The divers most likely came from San Onofre's ICI thimble replacement project. SCE used a new, NRC-approved way of tracking whole-body exposure when working in non-uniform fields. The methods are outlined in ANSI N13.41. Assuming I have this all right, it works like this:
Instead of using the highest-reading whole body dosimeter for recording the exposure to the whole body, each section of the whole body is given "compartment factors". The dosimeter reading for each of these "compartments" is multiplied by a weighting factor. Each of these "compartment doses" are then added together for the assigned whole body exposure.
Chest = 0.88 (thorax, abdomen, pelvis)
Head and neck = 0.10
Upper Arm = 0.005 (each arm)
Thigh = 0.005 (each thigh)
Based on what I saw with the divers' doses during this project, this does result in a lower assigned whole-body dose (relative to this project, anyway).
I'm still trying to wrap my head around this "new" way of dealing with non-uniform field exposures, but it seems to work and appears to be a more realistic assignment of dose. I guess we'll just have to wait and see what the NRC decides to do relative to the rest of the industry.