 
    3.3.1.7. SR 3.3.1.7 requires that a channel functional test be 
    performed on each RPS channel, except the power range neutron flux 
    channels. Therefore, the proposed change would delete the exception 
    to SR 3.3.1.7 for the power range neutron flux channels. This change 
    will not involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 3 would revise SR 3.3.2.5 of TS 3.3.2, ``Reactor 
    Protective Instrumentation (RPS)-Shutdown.'' SR 3.3.2.5 requires 
    that the RPS response time be verified within limits every 24 months 
    on a staggered test basis. SR 3.3.1.13 of TS 3.3.1 also requires 
    that response time tests be performed every 24 months on a staggered 
    test basis. However, neutron detectors presently are excluded from 
    response time testing in Modes 1 and 2. Therefore, the proposed 
    change will add a note to SR 3.3.2.5 to allow exclusion of neutron 
    detectors from response time testing. The proposed change will not 
    involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 4 would delete the bypass removal function, as 
    it is not a part of the RAS function. Because the RAS function does 
    not utilize the bypass removal function, eliminating the words from 
    the SR cannot involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 5 would revise the FHIS monitor allowable values 
    and would not alter the existing margin of safety. The change would 
    only relinquish control of the allowable values from the TSs to 
    quality-affecting (changes will require a 10 CFR 50.59 evaluation) 
    procedures. In addition, the proposed change would correct a 
    typographical error in the Note to SR 3.3.10.3. Therefore, operation 
    of the facility will not involve a significant reduction in a margin 
    of safety.
        Proposed change 6 revises the name of Function 6 of Table 
    3.3.11-1. Currently, Function 6 refers to Containment Sump Water 
    Level (wide range), and is more correctly specified as the 
    Containment Water Level (wide range). The proposed change cannot 
    involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 7 would remove an inconsistency between what is 
    specified in the LCO, and what is required to be verified by the SR. 
    The proposed change conservatively removes the inconsistency by 
    revising SR 3.4.7.2 to specify that the required steam generator 
    secondary side water level be verified greater than 50% (wide 
    range). This change is consistent with existing station procedures, 
    and consistent with operation of the facility. The proposed change 
    cannot involve a significant reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 8 would revise TS 3.4.12.1, ``Low Temperature 
    Overpressure Protection (LTOP) System.'' Specifically, the 
    Applicability would be revised to clarify the Mode 6 applicability. 
    The Applicability should read ``Mode 6 when the head is on the 
    reactor vessel and the RCS is not vented.'' This change is intended 
    to clarify the Applicability of TS 3.4.12.1 in Mode 6, and also 
    reflects the previous requirements of former TS 3/4.4.8.3.1, 
    ``Overpressure Protection Systems RCS Temperature less than or equal 
    to 256 deg.F.''
        Proposed change 9 would revise SR 3.7.5.3 and SR 3.7.5.4 of TS 
    3.7.5, ``Auxiliary Feedwater (AFW) System,'' to delete the 
    requirements that the SRs be performed in Mode 1, 2, or 3. The 
    intent of the wording for the SR is to perform the test in Mode 5 in 
    order to demonstrate the operability of the system in Modes 1, 2, 
    and 3. Therefore, the proposed change cannot involve a significant 
    reduction in a margin of safety.
        Proposed change 10 would revise Section 5.5.2.10, ``Inservice 
    Testing Program.'' The change will clarify that this section applies 
    not only to the Inservice Testing Program, but includes the 
    Inservice Inspection Program as well. This change is editorial in 
    that it correctly identifies the intent of this section. This is an 
    editorial change only.
        Proposed change 11 would revise Section 5.5.2.11 to correct 
    typographical errors. Operation of the facility would remain 
    unchanged as a result of the proposed changes and could not create 
    the possibility of a new or different kind of accident from any 
    previously evaluated.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment requests involve no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: Main Library, University of 
    California, Irvine, California 92713.
        Attorney for licensee: T.E. Oubre, Esquire, Southern California 
    Edison Company, P.O. Box 800, Rosemead, California 91770.
        NRC Project Director: William H. Bateman.
    
    Virginia Electric and Power Company, Docket Nos. 50-338 and 50-339, 
    North Anna Power Station, Units No. 1 and No. 2, Louisa County, 
    Virginia
    
        Date of amendment request: February 3, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed changes will replace 
    the augmented inspection requirements for the Reactor Coolant Pump 
    flywheels specified by Regulatory Guide 1.14, ``Reactor Coolant Pump 
    Integrity,'' Revision 1, dated August 1975, with those established by 
    WCAP-14535A, ``Topical Report on Reactor Coolant Pump Flywheel 
    Inspection Elimination,'' dated November 1996, and will eliminate the 
    inspection requirements for the flow straighteners.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        Virginia Electric and Power Company has reviewed the 
    requirements of 10 CFR 50.92 as they relate to the proposed changes 
    for the North Anna Units 1 and 2 and determined that a significant 
    hazards consideration is not involved.
        (a) The elimination of the inspection requirements for the flow 
    straighteners, and the reduction of the inspection requirements for 
    the reactor coolant pump flywheels as granted by the NRC and 
    supported by WCAP-14535A do not significantly increase the 
    probability of an accident previously evaluated in the safety 
    analysis report.
        The surveillance frequency changes for the reactor coolant pump 
    flywheels are based upon the technical basis of the Westinghouse 
    Energy Systems Topical Report WCAP-14535A. The results of WCAP-
    14535A have been reviewed, evaluated, and accepted for referencing 
    in license applications by the NRC in their letter entitled 
    ``Acceptance for Referencing of Topical Report WCAP-14535, Topical 
    Report on Reactor Coolant Pump
    
