Atomic Safety and Licensing Board; In the Matter of: U.S. Department of Energy: (High-Level Waste Repository: Pre-Application Matters, Advisory PAPO Board); Notice and Memorandum, 13256-13258 [E8-4918]
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13256
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 49 / Wednesday, March 12, 2008 / Notices
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
class mail as of the time of deposit in
the mail, or by courier, express mail, or
expedited delivery service upon
depositing the document with the
provider of the service.
Non-timely requests and/or petitions
and contentions will not be entertained
absent a determination by the
Commission, the presiding officer, or
the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board
that the petition and/or request should
be granted and/or the contentions
should be admitted, based on a
balancing of the factors specified in 10
CFR 2.309(c)(1)(i)–(viii). To be timely,
filings must be submitted no later than
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the due
date. Documents submitted in
adjudicatory proceedings will appear in
NRC’s electronic hearing docket which
is available to the public at: https://
ehd.nrc.gov/EHD_Proceeding/home.asp,
unless excluded pursuant to an order of
the Commission, an Atomic Safety and
Licensing Board, or a Presiding Officer.
Participants are requested not to include
personal privacy information, such as
social security numbers, home
addresses, or home phone numbers in
their filings. With respect to copyrighted
works, except for limited excerpts that
serve the purpose of the adjudicatory
filings and would constitute a Fair Use
application, Participants are requested
not to include copyrighted materials in
their submissions.
For further details with respect to this
license amendment application, see the
application for amendment dated
February 29, 2008, which is available
for public inspection at the
Commission’s PDR, located at One
White Flint North, File Public Area O1
F21, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor),
Rockville, Maryland. Publicly available
records will be accessible electronically
from the Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System’s
(ADAMS) Public Electronic Reading
Room on the Internet at the NRC Web
site, https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. Persons who do not have
access to ADAMS or who encounter
problems in accessing the documents
located in ADAMS, should contact the
NRC PDR Reference staff by telephone
at 1–800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or
by e-mail to pdr@nrc.gov.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 5th day
of March 2008.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Peter S. Tam,
Senior Project Manager, Plant Licensing
Branch III–1, Division of Operating Reactor
Licensing, Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation.
[FR Doc. E8–4913 Filed 3–11–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY
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[Docket No. PAPO–001; ASLBP No. 08–861–
01–PAPO–BD01]
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board; In
the Matter of: U.S. Department of
Energy: (High-Level Waste Repository:
Pre-Application Matters, Advisory
PAPO Board); Notice and
Memorandum (Requesting Information
From Potential Parties)
March 6, 2008.
Before Administrative Judges: Thomas S.
Moore, Chairman; G. Paul Bollwerk, III; E.
Roy Hawkens.
I. Introduction
On December 13, 2007, the
Commission authorized the
establishment of an Advisory PreLicense Application Presiding Officer
Board (Advisory PAPO Board) to obtain
input from potential parties 1 on the
broad range of procedural matters
expected to arise from, and associated
case management requirements that
could be imposed in, any adjudication
regarding an application by the
Department of Energy (DOE) for
authorization to construct a high-level
waste (HLW) repository at Yucca
Mountain, Nevada.2 Pursuant to this
authority, this Board was established on
February 13, 2008.3 This memorandum
is the first request from this Board for
information from potential parties to the
HLW repository proceeding on the
construction permit application of
DOE.4
II. Requests for Information
A. Request for Information From Any
Potential Parties
The Nuclear Waste Policy Act of
1982, as amended, sets a three-year time
period, with the possibility of a one-year
extension, for the NRC to review and
make a licensing determination on the
application for the construction of the
1 ‘‘Potential party,’’ as it is used here, means DOE,
the NRC Staff, the State of Nevada, and any person
or entity that meets the definitions of ‘‘party,’’
‘‘potential party,’’ or ‘‘interested governmental
participant’’ under 10 CFR 2.1001.
2 Staff Requirements Memorandum COMSECY–
07–0030—Requesting Authority to Issue Case
Management Orders in High-Level Waste
Proceeding Prior to the Issuance of a Notice of
Opportunity for Hearing (Dec. 13, 2007).
