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Glossary |
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This Glossary is for
reference ONLY.
Definitions of words and
terms herein are intended to reflect those given in applicable regulations and
requirements. Should a difference
between a definition in this glossary and that given in a regulation be found,
regulatory definitions shall prevail.
abnormal situation |
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AC utilization equipment |
Equipment that utilizes
electrical energy for electronic, electromechanical, chemical, heating,
lighting, or similar purposes. For further information on this equipment
refer to ES&H
Manual Chapter 6230 Electronic Equipment Safe Work Program. |
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acceleration system/component |
Devices capable of accelerating particles to
energies of > 10 keV. This includes ac, dc, or RF voltages in excess of 10
kV applied in or near a low pressure vessel. (Prompt radiation controls are
recommended for equipment capable of generating a final particle energy ≥ 25
keV.) |
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Accelerator Operations Directives (AOD) |
A comprehensive directive that describes
and governs how MCC Operations "does business." Details the approach utilized by
Accelerator operators to comply with Jefferson Lab policy, procedures, and
documentation requirements.(see http://opsntsrv.acc.jlab.org/ops_docs/online_document_files/ACC_online_files/accel_ops_directives.pdf) |
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Accelerator
Safety Envelope (ASE) |
A set of physical and administrative
conditions based on ES&H considerations contained in DOE guidelines. The
ASE establishes and defines the boundaries within which an accelerator and
its experiments may be operated. If all operations are performed within the
boundaries of the safety envelope, the facility staff, the facility users,
the general public, and the environment are protected. (See Jefferson Lab’s Final
Safety Assessment Document) |
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access control system (ACS) |
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access-restricted construction site |
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action level |
Term used to designate when an
activity requires medical surveillance, increased Industrial Hygiene
monitoring, or other mitigation to reduce risk. Action levels are generally
set at one half the actual permissible exposure limit (PEL), and are calculated at a time-weighted average of 8-hours of exposure
(e.g.: noise, lead, beryllium.) (e.g. 30 μg/m3
concentration of lead particulates in the air for eight hours triggers
stringent Industrial Hygiene monitoring.) |
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action owner |
The individual assigned responsibility for
completion of a corrective
action. |
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active controls |
Controls that require some action
to prevent or mitigate a hazard. |
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administrative control level |
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administrative controls |
Controls which require action on the part of an individual to be
effective. Effectiveness depends upon individual awareness
and compliance. Used when a hazard cannot be reduced to safe levels through engineering controls.
The most common Administrative Controls at
Jefferson Lab include, but are not limited to: procedures, recordkeeping,
assessment, and reporting. (Administrative
controls are the least preferred method of hazard mitigation.) |
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administrative lockout/tagout |
Procedures used to restrict
operation, access, equipment use, or tampering for reasons other than
maintenance and repair.
(See ES&H Manual Chapter 6111
Administrative Control using Locks and Tags.) |
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Administrative Lockout/Tagout Tag |
clearly distinguishable from Jefferson Lab approved Danger Tags |
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administrative procedures |
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adverse event |
Any unfavorable medical occurrence in a human
subject, including any abnormal sign (for example, abnormal physical exam or
laboratory finding), symptom, or disease, temporally associated with the
subjects participation in the research, whether or not considered related to
the subject's participation in the research. |
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affected employee |
A person who relies on equipment that
LO/TO is applied to during maintenance or service. The affected employee is
not necessarily the one performing the maintenance. It is anyone whose work
requires entry into an area where that person could be injured by an
uncontrolled release of energy as the result of maintenance and/or service or
whose work is interrupted by the maintenance and/or service. |
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affirmative procurement (AP) |
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An after-action review (AAR) is a structured review
or de-brief process for analyzing what happened, why it happened, and how it
can be done better by the participants and those responsible for the project
or event. |
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agreement parties |
The parties authorized to sign the contract, and
modifications thereof, between the DOE and the Jefferson Science Associates,
LLC (JSA) on behalf of their respective institutions. These parties are the
Contracting Officer and the President of JSA. |
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airborne radioactive material or airborne radioactivity |
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airborne radioactivity area |
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alert level |
The cumulative annual exposure
that triggers special efforts to keep an individual’s exposure ALARA.
Jefferson Lab’s alert level is 0.25 rem (250 mrem) in 1 year. |
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alternative design rules |
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alternate duty |
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American National Standards Institute and the
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers (ANSI/IEEE) |
These two organizations have
collaborated to produce two standards, “Recommended Practice for the
Measurement of Potentially Hazardous Electromagnetic Fields — RF and
Microwave.” Its reference number is C95.3–1991. (Also the “IEEE Standard for
Safety Levels with respect to Human Exposure to Radio Frequency
Electromagnetic Fields” C95.1 3 kHz to 300 GHz.) http://www.ansi.org/ / http://www.ieee.org/portal/site |
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American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) |
The professional engineering
organization whose Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code is the standard for
pressure vessel engineering at Jefferson Lab. This code can also be adapted
for certain cases of vacuum vessel engineering design. The most frequently
used sections of the Code as applied to pressure vessels used at Jefferson
Lab are: Section II Materials, Section VIII Rules for Construction of
Pressure Vessels, and Section IX Welding and Brazing Qualifications. http://www.asme.org/ |
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ANSI Z-136.1 “American National Standard for Safe
Use of Lasers” |
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approved equipment |
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arc flash boundary |
The
approach limit from a prospective arc source within which a person could
receive a second degree burn if an electrical arc flash were to occur (ref.
NFPA 70E). When work is to be performed within the arc flash boundary, the qualified persons use personal protective
equipment (PPE) that is appropriate for the available incident energy of the
system being worked on. |
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as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) |
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asbestos-containing building material (ACBM) |
Components,
systems, or surfaces in a building that were manufactured with asbestos, or
to which asbestos coatings have been applied. |
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ASME – Boiler and Pressure Vessel
(BPV) Code |
· Section II: Materials, Parts A, B, C, and D · Section V: Nondestructive Examination · Section VIII: Rules for Construction of Pressure Vessels,
Divisions I & II · Section IX: Welding and Brazing Qualifications |
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ASME – Code for Pressure Piping B31 |
· B31.1 Power Piping · B31.3 Process Piping* · B31.5 Refrigeration Piping · B31.9 Building Services Piping *ASME B31.3 Process Piping shall be used as the primary standard for Jefferson Lab piping systems. Other sections shall be applied as appropriate based on sound judgment of the Design Authority and proven practices in the respective field. |
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assigned radiation monitor (ARM) |
Staff members who
have completed special radiation survey training and assist the Radiation
Control Department in performing radiation survey measurements of the
facility and equipment. |
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attendant |
An
individual stationed outside a permit-required
confined space (PRCS) who monitors the
authorized entrants and performs other duties as indicated on the entry
permit. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6160
Confined Space Entry.) |
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audiometric testing |
A procedure that measures hearing ability. The
perception threshold is established at representative frequencies from 500 Hz
to 8 kHz. The unit of measure is decibels on the A-weighted sound scale
(dBA), which measures the slow response sound pressure level relative to 0.2
newton/cm2, frequency-normalized for typical human ear sound response. |
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authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) |
The decision-making authority for
fire-protection systems, building features, and suitability for occupancy with
respect to fire safety as described in ES&H Manual
Chapter 6900 Fire Protection Program. Final AHJ
responsibilities rest with the cognizant DOE Authority. The Jefferson Lab
Facilities Management Director (PED) provides the laboratory with direction
for fire-protection based upon contractual commitments and applicable
standards and codes, and serves as the on-site AHJ. |
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authorized employee |
Employee given permission to perform a task by the responsible Supervisor after consideration of the necessary qualifications,
experience, and other work planning factors. |
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Automated External Defibrillator (AED) |
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aversion response |
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backflow preventer |
A mechanical device used to prevent foreign
materials from entering and contaminating the drinking water supply. |
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backup protection |
A secondary, redundant, protective system designed
to de-energize a device, system, or facility so as to permit safe physical
contact by maintenance personnel. A backup protective system is totally
independent of the first-line protection and capable of functioning in the
event of total failure of the first-line protective system. |
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beam dump |
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beam line |
All accelerator
components that comprise the vacuum space through which the electron beam is
transported. |
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Beam “on”/“off” |
The injector gun is or is not in the beam permit
state. |
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beam power absorber |
A
device designed to safely absorb an electron beam and transfer the power to
another medium. |
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Becquerel (Bq) |
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below-the-hook lifting device |
Any device, other than slings,
used for attaching loads to a hoist (such as a spreader bar), as described in
ASME B30.20-1993 Section 20-0.1.
(See ES&H Manual Chapter 6141
Material Handling Equipment – Rigging, Cranes, and Hoists.) |
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beryllium article |
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bioassay |
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bio-based product |
A commercial or industrial product (other than food
or feed) that utilizes biological products or renewable domestic agricultural
(plant, animal, or marine) or forestry materials. |
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bioelectronic device |
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blind penetration |
Drilling, cutting, nailing, and installing
fasteners, etc. into a wall or floor when the interior is concealed from
view.
(See ES&H
Manual Chapter 3320 Temporary Work Permits.) |
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bloodborne pathogens |
Pathogenic microorganisms that
are present in human blood and can cause disease in humans. These pathogens include,
but are not limited to, Hepatitis B Virus (HBV) and Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV).
(See ES&H Manual Chapter 6800
Occupational Medicine.) |
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brazement |
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brazing |
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brazing procedure specification (BPS) |
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building service electrical equipment |
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Business Continue Plan (or Program) (BCP) |
An ongoing process supported by senior management to
ensure that the necessary steps are taken to identify the impact of potential
losses, maintain viable recovery plans and strategies, and ensure continuity
of operations through personnel training, plan testing, and maintenance. |
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calibration |
To adjust and/or determine either: (1) The response or reading of an instrument relative to
a standard (e.g., primary, secondary, or tertiary) or to a series of
conventionally true values or (2) The strength of a radiation source relative
to a standard (e.g., primary, secondary, or tertiary) or conventionally true
value. |
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cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) |
An emergency procedure consisting
of artificial respiration and external chest compressions to maintain a
steady flow of blood and oxygen for a person whose heart and/or lungs have
stopped functioning.
(See http://www.jlab.org/div_dept/train/ to schedule training.) |
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change driver |
The reason for considering and/or making a change to
an existing obligatory procedure. |
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Clean Air Act and Amendments (CAAA) |
Sets limits on certain air pollutants to help ensure basic health and
environmental protection. It gives the EPA authority to limit emissions of
air pollutants coming from sources like chemical plants, utilities, and still
mills. States may have stronger air pollution laws, but may not have weaker
limits than those set by the EPA. The 1990 Clean Air Act is the most recent
version of a law first passed in 1970 to clean up air pollution. See www.epa.gov/air/caa/. |
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closed-loop recycling |
The process by which products are purchased and used
then collected and reused, avoiding the cost and environmental damage
associated with waste disposal. This reuse may include the product itself
(book exchange) or the products material (old newspaper to cellulose). |
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Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) |
The Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) annual edition is the
codification of the general and permanent rules published in the Federal Register by the departments
and agencies of the Federal Government |
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cognizant person |
A
person who is knowledgeable, trained, certified, and designated by either
Physics or Accelerator Division Management as appropriate (per Jefferson
Lab’s Final
Safety Assessment Document). |
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collective dose |
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Committed Effective Dose |
The
sum of the committed equivalent doses to various
tissues or organs in the body (HT,50), each multiplied by the appropriate
tissue weighting factor (wT)—that is, E50=
ΣwTHT,50+ wRemainderHRemainder,50. Where “wRemainder”
is the tissue weighting factor assigned to the remainder organs and tissues
and “HRemainder,50” is the committed equivalent dose to the remainder organs
and tissues. |
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Committed Equivalent Dose |
The equivalent dose calculated to be
received by a tissue or organ over a 50-year period after the intake of a
radionuclide into the body. It does not include contributions from radiation
sources external to the body. |
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competent person |
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compressed (or pressurized) gas |
Any gas enclosed in a container
at a pressure higher than 40 psia at 68°F (20°C); also any flammable liquid
enclosed in a container with a vapor pressure of 40 psia or higher at 100°F
(37.8°C). See ES&H
Manual Chapter 6150 Compressed, Liquefied, and Solidified Gas Program |
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configuration control |
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confined space |
An area that meets all three of the
following criteria: ·
There
is sufficient space for a person to enter and perform work; ·
There
are limited/restricted means for entering/exiting the space; ·
The
space was not designed for continuous occupancy. |
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confined space entry |
Occurs
when any part of the body breaks the plane of the confined space opening. See ES&H Manual Chapter 6160
Confined Space Entry |
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consequence level |
(See ES&H Manual Chapter
3210 Appendix T3 Risk Code Assignment.) |
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construction |
The combination of erection,
installation, assembly, demolition, or fabrication activities involved in
creating a new facility or altering, adding to, rehabilitating, dismantling,
or removing an existing facility. It also includes the alteration and repair
(including dredging, excavating, and painting) of buildings, structures, or
other real property, as well as any construction, demolition, and excavation
activities conducted as part of environmental restoration or remediation
efforts. |
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contaminant |
Any objectionable or hazardous physical, chemical,
biological, or radiological substance or matter in water. |
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contaminated surface |
The presence or the reasonably anticipated presence
of blood or other potentially infectious materials on an item or surface. |
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contamination area |
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Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) |
An internal effort within an organization to assure
that the capability exists to continue essential business functions across a
wide range of potential emergencies, including localized acts of nature,
accidents, and technological and/or attack/terrorist-related emergencies.