    [[Page 11925]]
    
    Flywheel Inspection Elimination'' dated September 12, 1996.
        The proposed surveillance (inspection) requirements only reduce 
    the inspection frequency for the reactor coolant pump flywheels and 
    eliminate the inspection requirements for the flow [straighteners]. 
    There is no change in the method of plant operation or system 
    design. Therefore, the proposed changes do not increase the 
    probability of occurrence or the consequences of any previously 
    analyzed accident.
        (b) The proposed changes for the elimination of the inspection 
    requirements for the flow straighteners, and for the reduction in 
    inspection requirements for the reactor coolant pump flywheels as 
    granted by the NRC and supported by WCAP-14535A do not create the 
    possibility of an accident or malfunction of a different type than 
    any evaluated previously in the safety analysis report.
        The proposed surveillance (inspection) requirements only reduce 
    the inspection frequency for the reactor coolant pump flywheels and 
    eliminate the inspection requirements for the flow [straighteners] 
    in Unit 1. There is no change in the method of plant operation or 
    system design. Therefore, there are no new or different kinds of 
    accident or malfunction from any accidents previously evaluated.
        (c) The proposed changes for the elimination of the inspection 
    requirements for the flow straighteners, and for the reduction in 
    inspection requirements for the reactor coolant pump flywheels as 
    granted by the NRC and supported by WCAP-14535A do not impact the 
    accident analysis assumptions or the basis of any Technical 
    Specification. The revised inspection requirements only reduce the 
    examination frequency for the reactor coolant pump flywheels and 
    eliminate the inspection requirements for the flow [straightener] in 
    Unit 1. Therefore, the proposed changes in surveillance (inspection) 
    frequency do not result in a significant reduction in the margin of 
    safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: The Alderman Library, Special 
    Collections Department, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 
    Virginia 22903-2498.
        Attorney for licensee: Michael W. Maupin, Esq., Hunton and 
    Williams, Riverfront Plaza, East Tower, 951 E. Byrd Street, Richmond, 
    Virginia 23219.
        NRC Project Director: Gordon E. Edison, Acting.
    
    Virginia Electric and Power Company, Docket Nos. 50-338 and 50-339, 
    North Anna Power Station, Units No. 1 and No. 2, Louisa County, 
    Virginia
    
        Date of amendment request: February 3, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed changes will allow 
    the reactor trip bypass breakers to be tested in the racked-in 
    position. This change will continue to ensure the operability of the 
    breakers and eliminate unnecessary movement caused by racking the 
    breakers, thus reducing the wear and tear on the breakers and the 
    possibility of a reactor trip. The operation of the Reactor Protection 
    System and the reactor trip and the reactor trip bypass breakers are 
    not being changed. The proposed changes in the test sequence for the 
    reactor trip bypass breakers continue to provide assurance that the 
    reactor trip bypass breakers will operate as designed to mitigate the 
    consequence of any unsafe or improper reactor operation during steady-
    state or transient power operations when the bypass breakers are placed 
    in service for reactor trip system testing or trip breaker maintenance.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
    
        Virginia Electric and Power Company has reviewed the 
    requirements of 10 CFR 50.92 as they relate to the proposed changes 
    for the North Anna Units 1 and 2 and determined that a significant 
    hazards consideration is not involved.
        (a) Operation and testing of the reactor trip breakers does not 
    increase the probability of an accident or malfunction of equipment 
    important to safety previously evaluated in the safety analysis 
    report.
        The testing sequence will continue to ensure that the reactor 
    trip system will be operable to mitigate the consequences of any 
    unsafe or improper reactor operation during steady state or 
    transient power operations. Although the breaker is placed in 
    service before it is tested, the breaker is tested as soon as 
    practicable to reestablish operability prior to performing testing 
    of the reactor trip system or maintenance on the reactor trip 
    breakers. During the short period of time the breaker is closed 
    before the local shunt trip device test, the operability of the 
    breaker is established based on satisfactory breaker testing 
    conducted during the previous surveillance interval. Changing the 
    minimum channels operable requirement for the reactor trip bypass 
    breakers does not affect the operation of the reactor trip system 
    since only one reactor trip breaker can be inservice for testing or 
    maintenance of the reactor protection system. Therefore, the 
    proposed test sequence does not significantly increase the 
    probability of occurrence or the consequences of any previously 
    analyzed accident.
        (b) The proposed Technical Specifications do not create the 
    possibility of an accident or malfunction of a different type than 
    any evaluated previously in the safety analysis report.
        The proposed test sequence change does not alter the actual test 
    performed to establish operability of the reactor trip bypass 
    breakers. The bypass breakers will be proven operable prior to 
    reactor trip system testing or reactor trip breaker maintenance. 
    Although the breaker is placed in service before it is tested, the 
    breaker is tested as soon as practicable to reestablish operability 
    prior to performing testing of the reactor trip system or 
    maintenance on the reactor trip breakers. During the short period of 
    time the breaker is closed before the local shunt trip device test, 
    the operability of the breaker is established based on satisfactory 
    breaker testing conducted during the previous surveillance interval. 
    Changing the minimum channels operable requirement for the reactor 
    trip bypass breakers does not affect the operation of the reactor 
    trip system since only one reactor trip bypass breaker can be 
    inservice for testing or maintenance of the reactor protection 
    system. Therefore, it is concluded that no new or different kind of 
    accident or malfunction from any previously evaluated has been 
    created.
        (c) The proposed Technical Specifications change does not result 
    in a significant reduction in margin of safety.
        The proposed change in the reactor trip bypass breaker test 
    sequence provides assurance that the reactor trip system remains 
    operable during normal operations or during reactor trip system 
    testing and reactor trip breaker maintenance to mitigate the 
    consequences of any unsafe or improper reactor operation. Changing 
    the minimum channels operable requirement for the reactor trip 
    bypass breakers does not affect the operation of the reactor trip 
    system since only one reactor trip bypass breaker can be inservice 
    for testing or maintenance of the reactor protection system. 
    Therefore, the proposed change in the test sequence for the reactor 
    trip bypass breaker does not significantly reduce the margin of 
    safety.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: The Alderman Library, Special 
    Collections Department, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, 
    Virginia 22903-2498.
        Attorney for licensee: Michael W. Maupin, Esq., Hunton and 
    Williams, Riverfront Plaza, East Tower, 951 E. Byrd Street, Richmond, 
    Virginia 23219.
        NRC Project Director: Gordon E. Edison, Acting.
    
