In the Matter of Mr. Francis Guilbeau; Order Prohibiting Involvement in NRC-Licensed Activities, 3010-3013 [2012-1060]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 13 / Friday, January 20, 2012 / Notices
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date will be considered if it is practical
to do so, but the NRC staff is able to
ensure consideration only for comments
received on or before this date.
ADDRESSES: Please include Docket ID
NRC–2012–0010 in the subject line of
your comments. For additional
instructions on submitting comments
and instructions on accessing
documents related to this action, see
‘‘Submitting Comments and Accessing
Information’’ in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section of this document.
You may submit comments by any of
the following methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for documents filed under Docket ID
NRC–2012–0010. Address questions
about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher
(301) 492–3668; email
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
• Mail comments to: Mail comments
to: Cindy Bladey, Chief, Rules,
Announcements, and Directives Branch
(RADB), Office of Administration, Mail
Stop: TWB–05–B01M, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, or by fax to RADB at
(301) 492–3446.
• Fax comments to: RADB at (301)
492–3446.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Richard Pelton, Division of Construction
Inspection and Operational Programs,
Office of New Reactors, TWFN Mail
Stop 07–D24, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, Phone: (301) 415–1028, email:
Rick.Pelton@nrc.gov or James Kellum,
Division of Construction Inspection and
Operational Programs, Office of New
Reactors, TWFN Mail Stop 07–D24, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555–0001; Phone:
(301) 415–5305, email:
Jim.Kellum@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Submitting Comments and Accessing
Information
Comments submitted in writing or in
electronic form will be posted on the
NRC Web site and on the Federal
rulemaking Web site, https://
www.regulations.gov. Because your
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information,
the NRC cautions you against including
any information in your submission that
you do not want to be publicly
disclosed.
The NRC requests that any party
soliciting or aggregating comments
received from other persons for
submission to the NRC inform those
persons that the NRC will not edit their
comments to remove any identifying or
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contact information, and therefore, they
should not include any information in
their comments that they do not want
publicly disclosed.
You can access publicly available
documents related to this document
using the following methods:
• NRC’s Public Document Room
(PDR): The public may examine and
have copied, for a fee, publicly available
documents at the NRC’s PDR, O1–F21,
One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
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(ADAMS): Publicly available documents
created or received at the NRC are
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adams.html. From this page, the public
can gain entry into ADAMS, which
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NRC’s public documents. If you do not
have access to ADAMS or if there are
problems in accessing the documents
located in ADAMS, contact the NRC’s
PDR reference staff at 1 (800) 397–4209,
(301) 415–4737, or by email to
pdr.resource@nrc.gov. The draft NUREG
is available electronically under
ADAMS Accession No. ML11354A280.
The draft NUREG will also be accessible
through the NRC’s public site under
draft NUREGs for comment.
• Federal Rulemaking Web site:
Public comments and supporting
materials related to this notice can be
found at https://www.regulations.gov by
searching on Docket ID NRC–2012–
0010.
Discussion
The draft NUREG provides the basis
for the development of content-valid
licensing examinations for reactor
operators (ROs) and senior reactor
operators (SROs). The examinations
developed using this Catalog along with
the Operator Licensing Examination
Standards for Power Reactors (NUREG–
1021) will sample the topics listed
under Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (10 CFR) Part 55.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 9th day
of January 2012.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Veronica Rodriguez,
Acting Chief, Operator Licensing and Human
Performance Branch, Division of Construction
Inspection and Operational Programs, Office
of New Reactors.
[FR Doc. 2012–1063 Filed 1–19–12; 8:45 am]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2012–0005; IA–11–032]
In the Matter of Mr. Francis Guilbeau;
Order Prohibiting Involvement in NRC–
Licensed Activities
I
Mr. Francis Guilbeau was employed
as a Radiographer at Accurate NDE &
Inspection, LLC, (Accurate NDE or
Licensee) located in Broussard,
Louisiana, in March 2010. Accurate
NDE is the holder of a general license
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC or the Commission)
pursuant to Title 10 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (10 CFR) 150.20.
This general license was granted to
Accurate NDE at various times during
calendar years between 2005 through
2011.
II
On May 26, 2010, the NRC conducted
a special inspection of licensed
activities involving the use of byproduct
material for industrial radiography
conducted under a general license
pursuant to the provisions of 10 CFR
150.20. The inspection was conducted
in response to an event that occurred on
March 15, 2010, involving the loss of a
sealed source of iridium-192 while
performing licensed activities in
offshore Federal waters. On June 28,
2010, the NRC’s Office of Investigations,
Region IV, began an investigation (Case
No. 4–2010–062) to determine, in part,
whether Mr. Guilbeau: (1) Willfully
failed to follow operating procedures by
attempting to retrieve a disconnected
source without making the proper
notifications and obtaining
authorization from the Accurate NDE
radiation safety officer (RSO); and (2)
willfully recorded an inaccurate number
for a pocket dosimeter reading on the
Accurate NDE Daily Radiation Report
dated March 14, 2010. By letter dated
July 28, 2011 (ML11209B637), the NRC
informed Mr. Guilbeau that the NRC
was considering escalated enforcement
action for two apparent violations of
NRC’s deliberate misconduct rule, 10
CFR 30.10. The NRC offered Mr.