Essentially equivalent to Business Continuity Plan. |
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Continuous Communications |
(In reference to PRCS areas having ODH conditions)
Achieved when a frequent verbal exchange, at normal conversation levels,
allows the Authorized Attendant to assess the Authorized Entrant’s condition
without visual aid. The following are NOT considered constant
communication: monitoring at a distance that requires communication at higher
than conversation levels; cell phones, two-way radios, two-way voice pagers,
any paging system, cameras, or PA systems. |
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contracting technical representative (CTR) (See SOTR) |
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contributing factor |
A situation, condition, or practice that made an
accident more likely to occur or that worsened the outcome. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 5200 Event Investigation and
Causal Analysis Process.) |
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control of the site |
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controlled area |
An area where access is
controlled to protect individuals from radiation exposure. |
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controlled area radiation monitor (CARM) |
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controlled document |
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controls |
Provisions related to organization and management (i.e. procedures,
recordkeeping, assessment, and reporting) necessary to ensure safe operation
of a facility. Practices or devices designed to
manage or reduce hazards. Controls may consist of engineering and/or
administrative devices, warnings, or procedures designed to control hazards. |
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Corrective Action (See also: Preventive
Action) |
An activity
that restores a service, item, component, or process to a state of acceptable
compliance with specifications, procedures, or regulatory requirements. (Corrective actions are designated in CATS within the “Issue Type” pull-down menu.) |
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Corrective Action Tracking System (CATS) |
The Jefferson Lab online
database used to document, track, and trend
findings, observations, and proposed corrective actions to completion. https://mis.jlab.org/ehs/ |
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corrosive |
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course |
A training program or “learning activity” that is
designed to teach or impart the information necessary to acquire a skill. |
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crane/hoist owner/Supervisor |
The
individual listed on Jefferson Lab property documentation as the custodian of
the Material Handling Equipment. |
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Credited control |
A safety control established to mitigate a hazard
that is categorized as unacceptable (or in some cases tolerable) and,
therefore, included in the Accelerator Safety Envelope. |
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Criteria and Review Approach Document (CRAD) |
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critical device |
An accelerator or beamline
component(s) specifically designed and used to ensure that the electron beam
is either inhibited or cannot be transported into areas where people are
present (occupied area). A critical device can be an individual component or
a collection of components. Examples include power supplies, power switches,
beam stoppers, beam current monitors, and electron guns. The configuration of
critical devices is controlled to ensure that critical device function meets
the requirements in the Accelerator Safety Envelope. The Conduct of
Engineering Manual gives the process for managing the configuration of
critical devices. The Safety Configuration Management Board must concur in
any changes to critical devices. |
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critical lift |
1. The load item, if damaged or
upset would result in a release, into the environment of radioactive or hazardous material
exceeding the established permissible environmental limits. 2. The load item is unique and, if
damaged, would be irreplaceable or not repairable and is vital to a system,
facility or project operation. 3. The cost to replace or repair the
load item, or the delay in operations of having the load item damaged would
have a negative impact on facility, organizational, or DOE budgets to the
extent that it would affect program commitments. 4. A lift not meeting the above
criteria shall also be designated critical if mishandling or dropping of the
load would cause any of the above noted consequences to nearby installations
or facilities.” (See
ES&H Manual Chapter 6141
Appendix T4 Hoisting and Rigging Operations.) |
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critique |
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cryogen |
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curie (Ci) |
Unit of radioactivity equivalent
to 37 billion disintegrations per second. |
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cutting |
The act
of shearing, slicing, or shaping metal (usually using
cutting torches or powered tools) that produces hot edges or fragments. |
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daisy chain |
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danger tag |
A specific type of tag (and the only authorized tag) used as
the official warning tag for maintenance and repair LO/TO at Jefferson Lab.
It is used to warn people not to tamper with equipment that has the potential
for a hazardous release of energy. Each tag must carry the printed name of
the person who placed the tag. |
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declared pregnant worker |
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decontamination |
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deep dose equivalent |
The dose equivalent derived from
external radiation at a depth of 1 cm in tissue. |
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Defense in-depth control |
A safety control established to provide protection beyond that afforded by a credited control; or to mitigate other lesser hazards that are categorized as acceptable (or in some cases tolerable). |
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deliverable |
A product or service delivered to fulfill a
contract. |
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deluge system |
Special-purpose extinguishing system for a
limited-size, high-hazard area with a limited quantity of extinguishing
agent. |
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Have
current and required training; adequate experience (previously performed the
same or similar, task without incident); and Supervisor’s confidence. |
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derived air concentration (DAC) |
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derived air concentration (DAC)-hour |
The
product of the concentration of
radioactive material in air (expressed as a fraction or multiple of the DAC
for each radionuclide) and the time of exposure to that radionuclide, in
hours. |
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Design Authority |
Engineer designated by a Division to be responsible
for pressure system design, fabrication, and testing. |
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design review |
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designated inspector |
A person who, on the basis of training, experience,
and qualifications, has been designated to perform inspection duties in
his/her area of expertise. |
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dewar |
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direct electrical hazard |
A potential source of injury resulting from the flow
of electrical energy through a person (electrical shock and burns). |
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disposition standard |
The retention period or length of time that records
are kept. |
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diversity |
Using different technologies to accomplish a given
task, such as beam shutdown. |
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document |
Information and its supporting
medium, which can be paper, magnetic, electronic or optical computer disc,
photograph or master sample, or any combination thereof. Jefferson Lab utilizes
three separate categories of controlled documents:
|
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document hierarchy |
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DOE Contracting Officer (CO) |
The person designated by the DOE as having DOE
approval authority for matters pertaining to the Jefferson Lab contract. |
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DOE ES&H Program Manager (PM) |
The person designated by the DOE to have approval
authority with the CO for matters pertaining to the WSS (Work Smart
Standards) if there is a potential change in the level of protection in
environment, safety, or health. |
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DOE reportable occurrence |
Any
unusual or unplanned event that has or could adversely affect public health;
the performance, reliability, or safety of a facility; or the environment, as
described in ES&H Manual Chapter 5300 Appendix T1 Occurrence
Reporting to Department of Energy (DOE) and Notification Procedure.
Reportable occurrences are classified by their potential for personal injury,
environmental damage, and/or equipment loss. Additional information on the
occurrence categorization process is available in DOE Manual 231.1-2. |
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dose |
1.
Term
used to include
absorbed dose, equivalent dose, effective dose, committed equivalent dose,
committed effective dose, or total effective dose as defined in 10CFR835. 2. Generic term applied to quantities
such as dose equivalent and its derivatives, and somewhat less formally to
exposure. |
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dose equivalent |
The absorbed dose measured at a point
multiplied by a Quality Factor that accounts for the relative biological
damage of the specific type of radiation. |
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dose equivalent rate |
Dose equivalent divided by the time period. |
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dose tracking |
The use of supplemental, direct reading
dosimeters (or other equivalent means) for purposes of assessing, tracking
and managing radiation exposures associated with a particular work activity. |
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effective dose equivalent (HE) |
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effective dose |
The summation of the products of the equivalent dose
received by specified tissues or organs of the body (HT) and the appropriate
tissue weighting factor (wT)—
that is, E = ΣwTHT. It includes the dose from radiation sources
internal and/or external to the body. (See “effective dose equivalent”). |
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effluent |
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Electrical Authority Having
Jurisdiction (EAHJ) |
An entity authorized by Jefferson Lab and approved by the Thomas
Jefferson Site Office that makes decisions regarding relevant regulations,
codes, and standards used to develop practices and procedures that protect
both qualified and unqualified persons from exposure to hazards associated with
electrical work. This entity also reviews requests for clarification,
interpretation, or equivalency to requirements and grant exemptions where it
is assured that equivalent safety is achieved by the deviation. |
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electrical power distribution |
The arrangement of feeders,
transformer substations, electrical panel boards, and circuit breakers that
supply electrical power to end user connection points. |
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electrical system |
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electrically safe work condition |
An equipment condition where
sources of energy are removed; the disconnecting means is under one of the
lock/tag/try methods, the absence of voltage is verified by an approved
voltage testing device, and, where applicable, temporarily grounded. NFPA 70E
Article 120 provides details. |
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electronic |
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embedded laser |
An enclosed laser with an
assigned class number that is higher than the inherent capability of the
laser system in which it is incorporated. When hazard ranking the laser, the
system’s lower classification is appropriate due to the engineering features
limiting accessible emission. |
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Emergency Manager |
Responsible for ensuring that Laboratory staff
maintains an appropriate level of readiness for on-site emergencies,
including the development and maintenance of pre-plans, preparations and
other resources. Provides direct consultation and support to members of the
Emergency Management Team and other planning or response teams. |
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Emergency Management |
The
process an
organization uses to prevent, mitigate, and recover from emergencies.
Consists of planning, preparing, responding, and readiness assurance
activities. |
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Emergency Planning |
Developing
and preparing emergency
plans and procedures; identifying necessary personnel and resources to
provide effective responses in the event of an emergency. |
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Emergency Preparedness |
The training of personnel; acquiring and maintaining
resources; exercising the plans, procedures, personnel, and resources
essential for emergency response. |
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Emergency Response |
Implementation of emergency plans. Includes the
decisions, actions, application of resources, and recovery. |
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emergency responder |
Trained,
professional emergency medical and firefighter personnel. |
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Emergency Warning Siren
(Outdoors) |
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employee (Synonym: staff) |
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employee exposure record |
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employee medical record |
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enclosed laser |
A laser or laser system located
within a protective housing so that access to laser radiation above the MPE
(maximum permissible exposure) limit is precluded. Opening, damaging, or
removing the protective housing provides additional access than is possible
with the protective housing in place and could expose workers to laser
radiation above the applicable MPE. (An embedded laser is an example of one
type of enclosed laser.) |
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Energized Electrical
Work Permit (EEWP) |
A
document, approved by the Laboratory Director, to justify the need for doing
Mode 3 manipulative work with the equipment energized. A Work Control Document including a formal Task
Hazard Analysis; hazard control
boundaries; Personal Protective Equipment (PPE); and specific steps
to accomplish the task are developed and approved by the Associate
Director/Division Manager (of group requesting the EEWP). Worker qualifications and any unusual aspects of the work are
included. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6220 Appendix T1 Energized
Electrical Work Permit (EEWP) – Instructions) |
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energy-draining
device |
A physical device
that channels the transmission or release of energy (e.g., grounding rods and
vent valves). |
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energy-isolating
device |
A mechanical device
that prevents the transmission or release of energy. Circuit breakers,
disconnect switches, and line valves are examples of energy-isolating
devices. Push buttons, selector switches, and other control circuit type
devices are not energy isolating devices. |
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engineering controls |
Measures designed to eliminate or reduce
exposure to a physical hazard through the use of engineered machinery or
equipment without
active involvement of personnel.
(These controls do not include HVAC systems.) Components and systems that
reduce airborne radioactivity and the spread of contamination by using
piping, containments, ventilation, filtration, or shielding. |
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entry |
Occurs when any part of the body breaks
the plane of a confined space opening. |
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entry employer |
Any employer who decides that an
employee it directs will enter a permit space. |
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entry supervisor |
The
individual responsible for determining if acceptable entry conditions are
present at a PRCS when entry is planned, authorizing entry, overseeing entry
operations, and terminating entry. (Note that the entry supervisor may not be
the individual’s Supervisor.) |
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environment |
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environmental aspect |
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environmental aspect category |
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environmental aspect, significant |
Any feature of an organization’s activities,
products, or services that can interact with the environment and has or can
have a considerable impact on the environment. |
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environmental baseline |
The approved description of
chemical, biological, physical, and radiological characteristics (determined
primarily through groundwater monitoring) that represents the starting level
for evaluating Jefferson Lab’s effect on the environment. |
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environmental impact |
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environmental management
procedure (EMP) |
A Standard Operating Procedure
(SOP) that documents Jefferson Lab’s EMS management procedures. |
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Environmental Management System
(EMS) |
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environmental monitoring |
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environmental performance measure |
Measurable results of the EMS,
related to an organization’s control of its environmental aspects, based on
its environmental program, objectives, and goals. |
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Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) |
The federal
agency that represents the executive department in protecting the nation’s
environment. Their realm includes surface water, groundwater, land,
geological resources, and air resources. The EPA is involved in research and
development, developing regulations, enforcing regulations, providing
information, educating the nation, and investigating issues. (40 CFR series) See http://www.epa.gov/ |
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environmental
surveillance |
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environmentally harmful material
(EHM) |
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equipment |
A general term used
to describe a mechanical or electrical machine or system that may require
maintenance or repair. |
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equivalent dose |
The
product of average absorbed dose (DT,R) in rad (or gray) in a tissue or organ
(T) and a radiation (R) weighting factor (wR).
For external dose, the equivalent dose to the whole body is assessed at a
depth of 1 cm in tissue; the equivalent dose to the lens of the eye is
assessed at a depth of 0.3 cm in tissue, and the equivalent dose to the
extremity and skin is assessed at a depth of 0.007 cm in tissue. (See “dose equivalent”). |
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Anyone having the appropriate training and authorization to enter the area(s)
being visited. (Exception: Subcontract employees are allowed to provide
escort services for deliveries of materials only, unless otherwise defined
within their contract.) |
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ES&H |
The Environment, Safety and Health Division of Jefferson Lab. |
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ES&H Reporting Officer |
The person with direct responsibility
for categorizing and communicating all DOE reportable occurrences. This
person is responsible for determining if incidents meet the ORPS
reportability threshold, as well as the specific codes for severity and
classification. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 2210 Appendix R1 Staff
Assigned to ES&H Activities for contact information.) |
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essential personnel |
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Evacuation Drill Coordinator |
Prepares
and performs evacuation
drills in assigned buildings in accordance with ES&H Manual – Fire Protection Supplement –
Chapter 9: Evacuation Drills. |
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event (see also: incident) |
2. Inspection activities that are
generally scheduled and performed by in-house staff, on a regular basis, on
behalf of upper-level management or to monitor safety requirements.
