In the Matter of Michael P. Cooley; Order Prohibiting Involvement in NRC-Licensed Activities, 14748-14751 [2014-05794]
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 51 / Monday, March 17, 2014 / Notices
dispute. After consulting with a sample
of people involved with the collection
of this information, the time to complete
this information collection is estimated
to average 15 minutes per response,
including gathering the data needed and
completion and review of the
information. However, the estimated
hour burden costs of the respondents
may vary due to the complexity of the
specific question in dispute. The
revision of the form requiring a new
application for every craft or class will
have little effect on the number of
application submitted. In 2012 and
2013, no applications were filed that
included a request for representation
services for more than one craft or class.
The application form is available from
the NMB’s Office of Legal Affairs and is
also available on the Internet at https://
www.nmb.gov/representation/
rapply.html
12. The total annualized Federal cost
is $846.98. This includes the costs of
printing and mailing the forms upon
request of the parties. The completed
applications are maintained by the
Office of Legal Affairs.
a. Printing cost: $ 80.00.
b. Mailing costs: $ 9.54.
Basis (mail cost): Forms are requested
approximately 3 times per year and it
takes 5 minutes to prepare the form for
mail.
Postage cost = $1.44
3 (times per year) × .48 (cost of postage)
Staff cost = $8.10
$.54 per minute (GS 9/10 $64,787 =
$32.48 per hr. ÷ 60)
$.54 × 5 minutes per mailing = $2.70
$2.70 × 3 times per year = $8.10
Total Mailing Costs = $9.54
c. Processing Cost=$756.00.
Basis (processing cost):
Representation is requested
approximately 70 times oer year and it
takes 20 minutes to process each
application.
Staff Cost= $756.00
$.54 per minute (GS 9/10 $64,787 =
$32.48 per hr. ÷ 60)
$.54 × 20 minutes per mailing = $10.80
$10.80 × 70 times per year = $756.00
13. Item 13—no change in annual
reporting and recordkeeping hour
burden.
14. The information collected by the
application will not be published.
15. The NMB will display the OMB
expiration date on the form.
16(a)—the form does not reduce the
burden on small entities; however, the
burden is minimized and voluntary.
16(b)—the form does not indicate the
retention period for record keeping
requirements.
16(c)—the form is not part of a
statistical survey.
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Requests for copies of the proposed
information collection request may be
accessed from www.nmb.gov or should
be addressed to Denise Murdock, NMB,
1301 K Street NW., Suite 250 E,
Washington, DC 20005 or addressed to
the email address murdock@nmb.gov or
faxed to 202–692–5081. Please specify
the complete title of the information
collection when making your request.
Comments regarding burden and/or
the collection activity requirements, as
well as comments on any legal and
substantive issues raised, should be
directed to Samantha Williams at 202–
692–5010 or via Internet address
williams@nmb.gov. Individuals who use
a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD/TDY) may call the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8339.
[FR Doc. 2014–05726 Filed 3–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7550–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[NRC–2014–0001]
Sunshine Act Meeting Notice
Weeks of March 17, 24, 31, April
7, 14, 21, 2014.
PLACE: Commissioners’ Conference
Room, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland.
STATUS: Public and Closed.
DATE:
Week of March 17, 2014
Friday, March 21, 2014
1 p.m. Briefing on Waste Confidence
Rulemaking (Public Meeting);
(Contact: Andrew Imboden, 301–
287–9220)
This meeting will be webcast live at
the Web address—https://www.nrc.gov/.
Week of April 14, 2014—Tentative
There are no meetings scheduled for
the week of April 14, 2014.
Week of April 21, 2014—Tentative
There are no meetings scheduled for
the week of April 21, 2014.
*
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The schedule for Commission
meetings is subject to change on short
notice. To verify the status of meetings,
call (recording)—301–415–1292.
Contact person for more information:
Rochelle Bavol, 301–415–1651.
*
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The NRC Commission Meeting
Schedule can be found on the Internet
at: https://www.nrc.gov/public-involve/
public-meetings/schedule.html.
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The NRC provides reasonable
accommodation to individuals with
disabilities where appropriate. If you
need a reasonable accommodation to
participate in these public meetings, or
need this meeting notice or the
transcript or other information from the
public meetings in another format (e.g.
braille, large print), please notify
Kimberly Meyer, NRC Disability
Program Manager, at 301–287–0727, or
by email at Kimberly.MeyerChambers@nrc.gov. Determinations on
requests for reasonable accommodation
will be made on a case-by-case basis.
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Members of the public may request to
receive this information electronically.
If you would like to be added to the
distribution, please contact the Office of
the Secretary, Washington, DC 20555
(301–415–1969), or send an email to
Darlene.Wright@nrc.gov.
Dated: March 13, 2014.