Guilbeau the opportunity to request a
predecisional enforcement conference
or request alternative dispute resolution
(ADR) with the NRC in an attempt to
resolve issues associated with this
matter. In response, Mr. Guilbeau
requested a predecisional enforcement
conference. A predecisional
enforcement conference was held with
Mr. Guilbeau on August 25, 2011, in an
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effort to obtain Mr. Guilbeau’s point of
view on the violations.
Based on the NRC review of the
information obtained during the
predecisional enforcement conference,
the inspection and the investigation,
two violations of the NRC’s rule
prohibiting deliberate misconduct, 10
CFR 30.10, were identified. First, Mr.
Guilbeau engaged in deliberate
misconduct in violation of 10 CFR
30.10(a)(1) by causing Accurate NDE to
be in violation of 10 CFR 150.20(b)(5),
which requires Accurate NDE to comply
with the terms of its State license.
Paragraph 21A of the Louisiana State
license required Accurate NDE to follow
its operating procedures. Accurate
NDE’s operating procedures prohibit a
radiographer from retrieving a
disconnected source unless he contacts
the radiation safety officer (RSO) first
and obtains authorization. Mr. Guilbeau
did not contact the RSO or obtain
authorization from the RSO prior to
attempting retrieval of the source.
Therefore, Mr. Guilbeau’s actions
caused Accurate NDE to be in violation
of its Louisiana State license, and 10
CFR 150.20. During an interview with
the Office of Investigations, Mr.
Guilbeau admitted that he tried to
retrieve the source without first
contacting the RSO. Mr. Guilbeau also
stated in this interview that he knew
radiographers were not supposed to
retrieve a source. In a written test on
Accurate NDE’s procedures taken on
March 10, 2010, four days prior to going
out on this job, Mr. Guilbeau chose the
correct response to a question asking
what to do in the event of a source
disconnect—a further indication that he
knew it was necessary to contact the
RSO and that he was not supposed to
attempt to put the source back in the
camera.
This incident occurred on Mr.
Guilbeau’s first job back with Accurate
NDE after several years working
elsewhere. During his previous tenure
with Accurate NDE in 2004–2006, Mr.
Guilbeau was involved in a similar
incident and in that case, he
immediately called the office. At the
predecisional enforcement conference
held on August 25, 2011, Mr. Guilbeau
stated repeatedly that his primary aim
was to get the ‘‘pill’’ hooked back up so
he could start X-raying again. He also
indicated that he should have contacted
the office first, but it was his first job
back with Accurate NDE, and he just
wanted to get the work done without
any complications.
Because Mr. Guilbeau knew that he
was supposed to contact the RSO before
attempting to retrieve a source but did
not do so, and because his actions
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caused the license to be in violation of
10 CFR 150.20(b)(5), Mr. Guilbeau’s
actions constitute deliberate misconduct
pursuant to 10 CFR 30.10(a)(1). During
the attempted source retrieval, the
licensee’s conclusion was that the
source fell through the grating on the
deck of the platform into the Gulf of
Mexico. Therefore, as a result of Mr.
Guilbeau’s actions, the source was lost.
Second, Mr. Guilbeau engaged in
deliberate misconduct in violation of 10
CFR 30.10(a)(2) by deliberately
submitting to Accurate NDE, an NRC
general licensee, information that he
knew was inaccurate in some material
respect. Specifically, Mr. Guilbeau
recorded a number for a pocket
dosimeter reading associated with work
performed by another radiographer on
March 14, 2010, on the Daily Radiation
Report, that Mr. Guilbeau knew was
inaccurate. During an interview by the
Office of Investigations, Mr. Guilbeau
admitted he did not know what the
other radiographer’s true radiographic
dose exposure was for March 14, 2010,
and estimated a number on the
licensee’s Daily Radiation Report for
that shift. During the predecisional
enforcement conference, Mr. Guilbeau
stated that he could not remember
receiving the other radiographer’s
radiographic dose exposure that would
have been recorded at the end of the
shift. This would indicate that Mr.
Guilbeau did not enter the correct dose
exposure reading for the other
radiographer on the Daily Radiation
Report. As a result, Mr. Guilbeau
deliberately submitted information to
Accurate NDE, an NRC general licensee,
information that he knew to be
inaccurate in some respect material to
the NRC. This was a violation of 10 CFR
30.10(a)(2). In addition, because the
Daily Radiation Report is a record that
Accurate NDE is required to keep
pursuant to 10 CFR 34.83 and 34.47(b),
Mr. Guilbeau’s actions caused Accurate
NDE to be in violation of 10 CFR 30.9(a),
which requires that information
required by regulation to be maintained
by a licensee must be accurate in all
material respects.
III
Based on the above, the NRC has
concluded that Mr. Francis Guilbeau, a
former employee of Accurate NDE,
violated 10 CFR 30.10(a)(1) by engaging
in deliberate misconduct that caused
Accurate NDE to be in violation of 10
CFR 150.20(b)(5) and 30.9. Further, Mr.