(Includes: ES&H Department Inspections, ESAF Walkthroughs, Laser Safety
Inspections, Safety Warden Monthly and Quarterly Inspections, Observations by
External Sources, Management, Staff, or Workers) 3. An occurrence that results in an
undesired workplace incident that causes injury, illness, property or
equipment damage, environment concern, or disruption of operations. (Includes: First-aid,
Occurrence, or Notable Event) (See ES&H Manual Chapter 5200 Event Investigation and
Causal Analysis Process.) |
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Event Owner |
The person responsible for ensuring that all
issues are completed and closed before the related event is submitted for
closure. |
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examination |
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examiner |
A person
qualified and certified to perform examination duties. |
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excavation |
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excluded vessels |
Pressurized vessels that do not
fall within the scope of the ASME Pressure Vessel Code. The ASME Code
specifically excludes: Vessels having an internal or external operating
pressure not exceeding 15 psi; Vessels having an inside diameter, width,
height, or cross section diagonal not exceeding 6 inches; Machinery such as
pumps, compressors, turbines, generators, and engines; Most piping systems or
structures whose primary function is the transport of fluids from one
location to another within a system of which they are an integral part;
Vessels with a nominal water-containing capacity of 120 gal or less for
containing water under pressure, including those containing air that is
compressed to serve as a cushion; Hot water supply storage tanks heated by
steam or any other indirect means, limited to 120 gallons, 210°F, and a heat input of 200,000
BTU/hr; Department of Transportation (DOT) regulated cylinders and dewars. |
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exclusion area |
An area which all personnel must evacuate before
electron beam can be transported through (e.g. the accelerator tunnel, BSY,
experiment halls, and FEL Vault). |
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exempt vessel |
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Experiment Operations Envelope
(EOE) |
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Experiment Safety Approval Form
(ESAF) |
Document
prepared by the Lead Scientist of a User Group that details all non-standard
safety hazards associated with a User experiment. It is submitted after
scientific approval of the experiment by the FEL Technical Advisory Committee
(TAC) and assignment of beam time by the FEL Program Manager. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 3130 Appendix T1 FEL
Experiment Safety Approval Form – Instructions.) |
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Experimental Safety Assessment
Document (ESAD) |
This
document describes identified hazards of an experiment and the measures taken
to eliminate, control, or mitigate them. Particular attention must be paid to
the analysis and evaluation of conditions that may pose special safety problems.
It includes the Safety Analysis and reviews or defines the Safety Envelope
for the equipment; it references the Radiation
Safety Assessment Document (RSAD), which
documents the experiment operations envelope and addresses ES&H issues
associated with direct and induced radioactivity. (See Typical Outline for a Preliminary
Experiment Safety Assessment or an Experiment Safety Assessment Document.) |
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exposure |
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exposure incident |
Any contact with blood or other
potentially infectious material that results from the performance of an
employee’s duties. For example, a specific exposure involving eye, mouth,
other mucous membrane, parenteral, or non-intact skin contact. |
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exposure rate |
The rate
of exposure to external sources of ionizing radiation, usually measured in
units of microRoentgen
per hour (μR/hr). 1 Roentgen refers to the amount
of photon radiation required to produce ions carrying 1 electrostatic unit of
electrical charge (2.08 billion electrons) in 1 cubic centimeter of air at
standard temperature and pressure. |
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external dose
or exposure |
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external standard invoked by law |
A standard generated by an
organization other than JSA where at least some of the provisions in the
standard are required by a law or regulation. |
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external standard not invoked by
law |
A standard generated by an
organization other than JSA where none of the provisions in the standard are
required by a law or regulation. JSA may elect to use such a standard to
further improve work processes or control hazards. |
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extremely hazardous substance
(EHS) |
Any of 406
chemicals identified by the EPA
to be potentially hazardous to life and health if released. If present
on-site in quantities exceeding the regulated threshold planning quantity
(TPQ) the facility shall notify local Emergency Planning and Response Group
(EPGs) under EPCRA. EHSs are listed in 40 CFR 355 (Appendices A and B). |
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eyewash |
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facility |
A building, portable structure,
its immediate site, and/or the characteristic operations and apparatus within
it. |
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Facility Manager |
See ES&H Manual Chapter 2210 Appendix R1 Staff
Assigned to ES&H Activities. |
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fail-safe |
Describes a system or device that is designed to not cause harm when it fails, and the resulting condition or operational mode is safe. (e.g. “fail-safe interlock” is a
mechanism through which the failure of a single mechanical or electrical
component of the interlock causes the laser system to go into, or remain in,
a safe mode.) |
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Fahrenheit (F) |
Fahrenheit is a temperature scale that bases the boiling point of
water at 212 and the freezing point at 32. |
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FEL Accelerator Physics Manager |
Responsible for design and
operation of the accelerator for the FEL. The Manager plans and coordinates
accelerator physics measurements and serves as the primary interface for any
modifications, upgrades, etc., to the accelerator system. |
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FEL Operations Directives
Supplement (FELODS) |
Describe
compliance with applicable guidelines, including operations programs,
procedures, and documentation.
(See Free Electron Laser Operations
Directives Supplement to the Accelerator Operations Directive) |
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FEL Physics Advisory Committee
(FEL PAC) |
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FEL Technical Advisory Committee
(FEL TAC) |
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files custodian |
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filler metal |
The metal
or alloy to be added in making a welded, brazed, or soldered joint. |
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final control element |
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The document containing the results of a safety analysis
for the Jefferson Lab accelerator facility pertinent to understanding the
risks of the proposed undertaking. This
document includes formal limits for exposures to radiation and addresses
oxygen deficiency hazards. |
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fire alarm control panel (FACP) |
An electronic console that
provides a visual indication of the system status and serves as a diagnostic
point for connected circuits. |
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fire classifications |
Letter designations given to each
of the major types of fires. |
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fire detection system |
An engineered system of devices
that automatically detects heat, smoke, or other products of combustion and
actuates an alarm. |
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fire extinguisher rating |
An indication of which class or
classes of fires a given extinguisher may be used against. |
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fire suppression system |
A mechanical system that detects
a fire, actuates an alarm, and suppresses the fire. |
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fire watch |
National Fire Protection
Association – NFPA 101, Fire Watch states: “The
assignment of a person or persons to an area for the sole purpose of
notifying the fire department, the building occupants, or both of an
emergency; preventing a fire from occurring; extinguishing small fires; or
protecting the public from fire or life safety dangers.” |
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fire-rated |
The time, in minutes or hours,
that materials or assemblies have withstood a fire exposure in accordance
with test procedures of NFPA 251, Standard Methods of Fire Tests of Building
Construction and Materials. |
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Fires Class A |
Ordinary combustibles like paper,
wood, cloth, and many plastics |
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Fires Class B |
Flammable liquids like oil,
gasoline, paints, and solvents |
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Fires Class C |
Electrical equipment and wiring |
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Fires Class D |
Combustible metals like magnesium
and sodium |
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first aid |
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first-line protection |
The primary protective system
provided to prevent physical contact with energized equipment. Covers,
shielding, and enclosures are examples of first-line protection. |
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flame arrestor |
A device which inhibits the
propagation of a flame. |
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flammable gas |
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flammable liquid |
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flammable solid |
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forklift attachment |
Any
modification or addition to a forklift that affects its capacity, stability,
or safe operation. |
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functional requirements
specification |
The application-specific
requirements of a safety interlock system. These may include: 1) reliability
requirements from the hazard analysis, 2) definition of the safe state of the
process, 3) process inputs to the safety interlock system and their set point
and limit values, 4) response time, 5) human-machine interfaces, 6) safety
interlock system outputs and their actions, 7) logic and math functions,
including any permissive required for proceeding, and 8) reliability
requirements to minimize spurious trips. |
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gas metal arc welding (GMAW) |
The
welding torch has a center consumable wire that maintains the arc as it melts
into the weld puddle. (Also known as Manual Inert Gas
(MIG) welding. |
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gas tungsten
arc welding (GTAW) |
The arc is established between a
non-consumable tungsten electrode and the work piece producing the heat to
melt the abutting edges of the metal to be joined; filler rod may also be
used. Argon or helium is fed into the annular space around the electrode to
maintain the inert environment. (Also known as
tungsten inert gas (TIG) welding). |
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gas-tight goggles |
Goggles
that do not have any pores for vapor infiltration and consequently may fog
up. |
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gauss (G) |
Unit of
measurement for magnetic flux density: 10,000 G = 1 Tesla (T). |
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General Employee Radiation
Training (GERT) |
The radiation
safety awareness course required of everyone at Jefferson Lab who is not a
radiation worker and does not take a more specialized Radiation Worker course. (See http://www.jlab.org/div_dept/train/) |
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generator |
Any person at Jefferson Lab whose
act or process produces solid waste that qualifies as a regulated medical
waste or whose act first causes a solid waste to become a regulated medical
waste. |
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gestation
period |
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Graded
Approach |
A method used to determining the appropriate
level of analysis, management controls, documentation, or other necessary
action(s) to determine where and when resources are to be allocated to ensure
items and/or processes have the greatest effect upon personnel, environment,
safety, health, cost, data, equipment, performance, quality and schedule.
(See QA/CI Department Graded Approach
Procedure) |
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gray (Gy) |
SI unit of absorbed
dose. One gray is equal to an absorbed dose of 1 joule per kilogram (100
rads). |
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grinding |
The act of
sharpening, shaping, or removing metal via abrasion; often using hand held
power tools. |
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ground-fault circuit interrupter
(GFCI) |
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grounding |
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grounding point |
The high-voltage contact point,
such as the terminals of a capacitor, where the grounding hook is to make
contact so as to release and dissipate a circuit’s stored energy. Such a
point shall be indicated by a yellow, circular marker. |
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grounds, electrical |
Any designated conductor with
adequate capacity to carry potential currents to earth. Designated conductors
may be building columns or specially designed ground-network cabling, rack,
or chassis ground. Cold water pipes, wireways, and conduits shall not be
relied upon as electrical grounds. |
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grounds, massive |
Large areas of metal, concrete,
or wet ground that make electrical isolation difficult or impossible. |
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groundwater(1) |
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Group Lock, Tag, and
Try (LTT) or (group lockout/tagout) |
A
procedure used to secure a hazardous energy source when a group of
individuals (more than one) is assigned to perform service or maintenance.
This procedure affords each individual protection equivalent to that provided
by a personal lockout or tagout device. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Appendix T3 Group Lock,
Tag, Try (LTT) Procedure.) |
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Group Lock, Tag, Try
(LTT) Coordinator or (group lockout/tagout coordinator) |
An individual designated by management as responsible for
ensuring that all steps of the group LTT procedure are followed. This
individual is specifically appointed with overall responsibility to assure
that all energy sources are under lockout and tagout. The coordinator is
required to account for all persons working under the group lockout. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Appendix T3 Group Lock,
Tag, Try (LTT) Procedure.) |
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Hampton Roads Sanitation District
(HRSD) |
The regional,
publicly-owned wastewater treatment facility system that handles and monitors
Jefferson Lab’s industrial wastewater discharges (IWDR). See http://www.hrsd.com/ |
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hazard(1) |
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Hazard-based safety approach
(HBSA) |
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hazard class |
For
electrical equipment see ES&H
Manual Chapter 6230 Appendix T1 Determining Equipment Class and Work Modes - Table 1 – Electronic Work Hazard Classes and
Restrictions |
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hazardous energy control (HEC) |
Hazardous energy control is
a broad term describing the use of procedures, techniques, designs and
methods to protect personnel from injury due to the inadvertent release
of hazardous energy.
Lockout is the placement of a lock or tag on an energy-isolating device in accordance with an established
procedure. |
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hazard evaluation |
An evaluation performed by Industrial Hygiene, or other department as appropriate, to determine if an activity or area requires additional safety precautions to mitigate a hazard issue. Anyone at Jefferson Lab may request a hazard evaluation. If it is determined that additional precautions are required the evaluator informs the supervisor/subcontracting officer’s technical representative (SOTR)/sponsor of the hazard, who then informs affected individuals and ensures that mitigation requirements are implemented. |
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hazard issue |
A hazard
identified as applicable to Jefferson Lab that requires a formal procedure to
establish an adequate level of protection. Jefferson Lab has established standards and
practices to address identified hazard issues. See ES&H Manual Chapter 2410 Appendix T1 Hazard
Issues List for
the current listing of recognized hazard issues. |
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hazardous chemical (HC) |
Any chemical
that poses a physical or health hazard as defined by OSHA
regulations (29 CFR 1910.1200). There is no definitive list, but TPQs for
hazardous chemicals are established. |
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hazardous material (HazMat) |
A material
that has been determined to be capable of posing unreasonable risk to health,
safety, and/or property and requires special care in handling. The term includes
hazardous substances, hazardous wastes, marine pollutants, and elevated
temperature materials. Hazardous materials are listed in 49
CFR 172 – Subpart B – Table of Hazardous
Materials and Special Provisions. |
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hazardous substance (HS) |
A substance,
designated by regulation, that could harm people or the environment,
including compounds, mixtures, hazardous wastes, toxic pollutants, and
hazardous air pollutants. HSs are listed in 40
CFR 302.4 – Designation of Hazardous
Substances. |
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high
contamination area |
Any area, accessible to individuals, where removable surface
contamination levels exceed or are likely to exceed 100 times the removable
surface contamination values specified in 10
CFR 835. |
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high current power source |
A source low voltage source ,with
a designed or related output current of greater than 110 Amperes to a
designed, or with a rated output power greater than 5KVA (volt-amperes). |
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high-performance work team (HPWT) |
Less formal processes such as standing committees, having a charter and goals, are also acceptable forms of a HPWT assuming meeting minutes and actions are captured. Documentation is the key to claiming credit for a HPWT. Therefore, documenting the process and results by an executive summary report or through committee meeting minutes is paramount. |
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high radiation area |
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highly toxic |
A chemical that falls within any
of the following categories: a) has an LD50 of 50 milligrams or less per
kilogram of body weight; b) a chemical that has an LD50 ≤ 200 milligrams per
kilogram of body weight when administered by continuous contact with the skin
for 24 hours; c) a chemical that has an LC50 in air of 200 ppm by volume or
less of gas or vapor, when administered by continuous inhalation for one
hour. |
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hiring manager |
The Jefferson Lab employee who
writes the posting, job description, and list of requirements to fill a
vacant position. The hiring manager normally makes the final decision on
which candidate to hire. |
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hoist |
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hook |
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hot spot |
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hot work |
Work that
creates high heat, sparks, or open flames and presents a risk of starting a
fire. Examples are welding,
brazing,
some cutting,
and grinding. |
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Hot Work Permit (HWP) |
The primary
tool used to prevent fire at Jefferson Lab (Click
for Form).
