the grader sm program for evaluating radiation detection systems for homeland security
Post on 03-Jan-2016
22 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Domestic Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO)
The GRaDERSM Program for Evaluating Radiation Detection Systems for Homeland SecurityOctober 21, 2009Standards and their Private Sector Application
Caroline Purdy, PhD, (DNDO)
Charles Sleeper (DNDO)
Website: http://www.dhs.gov/GRaDEREmail:
GRaDER.Questions@hq.dhs.govGRaDER.Comments@hq.dhs.govGRaDER.Applications@hq.dhs.gov
2MPM-A.4
DNDO Mission and ObjectivesMission: To substantially reduce the risk of nuclear terrorism against the United States by continually improving capabilities to deter, detect, respond to, and attribute attacks, in coordination with domestic and international partners.
Develop the global nuclear detection and reporting architecture
Develop, acquire, and support the domestic nuclear detection and reporting system
Thoroughly characterize detector system performance before deployment
Establish situational awareness through information sharing and analysis
Establish operation protocols to ensure detection leads to effective response
Conduct a transformational research and development program
Maintain the National Technical Nuclear Forensics Center to provide centralized planning and integration of U.S. nuclear forensics programs
3MPM-A.4
GRaDER Mission and Objectives Mission
– Identify radiation detection products that satisfy standards and Homeland Security mission requirements
– Enable Federal, State, local, tribal and territorial agencies to make more informed radiological/nuclear detector procurement decisions
Objectives– Provide infrastructure for the collection of high integrity test data
National Voluntary Laboratory Accreditation Program (NVLAP) lab accreditation process
Identify instrument categories, applicable standards, reporting protocols and compliance levels
– Become a self-sustaining program
Manufacturers pay for testing by accredited labs on their own schedule
Labs submit for and maintain accreditation
– Standardize instrument testing and presentation of test results to assure valid comparisons and easily interpreted results
– Develop Government post-market surveillance program to track products already evaluated under GRaDER program
4MPM-A.4
GRaDER Process and Phases
Federal, State, local, tribal,
territorialAgency
Federal Acquisition Requirements
and Grant Guidance
* NVLAP Accreditation
Testing Evaluation Procurement
AccreditedTesting Labs*
Rad/Nuc DetectorVendor
$
Results
Design Test
Standards
GRaDER Evaluated Equipment
List Use Established
Compliance Levels
DNDOTechnical Review
and Market Surveillance
Support
Compliance Levels
5MPM-A.4
GRaDER Compliance Levels Level 0 – Equipment has not been tested; the test results are not
available; or the test results do not meet the minimum subset of the standards as set forth below in each category.
Level 1 – Equipment meets DNDO-selected requirements of the ANSI standards
Level 2 – Equipment fully meets the ANSI standards.
Level 3 – Equipment meets Level 1 or Level 2 and also satisfies the requirements of the applicable published technical capability standards.
Adjust compliance levels as technology evolves
6MPM-A.4
GRaDER Equipment Categories
Category 1 - Alarming Personal Radiation Detectors (PRDs or “Pagers”) ANSI N42.32
Category 2 - Survey MetersANSI N42.33
Category 3 – Radioactive Isotope Identification Devices (RIID’s)ANSI N42.32
7MPM-A.4
GRaDER Equipment Categories Category 4 - Radiation Portal Monitors (RPM’s)ANSI N42.35 Category 5 - Spectroscopic Radiation Portal MonitorsANSI N42.38
Category 6 - Mobile and Transportable SystemsANSI N42.43
8MPM-A.4
Technical Capability Standards Overview DNDO-led multi-agency effort separate from GRaDER Program
Legislatively mandated by SAFE Port Act of 2006– “…DNDO in collaboration with NIST, shall publish technical capability
standards and recommended standard operating procedures for the use of non-intrusive imaging and radiation detection equipment in the United States. Such standards and procedures--
– (1) should take into account relevant standards and procedures utilized by other Federal departments or agencies as well as those developed by international bodies; and
– (2) shall not be designed so as to endorse specific companies or create sovereignty conflicts with participating countries.”
Go beyond and supplements ANSI standards and fill gaps
Focus on detection and identification of special nuclear materials and industrials
Supports Federal mission space
9MPM-A.4
What GRaDER Program Does Establishes a voluntary “fee-for-testing” program that enables
manufacturers to set their own schedule to independently test detector performance against prescribed standards
Supports any lab that wishes to seek NVLAP accreditation
Accepts test results from NVLAP-accredited or DNDO-accepted labs
Evaluates results and assigns and reports compliance levels
Compiles a list of compliant detectors that is readily available to Federal agencies and to State, local and tribal agencies with permission of manufacturers
Provides test results and compliance levels which are used as criteria for Grants and federal procurements
Conducts post-market surveillance on previously tested and listed products; potential need to resolve issues and resubmit for test
Enables first responders and Law Enforcement agencies to benefit from better equipment and standardized performance results
10MPM-A.4
What GRaDER Program Does Not Do Recommend or require specific manufacturers or products
Endorse one accredited lab over any other accredited lab
Pay for product testing
Assign conformance levels based on manufacturer’s claims or warranties
Test instruments against actual rad/nuc threats
Guarantee product performance, acceptance, or selection
Satisfy all requirements for SAFETY Act certification
Develop standards
Develop federal procurement and grant program criteria
Guarantee permanent placement on any accepted products list
11MPM-A.4
Future Activities Add detector categories – Recent and Emerging Standards
– N42.41 - Active Interrogation Systems – N42.44 - Checkpoint Cabinet X-Ray Imaging Security Systems– N42.46 - Imaging Performance of X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Systems for Cargo and
Vehicle Security Screening– N42.48 - Spectroscopic Personal Radiation Detectors (SPRDs) – N42.49 A & B after publication - Personal Electronic Radiation Detectors
Adjust compliance levels as technology evolves
Add technical capability standards to the testing program (Level 3)
Publish and Update GRaDER Evaluated Equipment List
Implement Government post-market surveillance program
Finalize DHS grant language regarding GRaDER Program compliance – FY11 target date– New grant initiatives
12MPM-A.4
Summary DNDO has initiated an independent, self-sustaining, voluntary program to
evaluate the performance of radiation detectors against accepted standards.
GRaDER will become part of the DHS grant process when sufficient radiation detectors have been tested. Target is FY2011.
More information about the program– http://www.dhs.gov/GRaDER
– Exhibit Booth #915
Questions, Comments, Applications– GRaDER.Questions@hq.dhs.gov
– GRaDER.Comments@hq.dhs.gov
– GRaDER.Applications@hq.dhs.gov
Homeland Security Information Network password protected GRaDERSM site will provide additional information exchange services for stakeholders
top related