Enhanced Security at Fuel Cycle Facilities; Special Nuclear Material Transportation, 34641-34642 [2014-14135]
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34641
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 79, No. 117
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
10 CFR Parts 26 and 73
[NRC–2014–0118]
RIN 3150–AJ41
Enhanced Security at Fuel Cycle
Facilities; Special Nuclear Material
Transportation
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Draft regulatory basis; request
for comment.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is requesting
comments on a draft regulatory basis to
support the potential amendments to
revise a number of existing securityrelated regulations relating to physical
protection of special nuclear material
(SNM) at NRC-licensed facilities and in
transit, as well as the fitness for duty
programs for security officers at certain
fuel cycle facilities. Potentially affected
licensees include fuel cycle facilities,
non-power reactors, research and
development facilities, industrial
facilities, and certain medical isotope
production facilities.
DATES: Submit comments by August 4,
2014. Comments received after this date
will be considered if it is practical to do
so, but the NRC is only able to ensure
consideration of comments received on
or before this date.
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–2014–0118. 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.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:25 Jun 17, 2014
Jkt 232001
• Email comments to:
Rulemaking.Comments@nrc.gov. If you
do not receive an automatic email reply
confirming receipt, then contact us at
301–415–1677.
• Fax comments to: Secretary, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission at 301–
415–1101.
• Mail comments to: Secretary, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555–0001, ATTN:
Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff.
• Hand deliver comments to: 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland
20852, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m.
(Eastern Time) Federal workdays;
telephone: 301–415–1677. For
additional direction on obtaining
information and submitting comments,
see ‘‘Obtaining Information and
Submitting Comments’’ in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
• Comments that contain proprietary
or sensitive information: Please contact
the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document to determine the most
appropriate method for submitting these
comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alex
Sapountzis, Office of Nuclear Security
and Incident Response, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001; telephone: 301–287–
3660, email: Alexander.Sapountzis@
nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Obtaining Information and
Submitting Comments
A. Obtaining Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC–2014–
0118 when contacting the NRC about
the availability of information for this
action. You may obtain publiclyavailable information related to this
action by any of the following methods:
• Federal rulemaking Web site: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2014–0118.
• NRC’s Agencywide Documents
Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publiclyavailable documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. To begin the search, select
‘‘ADAMS Public Documents’’ and then
select ‘‘Begin Web-based ADAMS
Search.’’ For problems with ADAMS,
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
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 draft
regulatory basis document is available
in ADAMS under Accession No.
ML14113A468.
• 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–
0118 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 in
comment submissions 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, and the NRC does not
routinely edit comment submissions to
remove identifying or contact
information.
If you are requesting or aggregating
comments from other persons for
submission to the NRC, then you should
inform those persons not to include
identifying or contact information that
they do not want to be publicly
disclosed in their comment submission.
Your request should state that the NRC
does not routinely edit comment
submissions to remove such information
before making the comment
submissions available to the public or
entering the comment into ADAMS.
II. Discussion
The NRC is requesting comment on a
draft regulatory basis to support
rulemaking to amend portions of Parts
26 and 73 of Title 10 of the Code of
Federal Regulations (10 CFR) to
strengthen physical protection of SNM
at NRC-licensed facilities and in transit,
as well as strengthen fatigue programs
for security officers at certain fuel cycle
facilities. The draft regulatory basis
supports potential rulemaking efforts
related to: (1) Enhanced security at fuel
cycle facilities; (2) special nuclear
material transportation security; and (3)
security-force fatigue at certain nuclear
facilities.
E:\FR\FM\18JNP1.SGM
18JNP1
34642
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 117 / Wednesday, June 18, 2014 / Proposed Rules
The specific objectives of these
rulemaking efforts are to update SNM
physical protection requirements to: (1)
Improve consistency and clarity; (2)
make generically applicable security
requirements similar to those imposed
by security orders issued after the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001;
(3) consider risk insights from new
National Laboratory studies, operational
oversight and inspection activities, and
international guidance; and (4) use a
risk-informed and performance-based
structure. The scope of the regulatory
basis includes physical protection of
SNM at fuel cycle facilities and other
facilities that possess and use SNM, and
the physical protection of SNM in
transit. Potentially affected licensees
include fuel cycle facilities, non-power
reactors, research and development
facilities, industrial facilities, and
certain medical isotope production
facilities. The regulatory basis, in part,
explains why the NRC believes the
existing regulations should be updated,
revised and enhanced, presents
alternatives to rulemaking, and
discusses cost and other impacts of the
potential changes.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
III. Specific Requests for Comments
The NRC requests that stakeholders
consider answering the following
questions when commenting on the
draft regulatory basis:
• Is the NRC considering an
appropriate approach for each objective
described in the draft regulatory basis?