This permit is required for any work activity that uses an
open flame (greater than a BIC lighter), including welding, brazing;
or spark
producing grinding or cutting operations, unless it is performed in an area
established as a weld shop by an Operational
Safety Procedure (OSP). (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6900 Appendix T1 Fire
Protection: Hot Work Permit) |
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Human Subjects Research (HSR) |
(1) use
humans to examine devices, products, or materials with the express purpose of
investigating human-machine interfaces or evaluating environmental
alterations when humans are the subjects being tested; (2)
use personally identifiable bodily materials such as cells, blood, tissues,
urine, or hair, even if the materials were collected previously for a purpose
other than the current research; (3) collect
and use personally identifiable information such as genetic information or
medical and exposure records, even if the information was collected
previously for a purpose other than the current research; (4) collect
personally identifiable or non-identifiable data, surveys, or questionnaires
through direct intervention or interaction with individuals; and (5) search
for generalizable knowledge about categories or classes of subjects (e.g.,
linking job conditions of worker populations to hazardous or adverse health
outcomes). |
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Hurricane Preparedness Condition
(HPC) Checklists |
Lists
of actions necessary for timely preparation for hurricanes, or other
devastating weather event, to minimize damage to people, equipment, and
property. All major buildings at Jefferson Lab have individualized
checklists. These are reviewed and revised annually. Checklists are organized
in accordance with hurricane forecasts and preparation level. A complete set
of checklists is available at http://www.jlab.org/intralab/emergency/weather/index.html. |
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Hurricane Preparedness Condition
1 (HPC-1) |
The National
Weather Service
has determined that Hurricane Season is from June 1 through November 30.
During this time Jefferson Lab elevates its awareness status to Hurricane
Preparedness Condition 1 (HPC-1) and commences continuously monitoring of the
weather forecast to ensure that laboratory operations are adequately
protected should an actual event occur. |
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Hurricane Preparedness Condition
2 (HPC-2) |
The National Weather Service has determined that when sustained winds of 74 mph or higher are possible
within a specified area a hurricane watch is issued 48 hours in advance of
the anticipated onset of tropical-storm-force winds. When this happens
Jefferson Lab elevates its status to Hurricane Preparedness Condition 2
(HPC-2) and commences pre-shutdown activities. |
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Hurricane Preparedness Condition
3 (HPC-3) |
The National Weather Service has determined that when sustained winds of 74 mph or higher are expected
within the specified area a hurricane watch is issued 36 hours in advance of
the anticipated onset of tropical-storm-force winds. When this happens
Jefferson Lab elevates its Hurricane Preparedness Condition Status to 3
(HPC-3) and commences shutdown activities. |
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immediately dangerous to life and
health (IDLH) |
A condition
that does, or will, pose a threat of immediate or delayed adverse health
effects; or prevents escape from such an environment. NIOSH developed these guidelines for
use by Industrial Hygienists to determine appropriate respirator use. |
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imminent danger |
“…any
conditions or practices… which are such that a danger exists that could
reasonably be expected to cause death or serious physical harm immediately or
before the imminence of such danger can be eliminated through the enforcement
procedures otherwise provided...” Per OSHA
Imminent Danger Section 13a. |
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impact goggles |
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implementation |
The actual methods by which a
requirement is met. |
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incident (or accident) |
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indirect electrical hazard |
A potential source of injury
resulting from electrical energy that is transformed into other forms of
energy (e.g., radiant energy such as radio-frequency energy, light, heat, or
energetic particles; magnetic fields; chemical reactions such as fire,
explosions, the production of noxious gases and compounds; involuntary
muscular reactions; and mechanical movement of electrically powered
equipment). |
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Induced radioactivity |
The interaction of
the accelerator beam with magnets, beam line components, targets, detectors,
other experimental area equipment, and beam dumps can cause the formation of
radioactive materials through activation (induced
radioactivity). Activated materials continue to emit radiation after the
accelerator has been shut off. The potential for activation to occur exists
to some extent in most areas of the CEBAF accelerator and the FEL. |
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inspection |
A process,
performed by one or more qualified
person, of examination of a target
area, including its components, structures, systems, practices, and
operations, against the standards and expectations described in the
appropriate chapter of the Jefferson Lab ES&H Manual or its references
including OSHA
regulations. Performance of this process requires: ·
Knowledge of the ES&H Manual and its
referenced standard(s); ·
Observation of the applicable
item/action attributes; ·
Comparison with the related standard(s)
or expectations; ·
Determination of appropriate
conformance/performance; and ·
Documentation and reporting of the
results. Quality
assurance functions performed by an inspector, including verification of the
performance of nondestructive examinations and pressure tests. Inspection
shall also include verification that the pressure system satisfactorily
conforms to all applicable examination requirements of the code and of the
engineering design. |
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inspector |
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institutional training |
ES&H
courses that have been developed and are offered to meet the common needs of
the laboratory. These include ES&H-related training
directed at a single organization or type of job. |
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integrated into work |
Included in the actual process of
planning and performing work. |
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Integrated Safety Management
(ISM) |
The DOE approach for systematically
integrating safety into management and work practices at all levels so that
missions are accomplished while protecting the public, the worker, and the
environment. http://www.jlab.org/ehs/ISM/ |
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Integrated Safety Management
(ISM) Plan |
Provides a formal, organized process whereby people
plan, perform, assess, and improve the safe conduct of work efficiently and
in a manner that ensures protection of workers, the public, and the
environment. This management system is used for ISM implementation to
systematically integrate safety into management and work practices at all
levels so that missions are accomplished while protecting the public, the
worker, and the environment.
At Jefferson Lab, the system includes, but is not limited to, safety and
environmental requirements and processes contained in Jefferson Lab program
documents (i.e., ES&H Manual, Environmental Management System Plan,
Quality Assurance Plan, Radiation Protection Program), their implementing
procedures (i.e., QA procedures, EM procedures) and project specific
procedures (i.e., OSPs, Accelerator Operations Directives). |
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interlock |
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internal dose
or exposure |
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ionizing radiation(1) |
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isolated closed loop cooling
system |
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issue |
(Observations
or opportunities-for-improvement, provided within formal event documents, that are not deviations from
requirements, may be considered issues based on the discretion of Management). |
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Jefferson Science Associates, LLC (JSA) |
|
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Jefferson Lab’s
information database that contains, among other applications, ES&H course
completion, as well as current SRLs. JLIST
and LMS
synchronize daily. |
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Job Task Analysis (JTA) |
A tool that
creates a Skills
Requirements List
(SRL) for an individual based on the answers to a series of questions about
job(s), work hazards, and administrative responsibilities. (See https://mis.jlab.org/mis/apps/training/ejta/index.cfm) |
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job-related injury/illness |
An injury or illness that occurs
by accident and arises in the course of employment. A job-related injury must
occur at some definite time and place on Jefferson Lab property or on behalf
of Jefferson Lab’s interests. Job-related illnesses are considered certain
specific disorders caused by environmental conditions in the workplace. |
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job-specific training |
Training
in support of skills, knowledge, and ability unique to a particular job,
operation, or task that is customarily provided for the benefit of a
comparatively small number of people. Supervisors
typically provide this type of training, although, in some instances,
Jefferson Lab may use designated expert co-workers, off-site, or contracted
training providers. (This may be the case with new or proprietary equipment,
for example.) |
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laser |
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laser controlled area |
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laser hazard classification |
A
numbered system used to describe a laser’s capability to injure personnel.
The classification system is defined by ANSI
Z-136.1. |
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Laser Operational Safety
Procedure (LOSP) |
A Work
Control Document, with a limited effective life
of three years or less, that follows the standard format specified in ES&H Manual
6410 Appendix T1 Laser Operational Safety Procedure. LOSPs
address hazard issues associated with laser light of
Class 3 and Class 4 and provides mitigation measures, procedures, and
reference documentation for areas of concern. These include, but are not limited
to, the FEL User Labs. An LOSP is generally written by the Laser System
Supervisor for the area. It is approved by the Laser Safety Officer. (A current listing of LOSPs may
be found at: https://jlabdoc.jlab.org/docushare/dsweb/View/Collection-1917) |
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Laser Operations Directives (LOD) |
Describes compliance with
applicable guidelines, including operations programs, procedures, and
documentation. |
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laser personnel/user |
Qualified
person who is directly involved in the
operation of the laser or who is present in a laser-controlled area during
laser operation. |
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Laser Safety Officer (LSO) |
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laser system |
A laser
and its energy source, with or without additional incorporated components. |
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Laser System Supervisor (LSS) |
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latch |
A mechanical device to close the
throat opening of the hook. |
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LC50 |
The concentration of a toxic
substance in air that causes death in half the test animal population under
controlled administration. |
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LD50 |
The dose or amount of a toxic
substance that causes death in half the test animal population under
controlled administration either by ingestion or skin contact. |
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lead mechanical
engineer/responsible designer |
Engineer designated by a Division
to be responsible for pressure vessel construction/design. |
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lead scientist |
Spokesperson for each experiment
who works closely with a Jefferson Lab staff member providing a direct path
of communication between the experiment, the division, and the support
groups. The Lead Scientist helps prepare memoranda of understanding and
coordinates experiment installation. In ES&H matters, the Lead Scientist
works with the FEL Facility Manager to ensure the safe installation and
operation of the equipment. The Lead Scientist also serves as the ES&H
review coordinator and facilitates the review procedure. This person is also
responsible for preparation of the experiment’s Test Plan. |
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lead
worker |
The
person that is typically the most experienced worker in a group of workers
who may conduct a pre-job safety briefing (if directed by
Supervisor/Subcontracting Officer’s Technical Representative (SOTR)/Sponsor)
and who is responsible for following the work plan and ensuring that
hazard controls remain in-place and effective. |
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leak test |
·
Hydrostatic
Leak Test ·
Pneumatic
Leak Test ·
Hydrostatic-Pneumatic
Leak Test ·
Sensitive
Leak Test ·
Alternative
Leak Test The
reader is directed back to the code for specific requirements that pertain to
each kind of test. |
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Learning Management System (LMS) |
A completely web-based learning management
system that maintains all SRLs and synchronizes data with JLIST
daily. |
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lecture bottle |
A small, compressed gas cylinder,
typically less than 10 liters gas volume (this does not include dewars used for cryogenic fluids). |
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legacy pressure systems |
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lethal service |
Vessels containing poisonous
gases or liquids of such a nature that a very small amount of the gas or of
the vapor of the liquid, mixed or unmixed with air, is dangerous to life when
such gases are inhaled or when persons come in contact with the liquid. |
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life-safety |
Features of building construction
and operations that ensure safe egress and that minimize the risk to
occupants from fire and explosion. National consensus codes define
life-safety provisions and practices. |
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A device used for lifting heavy
loads. |
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line employee |
JSA employee who directly
produces a deliverable that is part of Jefferson Lab’s reason for existence. |
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line manager |
Any management level within the line
organization, including contractor management, that is responsible and
accountable for directing and conducting work. (See Supervisor) |
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lines of inquiry (LOI) |
One or more items or questions that provide consistent objective
guidance to the assessor. |
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load – electrical |
The electrical device or circuit
having resistive and/or reactive impedance that consumes electrical energy
from the power source. A printed circuit board or module is generally
considered a single load. However, crate systems, capable of powering one or
more modules or printed circuit boards within a single chassis are a unique
special case. For such crate systems the backplane, its conductors and
connectors, and installed boards or modules are all to be considered as a
single load to the power source. The power source conductors are considered
to terminate at the point of backplane connection. |
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load – weight |
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load path |
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load shadow |
The area
beneath the load path that is kept clear of personnel during the movement of
the load. |
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lockout/tagout (LOTO) |
The approved
method for securing hazardous energy sources and thereby making them safer
for work. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Lockout/Tagout, Try
(LOTO) Program.) |
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lock, tag, and try (LTT) |
The
approved method for securing hazardous energy sources and thereby making them
safer for work. This method is now referred to as LOTO (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Lock, Tag, Try (LTT)
Program.) |
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lock, tag, and try (LTT) danger
tag |
A
warning tag for maintenance/repair LTT at Jefferson Lab. It is used to warn
people not to tamper with equipment that has the potential for the hazardous
release of energy. Each tag must carry the printed name of the person who
placed the tag. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Lock, Tag, Try (LTT)
Program.) |
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lock, tag, and try (LTT) lock |
A specific
lock used only for LTT purposes supplied by Jefferson Lab. One of the JLab
approved ‘DANGER’ locks is a silver-colored master lock with a color plastic
band at the bottom. The other JLab approved ‘DANGER’ lock has a red plastic
body. Both locks have a danger label affixed. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6110 Lock, Tag, Try (LTT)
Program.) |
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lockout |
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lockout mechanism |
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lockout/tagout
(LO/TO) |
A
term used to refer to a lockout, a tagout, or the combination of both. (See
ES&H Manual Chapter 6110
Lock, Tag, Try (LTT) Program.) |
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low-pressure enclosures |
A class of vessels and piping not covered by an ASME pressure vessel
or piping code, but potentially stores energy in excess of 100 kJ. For the
purposes of the welding program, this occurs when the product of its maximum
internal or external pressure and its internal volume (P x V) exceed 40
atmospheres*cubic feet (atm*ft3). Vacuum piping exceeding this product AND
having an inner diameter, width, height, or cross section exceeding 12 inches
is considered to be a low-pressure enclosure. |
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lower-tier subcontractors (see: subcontractor) |
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magnetic flux density (β) |
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maintenance/repair
lockout/tag out |
Procedures used to
prevent the unwanted release of energy or equipment from operating during
fabrication, installation, maintenance, service, or repair. This includes
diagnostic and test procedures. |
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Management Safety Discussion (MSD) |
unstructured, hands-on approach
designed to facilitate meaningful conversations between management and
workers to promote safe workplace behaviors and a progressive safety culture |
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managing division |
The division that has daily
operational control over a subcontractor’s operation. This includes control
over quality, performance, adherence to technical and ES&H
specifications, and authorization for payment. |
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manipulative operations |
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manual inert
gas (MIG) welding |
The
welding torch has a center consumable wire that maintains the arc as it melts
into the weld puddle. (Also known as Gas
Metal Arc Welding (GMAW). |
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material |
Equipment, components, chemicals, products,
and hardware, including but not limited to fasteners, structures, and
consumables. |
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material handling equipment (MHE) |
Equipment
used for lifting, lowering, shifting, or otherwise moving materials. Jefferson Lab uses cranes, hoists, and forklifts
to support and transport loads within designated areas, vertically or
horizontally. Testing, labeling, and certification can be found in ASME
B30.20. |
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material safety data sheet (MSDS) |
Key to the
hazard communication (HAZCOM) program. The MSDS includes detailed information
on the material such as hazard characteristics and proper handling
procedures.