3 See 73 FR 9358 (Feb. 20, 2008).
4 To ensure a wide dissemination of this
Memorandum, it is being published in the Federal
Register. It is also being served on the service list
for the PAPO proceeding, docket number PAPO–00,
which the Secretary of the Commission has
incorporated as the initial service list for this
proceeding.
PO 00000
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HLW repository.5 Appendix D of 10
CFR Part 2 establishes a schedule, based
upon the time period prescribed by the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act, for the
adjudication arising from challenges to
the DOE license application, and 10
CFR 2.1026 mandates that licensing
boards in the HLW proceeding meet this
schedule.6
The schedule in the Commission’s
regulations is rigorous, considering the
potential complexity of the HLW
proceeding,7 with initial deadlines for
the filing of contentions, answers to
those contentions, and replies to
answers due in relatively short order
following the issuance of the initial
hearing opportunity notice. Pursuant to
10 CFR 2.309(b)(2), potential parties
(i.e., petitioners) must file petitions to
intervene containing contentions within
30 days of the date of publication of the
Notice of Opportunity for Hearing in the
Federal Register.8 Thereafter, Appendix
D requires applicant DOE, the NRC staff,
and any other potential party
challenging the admission of
contentions to file answers to any
intervention petitions within 25 days.9
After DOE, the NRC staff, and any other
potential party challenging contention
admissibility file their answers,
potential parties (i.e., petitioners) have 7
days within which to file replies.10
If potential parties request extensions
of time for filing answers or replies, the
authority of any licensing board is
expressly limited to extensions of an
additional 15 days.11 All requests for
extensions of time in excess of 15 days
must be referred to the Commission.12
As a consequence, if licensing boards
are to manage realistically these
proceedings within the schedule set out
in Appendix D, it is imperative that
procedural standards be developed at
the outset to organize potential party
submissions.
Before we request input on such
procedural standards from potential
parties, however, we need a realistic
estimation of the scope of the challenge
we (and the potential parties) face.
Accordingly, we request the following:
1. Each potential party considering
filing a petition to intervene should
5 Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as amended,
section 114(d), 42 U.S.C. 10134(d).
6 See 10 CFR Part 2, App. D; 10 CFR 2.1026(a).
7 The Commission has acknowledged the
potential complexity of the HLW repository
proceeding. See 69 FR 2182, 2204 (Jan. 14, 2004).
8 10 CFR 2.309(b)(2)
9 CFR Part 2, App. D (Day 55).
10 Id. (Day 62).
11 CFR 2.1026(b)(1).
12 10 CFR 2.1026(b)(2).
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 49 / Wednesday, March 12, 2008 / Notices
provide us with its current, best, goodfaith estimate of the number of initial
contentions it intends to file, using the
number ranges provided below.
We recognize that until DOE files,
inter alia, a license application, no
potential party will know definitively
how many contentions it will file or the
subject matter of its contentions, so an
exact figure is not possible. Thus, we are
seeking only best, good-faith estimates,
nothing more. Further, because we are
seeking this information for the purpose
of developing standards for the effective
and efficient management of the
proceeding, potential party estimates
will be used solely and exclusively for
that purpose, and no other, and is
without prejudice to the potential
party’s ability subsequently to file a
larger (or smaller) number of
contentions.
pwalker on PROD1PC71 with NOTICES
Estimated Number of Contentions
(1) 1–10
(2) 11–25
(3) 26–50
(4) 50–100
(5) 101–250
(6) 251–500
(7) 501–1000
(8) 1001–2000
(9) 2001–3000
(10) 3001+
2. DOE, the NRC Staff, and any
potential party challenging the
admissibility of contentions should
provide a best, good-faith estimate of the
number of days it realistically will need
to file reasoned answers to each range
of contentions listed above to aid the
licensing boards in resolving the
admissibility of contentions. In
estimating the time it will take to file
such reasoned answers, DOE and any
potential party challenging the
admissibility of contentions should
keep in mind that 10 CFR Part 2,
Subpart J eliminates the apparent need
in other proceedings for applicants and
other challengers of contention
admissibility to challenge the
admissibility of all proffered
contentions to preserve the right to an
interlocutory appeal of a licensing
board’s ruling admitting any
contention.13 Instead, Subpart J
provides for an interlocutory appeal to
the Commission on a licensing board’s
contention admissibility decisions
regardless of whether the party took the
initial position that the petition should
have been ‘‘wholly denied.’’ 14
13 See 10 CFR 2.311(c) (allowing interlocutory
appeal of licensing board decision granting petition
to intervene only if issue is ‘‘whether the request/
petition should have been wholly denied’’).
