Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee Recovery for Fiscal Year 2018, 29622-29657 [2018-13320]
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
• 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
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brian Harris, Office of the Chief
Financial Officer, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone: 301–415–
6382, email: Brian.Harris@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
[NRC–2017–0026]
RIN 3150–AJ95
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee
Recovery for Fiscal Year 2018
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) is amending the
licensing, inspection, special project,
and annual fees charged to its
applicants and licensees. These
amendments are necessary to
implement the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990, as amended
(OBRA–90) which requires the NRC to
recover approximately 90 percent of its
annual budget through fees.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
August 24, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Please refer to Docket ID
NRC–2017–0026 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 Website: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and search
for Docket ID NRC–2017–0026. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol
Gallagher; telephone: 301–415–3463;
email: Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov. For
technical questions, contact the
individual listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
document.
• 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,
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 (if it is available in
ADAMS) is provided the first time that
it is mentioned in this document. For
the convenience of the reader, the
ADAMS accession numbers and
instructions about obtaining materials
referenced in this document are
provided in the ‘‘Availability of
Documents’’ section of this document.
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SUMMARY:
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Table of Contents
I. Background; Statutory Authority
II. Discussion
III. Public Comment Analysis
IV. Public Comments and NRC Response
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
VI. Regulatory Analysis
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
VIII. Plain Writing
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
XI. Congressional Review Act
XII. Voluntary Consensus Standards
XIII. Availability of Guidance
XIV. Availability of Documents
I. Background; Statutory Authority
The NRC’s fee regulations are
primarily governed by two laws: (1) The
Independent Offices Appropriation Act,
1952 (IOAA) (31 U.S.C. 9701), and (2)
OBRA–90 (42 U.S.C. 2214). The IOAA
generally authorizes and encourages
Federal regulatory agencies to recover—
to the fullest extent possible—costs
attributable to services provided to
identifiable recipients. The OBRA–90
requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of its budget
authority for the fiscal year (FY) through
fees; in FY 2018, amounts appropriated
for waste-incidental-to-reprocessing
(WIR), generic homeland security
activities, advanced reactor regulatory
infrastructure activities, international
activities, and Inspector General (IG)
services for the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board are excluded
from this fee-recovery requirement. The
OBRA–90 requires the NRC to use its
IOAA authority first to collect service
fees for NRC work that provides specific
benefits to identifiable applicants and
licensees (such as licensing work,
inspections, and special projects). The
regulations at part 170 of title 10 of the
Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR)
authorize these fees. But, because the
NRC’s fee recovery under the IOAA (10
CFR part 170) does not equal 90 percent
of the NRC’s budget authority for the
fiscal year, the NRC also assesses
‘‘annual fees’’ under 10 CFR part 171 to
recover the remaining amount necessary
to meet OBRA–90’s fee-recovery
requirement. These annual fees recover
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costs that are not otherwise collected
through 10 CFR part 170.
II. Discussion
FY 2018 Fee Collection—Overview
The NRC is issuing the FY 2018 final
fee rule based on the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018 (Pub. L. 115–
141) (the enacted budget), in the amount
of $922.0 million, an increase of $4.9
million from FY 2017. As explained
previously, certain portions of the
NRC’s total budget are excluded from
the NRC’s fee-recovery amount—
specifically, these exclusions include:
$1.3 million for WIR activities, $1.1
million for IG services for the Defense
Nuclear Facilities Safety Board, $10.0
million for advanced reactor regulatory
infrastructure activities, and $15.2
million for generic homeland security
activities. Also, for the first time, the
enacted budget excludes $16.2 million
for international activities from the feerecoverable budget. Additionally,
OBRA–90 requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of the
remaining budget authority—10 percent
of the remaining budget authority is not
recovered through fees. The NRC refers
to the activities included in this 10percent as ‘‘fee-relief’’ activities.
After accounting for the OBRA–90
exclusions, the adjustment associated
with the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID)
rescission,1 the fee-relief activities, and
net billing adjustments (the sum of
unpaid current year invoices (estimated)
minus payments for prior year invoices),
the NRC must bill approximately $789.3
million in FY 2018 to licensees and
applicants. Of this amount, the NRC
estimates that $280.8 million will be
recovered through 10 CFR part 170 user
fees, which leaves approximately $508.5
million to be recovered through 10 CFR
part 171 annual fees. Table I
summarizes the fee-recovery amounts
for the FY 2018 final fee rule using the
enacted budget and taking into account
excluded activities, the fee-relief
activities, and net billing adjustments
(individual values may not sum to totals
due to rounding). The Joint Explanatory
Statement associated with the
Consolidated Appropriations, Act 2018
includes direction for the NRC to use
$15.0 million in carryover funds. The
use of carryover funds allows the NRC
1 The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018,
rescinds approximately $0.1 million of unobligated
balances from funds previously transferred to the
NRC from the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID). The Joint
Explanatory Statement for the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2018, includes an adjustment
to the NRC’s fee recovery amount associated with
this rescission.
