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LLNL Emergency Management Plan <br /> Rev 24 <br /> January 2019 <br /> 4 EMERGENCY RESPONSE FACILITIES AND EQUIPMENT/SYSTEMS <br /> Emergency facilities and equipment support the ERO. Emergency facilities include ACRECC, <br /> the EOC, the DOCS, LLNL HSD, the ACFD Stations#20 and#21, the JIC, the TOC, and their <br /> alternate locations, if any. <br /> Equipment includes information management and communication systems that are capable of <br /> transmitting required notifications of emergency events and necessary exchanges of information. <br /> Various emergency alarm systems are installed to notify Laboratory workers of the emergency <br /> protective actions that may be required. Transportation equipment, personal protective <br /> equipment, consequence assessment equipment and other equipment used for an emergency are <br /> specified in Section 4.2. <br /> 4.1 Emergency Facilities <br /> 4.1.1 Emergency Operations Center <br /> The Site 200 EOC is the coordination and control point for Operational Emergency-support <br /> efforts. It provides a location and a system from which the ED and Emergency Management <br /> Team assess, evaluate, coordinate, and direct emergency support activities. It is the focal point <br /> for emergency notifications and reports and for liaison with Federal, State, and local response <br /> organizations. <br /> The facility that houses the EOC was designed and constructed as a physics laboratory building <br /> (DOE FIMS Code 721) in two increments -West (circa 1982) and East(circa 1988). The east <br /> increment was considered a moderate-hazard facility at the time it was built. The west increment <br /> was considered a low-hazard facility. A seismic evaluation prepared by LLNL in 1991 concluded <br /> that the structural elements are "adequately strong;"however, "pounding" between the two <br /> increments was likely. In 2002, the EOC was moved into the west increment of the facility as a <br /> temporary location until a permanent location could be determined. The EOC's location is <br /> directly at the junction of the west-east increments. In 2016, a new Seismic Safety Engineering <br /> Study was performed by an external independent engineering firm. Numerous structural and <br /> construction seismic deficiencies were identified by the evaluation. <br /> Due to the presence of the EOC, the space within the facility housing the EOC is identified as an <br /> essential facility. This space has been upgraded with positive air pressure ventilation. Essential <br /> emergency electrical components in the EOC space can be supplied with emergency power by a <br /> dedicated and separate back-up diesel generator located outside the facility. <br /> DOE HQ has approved a DOE-funded line item acquisition project to relocate the EOC from its <br /> current seismically deficient location into a permanent facility meeting California building code <br /> seismic structural design requirements for an essential facility. This new facility is anticipated to <br /> house the EOC and Emergency Programs Organization staff, consolidate life-safety and facility <br /> industrial alarms monitoring, and dispatching and communication with LLNL emergency <br /> 57 <br />