14 10 CFR 2.1015(b); see also 10 CFR Part 2, App.
D (Day 110).
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3. Each potential party expecting to
file a petition to intervene should
provide a best, good-faith estimate of the
number of days it realistically will need
to file replies to the answers, keeping in
mind that the filing of a reply is the first
(and only written) opportunity a
petitioner has to defend its contentions.
Again, we recognize that at this stage
before the application has been filed
plans for filing contentions have not
been finalized. We emphasize, however,
that we are only looking for best, goodfaith estimates to establish a format for
the filing of contentions that will best
enable the Appendix D schedule to be
met. Whether they support or oppose
the potential DOE application, any
potential parties that are reluctant to
cooperate should realize that the work
of the Advisory PAPO Board is intended
to assist them in meeting deadlines once
an application is filed.15
B. Request for Information From DOE
Our goal in issuing this Memorandum
is, among other things, to obtain
information to better enable us to
propose to potential parties for
comment one or more potential
organizational structures that will
ensure (1) each contention is clear on its
face in addressing each of the
admissibility requirements of section
2.309(f)(1)(i)–(vi); (2) those opposing the
admissibility of a contention are able
readily to identify and challenge only
those portions of a contention that fail
to meet the admissibility requirements
of section 2.309(f)(1)(i)–(vi); (3)
potential parties are able effectively to
defend the admissibility of their
contentions in any reply pleadings; and
(4) licensing boards are able to see how
each contention addresses the factors in
section 2.309(f)(1) and what challenges
and defenses have been interposed
relative to that contention, in order to
make a timely, reasoned decision
regarding whether each contention is
admissible.
One approach we believe could
provide an organizational structure that
15 In this regard, although we recognize that the
State of Nevada consistently has maintained that its
ability to provide an estimate of the number of
contentions is severely constrained by its lack of
access to the application and its major supporting
documentation, such as the total system
performance assessment model/analysis for the
license application, see, e.g., Motion to Strike DOE’s
October 19, 2007 LSN Recertification and to
Suspend Certification of Others Until DOE Validly
Recertifies (Oct. 29, 2007) at 34, we are hopeful its
ability to make a best, good-faith estimate may be
enhanced considerably by DOE’s apparent recent
submission of that document into the Licensing
Support Network. See Total System Performance
Assessment Model/Analysis for the License
Application Volume I, Volume II, and Volume III
(C), LSN Accession No. DEN001574936.
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13257
would accomplish these purposes
would be to label contentions in a way
that models the Table of Contents (TOC)
of the DOE License Application to show
the specific portion of the application
being challenged, which petitioners are
required to demonstrate under 10 CFR
2.309(f)(1)(vi) when contentions are
filed. In addition, knowing the level of
granularity of DOE’s TOC may assist the
Board to develop a proposal regarding
the specificity necessary for petitioners
to state their issues of law or fact to be
controverted under section 2.309(f)(1)(i).
Contentions that are modeled on the
TOC might in turn assist those who will
be filing answers, including DOE, to
ascertain quickly the focus of the
contention and to challenge directly, as
necessary, the admissibility of
contentions in a timely manner.