Rochelle Bavol,
Policy Coordinator, Office of the Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2014–05915 Filed 3–13–14; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
Week of March 24, 2014—Tentative
There are no meetings scheduled for
the week of March 24, 2014.
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
Week of March 31, 2014—Tentative
[NRC–2014–0051; IA–12–045]
There are no meetings scheduled for
the week of March 31, 2014.
Week of April 7, 2014—Tentative
In the Matter of Michael P. Cooley;
Order Prohibiting Involvement in NRCLicensed Activities
Thursday April 10, 2014
I
9 a.m. Meeting with Organization of
Agreement States (OAS) and
Conference of Radiation Control
Program Directors (CRCPD) (Public
Meeting); (Contact: Cindy Flannery,
301–415–0223).
This meeting will be webcast live at
the Web address—https://www.nrc.gov/.
Michael P. Cooley is a former
Environmental Health and Safety
Specialist, for Shaw, Stone & Webster
(Shaw) at South Carolina Electric & Gas
Company’s Virgil C. Summer Nuclear
Station (Licensee). The licensee is the
holder of License No. NPF–12 issued by
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
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Commission (NRC) pursuant to Part 50
of Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (10 CFR) on August 6, 1982,
and renewed on April 23, 2004. The
license authorizes the operation of the
Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Station
(facility) in accordance with the
conditions specified therein. The
facility is located on the licensee’s site
in Jenkinsville, South Carolina.
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II
On January 16, 2013, an investigation
was completed by the NRC’s Office of
Investigations (OI). The purpose of the
investigation was to review the facts and
circumstances surrounding Mr. Michael
P. Cooley’s actions with respect to his
completion of a V. C. Summer Personnel
History Questionnaire (PHQ) to obtain
unescorted access authorization (UAA)
to the facility.
In Section III of the PHQ titled
‘‘Criminal History Self-Disclosure,’’ Mr.
Cooley answered ‘‘no’’ to a question
that, in part, asked, ‘‘Have you ever been
held, detained, taken into custody,
charged, arrested, indicted, convicted
for a violation of law, regulation, or
ordinance (e.g., felony, misdemeanor,
traffic, etc.), or do you have such a case
pending or currently under indictment,
on probation, parole, work release, or
subject to any other control of court?’’
During the subsequent background
investigation conducted by the licensee
in August and September 2010, a
criminal record search returned a U.S.
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI)
record dated August 31, 2010, which
revealed Mr. Cooley had been arrested
on March 17, 2010, in Lucedale,
Mississippi and charged with four
counts of arson. The FBI record also
revealed that the arson charges had been
bound over to a grand jury in
Mississippi, and were pending at the
time Mr. Cooley completed the PHQ.
The licensee’s access authorization staff
questioned Mr. Cooley about the failure
to list the arrest and charges on the
PHQ. Mr. Cooley explained his lawyer
said there was no need to list the arrest
because the charges were dismissed.
The licensee’s access staff accepted this
explanation and asked Mr. Cooley to
provide a document showing the
charges were dismissed. Mr. Cooley
fabricated a document that falsely stated
the arson charges had been dismissed
and he submitted it to the licensee’s
access authorization staff. The access
authorization staff reviewed and
adjudicated the forged document and
found it acceptable. Mr. Cooley was
granted the UAA to the V. C. Summer
Nuclear Station. Mr. Cooley was
employed at the site from August 30,
2010 until March 3, 2011, when the
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licensee learned the arson charges had
not been dismissed, but were still
pending. Mr. Cooley was terminated.
During questioning by the OI, Mr.
Cooley admitted he was deliberately
untruthful when answering ‘‘no’’ to the
criminal history question in the PHQ,
and admitted to deliberately fabricating
the court record to conceal potentially
disqualifying information.
In a letter dated June 5, 2013, the NRC
provided Mr. Cooley the results of the
OI investigation. The letter informed
Mr. Cooley the NRC was considering
escalated enforcement action against
him for: (1) The deliberate failure to
disclose an arrest for arson in the PHQ
criminal history, information that was
necessary for access staff to consider in
making determinations regarding his
trustworthiness and reliability, in
apparent violation of 10 CFR
73.56(d)(2); and (2) the deliberate
submittal of information he knew to be
incomplete or inaccurate, in apparent
violation of the requirements of 10 CFR
50.5(a)(2). Specifically, to support his
assertion that arson charges had been
dismissed, Mr. Cooley submitted a
forged document dated September 14,
2010, that falsely stated arson charges
had been dismissed by a Mississippi
county court. At the time the document
was submitted to the licensee’s access
authorization staff, the arson charges
were pending. This information was
material because it formed the basis for
the licensee’s determination that Mr.