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to accomplish the work needed without
additional costs to licensees because
consistent with the requirements of
OBRA–90, fees are calculated based on
29623
the budget authority enacted for the
current FY and not carryover funds.
TABLE I—BUDGET AND FEE RECOVERY AMOUNTS 2
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final rule
FY 2018
final rule
Percentage
change
Total Budget Authority .................................................................................................................
Less Excluded Fee Items ............................................................................................................
$917.1
¥23.1
$922.0
¥43.8
0.5
89.6
Balance .................................................................................................................................
Fee Recovery Percent .................................................................................................................
894.0
90
878.2
90
¥1.7
0.0
Total Amount to be Recovered ...................................................................................................
Adjustment USAID Rescission 3 ..................................................................................................
804.6
0.0
790.4
¥0.1
¥1.7
¥100.0
Total Amount to be Recovered Post USAID ...............................................................................
10 CFR Part 171 Billing Adjustments:
Unpaid Current Year Invoices (estimated) ...........................................................................
Less Payments Received in Current Year for Previous Year Invoices (estimated) ............
804.6
790.3
¥1.8
6.2
¥4.9
6.5
¥7.5
4.8
53.1
Subtotal .........................................................................................................................
1.3
¥1.0
¥176.9
Amount to be Recovered through 10 CFR Parts 170 and 171 Fees .........................................
Less Estimated 10 CFR Part 170 Fees ......................................................................................
805.9
¥297.3
789.3
¥280.8
¥2.0
¥1.2
10 CFR Part 171 Fee Collections Required ........................................................................
508.6
508.5
0.0
for: (1) Mission-direct program salaries
and benefits; (2) mission-indirect
program support; and (3) agency
support (corporate support and the IG),
and then subtracting certain offsetting
receipts, and dividing this total by the
mission-direct full-time equivalents
(FTE) converted to hours. The NRC is
adding the definitions for ‘‘missiondirect program salaries and benefits,’’
‘‘mission-indirect program support,’’
and ‘‘agency support (corporate support
and the IG)’’ to 10 CFR 170.3,
‘‘Definitions.’’ The mission-direct FTE
converted to hours is the product of the
mission-direct FTE multiplied by the
estimated annual mission-direct FTE
productive hours. The only budgeted
resources excluded from the
professional hourly rate are those for
mission-direct contract resources, which
are generally billed to licensees
separately. The following shows the
professional hourly rate calculation (for
this equation, ‘‘budgeted resources’’
does not include mission-direct contract
resources):
For FY 2018, the NRC is increasing
the professional hourly rate from $263
to $275. The 4.6 percent increase in the
FY 2018 professional hourly rate is due
primarily to the 7.3 percent decline in
the number of mission-direct FTE
compared to FY 2017, offset by a 2.4
percent decline in budgeted resources
and a small increase in productive
hours. The 7.3 percent decline in the
number of mission-direct FTE was
larger than the decline projected in the
proposed rule due primarily to the
exclusion of advanced reactor regulatory
infrastructure activities and
international activities from the feerecoverable budget, which caused the
mission-direct FTE assigned to these
activities to be excluded from the
professional hourly rate calculation. The
FY 2018 estimated annual missiondirect FTE productive hours is 1,510
hours, up from 1,500 hours in FY 2017.
This estimate, also referred to as the
productive hours assumption, reflects
the average number of hours that a
mission-direct employee spends on
mission-direct work in a given year.
This excludes hours charged to annual
leave, sick leave, holidays, training, and
general administration tasks. Table II
shows the professional hourly rate
calculation methodology. The FY 2017
amounts are provided for comparison
purposes.
2 For each table, numbers may not add due to
rounding.
3 The adjustment to the NRC’s fee recovery
amount associated with the USAID rescission is
shown in Table 1. Because the USAID rescission
amount was approximately $0.1 million, the
proportion of the USAID rescission applicable to
each fee class is not shown in the accompanying
tables for each fee class. Additional information on
the amount of the USAID rescission applicable to
each fee class is available in the work papers
(ADAMS Accession No. ML18135A044).
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FY 2018 Fee Collection—Professional
Hourly Rate
The NRC uses a professional hourly
rate to assess fees for specific services
provided by the NRC under 10 CFR part
170. The professional hourly rate also
helps determine flat fees (which are
used for the review of certain types of
license applications). This rate will be
applicable to all activities for which fees
are assessed under §§ 170.21 and
170.31.
