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LLNL Emergency Management Plan <br /> Rev 24 <br /> January 2019 <br /> 11 TERMINATION AND RECOVERY <br /> This section describes the responsibilities for Operational Emergency termination and recovery. <br /> Recovery includes incident assessments and investigation, recovery planning, scheduling, repair, <br /> restoration and return or relocation. At LLNL, recovery planning and management of recovery <br /> activities are the responsibility of line management. <br /> 11.1 Emergency Termination <br /> During an Operational Emergency, timely decisions are required to ensure protective actions <br /> minimize the potential for health effects to onsite personnel and the public. The ED is <br /> responsible for terminating the emergency phase, completing appropriate notifications and <br /> entering into the recovery phase when the following general criteria are met: <br /> • The emergency condition no longer exists and it appears unlikely conditions will <br /> deteriorate sufficiently to cause another emergency; <br /> • Implemented personnel protective measures,both onsite and offsite, are relaxed or <br /> restricted to controlled areas; <br /> • Evacuated areas may be re-entered though some clean-up and repair may be ongoing or <br /> required, or the areas will be isolated/controlled; <br /> • The IC recommends that the ED consider termination; <br /> • The Emergency Management Team concurs if the EOC is activated and operational; <br /> • Affected offsite response organizations concur; and <br /> • If required, a Recovery Manager is appointed and a Recovery Plan Outline is developed. <br /> Under DOE Order 151.1D, LLNL must notify LFO, DOE Headquarters Watch Office, State, and <br /> local organizations within 30 minutes of termination of an Operational Emergency. <br /> 11.2 Recovery Operations <br /> The purpose of the recovery effort is to return the affected facilities and areas to normal <br /> operations following the termination of emergency response. Normally, the Fire Department IC <br /> will formally transfer control of the incident scene (facility and local affected area) to the ES&H <br /> Team Leader upon stabilization of the scene and completion of Fire Department activities. <br /> However, the Security IC may elect to retain control of the incident scene as a crime scene. <br /> Prior to transfer of control from the IC, the ED or LEDO (if the EOC is not operational), in <br /> conjunction with line management must ensure the incident scene is preserved so critical <br /> evidence will not be lost. This evidence is needed to determine what caused the incident and <br /> 96 <br />