Cooley was trustworthy, reliable, and
suitable for the granting of UAA. The
NRC regulations at 10 CFR 73.56(c)
require that licensees provide high
assurance that individuals granted
unescorted access are trustworthy and
reliable, such that they do not constitute
an unreasonable risk to public health
and safety, or the common defense and
security, including the potential to
commit radiological sabotage.
The NRC’s letter dated June 5, 2013,
offered Mr. Cooley a choice to respond
to the apparent violations within 30
days of the date of that letter, to attend
a Predecisional Enforcement
Conference, or to request Alternative
Dispute Resolution (ADR) and the use of
mediation to resolve any possible
disagreement over: (1) Whether the
violation occurred; and (2) the
appropriate enforcement action. During
a telephone conversation with the
NRC’s representatives on June 14, 2013,
Mr. Cooley stated that he did not intend
to provide a written response or request
a Predecisional Enforcement Conference
or ADR.
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14749
III
Based on the above, the NRC has
concluded that Mr. Michael P. Cooley,
a former Environmental Health and
Safety Specialist for Shaw, Stone &
Webster (Shaw) at South Carolina
Electric & Gas Company’s Virgil C.
Summer Nuclear Station, engaged in
deliberate misconduct that resulted in a
violation of the requirements at 10 CFR
73.56(d)(2). In addition, Mr. Cooley
deliberately submitted to the licensee
information that he knew to be
incomplete or inaccurate in some
respect material to the NRC, in violation
of the NRC regulations at 10 CFR
50.5(a)(2). Mr. Cooley’s deliberate
misconduct put the License in violation
of 10 CFR 73.56 and 10 CFR 50.9.
The NRC must be able to rely on a
licensee, its employees, and contractors
to comply with the NRC’s requirements,
including the requirement that
information provided to the NRC be
complete and accurate in all material
respects. Mr. Cooley’s misstatements on
his PHQ and his preparation and
submission of a fabricated court
document caused the licensee to violate
10 CFR 73.56(d)(2) and 10 CFR 50.9. Mr.
Cooley’s deliberate misconduct raises
serious doubt as to whether he can be
relied upon to comply with the NRC’s
regulatory requirements and to provide
complete and accurate information to
the NRC.
Consequently, I lack reasonable
assurance that licensed activities can be
conducted in compliance with
Commission requirements and that the
health and safety of the public will be
protected, if Mr. Cooley were permitted
to be involved in NRC-licensed
activities. Therefore, the public health
and safety, and the common defense
and security of the nation require that
Mr. Cooley be prohibited from any
involvement in NRC-licensed activities
for a period of 5 years following the
effective date of this Order.
Additionally, Mr. Cooley is required to
notify the NRC if he is employed in
NRC-licensed activities following the 5year prohibition period; this restriction
is for a period of 1 year.
IV
Accordingly, pursuant to Sections
103, 161b, 161i, 161o, 182 and 186 of
the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
amended, and the Commission’s
regulations in 10 CFR 2.202, 10 CFR
50.5, and 10 CFR 150.20, it is hereby
ordered, effective immediately, that:
1. Mr. Cooley is prohibited for a
period of 5 years, from the effective date
of this Order, from engaging in NRClicensed activities. NRC-licensed
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activities are activities conducted
pursuant to a specific or general license
issued by the NRC, including, but not
limited to, activities of Agreement State
licensees conducted pursuant to the
authority granted by 10 CFR 150.20.
2. This Order shall be effective 30
days following its issuance and shall
remain in effect for a period of 5 years.
3. If Mr. Cooley is currently involved
with NRC-licensed activities, he must
immediately cease those activities, and
inform the NRC of the name, address
and telephone number of his employer,
and provide a copy of this Order to the
employer.
4. For a period of 1 year after the 5year period of prohibition has expired,
Mr. Cooley shall, within 30 days of
acceptance of his first employment offer
involving NRC-licensed activities, or his
becoming involved in NRC-licensed
activities, as defined in Paragraph IV.1,
provide notice to the Director, Office of
Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, of the name, address, and
telephone number of the employer or
the entity where he is or will be
involved in NRC-licensed activities. In
the notification, Mr. Cooley shall
include a statement of his commitment
to compliance with regulatory
requirements and the basis for why the
Commission should have confidence
that he will now comply with the
applicable NRC’s requirements.
The Director, Office of Enforcement,
or designee, may, in writing, relax or
rescind any of the above conditions
upon demonstration by Mr. Cooley of
good cause.
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V
Mr. Michael P. Cooley is not required
to respond to this Order; however, if he
chooses to respond, he must submit a
written answer to this Order under oath
or affirmation within 30 days of
issuance in accordance with 10 CFR
2.202.