To enable us to develop this proposal,
it would be helpful if DOE would file
the current draft version of the TOC of
its License Application. If DOE has a
legitimate reason which it believes
precludes it from filing the draft TOC
for the entire License Application, we
request that it file the draft TOC for the
general information section of the
License Application.16 If DOE believes it
has a legitimate reason that precludes it
from filing the draft TOC for the general
information section, we request that it
provide a full description of the level of
detail (i.e., complete hierarchical
structure) that it plans to use in the
TOC. If DOE chooses not to file any part
of the draft TOC, we also request that it
explain fully its reasons for withholding
the TOC so we, in turn, can explain to
the Commission the reason DOE has
been unable to aid our efforts to make
the HLW proceeding more efficient for
all involved.17
III. Filing and Service
The first filing by any potential party
wishing to respond that has not filed a
notice of appearance in the initial PAPO
proceeding, docket number PAPO–00,
should be accompanied by a notice of
appearance from that potential party’s
authorized representative or counsel
containing all required information
under 10 CFR 2.314(b). The notice of
appearance will provide the information
necessary to establish and maintain a
service list, so that participants can be
accurately identified and duly notified
16 See 10 CFR 63.21(a), (b); see also Office of
Nuclear Materials Safety & Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Comm’n, Yucca Mountain Review Plan,
NUREG–1804, at 1–1 to 1–31 (rev. 2 July 2003).
17 Additionally, if DOE declines to provide the
application TOC, it should suggest an alternative
organizational structure for contentions that can be
utilized by potential intervenors without having to
await the filing of its HLW application.
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13258
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 49 / Wednesday, March 12, 2008 / Notices
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during this advisory phase of the
proceeding.18
Responses to this memorandum and
any other responses to information or
requests for input from the Advisory
PAPO Board must be submitted and
served electronically through the NRC’s
Electronic Information Exchange (EIE)
system, docket number PAPO–001.
Potential parties that already have been
participating in the PAPO proceeding,
docket number PAPO–00, and using the
EIE system do not need to do anything
additional to be able to file in this
Advisory PAPO proceeding. Those that
have not been participating in the PAPO
proceeding but wish to make
submissions before this Board should
consult the NRC’s Web site, which
provides detailed instructions on the
steps necessary to access and make EIE
submissions, including (1) obtaining a
digital certificate from the NRC Office of
the Secretary and installing that
certificate into the participant’s Web
browser (https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/
e-submittals/apply-certificates.html); (2)
loading the viewer software currently
needed to submit and view documents
in the EIE system (https://www.nrc.gov/
site-help/e-submittals/installviewer.html); (3) creating a document in
the portable document format (PDF)
suitable for EIE submission (https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/electronic-subref-mat.html); and (4) accessing the EIE
Web site and submitting the document
(https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals/submit-documents.html). A
potential party that is not currently
participating in the PAPO proceeding
and using EIE should begin this process
no less than five days before it wishes
to make an initial submission. In
submitting their responses, potential
parties should make sure they are filing
them on this docket, PAPO–001, which
is denominated as the ‘‘Advisory PAPO
Board’’ on the dropdown list of
proceedings that is part of the EIE filing
form.
We request that all potential parties
(including DOE and the NRC Staff)
provide us with a filing that includes
the information described above in Part
II.A and that in its filing DOE also
provide us with the information
described above in Part II.B. All filings
should be submitted through the
agency’s EIE system and served on the
service list for the Advisory PAPO
Board proceeding, docket number
PAPO–001, by Monday, March 24, 2008.
18 We caution that for potential parties that have
not already been participating in the PAPO
proceeding, docket number PAPO–00, filing a
notice of appearance with this Advisory PAPO
Board, docket number PAPO–001, will not suffice
for participation in the PAPO proceeding.
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March 6, 2008, Rockville, Maryland.
The Advisory Pre-License Application,
Presiding Officer Board.
Thomas S. Moore,
Chairman, Administrative Judge.
G. Paul Bollwerk, III,
Administrative Judge.
E. Roy Hawkens,
Administrative Judge.
[FR Doc. E8–4918 Filed 3–11–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
Proposed License Renewal Interim
Staff Guidance LR–ISG–2008–01: Staff
Guidance Regarding the Station
Blackout Rule (10 CFR 50.63);
Associated With License Renewal
Applications; Solicitation of Public
Comment
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
Solicitation of public comment.