    [[Page 11926]]
    
    Wisconsin Public Service Corporation, Docket No. 50-305, Kewaunee 
    Nuclear Power Plant, Kewaunee County, Wisconsin
    
        Date of amendment request: October 13, 1997, as supplemented by a 
    letter dated February 10, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise the Kewaunee Technical Specifications (TS) to denote several 
    changes. The proposed changes are: Relocating information to the 
    Updated Safety Analysis Report (USAR), deleting redundant information, 
    incorporating new references and deleting incorrect references, 
    correcting errors, and augmenting existing requirements.
        Basis for proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination: As required by 10 CFR 50.91(a), the licensee has 
    provided its analysis of the issue of no significant hazards 
    consideration, which is presented below:
        The proposed changes were revised in accordance with the provision 
    of 10 CFR 50.92 to show no significant hazards exist. The proposed 
    changes will not:
    
        (1) Involve a significant increase in the probability or 
    consequences of an accident previously evaluated.
        The likelihood that an accident will occur is neither increased 
    nor decreased by these TS changes. The TS changes will not impact 
    the function or method of operation of plant equipment. Thus, there 
    is not a significant increase in the probability of a previously 
    analyzed accident due to the changes. Since no plant practices have 
    changed and no physical changes are being made, no systems, 
    equipment, or components are affected by the proposed changes. Thus, 
    the consequences of the malfunction of equipment important to safety 
    previously evaluated in the Updated Safety Analysis Report (USAR) 
    are not increased by the changes.
        The proposed changes are administrative in nature and, 
    therefore, have no impact on accident initiators or plant equipment, 
    and thus, do not affect the probabilities or consequences of an 
    accident.
        (2) Create the possibility of a new or different kind of 
    accident from any accident previously evaluated.
        Operation of the facility in accordance with the proposed TS 
    changes would not create the possibility of a new or different kind 
    of accident from any accident previously evaluated. The proposed 
    changes do not involve changes to the physical plant or operations. 
    Since these administrative changes do not contribute to accident 
    initiation, they do not produce a new accident scenario or produce a 
    new type of equipment malfunction. Also, these changes do not alter 
    any existing accident scenarios; they do not affect equipment or its 
    operation, and thus, do not create the possibility of a new or 
    different kind of accident.
        (3) Involve a significant reduction in the margin of safety.
        Changes in the proposed amendment include relocating information 
    to the USAR, deleting redundant information, incorporating new 
    references, deleting incorrect references, correcting errors, and 
    augmenting existing requirements. Operation of the facility in 
    accordance with the proposed TS would not involve a significant 
    reduction in a margin of safety. The proposed changes do not affect 
    plant equipment or operation. Safety limits and limiting safety 
    system settings are not affected by these proposed changes.
    
        The NRC staff has reviewed the licensee's analysis and, based on 
    this review, it appears that the three standards of 10 CFR 50.92(c) are 
    satisfied. Therefore, the NRC staff proposes to determine that the 
    amendment request involves no significant hazards consideration.
        Local Public Document Room location: University of Wisconsin, 
    Cofrin Library, 2420 Nicolet Drive, Green Bay, WI 54311-7001.
        Attorney for licensee: Bradley D. Jackson, Esq., Foley and Lardner, 
    P.O. Box 1497, Madison, WI 53701-1497.
        NRC Project Director: Richard P. Savio.
    
    Previously Published Notices of Consideration of Issuance of 
    Amendments to Facility Operating Licenses, Proposed No Significant 
    Hazards Consideration Determination, and Opportunity for a Hearing
    
        The following notices were previously published as separate 
    individual notices. The notice content was the same as above. They were 
    published as individual notices either because time did not allow the 
    Commission to wait for this biweekly notice or because the action 
    involved exigent circumstances. They are repeated here because the 
    biweekly notice lists all amendments issued or proposed to be issued 
    involving no significant hazards consideration.
        For details, see the individual notice in the Federal Register on 
    the day and page cited. This notice does not extend the notice period 
    of the original notice.
    