Any person adversely affected by this
Order may submit a written answer to
this Order within 30 days of its
issuance. In addition, Mr. Cooley, and
any other person adversely affected by
this Order, may request a hearing on
this Order within 30 days of its issuance
date. Where good cause is shown,
consideration will be given to extending
the time to answer or request a hearing.
A request for extension of time must be
made in writing to the Director, Office
of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001 and include a statement of good
cause for the extension.
All documents filed in NRC
adjudicatory proceedings, including a
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request for hearing, a petition for leave
to intervene, any motion or other
document filed in the proceeding prior
to the submission of a request for
hearing or petition to intervene, and
documents filed by interested
governmental entities participating
under 10 CFR 2.315(c), must be filed in
accordance with the NRC’s E-Filing rule
(72 FR 49139; August 28, 2007). The EFiling process requires participants to
submit and serve all adjudicatory
documents over the internet, or in some
cases to mail copies on electronic
storage media. Participants may not
submit paper copies of their filings
unless they seek an exemption in
accordance with the procedures
described below.
To comply with the procedural
requirements of E-Filing, at least 10
days prior to the filing deadline, the
participant should contact the Office of
the Secretary by email at
hearing.docket@nrc.gov, or by telephone
at 301–415–1677, to (1) request a digital
identification (ID) certificate, which
allows the participant (or its counsel or
representative) to digitally sign
documents and access the E-Submittal
server for any proceeding in which it is
participating; and (2) advise the
Secretary that the participant will be
submitting a request or petition for
hearing (even in instances in which the
participant, or its counsel or
representative, already holds an NRCissued digital ID certificate). Based upon
this information, the Secretary will
establish an electronic docket for the
hearing in this proceeding if the
Secretary has not already established an
electronic docket.
Information about applying for a
digital ID certificate is available on the
NRC’s public Web site at https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/
apply-certificates.html. System
requirements for accessing the ESubmittal server are detailed in the
NRC’s ‘‘Guidance for Electronic
Submission,’’ which is available on the
NRC’s public Web site at https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html. Participants may
attempt to use other software not listed
on the Web site, but should note that the
NRC’s E-Filing system does not support
unlisted software, and the NRC Meta
System Help Desk will not be able to
offer assistance in using unlisted
software.
If a participant is electronically
submitting a document to the NRC in
accordance with the E-Filing rule, the
participant must file the document
using the NRC’s online, Web-based
submission form. In order to serve
documents through the Electronic
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Information Exchange System, users
will be required to install a Web
browser plug-in from the NRC’s public
Web site. Further information on the
Web-based submission form, including
the installation of the Web browser
plug-in, is available on the NRC’s public
Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/sitehelp/e-submittals.html.
Once a participant has obtained a
digital ID certificate and a docket has
been created, the participant can then
submit a request for hearing or petition
for leave to intervene. Submissions
should be in Portable Document Format
(PDF) in accordance with NRC guidance
available on the NRC’s public Web site
at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html. A filing is considered
complete at the time the documents are
submitted through the NRC’s E-Filing
system. To be timely, an electronic
filing must be submitted to the E-Filing
system no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern
Time on the due date. Upon receipt of
a transmission, the E-Filing system
time-stamps the document and sends
the submitter an email notice
confirming receipt of the document. The
E-Filing system also distributes an email
notice that provides access to the
document to the NRC’s Office of the
General Counsel and any others who
have advised the Office of the Secretary
that they wish to participate in the
proceeding, so that the filer need not
serve the documents on those
participants separately. Therefore,
applicants and other participants (or
their counsel or representative) must
apply for and receive a digital ID
certificate before a hearing request or
petition to intervene is filed so that they
can obtain access to the document via
the E-Filing system.
A person filing electronically using
the NRC’s adjudicatory E-Filing system
may seek assistance by contacting the
NRC’s Meta System Help Desk through
the ‘‘Contact Us’’ link located on the
NRC’s public Web site at https://
www.nrc.gov/site-help/esubmittals.html, by email to
MSHD.Resource@nrc.gov, or by a tollfree call to 1–866–672–7640. The NRC
Meta System Help Desk is available
between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., Eastern
Time, Monday through Friday,
excluding government holidays.
Participants who believe that they
have a good cause for not submitting
documents electronically must file an
exemption request, in accordance with
10 CFR 2.302(g), with their initial paper
filing requesting authorization to
continue to submit documents in paper
format. Such filings must be submitted
by: (1) First class mail addressed to the
Office of the Secretary of the
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tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 51 / Monday, March 17, 2014 / Notices
Commission, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001, Attention: Rulemaking and
Adjudications Staff; or (2) courier,
express mail, or expedited delivery
service to the Office of the Secretary,
Sixteenth Floor, One White Flint North,
11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852, Attention: Rulemaking
and Adjudications Staff. Participants
filing a document in this manner are
responsible for serving the document on
all other participants. Filing is
considered complete by first-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. A presiding officer, having
granted an exemption request from
using E-Filing, may require a participant
or party to use E-Filing if the presiding
officer subsequently determines that the
reason for granting the exemption from
use of E-Filing no longer exists.