Guilbeau deliberately provided to
Accurate NDE information that he knew
to be incomplete or inaccurate in some
respect material to the NRC, in violation
of 10 CFR 30.10(a)(2).
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The NRC must be able to rely on the
Licensee and its employees to comply
with NRC requirements, including the
requirement that general licensees
operating under the reciprocity
provisions of 10 CFR 150.20 comply
with the terms and conditions of their
Agreement State licenses and the
requirement to provide information and
maintain records that are complete and
accurate in all material respects. Mr.
Guilbeau’s actions caused the Licensee
to violate 10 CFR 150.20(b)(5) and 10
CFR 30.9 and have raised serious doubt
as to whether he can be relied upon to
comply with NRC requirements and to
provide complete and accurate
information to the NRC.
Consequently, I lack the requisite
reasonable assurance that licensed
activities can be conducted in
compliance with the Commission’s
requirements and that the health and
safety of the public will be protected if
Mr. Guilbeau were permitted at this
time to be involved in NRC-licensed
activities. Therefore, the public health,
safety and interest require that Mr.
Guilbeau be prohibited from any
involvement in NRC-licensed activities
for a period of 1 year from the effective
date of this Order, as defined in Section
V. Additionally Mr. Guilbeau is
required to notify the NRC of his first
employment in NRC-licensed activities
for a period of 1 year following the
prohibition period.
IV
Accordingly, pursuant to Sections 81,
161b, 161i, 161o, 182 and 186 of the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended,
and the Commission’s regulations in 10
CFR 2.202, 10 CFR 30.10, 10 CFR parts
20, 34, and 10 CFR 150.20, It is hereby
ordered that:
1. Mr. Francis Guilbeau is prohibited
for 1 year from the effective date of this
Order, as defined in Section V, from
engaging in NRC-licensed activities.
NRC-licensed activities are those
activities that are conducted pursuant to
a specific or general license issued by
the NRC, including but not limited to,
those activities of Agreement State
licensees conducted pursuant to the
authority granted by 10 CFR 150.20.
Specifically, Mr. Guilbeau is prohibited
from performing, supervising, assisting
or otherwise engaging in (1) Industrial
radiography for an Agreement State
licensee that is conducted in nonAgreement States, in areas of exclusive
federal jurisdiction within Agreement
States, or in offshore waters under an
NRC general license granted pursuant to
10 CFR 150.20, (2) industrial
radiography for an NRC licensee,
including, but not limited to,
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radiography conducted under the
authority of a license issued pursuant to
10 CFR Part 34, and (3) any other
licensed activity under NRC
jurisdiction.
2. As of the effective date of this
Order, if Mr. Guilbeau is currently
involved in NRC-licensed activities, he
must immediately cease those activities,
and inform the NRC of the name,
address and telephone number of the
employer, and provide a copy of this
Order to the employer.
3. For a period of 1 year after the 1year period of prohibition has expired,
Mr. Guilbeau shall, within 20 days of
acceptance of his first employment offer
involving NRC-licensed activities or his
becoming involved in NRC-licensed
activities, as defined in paragraph IV.1
above, provide notice to the Director,
Office of Enforcement, U. S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, of the name, address,
and telephone number of the employer
or the entity where he is, or will be,
involved in the NRC-licensed activities.
In the notification, Mr. Guilbeau shall
include a statement of his commitment
to compliance with NRC regulatory
requirements and the basis for why the
Commission should have confidence
that he will now comply with
applicable NRC requirements.
The Director, Office of Enforcement,
may, in writing, relax or rescind any of
the above conditions upon
demonstration by Mr. Guilbeau of good
cause.
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V
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.202, Mr.
Francis Guilbeau must, and any other
person adversely affected by this Order
may, submit an answer to this Order
within 30 days of its issuance date. In
addition, Mr. Guilbeau and any other
person adversely affected by this Order
may request a hearing on this Order
within 30 days of its issuance date.
Where good cause is shown,
consideration will be given to extending
the time to answer or request a hearing.
A request for extension of time must be
directed to the Director, Office of
Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, and include a statement of
good cause for the extension.
All documents filed in NRC
adjudicatory proceedings, including a
request for hearing, a petition for leave
to intervene, any motion or other
document filed in the proceeding prior
to the submission of a request for
hearing or petition to intervene, and
documents filed by interested
governmental entities participating
under 10 CFR 2.315(c), must be filed in
accordance with the NRC E-Filing rule
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(72 FR 49139, August 28, 2007). The EFiling process requires participants to
submit and serve all adjudicatory
documents over the Internet, or in some
cases to mail copies on electronic
storage media. Participants may not
submit paper copies of their filings
unless they seek an exemption in
accordance with the procedures
described below.