    Duke Energy Corporation, Docket No. 50-270, Oconee Nuclear Station, 
    Unit 2, Oconee County, South Carolina
    
        Date of amendment request: January 15, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The proposed amendment would 
    revise Technical Specifications (TS) Table 4.1-1 and TS 4.5.2.1.2 to 
    allow a one-time extension for specified Unit 2 refueling outage 
    surveillances during operating cycle 16.
        Date of publication of individual notice in the Federal Register: 
    January 23, 1998 (63 FR 3593).
        Expiration date of individual notice: February 23, 1998.
        Local Public Document Room location: Oconee County Library, 501 
    West South Broad Street, Walhalla, South Carolina.
    
    IES Utilities Inc., Docket No. 50-331, Duane Arnold Energy Center, Linn 
    County, Iowa
    
        Date of application for amendment: February 3, 1998.
        Brief description of amendment request: The proposed amendment 
    would change the operability requirement for the Standby Liquid Control 
    system to Run/Power Operations and Startup.
        Date of individual notice in Federal Register: February 26, 1998 
    (63 FR 9872).
        Expiration date of individual notice: March 30, 1998.
        Local Public Document Room location: Cedar Rapids Public Library, 
    500 First Street, SE., Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401.
    
    IES Utilities Inc., Docket No. 50-331, Duane Arnold Energy Center, Linn 
    County, Iowa
    
        Date of application for amendment: February 3, 1998.
        Brief description of amendment request: The proposed amendment 
    would revise the definitions of Cold Condition and Cold Shutdown and 
    add a new section, 3.17, Vessel Hydrostatic Pressure and Leak Testing, 
    to the Technical Specifications to specifically allow reactor vessel 
    hydrostatic pressure testing to be performed during plant shutdown.
        Date of individual notice in Federal Register: February 26, 1998 
    (63 FR 9874).
        Expiration date of individual notice: March 30, 1998.
        Local Public Document Room location: Cedar Rapids Public Library, 
    500 First Street, SE., Cedar Rapids, Iowa 52401.
    
    Southern Nuclear Operating Company, Inc, Docket Nos. 50-348 and 50-364, 
    Joseph M. Farley Nuclear Plant, Units 1 and 2, Houston County, Alabama
    
        Date of amendment request: July 23, 1997, as supplemented September 
    30, October 27, and December 18, 1997, and February 12, 1998.
        Description of amendment request: The July 23, 1997, application 
    was previously noticed in the Federal Register on September 10, 1997 
    (62 FR 47699). In addition, the December 18, 1997, supplement provided 
    additional information that revised the original licensee's evaluation 
    of the no
    
    [[Page 11927]]
    
    significant hazards consideration and, therefore, was noticed in the 
    Federal Register on January 14, 1998 (63 FR 2281). The February 12, 
    1998, supplement provided additional information that revised the 
    licensee's evaluation of the no significant hazards consideration. 
    Therefore, renotification of the Commission's proposed determination of 
    no significant hazards is necessary.
        The proposed amendments would revise the Technical Specifications 
    (TSs) by relocating the reactor coolant system (RCS) pressure and 
    temperature limits from the TSs to the proposed Pressure Temperature 
    Limits Report in accordance with the guidance provided by Generic 
    Letter 96-03, ``Relocation of the Pressure Temperature Limit Curves and 
    Low Temperature Overpressure Protection System Limits.'' TS 3.4.10.3 
    would be revised to require that two residual heat removal system 
    suction relief valves be operable or that the RCS be vented at RCS 
    indicated cold leg temperatures less than or equal to 325  deg.F. In 
    addition, a new TS would be added to limit the operation of more than 
    one reactor coolant pump below 110  deg.F.
        Date of publication of individual notice in the Federal Register: 
    February 23, 1998 (63 FR 9020).
        Expiration date of individual notice: March 25, 1998.
        Local Public Document Room location: Houston-Love Memorial Library, 
    212 W. Burdeshaw Street, Post Office Box 1369, Dothan, Alabama 36302.
    
    Notice of Issuance of Amendments to Facility Operating Licenses
    
        During the period since publication of the last biweekly notice, 
    the Commission has issued the following amendments. The Commission has 
    determined for each of these amendments that the application complies 
    with the standards and requirements of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, 
    as amended (the Act), and the Commission's rules and regulations. The 
    Commission has made appropriate findings as required by the Act and the 
    Commission's rules and regulations in 10 CFR Chapter I, which are set 
    forth in the license amendment.
        Notice of Consideration of Issuance of Amendment to Facility 
    Operating License, Proposed No Significant Hazards Consideration 
    Determination, and Opportunity for A Hearing in connection with these 
    actions was published in the Federal Register as indicated.
        Unless otherwise indicated, the Commission has determined that 
    these amendments satisfy the criteria for categorical exclusion in 
    accordance with 10 CFR 51.22. Therefore, pursuant to 10 CFR 51.22(b), 
    no environmental impact statement or environmental assessment need be 
    prepared for these amendments. If the Commission has prepared an 
    environmental assessment under the special circumstances provision in 
    10 CFR 51.12(b) and has made a determination based on that assessment, 
    it is so indicated.
        For further details with respect to the action see (1) the 
    applications for amendment, (2) the amendment, and (3) the Commission's 
    related letter, Safety Evaluation and/or Environmental Assessment as 
    indicated. All of these items are available for public inspection at 
    the Commission's Public Document Room, the Gelman Building, 2120 L 
    Street, NW., Washington, DC, and at the local public document rooms for 
    the particular facilities involved.
    