MSDSs can be found on-line http://jlab.complyplus.com/search/default.asp |
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maximally exposed individual |
Hypothetical person in the
general population who receives the highest dose from a facility, generally
from all possible pathways. This individual is used for purposes of
comparison with dose limits for the average person. |
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maximum credible fire loss (MCFL) |
Property and content damage from
a fire, assuming that the fire-suppression systems worked as designed. |
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maximum permissible exposure
(MPE) |
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maximum possible fire loss (MPFL) |
The total value of the structure
and contents within a potential fire area. This assumes that there is no
automatic fire suppression or firefighting efforts. |
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medical certification |
A written statement from the
physician that attests to the ability of an employee to perform certain
defined tasks without undue risk to his or her health or to co-workers. |
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medical monitoring |
Refers
to recurring or periodic examinations or diagnostics associated with specific
exposure to special hazards.
See ES&H Manual Chapter 2410
Appendix T1 Hazard Issues List. |
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memorandum of understanding (MOU) |
An agreement between a group of
experimenters and the Jefferson Lab Director that sets forth the commitments
of the parties involved throughout the experiment. |
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The person assigned as Supervisor to a student by the Sponsor; and is a Lab employee who is
knowledgeable of the work the student will be performing and is be
responsible for overseeing the student and assuring he/she is appropriately
trained and able to work safely. |
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microwave |
Electromagnetic
radiation with frequencies in the range of 300 MHz - 300 GHz. |
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modified duty |
A modification of normal work
activities to meet physical restrictions specified by the treating physician.
This may include activity restrictions, time limitations, and special
provisions for work areas. |
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monitoring |
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Mrem |
The unit of
measure millirem (or thousandth of a rem). See rem. |
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multiplicity |
Using two or more methods of
fundamentally different natures to mitigate a hazard. |
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National Board Inspection Code |
This is a widely adopted code that
sets the criteria and procedures for maintenance, inspection, repair,
alteration, and rerating for pressure vessels and boilers. |
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National Emission Standards for
Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) |
Promulgated
as U.S. EPA
(40 CFR 61), limits annual dose equivalent to a member of the general public
to 10 mrem due to airborne release of radioactive materials. |
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National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) |
Requires that federal agencies integrate
environmental values into their decision making processes by considering the
environmental impacts of their proposed actions and reasonable alternatives
to those actions. (See http://www.epa.gov/Compliance/nepa/) |
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National Fire Protection
Association (NFPA) |
The recognized
standard-setting organization in the U.S. for fire and life safety. http://www.nfpa.org/index.asp?cookie%5Ftest=1 |
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Nationally Fire Protection
Association (NFPS) |
NFPA delivers information and knowledge
through more than 300 consensus codes and standards, research, training,
education, outreach and advocacy; and by partnering with others who share an
interest in furthering our mission |
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Necessary and Sufficient
(N&S) Process |
Synonymous with,
and replaced by, the Work Smart Standards (WSS) process. |
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necessary set |
The collection of all standards
identified by the WSS Process as Necessary. Implementation of these standards
is subject to verification and audit by the Contracting Officer. |
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necessary standard |
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new employee orientation (NEO) |
The formal introduction to Lab
polices, culture, facilities, benefits, etc. conducted by HR on the start
date of new hires (normally the first day of each pay period). |
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NIOSH-approved respirator |
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noise controls |
Engineered measures such as
enclosures, noise-absorbing materials, and vibration-isolation devices. |
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nominal hazard zone |
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non-code pressure vessels |
A pressure vessel whose design
cannot meet the intent of the applicable ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel
Code. |
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non-code qualified construction
elements |
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non-code qualified design
elements |
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non-complex work |
Work on a system with relatively few
interrelated or non-isolatable parts, interdependencies with, or implications for other
systems. |
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Noncompliance Tracking System
(NTS) |
A Department of Energy (DOE)
database that tracks A condition
that does not meet
a DOE regulatory
requirement. Notice of Violation: Either a PNOV or FNOV. Programmatic
Problem: Generally involves some weakness in administrative or management
controls, or their implementation, to such a degree that a broader management
or process control problem exists. |
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non-critical enclosure |
A class of vessels and piping not covered by an
ASME pressure vessel or piping code but having a P x V less than or equal to
40 atm * ft3. Vacuum piping having an inner diameter, width,
height, or cross section less than or equal to 12-inches is considered to be
a non-critical enclosure regardless of P x V and length. |
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non-critical weld |
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Non-destructive examination (NDE) |
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non-destructive testing (NDT) |
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non-ionizing radiation(1) |
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Non-Public Area |
CEBAF Center’s (Building 12) common areas, common
rooms, and hallways are designated as Public Areas during core business hours
Monday – Friday under the DOE Foreign Visits Program. Visitors requiring
access to any other area, or after hours, requires an Escort. |
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non-stamped pressure vessels |
A pressure vessel whose design
meets the intent of the applicable ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, but
is not stamped in accordance with the code. |
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nonstochastic effects |
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normal lift |
Lifts not meeting the criteria of
Critical
Lift. |
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normal operating conditions |
Conditions
during which a crane is performing functions within the scope of the original
design and/or in acceptable environmental conditions without a SOP. |
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notable event |
An unplanned or abnormal event that affects or has the potential
to affect performance, reliability, safety, or the environment. It may or may
not meet DOE occurrence
reporting criteria. |
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Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) |
The Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, more commonly known by its acronym OSHA, is responsible for ensuring a safe and healthful working
conditions for working men and women by setting and enforcing standards and
by providing training, outreach, education and assistance. |
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occurrence reporting |
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Occurrence Reporting and
Processing System of Operations Information – DOE (ORPS) |
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ODH 0 |
The
classification given to areas that have an estimated oxygen deficiency hazard
fatality rate less than 10-7/hr and for which ODH awareness training is required
for entry. |
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ODH 1 |
The
classification given to areas that, without countermeasures, would have a
fatality risk from potential oxygen deficiency of up to 10 times that of
riding in an automobile.* ODH awareness training and multiple
personnel are required for entry. |
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Areas
that have a major oxygen deficiency hazard – risk of fatality greater than 10
times that of riding in an automobile; significant training and medical
approval are required for entry. See ES&H
Manual Chapter 6540 Appendix T2 Classifications, Engineering and
Administrative Control Practices, Training, and Medical Exclusions for more detail. |
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On-the-Job Training (OJT) |
On-the-job training
definition is – training
that a person is given while doing a job
and getting paid. |
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Major
unplanned or abnormal events or conditions that: involve or affect DOE/NNSA
facilities and activities by causing or having the potential to cause serious
health and safety or environmental impacts; require resources from outside
the immediate/affected area or local event scene to supplement the initial
response; and, require time-urgent notifications to initiate response
activities at locations beyond the event scene. |
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Operational Safety Procedure
(OSP) |
A Work Control Document,
with a limited effective life of up to three years, that follows the standard
format specified in ES&H Manual
Chapter 3310 Appendix T1 Operational Safety Procedure (OSP) and Temporary OSP
Procedure. OSPs
address unique or complex hazards not
covered in the ES&H Manual, or require more specific detailed instructions.
The document is signed by the appropriate authorities before work proceeds;
and is read and signed by each worker before they take part in the work. (A current listing of OSPs may be
found at: https://jlabdoc.jlab.org/docushare/dsweb/View/Collection-1918) |
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operational upset |
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operations envelope |
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Operations Manager |
The Associate Director (AD) for
Environment, Safety, Health and Quality Assurance (ESH&Q) serves as
Operations Manager (OM) for the Emergency Management Team (EMT). The OM is
responsible for coordinating the response to emergent events at Jefferson
Lab. The OM is also responsible for categorization of an emergency event and
ensuring initial notification is made to the Department of Energy (DOE)
Emergency Operations Center (EOC) by the Reporting Officer. |
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operator |
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OSHA-Recordable Injury |
Any work-related injury or
illness that includes treatment beyond first aid. (DOE-Reportable Injury has
the same definition.) |
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OSL Badge |
A personnel radiation dosimeter consisting of one or more
Optically Stimulated Luminescence detectors. OSL technology is similar to
TLD, except that light is used rather than heat to stimulate the emission of
light from the detector. The OSL badge may also contain track-etch, or other detectors. |
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other potentially infectious
materials (OPIM) |
Any unfixed
tissue or organ from a human; HIV-containing cell or tissue cultures, organ
cultures, HIV- or hepatitis B virus-containing culture medium or other
solutions; blood, organs, or other tissues from experimental animals infected
with HIV or hepatitis B virus; and human body fluids to include semen,
vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, synovial fluid, pleural fluid,
pericardial fluid, peritoneal fluid, amniotic fluid, saliva in dental
procedures, any body
fluid visibly contaminated with blood, and all body fluids in situations
where it is difficult or impossible to differentiate between body fluids. |
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overcurrent trip condition |
A condition for which an electric
current limiting or interrupting means, such as a fuse, circuit breaker,
resistor, electronic current limit or other suitable device has acted to
limit or reduce the current from a power source to some lower predefined
value. |
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overload |
Any load greater than the rated
load of a crane/hoist or piece of rigging equipment. |
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oxidizer |
A chemical that
readily yields oxygen or that vigorously promotes oxidation reactions or
combustion. |
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oxygen deficiency |
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oxygen deficiency hazard (ODH) |
A hazard due to
the potential elimination of or reduction in oxygen available to breathe. See ES&H Manual Chapter 6540 Oxygen Deficiency
Hazard Control Program |
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ozone-depleting substances (ODS) |
Compounds that
evaporate and rise to the upper atmosphere where they react with and destroy
stratospheric ozone. The layer of stratospheric ozone is effective at
protecting life at the earth’s surface from high-frequency, ultraviolet
light. (See http://www.epa.gov/Ozone/science/ods/ Environmental Protection Agency) |
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parenteral |
Piercing mucous membranes or the
skin barrier through such events as needlesticks, human bites, cuts, and
abrasions. |
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passive controls |
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peer review |
Documented
technical validation of vessel engineering design, to be conducted by at
least one pressure vessel design engineer who meets the qualifications or organizational peer group
comprised of at least one technical representative meeting the qualifications
for Design Authority who was not involved as a participant, Supervisor, technical
reviewer, or advisor in the work being reviewed. Documented technical review of
Non-Code Qualified Construction Elements to be conducted by at least one
qualified independent (outside Jefferson Lab) design professional (i.e.
professional engineer) or organizational
peer group comprised of at least one technical representative meeting the
qualifications for Design Authority who was not involved as a participant, Supervisor, technical reviewer, or advisor
in the work being reviewed. Documented technical review of pressure system engineering
design, to be conducted by a least one qualified independent (outside
Jefferson Lab) design professional (i.e. professional engineer) or organizational peer group
comprised of at least one technical representative meeting the qualifications
for Design Authority who was not involved as a participant, Supervisor, technical reviewer,
or advisor in the work being reviewed. |
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performance measure |
Contract-based
system used to monitor performance for fiscal year goals in any category. |
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performance measures/metrics |
Quantitative results used to gauge the degree
to which Jefferson Lab has achieved its goals and/or contract requirements. |
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performance standards |
Measures of ES&H -related
performance identified in the contract. |
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permanent threshold shift |
A significant, irreversible loss
of hearing as shown on an audiogram. |
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permeation test |
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permissible exposure limit (PEL) |
Refers to the regulatory limits set
for the amount, or concentration, of a substance in the air. Approximately
500 PELs have been established based on an 8-hour time weighted average (TWA)
exposure. Employers comply with PELs in accordance with OSHA
requirements.
