DocumentCode :
849475
Title :
Emergency Planning and Preparedness before and after Three Mile Island
Author :
Collins, Harold E.
Author_Institution :
Assistant Director for Emergency Preparedness Office of State Programs U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Comission Washington, D. C. 20555
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
fYear :
1980
Firstpage :
919
Lastpage :
923
Abstract :
The last bastion of the often touted and quoted "Defense-in-Depth" concept against consequences of accidents at nuclear facilities, which has governed the development of commercial nuclear power for two-andone-half decades in this country, is a proper and effective emergency planning and preparedness program with respect to these facilities. This bastion has not received the support which it deserves. Proper and adequate emergency planning, rather than paying "lipservice" to it, can help alleviate many of the fears surrounding the safe operation of nuclear power facilities. In the past, the old view that emergency planning and preparedness should be "kept in the closet," away from public scrutiny, lest it "stir-up the folks in Toonerville," just won\´t wash anymore. Three Mile Island has changed all of that, and I look at it as a healthy, up-beat change. This accident has given us a golden opportunity to improve things and we must not fail, collectively, to take advantage of it and to learn from it and to act on it. We are unlikely to have another chance to do so.
Keywords :
Appraisal; Cardiac arrest; Fires; Industrial accidents; Local government; Nuclear electronics; Nuclear power generation; Personnel; Power engineering and energy; US Government;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.1980.4330950
Filename :
4330950
Link To Document :
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