To comply with the procedural
requirements of E-Filing, at least 10
days prior to the filing deadline, the
participant should contact the Office of
the Secretary by email at
hearing.docket@nrc.gov, or by telephone
at (301) 415–1677, to request (1) a
digital ID certificate, which allows the
participant (or its counsel or
representative) to digitally sign
documents and access the E-Submittal
server for any proceeding in which it is
participating; and (2) advise the
Secretary that the participant will be
submitting a request or petition for
hearing (even in instances in which the
participant, or its counsel or
representative, already holds an NRCissued digital ID certificate). Based upon
this information, the Secretary will
establish an electronic docket for the
hearing in this proceeding if the
Secretary has not already established an
electronic docket.
Information about applying for a
digital ID certificate is available on
NRC’s public Web site at https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/
apply-certificates.html. System
requirements for accessing the ESubmittal server are detailed in NRC’s
‘‘Guidance for Electronic Submission,’’
which is available on the agency’s
public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/
site-help/e-submittals.html. Participants
may attempt to use other software not
listed on the Web site, but should note
that the NRC’s E-Filing system does not
support unlisted software, and the NRC
Meta System Help Desk will not be able
to offer assistance in using unlisted
software.
If a participant is electronically
submitting a document to the NRC in
accordance with the E-Filing rule, the
participant must file the document
using the NRC’s online, web-based
submission form. In order to serve
documents through NRC’s Electronic
Information Exchange (EIE), users will
be required to install a web browser
plug-in from the NRC Web site. Further
information on the web-based
submission form, including the
installation of the web browser plug-in,
is available on the NRC’s public Web
site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html.
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Once a participant has obtained a
digital ID certificate and a docket has
been created, the participant can then
submit a request for hearing or petition
for leave to intervene. Submissions
should be in portable document format
(PDF) in accordance with NRC guidance
available on the NRC public Web site at
https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html. A filing is considered
complete at the time the documents are
submitted through the NRC’s E-Filing
system. To be timely, an electronic
filing must be submitted to the E-Filing
system no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern
time on the due date. Upon receipt of a
transmission, the E-Filing system timestamps the document and sends the
submitter an email notice confirming
receipt of the document. The E-Filing
system also distributes an email notice
that provides access to the document to
the NRC’s Office of the General Counsel
and any others who have advised the
Office of the Secretary that they wish to
participate in the proceeding, so that the
filer need not serve the documents on
those participants separately. Therefore,
applicants and other participants (or
their counsel or representative) must
apply for and receive a digital ID
certificate before a hearing request/
petition to intervene is filed so that they
can obtain access to the document via
the E-Filing system.
A person filing electronically using
the agency’s adjudicatory E-Filing
system may seek assistance by
contacting the NRC Meta System Help
Desk through the ‘‘Contact Us’’ link
located on the NRC Web site at https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html, by email at
MSHD.Resource@nrc.gov, or by a tollfree call at (866) 672–7640. The NRC
Meta System Help Desk is available
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern time,
Monday through Friday, excluding
government holidays.
Participants who believe that they
have a good cause for not submitting
documents electronically must file an
exemption request, in accordance with
10 CFR 2.302(g), with their initial paper
filing requesting authorization to
continue to submit documents in paper
format. Such filings must be submitted
by: (1) First class mail addressed to the
Office of the Secretary of the
Commission, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, Attention: Rulemaking and
Adjudications Staff; or (2) courier,
express mail, or expedited delivery
service to the Office of the Secretary,
Sixteenth Floor, One White Flint North,
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852, Attention: Rulemaking
and Adjudications Staff. Participants
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filing a document in this manner are
responsible for serving the document on
all other participants. Filing is
considered complete by first-class mail
as of the time of deposit in the mail, or
by courier, express mail, or expedited
delivery service upon depositing the
document with the provider of the
service. A presiding officer, having
granted an exemption request from
using E-Filing, may require a participant
or party to use E-Filing if the presiding
officer subsequently determines that the
reason for granting the exemption from
use of E-Filing no longer exists.
Documents submitted in adjudicatory
proceedings will appear in NRC’s
electronic hearing docket, which is
available to the public at https://
ehd1.nrc.gov/ehd/, unless excluded
pursuant to an order of the Commission,
or the presiding officer. Participants are
requested not to include personal
privacy information, such as social
security numbers, home addresses, or
home phone numbers in their filings,
unless an NRC regulation or other law
requires submission of such
information. With respect to
copyrighted works, except for limited
excerpts that serve the purpose of the
adjudicatory filings and would
constitute a Fair Use application,
participants are requested not to include
copyrighted materials in their
submission.
If a person other than Mr. Francis
Guilbeau requests a hearing, that person
shall set forth with particularity the
manner in which his interest is
adversely affected by this Order and
shall address the criteria set forth in 10
CFR 2.309(d).
If a hearing is requested by Mr.
Guilbeau or any other person whose
interest is adversely affected, the
Commission will issue an order
designating the time and place of any
hearings.
If a hearing is held, the issue to be
considered at such hearing shall be
whether this Order should be sustained.
In the absence of any request for hearing
or ADR, or written approval of an
extension of time in which to request a
hearing, the effective date of this Order
(the date that the provisions specified in
Section IV above become final and
effective) shall be 30 days from the
issuance date of this Order without
further order or proceedings. If an
extension of time for requesting a
hearing has been approved, the effective
date of this Order shall be when the
extension expires if a hearing request
has not been received. If a hearing or
ADR is requested, the effective date of
this Order shall be determined in
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accordance with the hearing or ADR
process.