Documents submitted in adjudicatory
proceedings will appear in the NRC
electronic hearing docket, which is
available to the public at https://
ehd1.nrc.gov/ehd/, unless excluded
pursuant to an order of the Commission
or the 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,
unless an NRC regulation or other law
requires submission of such
information. With respect to
copyrighted works, participants are
requested not to include copyrighted
materials in their submission, except for
limited excerpts that serve the purpose
of the adjudicatory filings and constitute
a Fair Use application.
If a person other than Mr. Cooley
requests a hearing, that person shall set
forth with particularity the manner in
which his/her interest is adversely
affected by this Order and shall address
the criteria set forth in 10 CFR 2.309(d)
and (f).
If a hearing is requested by a licensee
or a person whose interest is adversely
affected, the Commission will issue an
Order designating the time and place of
any hearings. If a hearing is held, the
issue to be considered at such hearing
shall be whether this Order should be
sustained. In the absence of any request
for hearing, or written approval of an
extension of time in which to request a
hearing, the provisions specified in
Section IV above shall be final 30 days
from the issuance date without further
order or proceedings. If an extension of
time for requesting a hearing has been
approved, the provisions specified in
Section IV shall be final when the
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extension expires if a hearing request
has not been received.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 10th day
of March 2014.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Roy P. Zimmerman,
Director, Office of Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2014–05794 Filed 3–14–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
[Docket No. 03029462; NRC–2014–0046]
Department of the Navy; Naval
Postgraduate School
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Request for alternate
decommissioning schedule; opportunity
to comment, request a hearing, and
petition for leave to intervene.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) has received a
request for an alternate
decommissioning schedule from the
Department of the Navy (Navy) for its
Naval Postgraduate School (PGS) site,
located in Monterey, California,
permitted under the Navy’s Master
Materials License (MML) No. 45–23645–
01NA. Approval of the request would
extend the time period for the Navy to
submit a decommissioning plan and
initiate decommissioning activities at
the PGS site.
DATES: Comments must be filed by May
16, 2014. A request for a hearing or
petition for leave to intervene must be
filed by May 16, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods (unless
this document describes a different
method for submitting comments on a
specific subject):
• Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2014–0046. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol
Gallagher; telephone: 301–287–3422;
email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov. For
technical questions, contact the
individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document.
• Mail comments to: Cindy Bladey,
Chief, Rules, Announcements, and
Directives Branch (RADB), Office of
Administration, Mail Stop: 3WFN–06–
44M, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555–
0001.
For additional direction on accessing
information and submitting comments,
see ‘‘Accessing Information and
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
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14751
Submitting Comments’’ in the
section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Orysia Masnyk Bailey,
Decommissioning and Technical
Support Branch, Division of Nuclear
Materials Safety, Region I, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, 2100
Renaissance Boulevard, King of Prussia,
Pennsylvania 19468; telephone: 864–
427–1032; fax number: 610–680–3597;
email: OrysiaMasnykBailey@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
I. Accessing Information and
Submitting Comments
A. Accessing Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC–2014–
0046 when contacting the NRC about
the availability of information regarding
this document. You may access
publicly-available information related to
this document by any of the following
methods:
• Federal Rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2014–0046.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may access publicly
available documents online in the NRC
Library at https://www.nrc.gov/readingrm/adams.html. To begin the search,
select ‘‘ADAMS Public Documents’’ and
then select ‘‘Begin Web-based ADAMS
Search.’’ For problems with ADAMS,
please contact the NRC’s Public
Document Room (PDR) reference staff at
1–800–397–4209, 301–415–4737, or by
email to pdr.resource@nrc.gov. The
ADAMS accession number for each
document referenced in this document
(if that document is available in
ADAMS) is provided the first time that
a document is referenced.
• NRC’s PDR: You may examine and
purchase copies of public documents at
the NRC’s PDR, Room O1–F21, One
White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852.
B. Submitting Comments
Please include Docket ID NRC–2014–
0046 in the subject line of your
comment submission, in order to ensure
that the NRC is able to make your
comment submission available to the
public in this docket.
The NRC cautions you not to include
identifying or contact information that
you do not want to be publicly
disclosed in your comment submission.
The NRC will post all comment
submissions at https://
www.regulations.gov as well as enter the
comment submissions into ADAMS.