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is soliciting public
comment on its Proposed License
Renewal Interim Staff Guidance LR–
ISG–2008–01 (LR–ISG) for clarification
to its previously issued LR–ISG–02,
‘‘Staff Guidance on Scoping of
Equipment Relied on to Meet the
Requirements of the Station Blackout
(SBO) Rule (10 CFR 50.63) for License
Renewal,’’ dated April 1, 2002, which
has been incorporated in the License
Renewal Standard Review Plan. This
LR–ISG provides additional clarification
to the staff position on the license
renewal scoping requirements regarding
the offsite power system for SBO
recovery. The NRC staff issues LR–ISGs
to facilitate timely implementation of
the license renewal rule and to review
activities associated with a license
renewal application. Upon receiving
public comments, the NRC staff will
evaluate the comments and make a
determination to incorporate the
comments, as appropriate. Once the
NRC staff completes the LR–ISG, it will
issue the LR–ISG for NRC and industry
use. The NRC staff will also incorporate
the approved LR–ISG into the next
revision of the license renewal guidance
documents.
SUMMARY:
Comments may be submitted by
May 12, 2008. Comments received after
this date will be considered, if it is
practical to do so, but the Commission
is able to ensure consideration only for
comments received on or before this
date.
DATES:
PO 00000
Frm 00069
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Comments may be
submitted to: Chief, Rulemaking,
Directives and Editing Branch, Office of
Administration, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001. Comments should be delivered to:
11545 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland, Room T–6D59, between 7:30
a.m. and 4:15 p.m. on Federal workdays.
Persons may also provide comments via
e-mail at NRCREP@NRC.GOV. The NRC
maintains an Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS), which provides text and
image files of NRC’s public documents.
These documents may be accessed
through the NRC’s Public Electronic
Reading Room on the Internet at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. Persons who do not have
access to ADAMS or who encounter
problems in accessing the documents
located in ADAMS should contact the
NRC Public Document Room (PDR)
reference staff at 1–800–397–4209, 301–
415–4737, or by e-mail at pdr@nrc.gov.
ADDRESSES:
Ms.
Stacie Sakai, Project Manager, Office of
Nuclear Reactor Regulation, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555–0001; telephone
301–415–1884 or by e-mail at
sxs11@nrc.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Attachment 1 to this Federal Register
notice, entitled Staff Position and
Rationale for the Proposed License
Renewal Interim Staff Guidance LR–
ISG–2008–01: Staff Guidance Regarding
the Station Blackout Rule (10 CFR
50.63) Associated with License Renewal
Applications,’’ contains the NRC staff’s
rationale for publishing the proposed
LR–ISG–2008–01. Attachment 2 to this
Federal Register notice, entitled
Proposed License Renewal Interim Staff
Guidance LR–ISG–2008–01: Staff
Guidance Regarding the Station
Blackout Rule (10 CFR 50.63)
Associated with License Renewal
Applications,’’ contains the additional
clarification to the current staff position
on the license renewal SBO scoping
requirements.
The NRC staff is issuing this notice to
solicit public comments on the
proposed LR–ISG–2008–01. After the
NRC staff considers any public
comments, it will make a determination
regarding issuance of the proposed LR–
ISG.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland this 5th day
of March, 2008.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 49 (Wednesday, March 12, 2008)]
[Notices]
[Pages 13256-13258]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-4918]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[Docket No. PAPO-001; ASLBP No. 08-861-01-PAPO-BD01]
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board; In the Matter of: U.S.
Department of Energy: (High-Level Waste Repository: Pre-Application
Matters, Advisory PAPO Board); Notice and Memorandum (Requesting
Information From Potential Parties)
March 6, 2008.
Before Administrative Judges: Thomas S. Moore, Chairman; G. Paul
Bollwerk, III; E. Roy Hawkens.