    Commonwealth Edison Company, Docket Nos. 50-237 and 50-249, Dresden 
    Nuclear Power Station, Units 2 and 3, Grundy County, Illinois
    
        Date of application for amendments: November 7, 1997.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments remove the 24/48 
    Volt direct current (Vdc) batteries and associated charger and 
    distribution systems from the Unit 2 Technical Specifications. All 
    safety-related loads associated with the 24/48 Vdc batteries for Unit 2 
    will be connected to other safety related battery systems which are in 
    the TS.
        Date of issuance: February 25, 1998.
        Effective date: Immediately, to be implemented within 30 days.
        Amendment Nos.: 165 and 160.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-19 and DPR-25: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: January 14, 1998 (63 FR 
    2277).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 25, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Morris Area Public Library 
    District, 604 Liberty Street, Morris, Illinois 60450.
    
    Commonwealth Edison Company, Docket Nos. 50-237 and 50-249, Dresden 
    Nuclear Power Station, Units 2 and 3, Grundy County, Illinois
    
        Date of application for amendments: October 3, 1996.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments will correct a 
    typographical error that was introduced into the Technical 
    Specifications with the issuance of Amendment Nos. 150 and 145 issued 
    on June 28, 1996.
        Date of issuance: February 25, 1998.
        Effective date: Immediately, to be implemented within 30 days.
        Amendment Nos.: 166 and 161.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-19 and DPR-25: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: January 14, 1998 (63 Fr 
    2273).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 25, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Morris Area Public Library 
    District, 604 Liberty Street, Morris, Illinois 60450.
    
    Commonwealth Edison Company, Docket Nos. 50-373 and 50-374, LaSalle 
    County Station, Units 1 and 2, LaSalle County, Illinois
    
        Date of application for amendments: October 15, 1997.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments eliminate 
    unnecessary detail from the Accident Monitoring Instrumentation 
    Surveillance Requirements (TS Table 4.3.7.5-1).
        Date of issuance: February 17, 1998.
        Effective date: Immediately, to be implemented prior to startup 
    from L1F35 for Unit 1 and L2R07 for Unit 2.
        Amendment Nos.: 123 and 108.
        Facility Operating License Nos. NPF-11 and NPF-18: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: November 19, 1997 (62 
    FR 61841).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 17, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Jacobs Memorial Library, 
    Illinois Valley Community College, Oglesby, Illinois 61348.
    
    Duke Energy Corporation, Docket No. 50-270, Oconee Nuclear Station, 
    Unit 2, Oconee County, South Carolina
    
        Date of application for amendment: January 15, 1998.
        Brief description of amendment: The amendment revises Technical 
    Specifications (TS) Table 4.1-1 and Specification 4.5.2.1.2 to allow a 
    one-time extension for specified Unit 2 refueling outage surveillances 
    during operating cycle 16.
    
    [[Page 11928]]
    
        Date of issuance: February 23, 1998.
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance to be implemented upon 
    receipt.
        Amendment No.: 228.
        Facility Operating License No. DPR-47: The amendment revised the 
    Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: January 23, 1998 (63 FR 
    3593).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 23, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Oconee County Library, 501 
    West South Broad Street, Walhalla, South Carolina 29691.
    
    Duke Energy Corporation, Docket Nos. 50-269, 50-270, and 50-287, Oconee 
    Nuclear Station, Units 1, 2, and 3, Oconee County, South Carolina
    
        Date of application for amendments: February 2, 1998, as 
    supplemented February 18, 1998.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments revise the wording 
    used to specify refueling outage surveillances.
        Date of issuance: February 26, 1998
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance and will be implemented 
    within 30 days.
        Amendment Nos.: Unit 1-228; Unit 2-229; Unit 3-225.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-38, DPR-47, and DPR-55: The 
    amendments revised the Technical Specifications.
        Public comments requested as to proposed no significant hazards 
    consideration: Yes. (63 FR 6784 dated February 10, 1998). The notice 
    provided an opportunity to submit comments on the Commission's proposed 
    no significant hazards consideration determination. No comments have 
    been received. The notice also provided for an opportunity to request a 
    hearing by March 12, 1998, but indicated that if the Commission makes a 
    final no significant hazards consideration determination, any such 
    hearing would take place after issuance of the amendments. The February 
    18, 1998, letter provided clarifying information that did not change 
    the scope of the February 2, 1998, application and the no significant 
    hazards consideration determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment, finding of 
    exigent circumstances, and a final no significant hazards consideration 
    determination are contained in a Safety Evaluation dated February 26, 
    1998.
        Attorney for licensee: J. Michael McGarry, III, Winston and Strawn, 
    1200 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC.
        Local Public Document Room location: Oconee County Library, 501 
    West South Broad Street, Walhalla, South Carolina.
    
    Florida Power and Light Company, et al., Docket No. 50-389, St. Lucie 
    Plant, Unit No. 2, St. Lucie County, Florida
    
        Date of application for amendment: August 22, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: Changes to the Technical 
    Specifications (TS) to relocate the inservice testing program 
    requirements from TS 4.0.5 to the Administrative Controls Section in 
    the Unit 1 and 2 TS.
        Date of Issuance: February 25, 1998.
        Effective Date: February 25, 1998.
        Amendment Nos.: 153 and 91.
        Facility Operating License No. NPF-16: Amendment revised the TS.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: September 24, 1997 (62 
    FR 50006).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 25, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Indian River Community College 
    Library, 3209 Virginia Avenue, Fort Pierce, Florida 34981-5596.
    