The NRC’s professional hourly rate is
derived by adding budgeted resources
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TABLE II—PROFESSIONAL HOURLY RATE CALCULATION
[Dollars in millions, except as noted]
FY 2017
final rule
FY 2018
final rule
Percentage
change
Mission-Direct Program Salaries & Benefits ...............................................................................
Mission-Indirect Program Support ...............................................................................................
Agency Support (Corporate Support and the IG) .......................................................................
$340.6
137.3
309.6
$325.7
135.0
308.1
¥4.4
¥1.7
¥0.4
Subtotal .................................................................................................................................
Less Offsetting Receipts 4 ...........................................................................................................
787.5
¥0.1
768.8
0.0
¥2.4
100.0
Total Budgeted Resources Included in Professional Hourly Rate .......................................
Mission-Direct FTE (Whole numbers) .........................................................................................
Annual Mission-Direct FTE Productive Hours (Whole numbers) ................................................
Mission-Direct FTE Converted to Hours (Mission-Direct FTE multiplied by Annual MissionDirect FTE Productive Hours) (In Millions) ..............................................................................
Professional Hourly Rate (Total Budgeted Resources Included in Professional Hourly Rate
Divided by Mission-Direct FTE Converted to Hours) (Whole Numbers) .................................
$787.4
1,996
1,500
$768.8
1,851
1,510
¥2.4
¥7.3
0.7
3.0
2.8
¥6.7
263
275
4.6
FY 2018 Fee Collection—Flat
Application Fee Changes
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The NRC is amending the flat
application fees that it charges to
applicants for import and export
licenses, applicants for materials
licenses and other regulatory services,
and holders of materials in its schedule
of fees in §§ 170.21 and 170.31 to reflect
the revised professional hourly rate of
$275 and the exclusion of international
activities from the fee-recoverable
budget. The NRC calculates these flat
fees by multiplying the average
professional staff hours needed to
process the licensing actions by the
professional hourly rate for FY 2018.
The NRC analyzes the actual hours
spent performing licensing actions and
then estimates the average professional
staff hours that are needed to process
licensing actions as part of its biennial
review of fees, which is required by
Section 205(a) of the Chief Financial
Officers Act of 1990 (31 U.S.C.
902(a)(8)). The NRC performed this
review in FY 2017 and will perform this
review again in FY 2019. The higher
4 The fees collected by the NRC for Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) services and indemnity
(financial protection required of licensees for public
liability claims at 10 CFR part 140) are subtracted
from the budgeted resources amount when
calculating the 10 CFR part 170 professional hourly
rate, per the guidance in Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) Circular A–25, User Charges. The
budgeted resources for FOIA activities are allocated
under the product for Information Services within
the Corporate Support business line. The indemnity
activities are allocated under the Licensing Actions
and the Research & Test Reactors products within
the Operating Reactors business line.
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professional hourly rate of $275 is the
primary reason for the increase in flat
application fees. Please see the work
papers for more detail (ADAMS
Accession No. ML18135044).
The NRC rounds these flat fees in
such a way that ensures both
convenience for its stakeholders and
that any rounding effects are minimal.
Accordingly, fees under $1,000 are
rounded to the nearest $10, fees
between $1,000 and $100,000 are
rounded to the nearest $100, and fees
greater than $100,000 are rounded to the
nearest $1,000.
The licensing flat fees are applicable
for certain materials licensing actions
(see fee categories 1.C. through 1.D., 2.B.
through 2.F., 3.A. through 3.S., 4.B.
through 5.A., 6.A. through 9.D., 10.B.,
15.A. through 15.L., 15.R., and 16 of
§ 170.31). Because the enacted budget
excludes international activities from
the fee-recoverable budget, import and
export licensing actions, wholly funded
through the international activities
product line, (see fee categories K.1.
through K.5. of § 170.21 and fee
categories 15.A. through 15.R. of
§ 170.31) will not be charged fees under
the final rule. To implement this, the
NRC has revised fee categories K.1.
through K.5. of § 170.21 and fee
categories 15.A.
through 15.R. of § 170.31 and
included a new footnote in these
tables.5 Applications filed on or after
the effective date of the FY 2018 final
fee rule will be subject to the revised
fees in this final rule.
5 The NRC has also removed the language relating
to international activities in §§ 171.15(d)(1)(ii) and
171.16(e)(2) (which pertain to the fee-relief
adjustment) because the enacted budget excludes
international activities from the fee-recoverable
budget and thus international activities are not
included in fee relief under the FY 2018 final fee
rule.
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FY 2018 Fee Collection—Fee-Relief and
Low-Level Waste (LLW) Surcharge
As previously noted, OBRA–90
requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of its annual
budget authority for the fiscal year. The
NRC applies the remaining 10 percent
that is not recovered to offset certain
budgeted activities—see Table III for a
full listing of these ‘‘fee-relief’’
activities. If the amount budgeted for
these fee-relief activities is greater or
less than 10 percent of the NRC’s annual
budget authority (less the fee-recovery
exclusions), then the NRC applies a fee
adjustment (either an increase or
decrease) to all licensees’ annual fees,
based on their percentage share of the
NRC’s budget.