Should implementing material
attractiveness and its associated
physical protection measures be
‘‘voluntary’’ or should it be
‘‘mandatory?’’ Given that the potentially
revised regulations would be materialbased rather than facility-based, are the
potential regulatory changes sufficiently
performance-based to allow licensees of
different facility types to effectively
implement the potential physical
protection performance objectives and
strategies for the various categories of
special nuclear material?
• Section 3 of the draft regulatory
basis discusses the regulatory problems
the NRC expects to address through
rulemaking. Section 4 presents the
desired regulatory changes to address
those regulatory problems and Section 5
discusses alternatives to rulemaking
considered by the NRC staff. Are there
other regulatory problems within or
related to the scope of the rulemaking
efforts (see Section 1) that the NRC
should consider? Are there other
approaches or alternatives the NRC
should consider to resolve those
regulatory problems?
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:25 Jun 17, 2014
Jkt 232001
• Section 8 of the draft regulatory
basis presents the NRC staff’s initial
assessment of cost and other impacts for
a number of key aspects of the potential
regulatory changes (i.e., fixed site
physical protection, transportation
physical protection, safety-safeguards
interface and fitness-for-duty impacts).
The NRC staff recognizes that this initial
assessment is based on limited data. As
such, staff is seeking additional data and
input relative to expected and/or
unintentional impacts from the desired
regulatory changes. What would be the
potential impacts to stakeholders/
licensees from implementing any of the
desired regulatory changes described in
this draft regulatory basis (e.g., what
would be a reasonable cost estimate for
implementation of fatigue requirements
for security officers at Category I
facilities in accordance to 10 CFR Part
26, Subpart I, including startup and
annual costs)?
• The NRC staff recognizes that the
security officer work hour data provided
voluntarily by licensees in the past and
summarized in Attachment 2 of the
draft regulatory basis is limited. As
such, are there additional data or
information (e.g., procedures that
demonstrate the licensee has fatigue
measures in place for security officers at
their site, updated security officer work
hour data from the most recent 2-month
period and so forth) that would inform
the NRC staff’s assessment or analysis?
IV. Publicly Available Documents
The NRC may post additional
materials related to this rulemaking
activity to the Federal rulemaking Web
site at www.regulations.gov, under
Docket ID NRC–2014–0118. By making
these documents publicly available, the
NRC seeks to inform stakeholders of the
current status of the NRC’s rulemaking
development activities and to provide
preparatory material for future public
meetings.
The Federal rulemaking Web site
allows you to receive alerts when
changes or additions occur in a docket
folder. To subscribe: (1) Navigate to the
docket folder (NRC–2014–0118); (2)
click the ‘‘Sign up for Email Alerts’’
link; and (3) enter your email address
and select how frequently you would
like to receive emails (daily, weekly, or
monthly).
V. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub.
L. 111–274) requires Federal agencies to
write documents in a clear, concise,
well-organized manner. The NRC has
written this document to be consistent
with the Plain Writing Act as well as the
Presidential Memorandum, ‘‘Plain
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Language in Government Writing,’’
published June 10, 1998 (63 FR 31883).
The NRC requests comment on this
document with respect to the clarity and
effectiveness of the language used.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 10th day
of June, 2014.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Christopher G. Miller,
Director, Division of Intergovernmental
Liaison and Rulemaking, Office of Federal
and State Materials and Environmental
Management Programs.
[FR Doc. 2014–14135 Filed 6–17–14; 8:45 am]
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FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 305
RIN 3084–AB03
Energy Labeling Rule
Federal Trade Commission
(‘‘FTC’’ or ‘‘Commission’’).