    Niagara Mohawk Power Corporation, Docket No. 50-220, Nine Mile Point 
    Nuclear Station Unit No. 1, Oswego County, New York
    
        Date of application for amendment: October 21, 1997, as 
    supplemented by letter dated February 3, 1998. The application 
    superseded a previous application of May 16, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: This amendment revised 
    administrative requirements regarding the unit staff positions of 
    General Supervisor Operation and Manager Operations as stated in TS 
    6.2.2.i and 6.3.1.
        Date of issuance: February 19, 1998.
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance to be implemented within 
    30 days.
        Amendment No.: 160.
        Facility Operating License No. DPR-63: Amendment revises the 
    Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: November 5, 1997 (62 FR 
    59916).
        The February 3, 1998, letter provided clarifying information that 
    did not change the no significant hazards consideration.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 19, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Reference and Documents 
    Department, Penfield Library, State University of New York, Oswego, New 
    York 13126.
    
    Northeast Nuclear Energy Company (NNECO), et al., Docket No. 50-336, 
    Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Unit No. 2, New London County, 
    Connecticut
    
        Date of application for amendment: March 27, 1997, as supplemented 
    on September 25, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: The amendment revises Technical 
    Specification (TS) Limiting Condition for Operation (LCO) 3.7.11 and 
    Surveillance Requirement (SR) 4.7.11 for the ultimate heat sink. TS LCO 
    3.7.11 is changed to indicate that the ultimate heat sink is operable 
    at a water temperature of less than or equal to 75  deg.F instead of an 
    average value. The use of average when verifying the water temperature 
    and the reference to a specific monitoring location are deleted in TS 
    SR 4.7.11.a and .b. The TS Bases Section 3/4.7.11 is also modified to 
    reflect the above changes.
        A license condition was also included in Appendix B of the 
    Operating license, which is a list of additional license conditions. 
    This license condition was discussed with NNECO in a conference call on 
    December 15, 1997, and NNECO agreed to the inclusion of the license 
    condition for approving the amendment.
        Date of issuance: February 9, 1998.
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance to be implemented within 
    30 days.
        Amendment No.: 213.
        Facility Operating License No. DPR-65: Amendment revised the 
    Technical Specifications and Appendix B of Operating License.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: April 23, 1997 (62 FR 
    19831).
        The September 25, 1997, letter provided clarifying information that 
    did not change the scope of the March 27, 1997, application and the 
    initial proposed no significant hazards consideration determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 9, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Learning Resources Center, 
    Three Rivers Community-Technical College, 574 New London Turnpike, 
    Norwich, Connecticut, and the Waterford Library, Attn: Vince Juliano,
    
    [[Page 11929]]
    
    49 Rope Ferry Road, Waterford, Connecticut.
    
    Northeast Nuclear Energy Company (NNECO), et al., Docket No. 50-423, 
    Millstone Nuclear Power Station, Unit No. 3, New London County, 
    Connecticut
    
        Date of application for amendment: August 29, 1997, as supplemented 
    by letters dated September 25 and November 14, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: Based on a review and subsequent 
    calculations of the cold overpressurization protection (COPS) enabling 
    temperature and the emergency core cooling system (ECCS)/charging 
    system mode 3 requirements, NNECO proposes to reduce the COPS enabling 
    temperature. As a result, NNECO proposed the following Technical 
    Specifications (TS) changes: add new heatup and cooldown pressure/
    temperature limit curves and their associated requirements; add new 
    power operated relief valve (PORV) setpoint curves and their associated 
    requirements; revise the reactor coolant loops and coolant circulation, 
    ECCS, boration systems, and COPS to incorporate the lower enabling 
    temperature and new restrictions for cold overpressure protection 
    system, PORV undershoot, and residual heat removal (RHR) relief valve 
    bellows; add a footnote to allow a reactor coolant pump to substitute 
    for an RHR pump during heatup from Mode 5 to 4, which is consistent 
    with the improved standard technical specification (STS); reword TS 3/
    4.4.9.3 and its surveillance requirement to be consistent with the 
    improved STS; and revise the affected Bases sections to be consistent 
    with the proposed changes.
        Date of issuance: February 12, 1998.
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance, to be implemented 
    within 60 days of issuance.
        Amendment No.: 157.
        Facility Operating License No. NPF-49: Amendment revised the 
    Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: December 8, 1997 (62 FR 
    52583).
        The September 25 and November 14, 1997, letters provided clarifying 
    information that did not change the August 27, 1997, application and 
    the initial proposed no significant hazards consideration 
    determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 12, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Learning Resources Center, 
    Three Rivers Community-Technical College, 574 New London Turnpike, 
    Norwich, Connecticut, and the Waterford Library, ATTN: Vince Juliano, 
    49 Rope Ferry Road, Waterford, Connecticut.
    