Dated this 5th day of January 2012.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Roy P. Zimmerman,
Director, Office of Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2012–1060 Filed 1–19–12; 8:45 am]
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PEACE CORPS
Submission for OMB Review; Request
for Comments
60-Day notice and request for
comments.
ACTION:
The Peace Corps will be
submitting the following information
collection request to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for
review and approval. The purpose of
this notice is to allow 60 days for public
comment in the Federal Register
preceding submission to OMB. We are
conducting this process in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter 35).
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before March 20, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
addressed to Denora Miller, FOIA
Officer, Peace Corps, 1111 20th Street
NW., Washington, DC 20526. Denora
Miller can be contacted by telephone at
(202) 692–1236 or email at
pcfr@peacecorps.gov. Email comments
must be made in text and not in
attachments.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Denora Miller at Peace Corps address
above.
The Peace
Corps Act states that ‘‘[t]he President
may enroll in the Peace Corps for
service abroad qualified citizens and
nationals of the United States (referred
to in this Act as ‘‘volunteers’’). The
terms and conditions of the enrollment
* * * of volunteers shall be exclusively
those set forth in this Act and those
consistent therewith which the
President may prescribe * * *’’ 22
U.S.C. 2504(a). Eligibility requirements
for the Peace Corps have been
prescribed in 22 CFR part 305. Among
those eligibility requirements is one
relating to medical status. An Applicant
‘‘must, with reasonable accommodation,
have the physical and mental capacity
required of a Volunteer to perform the
essential functions of the Peace Corps
Volunteer assignment for which he or
she is otherwise eligible and be able to
complete an agreed upon tour of service,
ordinarily two years, without undue
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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3013
disruption due to health problems.’’ 22
CFR 305.2(c). All applicants for service
must undergo a physical examination
and a dental evaluation prior to
Volunteer service to determine if they
meet this medical status eligibility
requirement. In addition, under 22
U.S.C. 2504(e), the Peace Corps provides
medical care to Volunteers during their
service and the information collected
will also be used in connection with
medical care and treatment during
Peace Corps service for applicants who
become Volunteers. Finally, the
information collected may serve as a
point of reference for any potential
future Volunteer worker’s compensation
claims.
Volunteers serve in 67 developing
countries where western-style
healthcare is often not available.
Volunteers are placed in remote
locations where they may suffer
hardship because they have no access to
running water and/or electricity. They
also may be placed in locations with
extreme environmental conditions
related to cold, heat or high altitude and
they may be exposed to diseases not
generally found in the U.S. Volunteers
may be placed many hours from the
Peace Corps medical office and not have
easy access to any health care provider.
Therefore, a thorough review of an
Applicant’s past medical history is an
essential first step to determine their
suitability for service in Peace Corps.
The current process requires almost
all Applicants to undergo a costly and
time consuming full medical evaluation.
Under the current process, it sometimes
happens that after an Applicant has
spent large amounts of time and money,
the Peace Corps finds that the Applicant
is not medically qualified to serve. In
2012, the Peace Corps will change the
current process in order to reduce the
time and expense of Applicants and to
ensure that only those who accept an
invitation to serve undergo a complete
medical evaluation. However,
Applicants who have certain
particularly difficult to accommodate
conditions will be evaluated early in the
process. This will reduce the time and
expense for those Applicants who
would, even with reasonable
accommodation, not be likely to be able
to perform the essential functions of a
Peace Corps Volunteer and complete a
tour of service without undue
disruption due to health problems.
Under the new system, the Applicant
will begin the medical part of the
application process by completing a
comprehensive health history form
called the ‘‘Health History Form’’. After
completion of the Health History Form
and after passing preliminary non-
E:\FR\FM\20JAN1.SGM
20JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 13 (Friday, January 20, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 3010-3013]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-1060]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[NRC-2012-0005; IA-11-032]
In the Matter of Mr. Francis Guilbeau; Order Prohibiting
Involvement in NRC-Licensed Activities
I
Mr. Francis Guilbeau was employed as a Radiographer at Accurate NDE
& Inspection, LLC, (Accurate NDE or Licensee) located in Broussard,
Louisiana, in March 2010. Accurate NDE is the holder of a general
license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC or the
Commission) pursuant to Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10
CFR) 150.20. This general license was granted to Accurate NDE at
various times during calendar years between 2005 through 2011.