ACTION: Supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
As part of its regulatory
review of the Energy Labeling Rule, the
Federal Trade Commission proposes to
expand coverage of the Lighting Facts
label, change the current label categories
for refrigerators, revise the ceiling fan
label design, and require room air
conditioner labels on packaging instead
of the units themselves.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before August 18, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties may file a
comment online or on paper, by
following the instructions in the
Request for Comment part of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
below. Write ‘‘Supplementary Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking on Energy
Labeling Rule Regulatory Review (16
CFR Part 305) (Project No. R611004)’’ on
your comment, and file your comment
online at https://
public.commentworks.com/ftc/
energyguidereview by following the
instructions on the web-based form. If
you prefer to file your comment on
paper, mail your comment to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary,
600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Suite
CC–5610 (Annex B), Washington, DC
20580, or deliver your comment to the
following address: Federal Trade
Commission, Office of the Secretary,
Constitution Center, 400 7th Street SW.,
5th Floor, Suite 5610 (Annex B),
Washington, DC 20024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Hampton Newsome, Attorney, (202)
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\18JNP1.SGM
18JNP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 117 (Wednesday, June 18, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 34641-34642]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-14135]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 117 / Wednesday, June 18, 2014 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 34641]]
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
10 CFR Parts 26 and 73
[NRC-2014-0118]
RIN 3150-AJ41
Enhanced Security at Fuel Cycle Facilities; Special Nuclear
Material Transportation
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Draft regulatory basis; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is requesting
comments on a draft regulatory basis to support the potential
amendments to revise a number of existing security-related regulations
relating to physical protection of special nuclear material (SNM) at
NRC-licensed facilities and in transit, as well as the fitness for duty
programs for security officers at certain fuel cycle facilities.
Potentially affected licensees include fuel cycle facilities, non-power
reactors, research and development facilities, industrial facilities,
and certain medical isotope production facilities.
DATES: Submit comments by August 4, 2014. Comments received after this
date will be considered if it is practical to do so, but the NRC is
only able to ensure consideration of comments received on or before
this date.
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-2014-0118. 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.
Email comments to: Rulemaking.Comments@nrc.gov. If you do
not receive an automatic email reply confirming receipt, then contact
us at 301-415-1677.
Fax comments to: Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission at 301-415-1101.
Mail comments to: Secretary, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, ATTN: Rulemakings and
Adjudications Staff.
Hand deliver comments to: 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville,
Maryland 20852, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m. (Eastern Time) Federal
workdays; telephone: 301-415-1677. For additional direction on
obtaining information and submitting comments, see ``Obtaining
Information and Submitting Comments'' in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Comments that contain proprietary or sensitive
information: Please contact the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this document to determine the most
appropriate method for submitting these comments.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Alex Sapountzis, Office of Nuclear
Security and Incident Response, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555-0001; telephone: 301-287-3660, email:
Alexander.Sapountzis@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Obtaining Information and Submitting Comments
A. Obtaining Information
Please refer to Docket ID NRC-2014-0118 when contacting the NRC
about the availability of information for this action. You may obtain
publicly-available information related to this action by any of the
following methods:
Federal rulemaking Web site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2014-0118.
NRC's Agencywide Documents Access and Management System
(ADAMS): You may obtain publicly-available documents online in the
ADAMS Public Documents collection at https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/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
draft regulatory basis document is available in ADAMS under Accession
No. ML14113A468.
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-2014-0118 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 in comment submissions 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, and the NRC does not routinely edit comment
submissions to remove identifying or contact information.
If you are requesting or aggregating comments from other persons
for submission to the NRC, then you should inform those persons not to
include identifying or contact information that they do not want to be
publicly disclosed in their comment submission. Your request should
state that the NRC does not routinely edit comment submissions to
remove such information before making the comment submissions available
to the public or entering the comment into ADAMS.
II. Discussion
The NRC is requesting comment on a draft regulatory basis to
support rulemaking to amend portions of Parts 26 and 73 of Title 10 of
the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) to strengthen physical
protection of SNM at NRC-licensed facilities and in transit, as well as
strengthen fatigue programs for security officers at certain fuel cycle
facilities. The draft regulatory basis supports potential rulemaking
efforts related to: (1) Enhanced security at fuel cycle facilities; (2)
special nuclear material transportation security; and (3) security-
force fatigue at certain nuclear facilities.