    Omaha Public Power District, Docket No. 50-285, Fort Calhoun Station, 
    Unit No. 1, Washington County, Nebraska
    
        Date of amendment request: November 20, 1996, as supplemented by 
    letter dated February 20, 1997, and submittal dated March 25, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: The amendment revised the technical 
    specifications to reflect organizational changes and correct editorial 
    and typographical inaccuracies. It also removed paragraph 3.D of the 
    facility operating license that described the modification that 
    increased the spent fuel pool storage capacity.
        Date of issuance: February 3, 1998.
        Effective date: February 3, 1998.
        Amendment No.: 184.
        Facility Operating License No. DPR-40: Amendment revised the 
    Technical Specifications and Facility Operating License No. DPR-40.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: January 2, 1997 (62 FR 
    131) and April 9, 1997 (62 FR 17238). The March 25, 1997, submittal did 
    not change the staff's original no significant hazards consideration 
    determination. The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is 
    contained in a Safety Evaluation dated February 3, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: W. Dale Clark Library, 215 
    South 15th Street, Omaha, Nebraska 68102.
    
    Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Docket Nos. 50-275 and 50-323, Diablo 
    Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, San Luis Obispo County, 
    California
    
        Date of application for amendments: October 4, 1995, as 
    supplemented by letters dated July 17, 1996, August 20, 1996, and June 
    2, 1997.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments revise the 
    technical specifications to relocate the requirements in 10 subsections 
    of the technical specifications to licensee-controlled documents.
        Date of issuance: February 3, 1998.
        Effective date: February 3, 1998, to be implemented within 90 days 
    of issuance.
        Amendment Nos.: Unit 1--120; Unit 2--118.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-80 and DPR-82: The amendments 
    revised the Operating Licenses and the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: November 27, 1995 (60 
    FR 58404). The July 17, 1996, August 20, 1996, and June 2, 1997, 
    supplemental letters provided additional clarifying information and did 
    not change the initial no significant hazards consideration 
    determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 3, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: California Polytechnic State 
    University, Robert E. Kennedy Library, Government Documents and Maps 
    Department, San Luis Obispo, California 93407.
    
    Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Docket Nos. 50-275 and 50-323, Diablo 
    Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, San Luis Obispo County, 
    California
    
        Date of application for amendments: May 14, 1997, as supplemented 
    by letter dated December 15, 1997.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments revised the 
    combined Technical Specifications (TS) for the Diablo Canyon Power 
    Plant (DCPP) Unit Nos. 1 and 2 to revise Technical Specification (TS) 
    6.9.1.8.b.5 to replace reference WCAP-10266-P-A with WCAP-12945-P for 
    best estimate loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) analysis. The amendment 
    also revises TS Bases 3/4.2.2 and 3/4.2.3 to change the emergency core 
    cooling system (ECCS) acceptance criteria limit to state that there is 
    a high level of probability that the ECCS acceptance criteria limits 
    are not exceeded.
        Date of issuance: February 13, 1998.
        Effective date: February 13, 1998, to be implemented within 90 days 
    of issuance.
        Amendment Nos.: Unit 1--121; Unit 2--119.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-80 and DPR-82: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: July 30, 1997 (62 FR 
    40855).
        The December 15, 1997, supplemental letter provided additional 
    clarifying information and did not change the staff's initial no 
    significant hazards consideration determination. The Commission's 
    related evaluation of the amendments is contained in a Safety 
    Evaluation dated February 13, 1998.
    
    [[Page 11930]]
    
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: California Polytechnic State 
    University, Robert E. Kennedy Library, Government Documents and Maps 
    Department, San Luis Obispo, California 93407
    
    Pacific Gas and Electric Company, Docket Nos. 50-275 and 50-323, Diablo 
    Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, Unit Nos. 1 and 2, San Luis Obispo County, 
    California
    
        Date of application for amendments: December 9, 1996.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments revised the 
    combined Technical Specifications (TS) for the Diablo Canyon Power 
    Plant (DCPP), Unit Nos. 1 and 2 to revise the surveillance frequencies 
    from at least once every 18 months to at least once per refueling 
    interval (nominally 24 months) for the reactor trip system (RTS) and 
    engineering safety features actuation systems (ESFAS) instrumentation 
    channels, and make certain changes in trip setpoints and allowance 
    values due to a setpoint methodology change in support of the 
    calibration extensions. Channel operational tests (COTs) and trip 
    actuating device operational tests (TADOTs) associated with these 
    channels are also being extended. Revisions to the appropriate TS Bases 
    are being revised to support the TS revisions.
        Date of issuance: February 17, 1998.
        Effective date: February 17, 1998, to be implemented within 90 days 
    of issuance.
        Amendment Nos.: Unit 1--Amendment No. 122; Unit 2--Amendment No. 
    120.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-80 and DPR-82: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: February 12, 1997 (62 
    FR 6577)
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 17, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: California Polytechnic State 
    University, Robert E. Kennedy Library, Government Documents and Maps 
    Department, San Luis Obispo, California 93407.
    
    Pennsylvania Power and Light Company, Docket Nos. 50-387 and 50-388 
    Susquehanna Steam Electric Station, Units 1 and 2, Luzerne County, 
    Pennsylvania
    
        Date of application for amendments: May 31, 1996.
        Brief description of amendments: These amendments delete, from the 
    Technical Specifications, Section 4.7.2.d.2, the surveillance 
    requirement for chlorine detection for the control room emergency 
    outside air supply system as a result of the removal of bulk quantities 
    of gaseous chlorine from the Susquehanna Steam Electric Station.
        Date of issuance: February 19, 1998.
        Effective date: Both units, as of date of issuance, to be 
    implemented within 30 days.
        Amendment Nos.: 172 and 145.
        Facility Operating License Nos. NPF-14 and NPF-22: The amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: July 16, 1997 (62 FR 
    38137).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 19, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Osterhout Free Library, 
    Reference Department, 71 South Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, PA 18701.
    