II
On May 26, 2010, the NRC conducted a special inspection of licensed
activities involving the use of byproduct material for industrial
radiography conducted under a general license pursuant to the
provisions of 10 CFR 150.20. The inspection was conducted in response
to an event that occurred on March 15, 2010, involving the loss of a
sealed source of iridium-192 while performing licensed activities in
offshore Federal waters. On June 28, 2010, the NRC's Office of
Investigations, Region IV, began an investigation (Case No. 4-2010-062)
to determine, in part, whether Mr. Guilbeau: (1) Willfully failed to
follow operating procedures by attempting to retrieve a disconnected
source without making the proper notifications and obtaining
authorization from the Accurate NDE radiation safety officer (RSO); and
(2) willfully recorded an inaccurate number for a pocket dosimeter
reading on the Accurate NDE Daily Radiation Report dated March 14,
2010. By letter dated July 28, 2011 (ML11209B637), the NRC informed Mr.
Guilbeau that the NRC was considering escalated enforcement action for
two apparent violations of NRC's deliberate misconduct rule, 10 CFR
30.10. The NRC offered Mr. Guilbeau the opportunity to request a
predecisional enforcement conference or request alternative dispute
resolution (ADR) with the NRC in an attempt to resolve issues
associated with this matter. In response, Mr. Guilbeau requested a
predecisional enforcement conference. A predecisional enforcement
conference was held with Mr. Guilbeau on August 25, 2011, in an
[[Page 3011]]
effort to obtain Mr. Guilbeau's point of view on the violations.
Based on the NRC review of the information obtained during the
predecisional enforcement conference, the inspection and the
investigation, two violations of the NRC's rule prohibiting deliberate
misconduct, 10 CFR 30.10, were identified. First, Mr. Guilbeau engaged
in deliberate misconduct in violation of 10 CFR 30.10(a)(1) by causing
Accurate NDE to be in violation of 10 CFR 150.20(b)(5), which requires
Accurate NDE to comply with the terms of its State license. Paragraph
21A of the Louisiana State license required Accurate NDE to follow its
operating procedures. Accurate NDE's operating procedures prohibit a
radiographer from retrieving a disconnected source unless he contacts
the radiation safety officer (RSO) first and obtains authorization. Mr.
Guilbeau did not contact the RSO or obtain authorization from the RSO
prior to attempting retrieval of the source. Therefore, Mr. Guilbeau's
actions caused Accurate NDE to be in violation of its Louisiana State
license, and 10 CFR 150.20. During an interview with the Office of
Investigations, Mr. Guilbeau admitted that he tried to retrieve the
source without first contacting the RSO. Mr. Guilbeau also stated in
this interview that he knew radiographers were not supposed to retrieve
a source. In a written test on Accurate NDE's procedures taken on March
10, 2010, four days prior to going out on this job, Mr. Guilbeau chose
the correct response to a question asking what to do in the event of a
source disconnect--a further indication that he knew it was necessary
to contact the RSO and that he was not supposed to attempt to put the
source back in the camera.
This incident occurred on Mr. Guilbeau's first job back with
Accurate NDE after several years working elsewhere. During his previous
tenure with Accurate NDE in 2004-2006, Mr. Guilbeau was involved in a
similar incident and in that case, he immediately called the office. At
the predecisional enforcement conference held on August 25, 2011, Mr.
Guilbeau stated repeatedly that his primary aim was to get the ``pill''
hooked back up so he could start X-raying again. He also indicated that
he should have contacted the office first, but it was his first job
back with Accurate NDE, and he just wanted to get the work done without
any complications.
Because Mr. Guilbeau knew that he was supposed to contact the RSO
before attempting to retrieve a source but did not do so, and because
his actions caused the license to be in violation of 10 CFR
150.20(b)(5), Mr. Guilbeau's actions constitute deliberate misconduct
pursuant to 10 CFR 30.10(a)(1). During the attempted source retrieval,
the licensee's conclusion was that the source fell through the grating
on the deck of the platform into the Gulf of Mexico. Therefore, as a
result of Mr. Guilbeau's actions, the source was lost.
Second, Mr. Guilbeau engaged in deliberate misconduct in violation
of 10 CFR 30.10(a)(2) by deliberately submitting to Accurate NDE, an
NRC general licensee, information that he knew was inaccurate in some
material respect. Specifically, Mr. Guilbeau recorded a number for a
pocket dosimeter reading associated with work performed by another
radiographer on March 14, 2010, on the Daily Radiation Report, that Mr.
Guilbeau knew was inaccurate. During an interview by the Office of
Investigations, Mr. Guilbeau admitted he did not know what the other
radiographer's true radiographic dose exposure was for March 14, 2010,
and estimated a number on the licensee's Daily Radiation Report for
that shift. During the predecisional enforcement conference, Mr.
Guilbeau stated that he could not remember receiving the other
radiographer's radiographic dose exposure that would have been recorded
at the end of the shift. This would indicate that Mr. Guilbeau did not
enter the correct dose exposure reading for the other radiographer on
the Daily Radiation Report. As a result, Mr. Guilbeau deliberately
submitted information to Accurate NDE, an NRC general licensee,
information that he knew to be inaccurate in some respect material to
the NRC. This was a violation of 10 CFR 30.10(a)(2). In addition,
because the Daily Radiation Report is a record that Accurate NDE is
required to keep pursuant to 10 CFR 34.83 and 34.47(b), Mr. Guilbeau's
actions caused Accurate NDE to be in violation of 10 CFR 30.9(a), which
requires that information required by regulation to be maintained by a
licensee must be accurate in all material respects.
