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LLNL Emergency Plan <br />Rev-23 <br />October 2017 <br /> <br /> 15 <br />1.4.1.1 Facility Descriptions <br />Site 200 <br />Site 200 has six facilities or grouping of facilities as determined by EPHAs that could experience <br />events causing the declaration of an Operational Emergency based on the nature of the hazardous <br />materials present. <br />Site 300 <br />Site 300 conducts tests associated with the non-nuclear explosive component of a nuclear <br />weapon. Some facilities at Site 300 store hazardous materials of sufficient quantity that could <br />cause declaration of an Operational Emergency if an incident occurred. However, while there are <br />various locations where hazardous material accidents could occur, the entire site is treated as a <br />single hazardous facility during the hazards assessment process. <br />1.4.1.2 All-Hazards Survey and Hazardous Material Assessment <br />The actual and authorized hazardous material inventories of the Livermore Site 200 and Site 300 <br />facilities are compared with the evaluation criteria screening thresholds from DOE <br />Guide 151.1-2, Technical Planning Basis, to determine the need for further quantitative <br />assessment. Facilities with an inventory of a particular hazardous material in excess of criteria- <br />based values require further evaluation and documentation in the form of a facility-specific <br />EPHA. The EPHAs are updated periodically (every three years) or whenever there are significant <br />changes to operations (e.g., new operations not previously considered or new hazardous material <br />inventories). <br />The processes used to screen hazardous materials are described in detail in a hazards survey. The <br />LLNL All-Hazards Survey is developed in accordance with local plans/procedures for preparing <br />the hazards survey. Most of the facilities listed in the All-Hazards Survey do not require a <br />facility-specific quantitative EPHA. Hazards existing at LLNL include small amounts of <br />chemical hazards such as hydrogen chloride, chlorine, and sodium hydroxide. Radiological <br />hazards include plutonium, uranium, tritium and transuranic wastes. The results of this <br />evaluation survey are summarized in Table HS-1 of the current version of the All-Hazards <br />Survey. The latest Emergency Readiness Assurance Plan contains annually updated information <br />on the All-Hazards Survey, EPHAs, and tabulated information related to significant radiological, <br />chemical, and biological hazards authorized in LLNL buildings and facilities. <br />Based on hazardous material inventory information, facilities are categorized in the Emergency <br />Management Hazardous Materials Program and require facility-specific quantitative assessments <br />with associated documentation (the EPHA). To ensure that hazardous materials posing plume- <br />release impacts are adequately considered, those hazardous materials inventories potentially <br />producing Alert, Site Area Emergency, or General Emergency classifications during an <br />Operational Emergency will be evaluated generically in the North American Emergency <br />Response Guidebook (current version) for transportation incidents and/or in a facility EPHA as