    Southern Nuclear Power Company, Inc., Georgia Power Company, Oglethorpe 
    Power Corporation, Municipal Electric Authority of Georgia, City of 
    Dalton, Georgia, Docket Nos. 50-424 and 50-425, Vogtle Electric 
    Generating Plant, Units 1 and 2, Burke County, Georgia
    
        Date of application for amendments: August 8, 1997, as supplemented 
    October 10, 1997, January 16, 23, and 27, 1998.
        Brief description of amendments: The amendment changes Vogtle 
    Electric Generating Plant, Units 1 and 2, Technical Specifications (TS) 
    3.7.17, ``Fuel Storage Pool Boron Concentration,'' TS 3.7.18, ``Fuel 
    Assembly Storage in the Fuel Storage Pool,'' and TS 4.3, ``Fuel 
    Storage,'' to allow credit for soluble boron, in the spent fuel pool, 
    for maintenance of subcriticality associated with spent fuel storage.
        Date of issuance: February 20, 1998.
        Effective date: As of the date of issuance to be implemented within 
    30 days.
        Amendment Nos.: 99--Unit 1; 77--Unit 2
        Facility Operating License Nos. NPF-68 and NPF-81: Amendments 
    revised the Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: December 31, 1997 (62 
    FR 68136).
        The January 16, 23, and 27, 1998, letters provided clarifying 
    information that did not change the scope of the August 8, 1997, 
    application and the initial proposed no significant hazards 
    consideration determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendments is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 20, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Burke County Library, 412 
    Fourth Street, Waynesboro, Georgia.
    
    Tennessee Valley Authority, Docket Nos. 50-327 and 50-328, Sequoyah 
    Nuclear Plant, Units 1 and 2, Hamilton County, Tennessee
    
        Date of application for amendments: September 17, 1997 (TS 97-02).
        Brief description of amendments: The amendments change the 
    Technical Specifications (TS) by modifying Surveillance Requirements 
    (SRs) 4.6.2.1.1.b., 4.6.2.1.1.c,. 4.6.2.1.1.d, and 4.6.2.1.2.b to 
    account for a plant modification to the containment spray system and to 
    make the SRs more consistent with the Westinghouse Standard TS (NUREG-
    1431).
        Date of issuance: February 20, 1998.
        Effective date: February 20, 1998.
        Amendment Nos.: 231 and 221.
        Facility Operating License Nos. DPR-77 and DPR-79: Amendments 
    revise TS.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: October 8, 1997 (62 FR 
    52589).
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 20, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: Chattanooga-Hamilton County 
    Library, 1001 Broad Street, Chattanooga, Tennessee 37402.
    
    Union Electric Company, Docket No. 50-483, Callaway Plant, Unit 1, 
    Callaway County, Missouri
    
        Date of application for amendment: February 23, 1996, as 
    supplemented by letters dated April 24, 1996, and November 15, 1996.
        Brief description of amendment: The amendment revises the Callaway 
    Plant, Unit 1 operating license to reflect Union Electric Company (UEC) 
    as a wholly-owned operating subsidiary of Ameren Corporation at the 
    closing of the contemplated merger between UEC and CIPSCO Incorporated.
        Date of issuance: February 13, 1998.
    
    [[Page 11931]]
    
        Effective date: February 13, 1998.
        Amendment No.: 120.
        Facility Operating License No. NPF-30: The amendment revised the 
    Operating License.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: May 22, 1996 (61 FR 
    25713) The November 15, 1996, supplemental letter provided only 
    clarifying information and did not change the original no significant 
    hazards consideration determination.
        The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is contained 
    in a Safety Evaluation dated February 13, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: University of Missouri-
    Columbia, Elmer Ellis Library, Columbia, Missouri.
    
    Union Electric Company, Docket No. 50-483, Callaway Plant, Unit 1, 
    Callaway County, Missouri.
    
        Date of application for amendment: August 8, 1997.
        Brief description of amendment: The amendment revises the Callaway 
    Plant, Unit 1 surveillance requirements of Technical Specification 3/
    4.7.4, ``Essential Service Water System'' by removing the requirement 
    to perform 4.7.4.b, 4.7.4.b.2 and 4.7.4.c during shutdown.
        Date of issuance: February 24, 1998.
        Effective date: February 24, 1998, to be implemented within 30 days 
    from the date of issuance.
        Amendment No.: 121.
        Facility Operating License No. NPF-30: The amendment revised the 
    Technical Specifications.
        Date of initial notice in Federal Register: December 17, 1997 (62 
    FR 66143) The Commission's related evaluation of the amendment is 
    contained in a Safety Evaluation dated February 24, 1998.
        No significant hazards consideration comments received: No.
        Local Public Document Room location: University of Missouri-
    Columbia, Elmer Ellis Library, Columbia, Missouri 65201-5149.
    
        Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 4th day of March 1998.
    
        For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
    Elinor G. Adensam,
    Acting Director, Division of Reactor Projects--III/IV Office of Nuclear 
    Reactor Regulation.
    [FR Doc. 98-6085 Filed 3-10-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7590-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/11/1998
Department:
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Entry Type:
Notice
Document Number:
98-6085
Dates:
Immediately, to be implemented within 30 days.
Pages:
11913-11931 (19 pages)
PDF File:
98-6085.pdf