Existing PELs are contained in 29 CFR 1910.1000 Table Z-1, the air contaminants
standard. |
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Jefferson Lab defines a “PRCS” to be any area that meets all of the following criteria: · Sufficient space for a person to enter and perform work; · Limited/restricted means for entering/exiting; · Not designed for continuous occupancy; AND · An actual or potential hazard. Typical PRCS hazards include: · A hazardous atmosphere; · Toxic materials that affect the skin or can be absorbed through it; · A material with the potential for engulfing a person or hindering quick escape; · Internal configuration that could trap a person. Entry is not allowed into a PRCS if there is a hazard that cannot be
mitigated to RC<2 or lower by use of conventional controls (as listed on a
permit). Inform the Confined Space
Coordinator if this situation exists. |
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person in charge (PIC) |
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personal protective equipment
(PPE) |
Equipment that is intended to be worn or held by a person to protect that person from harm. Basic, non-specialized PPE includes: · Hard Hat · Safety Glasses w/Side Shields (as needed) · Safety Shoes · Hearing Protection · Face Shield · Gloves · Knee Pads · Proper Work Clothes (See: ES&H Manual Chapter 6620 Personal Protective Equipment Program.) Basic, non-specialized PPE does not include items used
for electrical, chemical, hot work etc. See applicable ES&H Manual
chapters for these requirements: · 6122 Appendix
T2 Hot Work Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) · 6131 Fall Protection
Systems · 6200 Appendix
T3 Electrical Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) · 6410 Appendix
T3 Laser Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) · 6610 Appendix
T5 Chemical Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and Associated Control
Measures |
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Personally identifiable information (PII) |
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personnel dosimetry |
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personnel
monitoring |
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Personnel Safety System (PSS) |
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physician panel |
A list of primary treating
physicians from which an employee may select to care for an on-the-job injury
or illness. Panels of medical specialists may also be provided when the
primary treating physician recommends follow-up diagnosis, treatment, or therapy.
See Occupational Medicine’s Injury Pamphlet. |
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Piping and Instrumentation Diagrams (P&ID) |
Piping and Instrumentation Diagrams are a detailed diagram in the process industry which shows the piping and process equipment together with the instrumentation and control devices. |
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piping system |
Interconnected piping subject to the same set or sets of design conditions. Piping refers to assemblies of piping components used to convey, distribute, mix, separate, discharge, meter, control, or snub fluid flows. Piping also includes pipe-supporting elements, but does not include support structures, such as building frames, bents, foundations, or any equipment excluded from ASME B31.3. Piping
components refers to mechanical elements
suitable for joining or assembly into pressure-tight fluid-containing piping
systems. Components include pipe, tubing, fittings, flanges, gaskets, bolting,
valves, and devices such as expansion joints, flexible joints, pressure
hoses, traps, strainers, in-line portions of instruments, and separators. |
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planned
special exposure |
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policy |
A
statement that expresses the philosophy, experience, or belief of an
organization’s senior managers. Guidance toward attainment of stated goals.
An overall plan embracing the general goals of a governing body. (The
Jefferson Lab ES&H Policy is stated in ES&H Manual Chapter 1100 Environmental, Safety, and Health Policy.) |
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pollution prevention (P2) |
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Portable hand tool |
A
device, with or
without a motor, which is manipulated by an operator to achieve a desired
result and is easily transported from one objective to another. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6120
Portable Hand Tool Safety.) |
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pre-job briefing: |
A meeting before the start of work between
a work manager and workers where task hazards and controls are discussed. The
discussion includes human performance considerations relevant to the work.
Workers acknowledge their participation in a pre-job briefing by written or
electronic signature. Subsequent to the pre-job briefing, the work manager authorizes work start by qualified individuals
with the requisite training and experience. |
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Preliminary Experiment Safety Assessment
Document (PESAD) |
This
document is a preliminary draft of the Experiment
Safety Analysis Document (ESAD). It is
optional, but recommended, as its use will provide insight into ES&H
issues at an early stage of the experiment design, and its review by the
Jefferson Lab E2RC will provide early feedback from the review
process on the merits and acceptability of mitigating measures planned for
addressing ES&H issues in the experimental apparatus design. |
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pressure enclosure |
Any piping or
vessel designed for internal
and/or external pressure. Enclosures having maximum design pressures less
than 15 psi are low-pressure or non-critical. |
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pressure piping |
Pressure
piping includes all piping
and piping components designed for external/internal gage pressures, usually
exceeding 15 psi, that are within the scope of the ASME B31 Piping Codes.
Also included are piping systems regardless of pressure that:
Piping systems that can be excluded
from this class of pressure piping include: [ASME B31.3, ¶300.1.3]
|
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pressure relief device |
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pressure relief valve |
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pressure system |
Exclusions from the above pressure system definition are identified in ASME B31.3 Process Piping and ASME BPV Code Section VIII, Rules for Construction of Pressure Vessels. Exclusion under one of these codes does not provide exclusion under the other. Piping systems that can be excluded from the definition of pressure systems include: [ASME B31.3, ¶300.1.3] · piping systems designed for internal gage pressures at or above zero but less than 15 psi, provided that the fluid handled is nonflammable, nontoxic, and not damaging to human tissue as defined in ASME B31.3 ¶ 300.2, and its design temperature is between -20°F through 366°F · tubes, tube headers, crossovers, and manifolds of fired heaters that are internal to the heater enclosure Pressure vessels that can be excluded from the definition of pressure systems include: [ASME BPV Sec. VIII, ¶U-1(c)(2)] · pressure containers that are integral parts or components of rotating or reciprocating mechanical devices · a vessel for containing water under pressure including those containing air, the compression of which serves only as a cushion, when none of the following limitations are exceeded: o a design pressure of 300 psi o a design temperature of 210°F · a hot water supply storage tank heated by steam or any other indirect means when none of the following limitations is exceeded: o a heat input of 200,000 Btu/hr o a water temperature of 210°F o a nominal water containing capacity of 120 gallons · vessels having an internal or external operating pressure not exceeding 15 psi with no limitation on size · vessels having an inside diameter, width, height, or cross section diagonal not exceeding 6 inches, with no limitation on length of the vessel or pressure Additionally, the following pressure systems are specifically excluded from this chapter: · Department of Transportation (DOT) regulated cylinders and dewars · roof and floor drains, plumbing, and sewers · piping for hydraulic or pneumatic hand tools and their components downstream of the first block or stop valve off the system distribution header · piping internal to instruments (not instrument piping) · fire protection systems constructed in compliance with recognized fire protection engineering standards and adhering to the provisions set forth in ES&H Manual Chapter 6900 Fire Protection Program. |
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Pressure System Committee (PSC) |
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pressure test |
Hydrostatic Test Pneumatic Test Refer
to the code for the specific requirements that pertain to each kind of test. |
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Pressure Vessel |
Pressure vessels, for the purposes of this
specification, shall be considered those vessels that are within the scope of
the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code Section VIII. The design,
construction, and fabrication of these assemblies shall be in accordance with
this Code. These pressure vessels may contain fluids or gases that are
utilized for the containment of pressures in excess of 15 psi but less than
3000 psi. All pressure factors shall be taken into consideration whether
during normal operating conditions or abnormal conditions and whether from
direct or indirect pressure generating sources. Pressure
vessels that can be excluded from this class of vessels include: [ASME BPV
Sec. VIII, ¶ U-1(c)(2)]
o
a
design pressure of 300 psi o
a
design temperature of 210°F
o
a
heat input of 200,000 Btu/hr o
a
water temperature of 210°F o
a
nominal water containing capacity of 120 gallons
|
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Preventive Action (See also: Corrective
Action) |
An activity
that prevents a service,
item, component, or process from becoming out of compliance with
specifications, procedures, or regulatory requirements. (Preventive Actions
are designated in CATS within the “Issue Type” pull-down menu. They have a “Significance
Level” 0 or, in rare cases, 1; and their “Primary Cause Code” is generally
“continuous improvement” or “tracking only.”) |
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probability
level |
The likelihood and frequency of an incident/accident occurring.
(See
ES&H Manual
Chapter 3210 Appendix T3 Risk Code Assignment.) |
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procedural requirement |
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program |
The
organizational methods and responsibilities used by management to attain a specific goal. |
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prompt radiation |
Refers
to ionizing radiation produced directly by operating an accelerator
system/component. Has a potential impact
only within close proximity to an operating accelerator on the site; it is
produced within the beam enclosure and its production stops when an
accelerator is turned off. |
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psia/psi/psig |
Psi is an abbreviation for the
“unit” pound-force per square inch; psia is an abbreviation for a “property,”
and Psig Pounds per
Square Inch (gauge). In this case it is the pressure (“a” stands for
absolute) at a given point in a medium expressed in units of psi. |
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Qualified Electrical Worker (QEW) |
A qualified electrical worker is trained, knowledgeable, and
certified, if applicable, for the construction, maintenance, or operation of
equipment; or a specified work method, and is trained to recognize and avoid
the hazards that might be present with respect to that equipment or work
method. They have been approved by
their division to conduct the work. |
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Qualified |
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Quality Factor |
The modifying factor used to calculate
the dose equivalent from the tissue or organ absorbed dose at a point. |
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DOE Reportable Occurrence |
Any
unusual or unplanned event that has or could adversely affect public health,
the performance, reliability, or safety of a facility, or the environment as
described in ES&H Manual Chapter 5300 Appendix T1
Occurrence Reporting to Department of Energy (DOE) and Notification Procedure.
Reportable occurrences are classified by their potential for personal injury,
environmental damage, and/or equipment loss. Additional information on the
occurrence categorization process is available in DOE Manual 231.1-2. |
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R-stamped pressure vessel |
ASME official “R” stamp marked on
a vessel indicates repair. |
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Rad |
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RADACS |
An independent
computer system that logs data from area radiation monitors. |
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RadCon Manual |
Jefferson
Lab Radiological Control Manual. See http://www.jlab.org/ehs/ehsmanual/RadCon/index.html. |
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radiation area |
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Radiation Control Department
(RadCon) |
Administers
the Jefferson Lab’s radiation control program site wide and is responsible
for ensuring that ionizing radiation and radionuclides exposure of personnel
and the environment is as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA), and in no
case higher than statutory and regulatory limits. (See http://www.jlab.org/accel/RadCon/index.html ) |
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Radiation Generating Devices
(RGD) |
Collective
term for devices which produce ionizing radiation, including, certain sealed
radioactive sources, small particle accelerators used for single purpose
applications which produce ionizing radiation (e.g., radiography), and
electron generating devices that produce X-rays incidentally. |
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Radiation Safety Assessment
Document (RSAD) |
Specifically
addresses radiation and activation issues associated with the delivery of
electron beam to an experiment. It includes an explicit calculation of the
planned Experiment Operations Envelope (EOE). It identifies safety issues
associated with the planned EOE and addresses mitigating measures that have
been incorporated into the apparatus and runs protocol to ensure compliance
during operation in the FEL, as defined by the DOE approval letter. It also
contains appropriate decommissioning plans for the target and beam-activated
components. (See
Typical Outline for a Radiation
Safety Assessment Document) |
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radiation worker |
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Radiation(1) |
Prompt
ionizing radiation produced by operation of an accelerator or its components. |
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Radiation Weighting Factor (wR) |
The modifying factor used to calculate
the equivalent dose from the average tissue or organ absorbed dose; the
absorbed dose (expressed in rad or gray) is multiplied by the appropriate
radiation weighting factor. |
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radio frequency (RF) radiation |
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radioactive
material |
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radioactive
material area |
Any area within a controlled area, accessible to individuals, in
which items or containers of radioactive material exist and the total
activity of radioactive material exceeds the applicable values provided in Appendix
E of 10 CFR 835. All radioactive
material areas are approved by the Radiation Control Department and monitored
per department procedures to comply with safety requirements. |
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radioactive
material transportation |
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radioactive
waste |
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radioactivity |
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radiography |
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radioisotope/radionuclide |
An
unstable isotope of an element that decays or disintegrates spontaneously,
emitting radiation. |
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radiological area |
Any area within a
controlled area defined as a
“radiation area,” “high radiation area,” “very high radiation area,”
“contamination area,” “high contamination area,” or “airborne radioactivity
area.” |
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radiological
buffer area (RBA) |
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radiological
control hold point |
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Radiological Control Operating
Procedure (RCOP) |
A special type
of Operational
Safety Procedure (OSP) required when the main
hazard is radiological. |
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Radiological Control
Technologist (RCT) |
Radiation
Control Department support personnel who provide health physics and
radiological engineering, dosimetry, independent oversight, instrumentation,
and calibration functions. They conduct work planning and radiological
surveillance, assist in the implementation of radiological control, perform
radiological analyses, and support the environmental monitoring program. They
have the responsibility and authority to stop work or mitigate the effect of
an activity if they suspect that continued performance of a job or evolution
or test will result in the violation of radiological control standards,
result in imminent danger or unacceptable risk, or result in the inadvertent
release of radioactive material to the environment. This responsibility is in
addition to the stop work authority possessed by all Laboratory staff in
accordance with the Jefferson Lab ES&H
Manual. Requirements: high
school degree and some post-secondary education or technical training; and
pursuit or current registry by The National Registry of Radiation Protection
Technologists is encouraged. (See Radiation
Control Supplement – Chapter 1 – Part 4 Radiation Control Department) |
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radiological
posting |
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radiological work |
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Radiological Work Permit (RWP) |
A work-control
document issued by the Radiation Control Department that specifies
requirements for entry into, or working in, specifically designated portions
of a radiologically controlled area (RCA). (See Radiation Control Supplement, Chapter 3 Conduct of Radiological
Work, Part 2 Work Preparation.) |
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radiological
worker |
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radiologically controlled area
(RCA) |
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rated load (capacity) |
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reactive |
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Readiness Assurance |
The evaluation and corrective measures taken to
ensure that planning, procedures, and resources have been adequately
allocated. |
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reagent |
A substance used in a chemical
reaction to detect, analyze, or produce another substance. |
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record |
OSHA
definition: Any item, collection, or grouping of information regardless of
the form or process by which it is maintained (e.g. paper document,
microfiche, microfilm, x-ray film, or automated data processing). |
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recordkeeping (1) |
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records management |
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records schedule |
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recycling |
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redundancy |
The replication of parallel
interlock chains, ideally from the sensor through the final control element. All
chains would have to fail for the interlock function to fail. |
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regulated medical waste |
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regulation(1) |
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release |
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Rem |
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removable
contamination |
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reportable quantity (RQ) |
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reproductive toxins |
Chemicals that affect
reproductive capabilities, including chromosomal damage (mutations) and
effects on developing fetuses (teratogens). |
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research pressure vessel |
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respiratory
protection |
An apparatus, such as
a respirator, worn by an individual for the purpose of reducing the
inhalation of airborne materials. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 6630
Respiratory Protection Program.) |
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Response Owner |
The
person responsible
for ensuring that all issues are completed and closed before the related event is submitted for closure. |
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responsible engineer |
An engineer
selected by his/her Supervisor
who is ultimately responsible for defining all requirements and providing all
documentation required to produce sound welded and brazed joints. Note: this person is called the
“Design Authority for Pressure Systems” in ES&H Manual
Chapter 6151 Pressure Systems. |
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restricted
approach boundary |
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rigging |
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Risk Code (RC) or Risk Code
Assignment (Synonym – Significance
Level) |
(See Risk Code Task Review Requirement for work control document requirements.) (See
ES&H Manual
Chapter 3210 Appendix T3 Risk Code Assignment.) |
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risk
code task review requirement |
The level of formal task review and mitigating measures required for each risk code.