III
Based on the above, the NRC has concluded that Mr. Francis
Guilbeau, a former employee of Accurate NDE, violated 10 CFR
30.10(a)(1) by engaging in deliberate misconduct that caused Accurate
NDE to be in violation of 10 CFR 150.20(b)(5) and 30.9. Further, Mr.
Guilbeau deliberately provided to Accurate NDE information that he knew
to be incomplete or inaccurate in some respect material to the NRC, in
violation of 10 CFR 30.10(a)(2).
The NRC must be able to rely on the Licensee and its employees to
comply with NRC requirements, including the requirement that general
licensees operating under the reciprocity provisions of 10 CFR 150.20
comply with the terms and conditions of their Agreement State licenses
and the requirement to provide information and maintain records that
are complete and accurate in all material respects. Mr. Guilbeau's
actions caused the Licensee to violate 10 CFR 150.20(b)(5) and 10 CFR
30.9 and have raised serious doubt as to whether he can be relied upon
to comply with NRC requirements and to provide complete and accurate
information to the NRC.
Consequently, I lack the requisite reasonable assurance that
licensed activities can be conducted in compliance with the
Commission's requirements and that the health and safety of the public
will be protected if Mr. Guilbeau were permitted at this time to be
involved in NRC-licensed activities. Therefore, the public health,
safety and interest require that Mr. Guilbeau be prohibited from any
involvement in NRC-licensed activities for a period of 1 year from the
effective date of this Order, as defined in Section V. Additionally Mr.
Guilbeau is required to notify the NRC of his first employment in NRC-
licensed activities for a period of 1 year following the prohibition
period.
IV
Accordingly, pursuant to Sections 81, 161b, 161i, 161o, 182 and 186
of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the Commission's
regulations in 10 CFR 2.202, 10 CFR 30.10, 10 CFR parts 20, 34, and 10
CFR 150.20, It is hereby ordered that:
1. Mr. Francis Guilbeau is prohibited for 1 year from the effective
date of this Order, as defined in Section V, from engaging in NRC-
licensed activities. NRC-licensed activities are those activities that
are conducted pursuant to a specific or general license issued by the
NRC, including but not limited to, those activities of Agreement State
licensees conducted pursuant to the authority granted by 10 CFR 150.20.
Specifically, Mr. Guilbeau is prohibited from performing, supervising,
assisting or otherwise engaging in (1) Industrial radiography for an
Agreement State licensee that is conducted in non-Agreement States, in
areas of exclusive federal jurisdiction within Agreement States, or in
offshore waters under an NRC general license granted pursuant to 10 CFR
150.20, (2) industrial radiography for an NRC licensee, including, but
not limited to,
[[Page 3012]]
radiography conducted under the authority of a license issued pursuant
to 10 CFR Part 34, and (3) any other licensed activity under NRC
jurisdiction.
2. As of the effective date of this Order, if Mr. Guilbeau is
currently involved in NRC-licensed activities, he must immediately
cease those activities, and inform the NRC of the name, address and
telephone number of the employer, and provide a copy of this Order to
the employer.
3. For a period of 1 year after the 1-year period of prohibition
has expired, Mr. Guilbeau shall, within 20 days of acceptance of his
first employment offer involving NRC-licensed activities or his
becoming involved in NRC-licensed activities, as defined in paragraph
IV.1 above, provide notice to the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.
S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, of the
name, address, and telephone number of the employer or the entity where
he is, or will be, involved in the NRC-licensed activities. In the
notification, Mr. Guilbeau shall include a statement of his commitment
to compliance with NRC regulatory requirements and the basis for why
the Commission should have confidence that he will now comply with
applicable NRC requirements.
The Director, Office of Enforcement, may, in writing, relax or
rescind any of the above conditions upon demonstration by Mr. Guilbeau
of good cause.
V
In accordance with 10 CFR 2.202, Mr. Francis Guilbeau must, and any
other person adversely affected by this Order may, submit an answer to
this Order within 30 days of its issuance date. In addition, Mr.
Guilbeau and any other person adversely affected by this Order may
request a hearing on this Order within 30 days of its issuance date.
Where good cause is shown, consideration will be given to extending the
time to answer or request a hearing. A request for extension of time
must be directed to the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, and include a statement of good cause for the
extension.
All documents filed in NRC adjudicatory proceedings, including a
request for hearing, a petition for leave to intervene, any motion or
other document filed in the proceeding prior to the submission of a
request for hearing or petition to intervene, and documents filed by
interested governmental entities participating under 10 CFR 2.315(c),
must be filed in accordance with the NRC E-Filing rule (72 FR 49139,
August 28, 2007). The E-Filing process requires participants to submit
and serve all adjudicatory documents over the Internet, or in some
cases to mail copies on electronic storage media. Participants may not
submit paper copies of their filings unless they seek an exemption in
accordance with the procedures described below.
To comply with the procedural requirements of E-Filing, at least 10
days prior to the filing deadline, the participant should contact the
Office of the Secretary by email at hearing.docket@nrc.gov, or by
telephone at (301) 415-1677, to request (1) a digital ID certificate,
which allows the participant (or its counsel or representative) to
digitally sign documents and access the E-Submittal server for any
proceeding in which it is participating; and (2) advise the Secretary
that the participant will be submitting a request or petition for
hearing (even in instances in which the participant, or its counsel or
representative, already holds an NRC-issued digital ID certificate).
