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The Cycle of Performance Getting Back on the Path to Excellence Warning Flags/Precursors

The Cycle of Performance Getting Back on the Path to Excellence Warning Flags/Precursors. Palo Verde: A Case Study Frederic Lake Corrective Action Program Manager. Emphasize. where we are and where we are going. Recognize. where we've been. A. B. C. D. E. 8. 7.

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The Cycle of Performance Getting Back on the Path to Excellence Warning Flags/Precursors

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  1. The Cycle of PerformanceGetting Back on the Path to Excellence Warning Flags/Precursors Palo Verde: A Case Study Frederic Lake Corrective Action Program Manager

  2. Emphasize where we are and where we are going Recognize where we've been...

  3. A B C D E 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 9 Potential Stages of Power Plants

  4. Coming off a Long Period of Strong Performance • Attributes • Mature Culture • Stable Operations • Performance indicators “Green” • Positive recognition by industry (INPO, Peers)

  5. Coming off a Long Period of Strong Performance • Behaviors • Overconfidence • Believing your own press • Arrogance • Withdrawal • Managers not reinforcing behaviors to set high standards • Managers distracted (external changes, regulatory, major projects)

  6. Unaware Culture • Some members may challenge current behaviors but face denial from other members • CAP owners may be dealing with poor behaviors • Strength of the Culture: • Length of time • Stability of membership • Emotional intensity of past experiences

  7. Palo Verde…..Early 2000’s • Plant running well • PV recognized as excellent by INPO • The place where people come to benchmark • Insular Staff

  8. Mounting Problems….. • 2004 – 2006: • NRC Substantive Cross-Cutting Issues (SCCI) in Human Performance and PI&R • Decreasing Equipment Reliability • Increased Forced Loss Rate • Decreasing Regulatory Confidence • 2007 • INPO Evaluation: significant weaknesses in several areas • NRC ROP Column 4

  9. What Problems? • Attributes • Increasing emergent issues/equipment failures/Forced Outages • Poor CAP Behaviors/Accountability • Efforts to Turn Performance Overly focused on process/procedure changes

  10. Using old solutions Cause Analysis fails to correct underlying problems Efforts to Turn Performance Not Successful The problems that exist today cannot be solved by the same level of thinking that created them. …Albert Einstein

  11. What Problems? • Behaviors • Event significance not recognized • Signs of performance decline rationalized • Teamwork declines; groups become isolated • Training is minimized • Reluctance to challenge each other

  12. Who me? • Attributes • Problems persist • Increasing backlogs • Sub-optimizing • Rapid decline in performance indicators - station is measuring against themselves • Ineffective Evaluations

  13. Who me? • Behaviors • Finger pointing; low accountability • Poor CAP support: • “loopholes” • Poor closures & resolution • CAP vs. “real work” • Declining CARB performance • Poor support • High use of alternates • Driving down level of participation

  14. Interim Measures • Metrics showing magnitude of backlogs • Outside cause analysis expertise • Team established to determine scope and magnitude of issues • Comparison of station performance to the industry (Epiphany)

  15. Communication • Message: • Unless we change something bad will happen • Objective is sustained performance; not just getting out of trouble • Weekly alignment meetings • Executive level CAP message • Safety message • Relentless repetition……….

  16. Stop the Bleeding • Direct and targeted actions to break the culture patterns and stop the declining performance: • Problem definition & triage • Causal analysis to determine underlying drivers and actions • Training using outside expertise in the essential functions of CAP, including causal analysis and CARB • Refining metrics and reinforcing accountability for CAP

  17. Safety Nets Increased oversight Closure Review Boards for actions important to the recovery 100% CAP Closure Reviews Increased management control of CAP administrative functions

  18. Behaviors • Directive Management from Executive Leadership and CAP Program Owner • Focus on Specific CAP Behaviors: • Identification of Issues • Causal Analysis Quality • Quality Completion of Corrective Actions • Training to close skills and knowledge gaps and to improve performance

  19. Evaluate Gaps • Team devoted to analyses of performance • Results grouped into Fundamental Overall Problem Areas: • Causal analysis performed for each area • Outside expertise • Actions formed the basis for the Site Integrated Improvement Plan (SIIP), and the NRC Confirmatory Action Letter (CAL)

  20. Cause Analysis • Organizational Effectiveness • Operational Focus • Emergency Preparedness • Engineering Programs • Design Control / Configuration Management • Engineering Technical Rigor • Equipment Reliability • Industrial Safety • Problem Identification & Resolution • Procedures / Work Instructions • Managing Plant Work Loads • Training & Qualification • EDG K-1 Relay (White Finding) • RAS Event (Yellow Finding)

  21. WeSAFELYand efficiently generateelectricity for thelong term Palo Verde Leadership Model

  22. Turning the Tide • Attributes • High volume of identification, causal analysis, and reliance on compensatory measures • Station begins to recognize that problem identification and resolution is a behavior; not simply a process • Metrics drive performance • Consistent message to the organization on staying the course

  23. Turning the Tide • Behaviors • Leaders start to align around: • Need to improve • Improvement goals • Operational focus • Leaders working down a level and exhibit a directive leadership style • WeBe – some workers take a “wait and see” attitude (we’ll be here when you’re gone)

  24. Closing the Gaps • Attributes • Overall plant performance improving • Fewer major equipment issues • Performance indicators continue to show improvement • High CAP backlog of conditions and actions, many of which may be no longer necessary

  25. Closing the Gaps • Behaviors • Using experience, self-assessment, and benchmarking to improve major processes • Leaders focus on improving accountability which allows for compensatory measures to be replaced by long-term processes • Improved coordination between departments • Some pockets of resistance; however, the gap between high performers and low performers is widening and becoming more evident

  26. The Plateau……….. • Symptoms: • If you think this is bad…you should have seen it before • Actions: • Focus on 3-5 year plans not just the immediate improvement plans • Communication and awareness • Overtly looking for signs of the plateau & continuous challenging

  27. Demonstrating Performance Improvement • Attributes • Plant operating reliably • Problems identified early and low level trending, analysis, and other performance improvement tools are used • Improved metrics that compare to industry • Involvement with the industry

  28. Demonstrating Performance Improvement • Behaviors • Highly accountable organization • Supervisors consistently reinforce expectations • Equipment failures are considered organizational failures • We find and fix our problems

  29. A B C D E 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 9 Potential Stages of Power Plants

  30. Common Warning Flags & Factors • Overconfidence • Isolationism • Production Priorities • Safety is assumed and not explicitly emphasized • Significance of issues underplayed • Operations and Engineering: • Poor application of fundamentals • Erosion of design margins • Poor Change Management • Defensive Leaders • Poor Self-Critical Behaviors

  31. Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you CHOOSE to react to it!

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