The NRC does not routinely edit
E:\FR\FM\17MRN1.SGM
17MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 51 (Monday, March 17, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 14748-14751]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-05794]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
[NRC-2014-0051; IA-12-045]
In the Matter of Michael P. Cooley; Order Prohibiting Involvement
in NRC-Licensed Activities
I
Michael P. Cooley is a former Environmental Health and Safety
Specialist, for Shaw, Stone & Webster (Shaw) at South Carolina Electric
& Gas Company's Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Station (Licensee). The
licensee is the holder of License No. NPF-12 issued by the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory
[[Page 14749]]
Commission (NRC) pursuant to Part 50 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal
Regulations (10 CFR) on August 6, 1982, and renewed on April 23, 2004.
The license authorizes the operation of the Virgil C. Summer Nuclear
Station (facility) in accordance with the conditions specified therein.
The facility is located on the licensee's site in Jenkinsville, South
Carolina.
II
On January 16, 2013, an investigation was completed by the NRC's
Office of Investigations (OI). The purpose of the investigation was to
review the facts and circumstances surrounding Mr. Michael P. Cooley's
actions with respect to his completion of a V. C. Summer Personnel
History Questionnaire (PHQ) to obtain unescorted access authorization
(UAA) to the facility.
In Section III of the PHQ titled ``Criminal History Self-
Disclosure,'' Mr. Cooley answered ``no'' to a question that, in part,
asked, ``Have you ever been held, detained, taken into custody,
charged, arrested, indicted, convicted for a violation of law,
regulation, or ordinance (e.g., felony, misdemeanor, traffic, etc.), or
do you have such a case pending or currently under indictment, on
probation, parole, work release, or subject to any other control of
court?''
During the subsequent background investigation conducted by the
licensee in August and September 2010, a criminal record search
returned a U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) record dated
August 31, 2010, which revealed Mr. Cooley had been arrested on March
17, 2010, in Lucedale, Mississippi and charged with four counts of
arson. The FBI record also revealed that the arson charges had been
bound over to a grand jury in Mississippi, and were pending at the time
Mr. Cooley completed the PHQ. The licensee's access authorization staff
questioned Mr. Cooley about the failure to list the arrest and charges
on the PHQ. Mr. Cooley explained his lawyer said there was no need to
list the arrest because the charges were dismissed. The licensee's
access staff accepted this explanation and asked Mr. Cooley to provide
a document showing the charges were dismissed. Mr. Cooley fabricated a
document that falsely stated the arson charges had been dismissed and
he submitted it to the licensee's access authorization staff. The
access authorization staff reviewed and adjudicated the forged document
and found it acceptable. Mr. Cooley was granted the UAA to the V. C.
Summer Nuclear Station. Mr. Cooley was employed at the site from August
30, 2010 until March 3, 2011, when the licensee learned the arson
charges had not been dismissed, but were still pending. Mr. Cooley was
terminated.
During questioning by the OI, Mr. Cooley admitted he was
deliberately untruthful when answering ``no'' to the criminal history
question in the PHQ, and admitted to deliberately fabricating the court
record to conceal potentially disqualifying information.
In a letter dated June 5, 2013, the NRC provided Mr. Cooley the
results of the OI investigation. The letter informed Mr. Cooley the NRC
was considering escalated enforcement action against him for: (1) The
deliberate failure to disclose an arrest for arson in the PHQ criminal
history, information that was necessary for access staff to consider in
making determinations regarding his trustworthiness and reliability, in
apparent violation of 10 CFR 73.56(d)(2); and (2) the deliberate
submittal of information he knew to be incomplete or inaccurate, in
apparent violation of the requirements of 10 CFR 50.5(a)(2).
Specifically, to support his assertion that arson charges had been
dismissed, Mr. Cooley submitted a forged document dated September 14,
2010, that falsely stated arson charges had been dismissed by a
Mississippi county court. At the time the document was submitted to the
licensee's access authorization staff, the arson charges were pending.
This information was material because it formed the basis for the
licensee's determination that Mr. Cooley was trustworthy, reliable, and
suitable for the granting of UAA. The NRC regulations at 10 CFR
73.56(c) require that licensees provide high assurance that individuals
granted unescorted access are trustworthy and reliable, such that they
do not constitute an unreasonable risk to public health and safety, or
the common defense and security, including the potential to commit
radiological sabotage.
The NRC's letter dated June 5, 2013, offered Mr. Cooley a choice to
respond to the apparent violations within 30 days of the date of that
letter, to attend a Predecisional Enforcement Conference, or to request
Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and the use of mediation to
resolve any possible disagreement over: (1) Whether the violation
occurred; and (2) the appropriate enforcement action. During a
telephone conversation with the NRC's representatives on June 14, 2013,
Mr. Cooley stated that he did not intend to provide a written response
or request a Predecisional Enforcement Conference or ADR.
III
Based on the above, the NRC has concluded that Mr. Michael P.