I. Introduction
On December 13, 2007, the Commission authorized the establishment
of an Advisory Pre-License Application Presiding Officer Board
(Advisory PAPO Board) to obtain input from potential parties \1\ on the
broad range of procedural matters expected to arise from, and
associated case management requirements that could be imposed in, any
adjudication regarding an application by the Department of Energy (DOE)
for authorization to construct a high-level waste (HLW) repository at
Yucca Mountain, Nevada.\2\ Pursuant to this authority, this Board was
established on February 13, 2008.\3\ This memorandum is the first
request from this Board for information from potential parties to the
HLW repository proceeding on the construction permit application of
DOE.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Potential party,'' as it is used here, means DOE, the NRC
Staff, the State of Nevada, and any person or entity that meets the
definitions of ``party,'' ``potential party,'' or ``interested
governmental participant'' under 10 CFR 2.1001.
\2\ Staff Requirements Memorandum COMSECY-07-0030--Requesting
Authority to Issue Case Management Orders in High-Level Waste
Proceeding Prior to the Issuance of a Notice of Opportunity for
Hearing (Dec. 13, 2007).
\3\ See 73 FR 9358 (Feb. 20, 2008).
\4\ To ensure a wide dissemination of this Memorandum, it is
being published in the Federal Register. It is also being served on
the service list for the PAPO proceeding, docket number PAPO-00,
which the Secretary of the Commission has incorporated as the
initial service list for this proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Requests for Information
A. Request for Information From Any Potential Parties
The Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as amended, sets a three-year
time period, with the possibility of a one-year extension, for the NRC
to review and make a licensing determination on the application for the
construction of the HLW repository.\5\ Appendix D of 10 CFR Part 2
establishes a schedule, based upon the time period prescribed by the
Nuclear Waste Policy Act, for the adjudication arising from challenges
to the DOE license application, and 10 CFR 2.1026 mandates that
licensing boards in the HLW proceeding meet this schedule.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982, as amended, section
114(d), 42 U.S.C. 10134(d). 5
\6\ See 10 CFR Part 2, App. D; 10 CFR 2.1026(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The schedule in the Commission's regulations is rigorous,
considering the potential complexity of the HLW proceeding,\7\ with
initial deadlines for the filing of contentions, answers to those
contentions, and replies to answers due in relatively short order
following the issuance of the initial hearing opportunity notice.
Pursuant to 10 CFR 2.309(b)(2), potential parties (i.e., petitioners)
must file petitions to intervene containing contentions within 30 days
of the date of publication of the Notice of Opportunity for Hearing in
the Federal Register.\8\ Thereafter, Appendix D requires applicant DOE,
the NRC staff, and any other potential party challenging the admission
of contentions to file answers to any intervention petitions within 25
days.\9\ After DOE, the NRC staff, and any other potential party
challenging contention admissibility file their answers, potential
parties (i.e., petitioners) have 7 days within which to file
replies.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The Commission has acknowledged the potential complexity of
the HLW repository proceeding. See 69 FR 2182, 2204 (Jan. 14, 2004).
\8\ 10 CFR 2.309(b)(2)
\9\ CFR Part 2, App. D (Day 55).
\10\ Id. (Day 62).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If potential parties request extensions of time for filing answers
or replies, the authority of any licensing board is expressly limited
to extensions of an additional 15 days.\11\ All requests for extensions
of time in excess of 15 days must be referred to the Commission.\12\ As
a consequence, if licensing boards are to manage realistically these
proceedings within the schedule set out in Appendix D, it is imperative
that procedural standards be developed at the outset to organize
potential party submissions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ CFR 2.1026(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 10 CFR 2.1026(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before we request input on such procedural standards from potential
parties, however, we need a realistic estimation of the scope of the
challenge we (and the potential parties) face. Accordingly, we request
the following:
1. Each potential party considering filing a petition to intervene
should
[[Page 13257]]
provide us with its current, best, good-faith estimate of the number of
initial contentions it intends to file, using the number ranges
provided below.
We recognize that until DOE files, inter alia, a license
application, no potential party will know definitively how many
contentions it will file or the subject matter of its contentions, so
an exact figure is not possible. Thus, we are seeking only best, good-
faith estimates, nothing more. Further, because we are seeking this
information for the purpose of developing standards for the effective
and efficient management of the proceeding, potential party estimates
will be used solely and exclusively for that purpose, and no other, and
is without prejudice to the potential party's ability subsequently to
file a larger (or smaller) number of contentions.