Based upon this information, the Secretary will establish an electronic
docket for the hearing in this proceeding if the Secretary has not
already established an electronic docket.
Information about applying for a digital ID certificate is
available on NRC's public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/apply-certificates.html. System requirements for accessing
the E-Submittal server are detailed in NRC's ``Guidance for Electronic
Submission,'' which is available on the agency's public Web site at
https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. Participants may
attempt to use other software not listed on the Web site, but should
note that the NRC's E-Filing system does not support unlisted software,
and the NRC Meta System Help Desk will not be able to offer assistance
in using unlisted software.
If a participant is electronically submitting a document to the NRC
in accordance with the E-Filing rule, the participant must file the
document using the NRC's online, web-based submission form. In order to
serve documents through NRC's Electronic Information Exchange (EIE),
users will be required to install a web browser plug-in from the NRC
Web site. Further information on the web-based submission form,
including the installation of the web browser plug-in, is available on
the NRC's public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html.
Once a participant has obtained a digital ID certificate and a
docket has been created, the participant can then submit a request for
hearing or petition for leave to intervene. Submissions should be in
portable document format (PDF) in accordance with NRC guidance
available on the NRC public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. A filing is considered complete at the time the
documents are submitted through the NRC's E-Filing system. To be
timely, an electronic filing must be submitted to the E-Filing system
no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on the due date. Upon receipt of
a transmission, the E-Filing system time-stamps the document and sends
the submitter an email notice confirming receipt of the document. The
E-Filing system also distributes an email notice that provides access
to the document to the NRC's Office of the General Counsel and any
others who have advised the Office of the Secretary that they wish to
participate in the proceeding, so that the filer need not serve the
documents on those participants separately. Therefore, applicants and
other participants (or their counsel or representative) must apply for
and receive a digital ID certificate before a hearing request/petition
to intervene is filed so that they can obtain access to the document
via the E-Filing system.
A person filing electronically using the agency's adjudicatory E-
Filing system may seek assistance by contacting the NRC Meta System
Help Desk through the ``Contact Us'' link located on the NRC Web site
at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html, by email at
MSHD.Resource@nrc.gov, or by a toll-free call at (866) 672-7640. The
NRC Meta System Help Desk is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.,
Eastern time, Monday through Friday, excluding government holidays.
Participants who believe that they have a good cause for not
submitting documents electronically must file an exemption request, in
accordance with 10 CFR 2.302(g), with their initial paper filing
requesting authorization to continue to submit documents in paper
format. Such filings must be submitted by: (1) First class mail
addressed to the Office of the Secretary of the Commission, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, Attention:
Rulemaking and Adjudications Staff; or (2) courier, express mail, or
expedited delivery service to the Office of the Secretary, Sixteenth
Floor, One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland
20852, Attention: Rulemaking and Adjudications Staff. Participants
[[Page 3013]]
filing a document in this manner are responsible for serving the
document on all other participants. Filing is considered complete by
first-class mail as of the time of deposit in the mail, or by courier,
express mail, or expedited delivery service upon depositing the
document with the provider of the service. A presiding officer, having
granted an exemption request from using E-Filing, may require a
participant or party to use E-Filing if the presiding officer
subsequently determines that the reason for granting the exemption from
use of E-Filing no longer exists.
Documents submitted in adjudicatory proceedings will appear in
NRC's electronic hearing docket, which is available to the public at
https://ehd1.nrc.gov/ehd/, unless excluded pursuant to an order of the
Commission, or the presiding officer. Participants are requested not to
include personal privacy information, such as social security numbers,
home addresses, or home phone numbers in their filings, unless an NRC
regulation or other law requires submission of such information. With
respect to copyrighted works, except for limited excerpts that serve
the purpose of the adjudicatory filings and would constitute a Fair Use
application, participants are requested not to include copyrighted
materials in their submission.
If a person other than Mr. Francis Guilbeau requests a hearing,
that person shall set forth with particularity the manner in which his
interest is adversely affected by this Order and shall address the
criteria set forth in 10 CFR 2.309(d).
If a hearing is requested by Mr. Guilbeau or any other person whose
interest is adversely affected, the Commission will issue an order
designating the time and place of any hearings.
If a hearing is held, the issue to be considered at such hearing
shall be whether this Order should be sustained. In the absence of any
request for hearing or ADR, or written approval of an extension of time
in which to request a hearing, the effective date of this Order (the
date that the provisions specified in Section IV above become final and
effective) shall be 30 days from the issuance date of this Order
without further order or proceedings. If an extension of time for
requesting a hearing has been approved, the effective date of this
Order shall be when the extension expires if a hearing request has not
been received. If a hearing or ADR is requested, the effective date of
this Order shall be determined in accordance with the hearing or ADR
process.
Dated this 5th day of January 2012.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Roy P. Zimmerman,
Director, Office of Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2012-1060 Filed 1-19-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P