Cooley, a former Environmental Health and Safety Specialist for Shaw,
Stone & Webster (Shaw) at South Carolina Electric & Gas Company's
Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Station, engaged in deliberate misconduct that
resulted in a violation of the requirements at 10 CFR 73.56(d)(2). In
addition, Mr. Cooley deliberately submitted to the licensee information
that he knew to be incomplete or inaccurate in some respect material to
the NRC, in violation of the NRC regulations at 10 CFR 50.5(a)(2). Mr.
Cooley's deliberate misconduct put the License in violation of 10 CFR
73.56 and 10 CFR 50.9.
The NRC must be able to rely on a licensee, its employees, and
contractors to comply with the NRC's requirements, including the
requirement that information provided to the NRC be complete and
accurate in all material respects. Mr. Cooley's misstatements on his
PHQ and his preparation and submission of a fabricated court document
caused the licensee to violate 10 CFR 73.56(d)(2) and 10 CFR 50.9. Mr.
Cooley's deliberate misconduct raises serious doubt as to whether he
can be relied upon to comply with the NRC's regulatory requirements and
to provide complete and accurate information to the NRC.
Consequently, I lack reasonable assurance that licensed activities
can be conducted in compliance with Commission requirements and that
the health and safety of the public will be protected, if Mr. Cooley
were permitted to be involved in NRC-licensed activities. Therefore,
the public health and safety, and the common defense and security of
the nation require that Mr. Cooley be prohibited from any involvement
in NRC-licensed activities for a period of 5 years following the
effective date of this Order. Additionally, Mr. Cooley is required to
notify the NRC if he is employed in NRC-licensed activities following
the 5-year prohibition period; this restriction is for a period of 1
year.
IV
Accordingly, pursuant to Sections 103, 161b, 161i, 161o, 182 and
186 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the Commission's
regulations in 10 CFR 2.202, 10 CFR 50.5, and 10 CFR 150.20, it is
hereby ordered, effective immediately, that:
1. Mr. Cooley is prohibited for a period of 5 years, from the
effective date of this Order, from engaging in NRC-licensed activities.
NRC-licensed
[[Page 14750]]
activities are activities conducted pursuant to a specific or general
license issued by the NRC, including, but not limited to, activities of
Agreement State licensees conducted pursuant to the authority granted
by 10 CFR 150.20.
2. This Order shall be effective 30 days following its issuance and
shall remain in effect for a period of 5 years.
3. If Mr. Cooley is currently involved with NRC-licensed
activities, he must immediately cease those activities, and inform the
NRC of the name, address and telephone number of his employer, and
provide a copy of this Order to the employer.
4. For a period of 1 year after the 5-year period of prohibition
has expired, Mr. Cooley shall, within 30 days of acceptance of his
first employment offer involving NRC-licensed activities, or his
becoming involved in NRC-licensed activities, as defined in Paragraph
IV.1, provide notice to the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, of the name,
address, and telephone number of the employer or the entity where he is
or will be involved in NRC-licensed activities. In the notification,
Mr. Cooley shall include a statement of his commitment to compliance
with regulatory requirements and the basis for why the Commission
should have confidence that he will now comply with the applicable
NRC's requirements.
The Director, Office of Enforcement, or designee, may, in writing,
relax or rescind any of the above conditions upon demonstration by Mr.
Cooley of good cause.
V
Mr. Michael P. Cooley is not required to respond to this Order;
however, if he chooses to respond, he must submit a written answer to
this Order under oath or affirmation within 30 days of issuance in
accordance with 10 CFR 2.202.
Any person adversely affected by this Order may submit a written
answer to this Order within 30 days of its issuance. In addition, Mr.
Cooley, and any other person adversely affected by this Order, may
request a hearing on this Order within 30 days of its issuance date.
Where good cause is shown, consideration will be given to extending the
time to answer or request a hearing. A request for extension of time
must be made in writing to the Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001 and include a
statement of good cause for the extension.
All documents filed in NRC adjudicatory proceedings, including a
request for hearing, a petition for leave to intervene, any motion or
other document filed in the proceeding prior to the submission of a
request for hearing or petition to intervene, and documents filed by
interested governmental entities participating under 10 CFR 2.315(c),
must be filed in accordance with the NRC's E-Filing rule (72 FR 49139;
August 28, 2007). The E-Filing process requires participants to submit
and serve all adjudicatory documents over the internet, or in some
cases to mail copies on electronic storage media. Participants may not
submit paper copies of their filings unless they seek an exemption in
accordance with the procedures described below.