(See
ES&H Manual
Chapter 3210 Appendix T3 Risk Code Assignment.) |
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risk(1) |
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root cause |
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root cause analysis |
A formal
structured process for defining the root cause of an issue, event, or adverse trend. The person conducting a Root Cause Analysis
is trained in the method |
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root mean square (RMS) |
The square root of the average of the squares of a set of numbers. The
corresponding formula for a continuous function f(t) defined
over the interval is The
rms of a periodic function is equal to the rms of one period of the function.
The rms value of a continuous function or signal can be approximated by
taking the rms value of a series of equally spaced samples. |
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routine task |
Activities for which hazards have been previously identified and mitigation measures are addressed in the ES&H Manual. They include common and non-hazardous activities. These are routine, recurring tasks such as maintenance, repairs, surveillances, etc. They are performed using the Task List and related procedures as appropriate. |
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safety alert symbol |
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safety analysis |
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safety envelope |
The range of conditions covered by the
safety documentation of a process or facility under which safe operation is
adequately controlled. This document specifies
equipment operating conditions that, if violated, might endanger public
health or safety, the environment, site personnel, and/or might violate
policy or threaten external confidence. Jefferson
Lab’s facility Safety Envelope is defined in the Jefferson Lab FSAD.
The FEL Safety Envelope is defined in a DOE approval letter. Each experiment
must incorporate the Safety Envelope criteria in describing the experiment
apparatus and beam operations as part of its ES&H review. The individual
experiment may incorporate more restrictive parameters, but it cannot exceed
the approved Jefferson Lab Safety Envelope described in the FSAD. |
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safety glasses |
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safety integrity requirements
specification |
Establishes acceptable system
architecture for achieving the level of integrity, safety, and performance
required for executing the desired safety system functions. |
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safety interlock system (SIS) |
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safety plan |
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safety shower |
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safety signs and signal words |
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safety symbol |
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safety system operator (SSO) |
The individual responsible for
monitoring and controlling access to Radiologically Controlled Areas where a
potential radiation hazard exists. A Limited Duty SSO is only authorized to
operate the Safety System for a particular task or machine region. |
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safety warden |
Performs
safety inspections specific to their area, minimally to ES&H Manual
guidance. For a
listing of current Safety Wardens see Jefferson Lab Safety Wardens. (See Also ES&H Manual Chapter 2500 Safety Warden Program.) |
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safety watch |
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sealed
radioactive source or sealed source |
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self-reading pocket dosimeter
(SRPD) |
A personal
exposure monitoring device (i.e., a dosimeter) that can be read “on the spot”
by its user – unlike TLDs
(thermoluminescent dosimeters), which require special processing. Examples of
SRPDs include: pocket ionization chambers (PICs), neutron bubble dosimeters,
and digital alarming dosimeters (DADs). |
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Serious injuries |
Any injury that requires more
than first-aid treatment. This includes fractures, concussions, internal
injuries, lacerations requiring sutures, burns (other than minor, localized
first-degree burns), and any injury where shock is apparent. |
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Severe Thunderstorm |
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severe thunderstorm warning |
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severe thunderstorm watch |
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severe weather |
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Severe Weather Planning Team |
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shackle |
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shallow dose
equivalent |
The dose equivalent deriving from external radiation at a depth
of 0.007 cm in tissue. |
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sharps |
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shield metal arc welding (SMAW) |
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Shielding (in reference to radiation) |
A
credited control☼ that is placed
between exclusion areas and occupied areas
during accelerator operations to keep personnel exposure to ionizing
radiation within the limits defined in the Radiation
Protection Program. The two categories of shielding are: Movable – shielding that can be moved when necessary (e.g.: lead bricks). Permanent – shielding that cannot be moved (e.g.: concrete structures, walls, floors, labyrinths, and earth cover). (☼Shielding that is used only for equipment protection is not a credited control.) |
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shock |
A metabolic response to a
life-threatening condition, characterized by reduced oxygen flow to body
organs. Signs and symptoms include pale and clammy skin, profuse sweating,
rapid and shallow breathing, rapid pulse, mental confusion, and extreme
thirst. |
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sievert (Sv) |
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Significance Level (Synonym – Risk Code) |
The significance of a hazard is dependent on the risk of unacceptable outcomes it creates. Jefferson Lab has established and categorized five Risk Codes applicable for work activities. Risk Codes are based on the likelihood of an accident occurring for a given activity coupled with the severity of the outcome. (See Risk Code for determination table.) |
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Annual summary of environmental
compliance status, analytical data summaries, and environmental protection
program status. |
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Site-safety fence |
The
fence that
surrounds the accelerator site and defines the site boundary. |
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skill |
The generic term used by LMS to identify skills, knowledge,
and abilities required by Jefferson Lab and usually acquired through
training. |
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skill of the craft |
Term used
to describe tasks that are routine and safely conducted by experienced staff
who have been appropriately trained and are working at a Risk Code of ≤ 2
with or without standard
protecting measures. |
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Skills Requirements List (SRL) |
Required for everyone who carries a Jefferson Lab badge (except
visitors). The SRL is managed in the LMS
by the Lab Training Office. It contains skills and combinations of
skills (competencies) that are required by the organization and job to which
an individual is assigned or by the supervisor/Subcontracting
Officer’s Technical Representative
(SOTR)/Sponsor for a particular individual. SRLs are created
when a person is added to the Jefferson Lab database and updated regularly
using the JTA tool. |
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sling angle |
The angle between the sling and
horizontal. |
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soft digging |
Excavating
with tools or equipment that utilizes air or water pressure as the direct
means to break up soil or earth for removal by vacuum excavation. |
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soldering |
A low
temperature form of brazing. This technique is used for joining
low-temperature base metals. |
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solid waste |
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source custodian |
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source leak
test |
A test to determine
if a sealed radioactive source is leaking radioactive material. |
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source reduction (also reduction
at the source) |
Any activity that reduces or
eliminates the generation of any kind of waste at the source, usually within
a process. |
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sparks |
The heated
residue created when cutting, brazing, grinding or welding metal. |
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spokesperson |
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Sponsor |
The Jefferson
Lab staff member who is the designated point-of-contact and liaison for a
facility User;
and has responsibilities equivalent to that of a Supervisor.
Sponsors of students are responsible for assigning a qualified
Jefferson Lab employee to act as Mentor/Supervisor to each student. |
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spotter |
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staff (Synonym: employee) |
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Standard Operating Procedure
(SOP) |
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Includes non-specialized personnel protective equipment; engineered
controls currently in place, reviewed,
and routinely used to reduce a task’s Risk Code to an acceptable level; and permitted activities authorized by EH&S Manual Chapter 3320 Temporary Work Permits, where the work permit addresses the
principal hazard. |
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standard
radiation symbols |
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Standard Welding Procedure
Specification (SWPS) |
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standard(1) |
A set of
requirements, procedures, or specifications pertaining to a particular topic. |
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standards in lieu of laws |
Standards that have been
identified as necessary because they fulfill the purpose of a law or
regulation, but that pertain to a subject for which there is no law or
regulation. |
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State Water Control Board (SWCB) |
The citizen
board that sets policy, proposes and adopts rules and regulations, and hears
disputes between regulated parties and the Water Division of the DEQ. |
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Statement of Work (SOW) |
Technical
specification used to define scope of effort for outside contracted services. Ex:
construction of pressure systems. |
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stochastic
effects |
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Stop-Work
Order |
A
definitive statement made that an imminent danger is present. After which all
related work is immediately stopped until a resolution can be found. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 3330 Appendix T2 Stop Work
for Safety Procedure.) |
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storage area |
A room or building used for the
storage of liquids in containers or portable tanks, separated from other
types of occupancies. |
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structural weld |
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subcontracting officer |
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subcontractor(1) |
A
business entity under contract with Jefferson Lab to perform specified
operations or services. |
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subject matter expert (SME) |
A professional with academic credentials,
recognized work experience, or expertise in the field of application. The
person designated as the Lab’s “expert” in a particular ES&H subject
area. The SME is normally the “owner” of courses related to his/her area of
expertise and, with the concurrence of the Director’s Safety Council, can add
or remove a related skill from the skill requirements lists. An SME is a person or group of
persons with recognized expertise or authority in a particular functional
area that is greater than anyone else at the Lab. Jefferson Lab has three
kinds of SMEs:
For a listing of hazard issue
“Subject Matter Experts” see ES&H Manual Chapter 2410 Appendix T1 Hazard
Issues List. |
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sufficient set |
The set of requirements
identified by the Necessary and Sufficient process, which, when implemented
together with the Necessary Set, will provide an appropriate level of
protection to laboratory employees, visitors, the public, and the
environment. The Sufficient Set includes External Standards invoked by law,
External Standards not invoked by law, and certain selected Internal
Standards. Except for External Standards invoked by law, the adequacy of
implementation of requirements in the Sufficient Set will be judged by the
process described in Appendix B of the DOE/JSA contract. |
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Supervisor |
The person responsible for the day-to-day allocation of
work to an individual. (Also known as: Mentor, Sponsor, Matrixed
Supervisor, Line Manager, Hall Leader, Group Leader or Manager, Department
Leader or Manager) |
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surgical implant |
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Suspend
Work |
An order given when a hazard
issue is discovered or anticipated,
where work is stopped until mitigation measures are implemented. (See ES&H Manual Chapter 3330 Appendix T1 Suspend
Work for Safety Procedure.) |
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tag line |
A length of line or rope used by
a member of a rigging crew (from a safe position) to guide and maintain
control of a load when it is out of reach. |
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Tagger (aka: Qualified
Tagger) |
·
Current and appropriate training (SAF 104 Lock, Tag,
Try). ·
Received specific LTT training on equipment being serviced. ·
Locked and/or tagged out equipment in order to service or test
that equipment. ·
Complete familiar with the hazards and associated operational
characteristics of the equipment that has been locked and/or tagged out. |
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tagout |
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Task Hazard Analysis (THA) |
A systematic
study of an assigned task in order to identify and mitigate hazards. Guidance
on the methodology for conducting a Task Hazard Analysis is contained within ES&H
Manual Chapter 3210 Work Planning, Control, and Authorization Process. |
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technical representative (TR) |
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technical review |
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technical work
document |
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Temporary Operational Safety
Procedure (TOSP) |
A Work Control Document,
with a limited effective life of three months or less, that follows the
standard format specified in ES&H Manual
Chapter 3310 Appendix T1 Operational Safety Procedure (OSP) and Temporary OSP
Procedure. TOSPs
address unique or complex hazards not
covered in the ES&H Manual, or require more specific detailed instructions.
