OAK HARBOR, OHIO Nuclear plant inspection shows continued operator errors



The plant has been shut down almost two years because of extensive corrosion.
OAK HARBOR, Ohio (AP) -- A two-week inspection of operations at the shuttered Davis-Besse nuclear plant revealed numerous operator errors, and government inspectors don't think the plant is ready to restart, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said Friday.
None of the errors presented a safety risk but showed plant operators didn't consistently follow correct procedures, said Rick Skokowski, who is in charge of the NRC's team overseeing the plant's restart. The NRC completed its inspection Friday and announced the results at a meeting.
Skokowski said a lot of the problems inspectors found were the same as those found during a September review. He said the changes made to correct the problems didn't work.
"The consistency wasn't there," Skokowski said.
The plant along Lake Erie has been shut down for almost two years because of extensive corrosion found on the reactor vessel. The NRC would not say Friday when it would allow the plant to reopen. The plant's owner, Akron-based FirstEnergy Corp., had hoped to restart the plant by the end of the year.
FirstEnergy officials said they will review the problems found by the inspection team and begin making changes to improve worker performance.
The company still hopes to restart the plant soon and does not consider the problems to be major, spokesman Todd Schneider said.
Poor performance
Lew Myers, chief operating officer of FirstEnergy's Nuclear Division, said the company was not happy with the results of the inspection.
"We're not satisfied with this performance," he said. "We're going to hold people accountable."
A second inspection team that evaluated safety attitudes among workers at the plant said they found significant improvement, but a recent survey showed a decline in a number of areas.
"The team does not have reasonable assurance in the quality and consistency of future" performance by the company, Geoff Wright, leader of that inspection group, said in a report.
The plant has been shut down since February 2002 when it was taken off-line for maintenance. A month later a leak was discovered that had allowed boric acid to eat nearly through the 6-inch-thick steel cap covering the plant's reactor vessel.
It was the most extensive corrosion ever at a U.S. nuclear reactor.