Estimated Number of Contentions
(1) 1-10
(2) 11-25
(3) 26-50
(4) 50-100
(5) 101-250
(6) 251-500
(7) 501-1000
(8) 1001-2000
(9) 2001-3000
(10) 3001+
2. DOE, the NRC Staff, and any potential party challenging the
admissibility of contentions should provide a best, good-faith estimate
of the number of days it realistically will need to file reasoned
answers to each range of contentions listed above to aid the licensing
boards in resolving the admissibility of contentions. In estimating the
time it will take to file such reasoned answers, DOE and any potential
party challenging the admissibility of contentions should keep in mind
that 10 CFR Part 2, Subpart J eliminates the apparent need in other
proceedings for applicants and other challengers of contention
admissibility to challenge the admissibility of all proffered
contentions to preserve the right to an interlocutory appeal of a
licensing board's ruling admitting any contention.\13\ Instead, Subpart
J provides for an interlocutory appeal to the Commission on a licensing
board's contention admissibility decisions regardless of whether the
party took the initial position that the petition should have been
``wholly denied.'' \14\
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\13\ See 10 CFR 2.311(c) (allowing interlocutory appeal of
licensing board decision granting petition to intervene only if
issue is ``whether the request/petition should have been wholly
denied'').
\14\ 10 CFR 2.1015(b); see also 10 CFR Part 2, App. D (Day 110).
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3. Each potential party expecting to file a petition to intervene
should provide a best, good-faith estimate of the number of days it
realistically will need to file replies to the answers, keeping in mind
that the filing of a reply is the first (and only written) opportunity
a petitioner has to defend its contentions.
Again, we recognize that at this stage before the application has
been filed plans for filing contentions have not been finalized. We
emphasize, however, that we are only looking for best, good-faith
estimates to establish a format for the filing of contentions that will
best enable the Appendix D schedule to be met. Whether they support or
oppose the potential DOE application, any potential parties that are
reluctant to cooperate should realize that the work of the Advisory
PAPO Board is intended to assist them in meeting deadlines once an
application is filed.\15\
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\15\ In this regard, although we recognize that the State of
Nevada consistently has maintained that its ability to provide an
estimate of the number of contentions is severely constrained by its
lack of access to the application and its major supporting
documentation, such as the total system performance assessment
model/analysis for the license application, see, e.g., Motion to
Strike DOE's October 19, 2007 LSN Recertification and to Suspend
Certification of Others Until DOE Validly Recertifies (Oct. 29,
2007) at 34, we are hopeful its ability to make a best, good-faith
estimate may be enhanced considerably by DOE's apparent recent
submission of that document into the Licensing Support Network. See
Total System Performance Assessment Model/Analysis for the License
Application Volume I, Volume II, and Volume III (C), LSN Accession
No. DEN001574936.
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B. Request for Information From DOE
Our goal in issuing this Memorandum is, among other things, to
obtain information to better enable us to propose to potential parties
for comment one or more potential organizational structures that will
ensure (1) each contention is clear on its face in addressing each of
the admissibility requirements of section 2.309(f)(1)(i)-(vi); (2)
those opposing the admissibility of a contention are able readily to
identify and challenge only those portions of a contention that fail to
meet the admissibility requirements of section 2.309(f)(1)(i)-(vi); (3)
potential parties are able effectively to defend the admissibility of
their contentions in any reply pleadings; and (4) licensing boards are
able to see how each contention addresses the factors in section
2.309(f)(1) and what challenges and defenses have been interposed
relative to that contention, in order to make a timely, reasoned
decision regarding whether each contention is admissible.
One approach we believe could provide an organizational structure
that would accomplish these purposes would be to label contentions in a
way that models the Table of Contents (TOC) of the DOE License
Application to show the specific portion of the application being
challenged, which petitioners are required to demonstrate under 10 CFR
2.309(f)(1)(vi) when contentions are filed. In addition, knowing the
level of granularity of DOE's TOC may assist the Board to develop a
proposal regarding the specificity necessary for petitioners to state
their issues of law or fact to be controverted under section
2.309(f)(1)(i). Contentions that are modeled on the TOC might in turn
assist those who will be filing answers, including DOE, to ascertain
quickly the focus of the contention and to challenge directly, as
necessary, the admissibility of contentions in a timely manner.
