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LLNL Emergency Plan <br />Rev-22 <br />January 2017 <br /> <br /> 100 <br /> Developing the overall strategic Recovery Plan Outline following an Operational <br />Emergency that interrupts normal operation of the Laboratory <br /> Developing and/or approving a written Recovery Plan for a facility <br /> Selecting personnel to lead the recovery team functional areas: Finance/Administration, <br />Logistics, Operations, and Planning <br /> Requesting support staff/liaison (e.g., ES&H, Security, Public Affairs) be assigned to the <br />recovery team <br /> Managing the recovery effort <br /> Coordinating Laboratory interactions with contractors, vendors, and offsite organizations <br /> Communicating and coordinating with offsite Federal, State, and local officials as needed <br /> Approving media releases (in coordination with the EBCC and NNSA/LFO) regarding <br />recovery <br /> Ensuring that recovery operations are documented <br /> Issuing a final report <br />Once the emergency has terminated, the appointed Recovery Manager reports to the Laboratory <br />Director and/or EBCC. Since the EOC needs to be ready to activate in response to another <br />Operational Emergency, the recovery team will most likely work out of a location other than the <br />EOC, such as the EBCC, a DOC, or other available facility. <br />11.2.2 Reentry Phase <br />Any facility that shows evidence of structural damage should not be entered by unqualified <br />personnel. Fire Department personnel, assisted by Structural Evaluation Assessment Field Teams <br />and ES&H Teams, are qualified to enter a structurally-damaged building for situation assessment <br />and recovery planning. <br />Where structural damage has clearly not occurred, reentry activities at a facility and locally <br />affected areas are initiated when the emergency conditions have stabilized such that damage <br />assessments can be safely accomplished. These activities should be conducted prior to the <br />termination of the emergency to assist in recovery planning, or they may be conducted post- <br />termination during the recovery phase of operations. The reentry plan should also describe: areas <br />to be surveyed, anticipated contamination levels, protective equipment and shielding <br />requirements, decontamination requirements and communications requirements. The Recovery <br />Manager or ES&H Team Leader is normally responsible for the reentry phase during the post- <br />termination recovery phase.