The document is signed by the appropriate authorities before work proceeds;
and is read and signed by each worker before they take part in the work. (A current listing of TOSPs may
be found at: https://jlabdoc.jlab.org/docushare/dsweb/View/Collection-1915) |
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Temporary Work Permit |
Work Control Documents that ensure hazards, pertaining to
a specific work condition, have been considered and the associated risks have
been acknowledged and mitigated. The following activities have been
identified as requiring a temporary work permit: • Confined-Space
Work – ES&H Manual Chapter 6160 Confined Space Entry • Energized
Electrical Work – ES&H Manual
Chapter 6220 AC Electrical Equipment Safe Work Program • Fire Hazard
Work – ES&H Manual Chapter 6900
Appendix T1 Fire Protection: Hot Work Permit • Radiological
Work – Jefferson Lab Radiological
Control Supplement • Dig/Blind
Penetration – Facilities Management’s
Excavations and Blind Penetrations into Walls & Floors • Active • Fall Protection
Systems – ES&H Manual Chapter 6131 Appendix T4 Fall Protection Permit
Instructions (See ES&H Manual Chapter 3320 Temporary Work Permits for more information.) |
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temporary shielding |
Materials
that are used for personnel protection from radiation, but can be
nondestructively disassembled or removed – for instance, lead bricks or nonmortared
concrete block walls. |
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temporary threshold shift |
A measurable loss of hearing that
is restored (usually within 24 hours) after the noise exposure has ceased. |
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tesla |
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thermoluminescent dosimeter (TLD) |
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thin window |
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threshold |
The point at
which any type of hazardous material is perceptible or can produce an effect. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
threshold limit value (TLV) for
noise |
Sound pressure levels and
duration of exposure that represent conditions under which it is believed
that nearly all workers may be repeatedly exposed without adverse effect on
their ability to hear and understand normal speech. The TLVs should protect
the median of the population against noise-induced hearing loss exceeding 2
dBA after 40 years of occupational exposure for the average of 0.5, 1, 2, and
3 kHz. Hearing protection is available in areas where noise exposure is at or
above 85 dBA as an 8-hour, time-weighted average. ACGIH and OSHA require employers to initiate a
hearing conservation program when this level of exposure is reached. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
threshold limit values (TLV) |
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threshold planning quantity (TPQ) |
An EPA-assigned
level that, once attained or exceeded, requires notification under the
Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA). A TPQ for each
EHS is listed in 40 CFR 355. TPQs are based on weight and must be reported in
pounds regardless of whether the substance is a solid, liquid, or gas. EHSs
contained in mixtures must be included in the calculated totals if the
mixture contains greater than 1% of an EHS or greater than 0.1% if it is an
EHS and a carcinogen. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tier II |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
time-weighted averages (TWA) |
The accepted means of calculating
and documenting occupational exposures to potentially injurious substances
and noise. Exposures are usually expressed as an 8-hour TWA. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Tissue Weighting Factor
(wT) |
The fraction of the overall health risk,
resulting from uniform, whole body irradiation, attributable to specific
tissue (T). The equivalent dose to tissue, (HT), is multiplied by the
appropriate tissue weighting factor to obtain the effective dose (E)
contribution from that tissue. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
tolerance zone |
A specified circumferential distance around
the indicated location of a utility. Virginia code requires 24-inches or
more. |
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tornado |
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tornado warning |
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tornado watch |
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total
effective dose |
The sum of the
effective dose equivalent (for external exposures) and the committed
effective dose equivalent (for internal exposures). |
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toxic |
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toxic chemical |
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transfill |
The transfer of compressed gas
and/or cryogenic liquid from one portable container to another or from a
bulk-storage vessel to a portable container. |
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tropical depression |
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tropical storm |
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tropical storm warning |
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tropical storm watch |
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try |
Before any work
begins on machines or equipment that have been locked out and/or tagged out,
an authorized employee must verify that the machine or equipment has been
properly isolated and de-energized. This verification of isolation shall
include the step of trying to restart the equipment, by activating push
buttons, selector switches, electrical interlocks, and other appropriate
operating controls, to otherwise verify that the equipment or machine cannot
be restarted. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
tungsten inert
gas (TIG) welding |
An arc is established between a nonconsumable tungsten electrode and the
work piece producing the heat to melt the abutting edges of the metal to be
joined; filler rod may also be used. Argon or helium is fed to the annular
space around the electrode to maintain the inert environment. (Also known as
Gas Tungsten Arc Welding (GTAW)). |
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U-stamped pressure vessel |
ASME official U symbol marked on
a vessel indicates unfired. Other pertinent design information is also
included with the U stamp. |
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unanticipated problem |
Any
incident, experience, or outcome that meets ALL three of the following
criteria: (1) Unexpected (in terms of nature, severity, or
frequency) given (a) the research procedures that are described in the
protocol-related documents, such as the IRB-approved research protocol and
informed consent document, and (b) the characteristics of the subject
population being studied; (2) Related or possibly related to participation
in the research (i.e., there is a reasonable possibility that the incident, experience,
or outcome may have been caused by procedures involved in the research); and (3) Likely to place subjects or others at greater
risk of harm (including physical, psychological, economic, or social harm)
than was previously known or recognized. |
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uncontrolled area |
An
area where there are no controls for radiation protection purposes. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
universal precautions |
The standardized set of
protective exposure control methods used by health care providers as defined
by OSHA in 29 CFR Part 1910.1030
(Occupational Exposure to Bloodborne Pathogens; Final Rule). This concept
involves treating all blood and certain other body fluids as being
infectious. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unreviewed Safety Issue (USI) |
An issue
arising from a
discovered condition, or a proposed change modification or experiment that:
·
significantly
increases the risk of an accident or malfunction of equipment beyond that
evaluated in the FSAD ·
introduces
the risk of an accident or malfunction of a different type than any evaluated
in the FSAD In this context, discovered conditions and proposed changes includes
hardware, software, operational procedures, or administrative controls. |
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unsafe act |
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unsafe condition |
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User |
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utility locate |
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Voltage- Alternating Current
(VAC) |
Alternating
current describes the flow of charge that changes direction periodically. As
a result, the voltage level also reverses along with the current. AC is used
to deliver power to houses, office buildings, etc. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
vacuum system |
A
system containing piping, its components, and/or vessel(s) used to either
convey or contain a fluid operating at less than atmospheric pressure. A
vacuum system, provided that its maximum design pressure does not reach or
exceed 15 psi, is considered to be within the scope of a low pressure or
non-critical enclosure in this program. |
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ventilation control |
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very high
radiation area |
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Virginia Department of
Environmental Quality (DEQ) |
The state
agency responsible for implementing federal environmental regulatory programs
at the state level. The DEQ is divided into Air, Water, and Waste Management
Divisions. See http://www.deq.state.va.us/ |
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Visitor |
Anyone at
Jefferson Lab
who is not authorized to access an area without an Escort |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
visual examination or inspection
(VT) |
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Volts (V) |
A
volt is the unit of electric potential difference, or the size of the force
that sends the electrons through a circuit. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Voltage Verification Unit (VVU) |
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waste analysis |
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waste minimization (WMin) |
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waste stream |
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wastewater |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
wastewater, domestic |
Wastewater produced from
non-industrial processes that are similar to household sanitary wastewater,
normally discharged to the sanitary sewer. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
wastewater, industrial |
Wastewater and water-carried
waste from industrial processes and of nonhuman origin normally discharged to
the sanitary sewer. |
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water, cooling (CW) |
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water, intermediate cooling (ICW) |
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water, low conductivity (LCW) |
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weber (Wb) |
The Standard International (SI)
unit of magnetic flux. |
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weighting
factor (WT) |
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welder |
A person who
performs a manual or semiautomatic welding operation. |
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welder’s flash |
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welding |
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welding hazard index (WHI) |
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welding procedure specification
(WPS) |
Written
detailed methods and practices including a procedure involved in the
production of a weld. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
weldment |
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whole body |
1.
for
the purposes of external exposure, head, trunk (including male gonads), arms
above and including the elbow, or legs above and including the knee. 2.
for
purposes of radiation surveys, the exposure/dose rate measured at a point 30
cm from the source or from any surface that the radiation penetrates. |
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winter weather advisory |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
winter weather outlook |
Issued
when significant winter precipitation is possible in the next three to five
days. |
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winter weather warning |
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winter weather watch |
Issued
when significant winter precipitation is possible in the next 24 to 48 hours. |
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WMin/P2 coordinator |
Coordinates activities with
Jefferson Lab staff that have agreed to participate in addressing lab-wide
and other identified issues in the WMin/P2 arena. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
A document used
to support moderately or highly hazardous work. (See ES&H Manual
Chapter 3310 Operational Safety Procedure Program; and ES&H Manual Chapter 6410 Laser Safety; and ES&H Manual Chapter 3320
Temporary Work Permits.) (See Work
Control Documents for a current listing.) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
work
manager |
The
person that ensures workers have the knowledge, skills, and abilities to
perform the work and have read, understand, and have signed work
planning and control documents, conducts or delegates pre-job briefing,
authorizes work and monitors wok performance (Work Manager may be Work
Planner) |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
work
planner |
The
line manager responsible for following the Core Functions of ISM while
planning work, including defining work scope task-by-task, assessing hazards
and controls for hazard issues identified by task, determining whether
hazards can be eliminated, reduced, or controlled, evaluating lessons-learned
for applicability, developing the necessary WPC documentation, consulting
with SMEs, monitoring the effectiveness of controls, updating WPC
documentation, developing lessons learned |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
work planning and control (WPC) |
Work planning and control is the use of formal, documented
processes for identifying and mitigating risks when planning, authorizing, releasing,
and performing work. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
work restrictions |
Limitations to work activity that
are specified by a treating physician. Affected activities may include
lifting, climbing, walking, or use of a certain body part. Protective or
support devices may also be required. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Work Smart Standards (WSS)
Process (Synonymous with, and replacement for, the Necessary and Sufficient
Process.) |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
working alone |
When an individual is engaged in
work without the presence or attention of another person. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Zero Energy Verification (ZEV) |
The approved method that is used to determine the
absence of a hazardous energy source on a piece of equipment or system. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Zero Voltage Verification (ZVV) |
The approved method that is used to determine the
absence of a hazardous energy source on a piece of equipment or system. |
Acronyms
& Abbreviations |
|
ADIC |
Associate Director in
Charge |
AISC |
American Institute of Steel Construction |
ALI |
annual limit on intake |
ANSI |
|
American National Standards Institute and the
Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers |
|
affirmative procurement |
|
APWA |
American Public Works Association |
ASTM |
American Society for Testing and Materials |
AWS |
|
BMP |
|
BPQ |
|
BPV |
boiler and
pressure vessel |
CDRH |
|
CEBAF |
Continuous Electron Beam Accelerator
Facility |
CERCLA |
Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act |
CFR |
|
CMAA |
Crane Manufacturers Association of American |
CMTF |
Cryomodule Test Facility |
CO |
DOE Contracting Officer |
COO |
|
criteria and review approach document |
|
CSP |
Contractor Safety Plan |
CX |
categorical exclusion |
DCR |
|
DLSO |
Deputy Laser Safety Officer |
DOE |
|
DOELAP |
DOE Laboratory Accreditation Program |
DOT |
|
DSC |
|
E&SC |
|
EA |
environmental
assessment |
ECP |
|
EP |
|
EPCRA |
|
EPG |
Emergency Planning and Response Group |
EPP |
environmentally preferred product |
ES&H |
|
ES&H |
Environmental Safety, and Health |
FACP |
fire alarm control panel |
FEL |
Free Electron Laser |
FHWP |
|
Final Safety Assessment Document |
|
Gauss |
|
3H |
|
HAZCOM |
|
HAZWOPER |
|
HBV |
Hepatitis B Virus |
He-3 |
|
HEPA |
|
HIV |
Human Immunodeficiency Virus |
HMIS |
Hazardous Materials Information Systems |
HR |
Human Resources |
HRA |
high radiation area |
IAW |
|
ICAT |
|
intermediate cooling water |
|
ISMS |
|
IT |
Investigation Team |
ITSDF |
Industrial Truck Standards Development Foundation |
JRRP |
|
JSA |
Jefferson Science Associates, LLC |
LFL |
lower flammable limit |
LOD |
Laser Operations Directives |
lines of inquiry |
|
Laser Operational Safety Procedure |
|
MCFL |
maximum credible fire loss |
MCM |
|
MHER |
|
MHSR |
|
MOU |
Memorandum of Understanding |
MPE |
|
MPFL |
maximum possible fire loss |
MSHA |
|
nondestructive examination |
|
nondestructive testing |
|
NEC |
National Electrical Code (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Electrical_Code_(US)) |
NEO |
New Employee Orientation |
NER |
notable event report |
NIST |
National Institute on Standards and Technology |
NP |
engineered nanoparticlesl |
NRC |
National Response Center |
NRRPT |
National Registry of Radiation Protection
Technologists |
NRTL |
Nationally Recognized Testing
Laboratory (see http://www.osha.gov/dts/otpca/nrtl/) |
NTS |
|
Occurrence Reporting and
Processing System of Operations Information – DOE |
|
OSHA |
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
(see http://www.osha.gov/) |
PAAA |
|
PAI |
|
PLEPC |
Peninsula Local Emergency Planning Committee |
PM |
DOE ES&H Program Manager |
PQR |
|
Pressure Safety Committee |
|
Psia/psi |
psi is an abbreviation for the “unit” pound-force
per square inch, and psia is an abbreviation for a “property.” In this case
it is the pressure (“a” stands for absolute) at a given point in a medium
expressed in units of psi. |
R/hr |
Roentgen per hour |
RCD or
RadCon |
(formerly Radiation Control Group) |
RCM |
|
RCRA |
|
rem |
Roentgen equivalent man |
RGD |
radiation generating device |
RPP |
|
RQ |
|
RSDR |
|
RT |
radiographic testing |
radiological worker level one |
|
radiological worker level two |
|
SAA |
|
SARA |
Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act |
SCBA |
|
SI |
|
SPCC |
|
SSO |
Safety System Operator |
standard welding procedure specification |
|
TJSO |
Thomas Jefferson Site Office |
TR |
Technical Representative (formerly Subcontracting Officer’s Technical
Representative, SOTR) |
TWA |
time-weighted averages |
unreviewed safety issue |
|
VERC |
Virginia Emergency Response Council |
VPDES |
|
visual examination, inspection, or test |
|
WPQ |
|
welding procedure specification |
|
(synonymous
with, and replacement for, the necessary and sufficient process) |
|
zero voltage verification |