To comply with the procedural requirements of E-Filing, at least 10
days prior to the filing deadline, the participant should contact the
Office of the Secretary by email at hearing.docket@nrc.gov, or by
telephone at 301-415-1677, to (1) request a digital identification (ID)
certificate, which allows the participant (or its counsel or
representative) to digitally sign documents and access the E-Submittal
server for any proceeding in which it is participating; and (2) advise
the Secretary that the participant will be submitting a request or
petition for hearing (even in instances in which the participant, or
its counsel or representative, already holds an NRC-issued digital ID
certificate). Based upon this information, the Secretary will establish
an electronic docket for the hearing in this proceeding if the
Secretary has not already established an electronic docket.
Information about applying for a digital ID certificate is
available on the NRC's public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/apply-certificates.html. System requirements for accessing
the E-Submittal server are detailed in the NRC's ``Guidance for
Electronic Submission,'' which is available on the NRC's public Web
site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. Participants
may attempt to use other software not listed on the Web site, but
should note that the NRC's E-Filing system does not support unlisted
software, and the NRC Meta System Help Desk will not be able to offer
assistance in using unlisted software.
If a participant is electronically submitting a document to the NRC
in accordance with the E-Filing rule, the participant must file the
document using the NRC's online, Web-based submission form. In order to
serve documents through the Electronic Information Exchange System,
users will be required to install a Web browser plug-in from the NRC's
public Web site. Further information on the Web-based submission form,
including the installation of the Web browser plug-in, is available on
the NRC's public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html.
Once a participant has obtained a digital ID certificate and a
docket has been created, the participant can then submit a request for
hearing or petition for leave to intervene. Submissions should be in
Portable Document Format (PDF) in accordance with NRC guidance
available on the NRC's public Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. A filing is considered complete at the time the
documents are submitted through the NRC's E-Filing system. To be
timely, an electronic filing must be submitted to the E-Filing system
no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the due date. Upon receipt of
a transmission, the E-Filing system time-stamps the document and sends
the submitter an email notice confirming receipt of the document. The
E-Filing system also distributes an email notice that provides access
to the document to the NRC's Office of the General Counsel and any
others who have advised the Office of the Secretary that they wish to
participate in the proceeding, so that the filer need not serve the
documents on those participants separately. Therefore, applicants and
other participants (or their counsel or representative) must apply for
and receive a digital ID certificate before a hearing request or
petition to intervene is filed so that they can obtain access to the
document via the E-Filing system.
A person filing electronically using the NRC's adjudicatory E-
Filing system may seek assistance by contacting the NRC's Meta System
Help Desk through the ``Contact Us'' link located on the NRC's public
Web site at https://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html, by email to
MSHD.Resource@nrc.gov, or by a toll-free call to 1-866-672-7640. The
NRC Meta System Help Desk is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.,
Eastern Time, Monday through Friday, excluding government holidays.
Participants who believe that they have a good cause for not
submitting documents electronically must file an exemption request, in
accordance with 10 CFR 2.302(g), with their initial paper filing
requesting authorization to continue to submit documents in paper
format. Such filings must be submitted by: (1) First class mail
addressed to the Office of the Secretary of the
[[Page 14751]]
Commission, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-
0001, Attention: Rulemaking and Adjudications Staff; or (2) courier,
express mail, or expedited delivery service to the Office of the
Secretary, Sixteenth Floor, One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville
Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852, Attention: Rulemaking and
Adjudications Staff. Participants filing a document in this manner are
responsible for serving the document on all other participants. Filing
is considered complete by first-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. A
presiding officer, having granted an exemption request from using E-
Filing, may require a participant or party to use E-Filing if the
presiding officer subsequently determines that the reason for granting
the exemption from use of E-Filing no longer exists.
Documents submitted in adjudicatory proceedings will appear in the
NRC electronic hearing docket, which is available to the public at
https://ehd1.nrc.gov/ehd/, unless excluded pursuant to an order of the
Commission or the 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, unless an NRC
regulation or other law requires submission of such information. With
respect to copyrighted works, participants are requested not to include
copyrighted materials in their submission, except for limited excerpts
that serve the purpose of the adjudicatory filings and constitute a
Fair Use application.
If a person other than Mr. Cooley requests a hearing, that person
shall set forth with particularity the manner in which his/her interest
is adversely affected by this Order and shall address the criteria set
forth in 10 CFR 2.309(d) and (f).
If a hearing is requested by a licensee or a person whose interest
is adversely affected, the Commission will issue an Order designating
the time and place of any hearings. If a hearing is held, the issue to
be considered at such hearing shall be whether this Order should be
sustained. In the absence of any request for hearing, or written
approval of an extension of time in which to request a hearing, the
provisions specified in Section IV above shall be final 30 days from
the issuance date without further order or proceedings. If an extension
of time for requesting a hearing has been approved, the provisions
specified in Section IV shall be final when the extension expires if a
hearing request has not been received.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 10th day of March 2014.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Roy P. Zimmerman,
Director, Office of Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2014-05794 Filed 3-14-14; 8:45 am]
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