To enable us to develop this proposal, it would be helpful if DOE
would file the current draft version of the TOC of its License
Application. If DOE has a legitimate reason which it believes precludes
it from filing the draft TOC for the entire License Application, we
request that it file the draft TOC for the general information section
of the License Application.\16\ If DOE believes it has a legitimate
reason that precludes it from filing the draft TOC for the general
information section, we request that it provide a full description of
the level of detail (i.e., complete hierarchical structure) that it
plans to use in the TOC. If DOE chooses not to file any part of the
draft TOC, we also request that it explain fully its reasons for
withholding the TOC so we, in turn, can explain to the Commission the
reason DOE has been unable to aid our efforts to make the HLW
proceeding more efficient for all involved.\17\
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\16\ See 10 CFR 63.21(a), (b); see also Office of Nuclear
Materials Safety & Safeguards, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, Yucca
Mountain Review Plan, NUREG-1804, at 1-1 to 1-31 (rev. 2 July 2003).
\17\ Additionally, if DOE declines to provide the application
TOC, it should suggest an alternative organizational structure for
contentions that can be utilized by potential intervenors without
having to await the filing of its HLW application.
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III. Filing and Service
The first filing by any potential party wishing to respond that has
not filed a notice of appearance in the initial PAPO proceeding, docket
number PAPO-00, should be accompanied by a notice of appearance from
that potential party's authorized representative or counsel containing
all required information under 10 CFR 2.314(b). The notice of
appearance will provide the information necessary to establish and
maintain a service list, so that participants can be accurately
identified and duly notified
[[Page 13258]]
during this advisory phase of the proceeding.\18\
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\18\ We caution that for potential parties that have not already
been participating in the PAPO proceeding, docket number PAPO-00,
filing a notice of appearance with this Advisory PAPO Board, docket
number PAPO-001, will not suffice for participation in the PAPO
proceeding.
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Responses to this memorandum and any other responses to information
or requests for input from the Advisory PAPO Board must be submitted
and served electronically through the NRC's Electronic Information
Exchange (EIE) system, docket number PAPO-001. Potential parties that
already have been participating in the PAPO proceeding, docket number
PAPO-00, and using the EIE system do not need to do anything additional
to be able to file in this Advisory PAPO proceeding. Those that have
not been participating in the PAPO proceeding but wish to make
submissions before this Board should consult the NRC's Web site, which
provides detailed instructions on the steps necessary to access and
make EIE submissions, including (1) obtaining a digital certificate
from the NRC Office of the Secretary and installing that certificate
into the participant's Web browser (https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-
submittals/apply-certificates.html); (2) loading the viewer software
currently needed to submit and view documents in the EIE system (http:/
/www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/install-viewer.html); (3) creating
a document in the portable document format (PDF) suitable for EIE
submission (https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/electronic-sub-ref-mat.html);
and (4) accessing the EIE Web site and submitting the document (https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/submit-documents.html). A potential
party that is not currently participating in the PAPO proceeding and
using EIE should begin this process no less than five days before it
wishes to make an initial submission. In submitting their responses,
potential parties should make sure they are filing them on this docket,
PAPO-001, which is denominated as the ``Advisory PAPO Board'' on the
dropdown list of proceedings that is part of the EIE filing form.
We request that all potential parties (including DOE and the NRC
Staff) provide us with a filing that includes the information described
above in Part II.A and that in its filing DOE also provide us with the
information described above in Part II.B. All filings should be
submitted through the agency's EIE system and served on the service
list for the Advisory PAPO Board proceeding, docket number PAPO-001, by
Monday, March 24, 2008.
March 6, 2008, Rockville, Maryland.
The Advisory Pre-License Application, Presiding Officer Board.
Thomas S. Moore,
Chairman, Administrative Judge.
G. Paul Bollwerk, III,
Administrative Judge.
E. Roy Hawkens,
Administrative Judge.
[FR Doc. E8-4918 Filed 3-11-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P