[[Page 34642]]
The specific objectives of these rulemaking efforts are to update
SNM physical protection requirements to: (1) Improve consistency and
clarity; (2) make generically applicable security requirements similar
to those imposed by security orders issued after the terrorist attacks
of September 11, 2001; (3) consider risk insights from new National
Laboratory studies, operational oversight and inspection activities,
and international guidance; and (4) use a risk-informed and
performance-based structure. The scope of the regulatory basis includes
physical protection of SNM at fuel cycle facilities and other
facilities that possess and use SNM, and the physical protection of SNM
in transit. Potentially affected licensees include fuel cycle
facilities, non-power reactors, research and development facilities,
industrial facilities, and certain medical isotope production
facilities. The regulatory basis, in part, explains why the NRC
believes the existing regulations should be updated, revised and
enhanced, presents alternatives to rulemaking, and discusses cost and
other impacts of the potential changes.
III. Specific Requests for Comments
The NRC requests that stakeholders consider answering the following
questions when commenting on the draft regulatory basis:
Is the NRC considering an appropriate approach for each
objective described in the draft regulatory basis? Should implementing
material attractiveness and its associated physical protection measures
be ``voluntary'' or should it be ``mandatory?'' Given that the
potentially revised regulations would be material-based rather than
facility-based, are the potential regulatory changes sufficiently
performance-based to allow licensees of different facility types to
effectively implement the potential physical protection performance
objectives and strategies for the various categories of special nuclear
material?
Section 3 of the draft regulatory basis discusses the
regulatory problems the NRC expects to address through rulemaking.
Section 4 presents the desired regulatory changes to address those
regulatory problems and Section 5 discusses alternatives to rulemaking
considered by the NRC staff. Are there other regulatory problems within
or related to the scope of the rulemaking efforts (see Section 1) that
the NRC should consider? Are there other approaches or alternatives the
NRC should consider to resolve those regulatory problems?
Section 8 of the draft regulatory basis presents the NRC
staff's initial assessment of cost and other impacts for a number of
key aspects of the potential regulatory changes (i.e., fixed site
physical protection, transportation physical protection, safety-
safeguards interface and fitness-for-duty impacts). The NRC staff
recognizes that this initial assessment is based on limited data. As
such, staff is seeking additional data and input relative to expected
and/or unintentional impacts from the desired regulatory changes. What
would be the potential impacts to stakeholders/licensees from
implementing any of the desired regulatory changes described in this
draft regulatory basis (e.g., what would be a reasonable cost estimate
for implementation of fatigue requirements for security officers at
Category I facilities in accordance to 10 CFR Part 26, Subpart I,
including startup and annual costs)?
The NRC staff recognizes that the security officer work
hour data provided voluntarily by licensees in the past and summarized
in Attachment 2 of the draft regulatory basis is limited. As such, are
there additional data or information (e.g., procedures that demonstrate
the licensee has fatigue measures in place for security officers at
their site, updated security officer work hour data from the most
recent 2-month period and so forth) that would inform the NRC staff's
assessment or analysis?
IV. Publicly Available Documents
The NRC may post additional materials related to this rulemaking
activity to the Federal rulemaking Web site at www.regulations.gov,
under Docket ID NRC-2014-0118. By making these documents publicly
available, the NRC seeks to inform stakeholders of the current status
of the NRC's rulemaking development activities and to provide
preparatory material for future public meetings.
The Federal rulemaking Web site allows you to receive alerts when
changes or additions occur in a docket folder. To subscribe: (1)
Navigate to the docket folder (NRC-2014-0118); (2) click the ``Sign up
for Email Alerts'' link; and (3) enter your email address and select
how frequently you would like to receive emails (daily, weekly, or
monthly).
V. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-274) requires Federal
agencies to write documents in a clear, concise, well-organized manner.
The NRC has written this document to be consistent with the Plain
Writing Act as well as the Presidential Memorandum, ``Plain Language in
Government Writing,'' published June 10, 1998 (63 FR 31883). The NRC
requests comment on this document with respect to the clarity and
effectiveness of the language used.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 10th day of June, 2014.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Christopher G. Miller,
Director, Division of Intergovernmental Liaison and Rulemaking, Office
of Federal and State Materials and Environmental Management Programs.
[FR Doc. 2014-14135 Filed 6-17-14; 8:45 am]
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