In FY 2018, the amount budgeted for
fee-relief activities is less than the 10percent threshold—therefore, the NRC
will assess a fee-relief credit that
decreases all licensees’ annual fees
based on their percentage share of the
budget. The credit is due primarily to
the exclusion of international activities
from the fee-recoverable budget. Table
III summarizes the fee-relief activities
budgeted for FY 2018. The FY 2017
amounts are provided for comparison
purposes.
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29625
TABLE III—FEE-RELIEF ACTIVITIES
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
budgeted
costs
Fee-relief activities
1. Activities not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or class of licensees:
a. International activities 6 .....................................................................................................
b. Agreement State oversight ...............................................................................................
c. Scholarships and Fellowships ..........................................................................................
d. Medical Isotope Production Infrastructure .......................................................................
2. Activities not assessed under 10 CFR part 170 service fees or 10 CFR part 171 annual
fees based on existing law or Commission policy:
a. Fee exemption for nonprofit educational institutions .......................................................
b. Costs not recovered from small entities under § 171.16(c) .............................................
c. Regulatory support to Agreement States .........................................................................
d. Generic decommissioning/reclamation (not related to the power reactor and spent fuel
storage fee classes) ..........................................................................................................
e. In Situ leach rulemaking and unregistered general licensees .........................................
f. Potential Department of Defense remediation program MOU activities ...........................
g. Non-military radium sites ..................................................................................................
FY 2018
budgeted
costs
Percentage
change
$13.8
12.9
17.9
4.2
$0.0
13.5
15.0
3.9
¥100.0
4.5
¥16.2
¥7.1
9.7
7.4
18.5
8.7
6.6
17.4
¥9.9
¥10.8
¥5.9
14.6
1.4
1.1
N/A
14.5
1.5
1.2
1.7
¥1.0
7.1
2.0
N/A
Total fee-relief activities ................................................................................................
Less 10 percent of the NRC’s total FY budget (less the fee recovery exclusions) ....................
101.5
¥89.4
83.9
¥87.8
¥17.3
1.8
Fee-Relief Adjustment to be Allocated to All Licensees’ Annual Fees ...............................
12.1
¥3.9
¥132.6
Table IV shows how the NRC
allocates the $3.9 million fee-relief
credit to each licensee fee class. Also, in
accordance with the staff requirements
memorandum (SRM) dated September
7, 2017 (ADAMS Accession No.
ML17250A841), for SECY–17–0026,
‘‘Policy Considerations and
Recommendations for Remediation of
Non-Military, Unlicensed Historic
Radium Sites in Non-Agreement States’’
dated February 22, 2017 (ADAMS
Accession No. ML17130A783), the NRC
has established a new fee-relief category
for non-military sites contaminated due
to historic uses of radium.
In addition to the fee-relief credit, the
NRC also assesses a generic LLW
surcharge of $3.4 million. Disposal of
LLW occurs at commercially operated
LLW disposal facilities that are licensed
by either the NRC or an Agreement
State. Four existing LLW disposal
facilities in the United States accept
various types of LLW. All are located in
Agreement States and, therefore, are
regulated by an Agreement State, rather
than the NRC. The NRC allocates this
surcharge to its licensees based on data
available in the U.S. Department of
Energy’s (DOE’s) Manifest Information
Management System (MIMS). This
database contains information on total
LLW volumes and NRC usage
information from four generator classes:
Academic, industrial, medical, and
utility. The ratio of utility waste
volumes to total LLW volumes over a
period of time is used to estimate the
portion of this surcharge that will be
allocated to the power reactors, fuel
facilities, and materials fee classes. The
materials portion is adjusted to account
for the fact that a large percentage of
materials licensees are licensed by the
Agreement States rather than the NRC.
The LLW surcharge amounts have
changed since the proposed rule. After
the NRC published the proposed rule for
public comment, DOE updated the
MIMS system with 2017 data. As a
result of the update, the LLW surcharge
for Operating Power Reactors fee class
increased from $1.4 million to $2.6
million. For Fuel Facilities and Material
Users, it decreased from $1.6 million to
$0.7 million and from $0.4 million to
$0.2 million, respectively. Additional
details about these changes to the LLW
surcharge resulting from DOE’s update
to the MIMS system can be found in
Section IV(I).
Table IV shows the LLW surcharge
and fee-relief credit, and its allocation
across the various fee classes.
TABLE IV—ALLOCATION OF FEE-RELIEF ADJUSTMENT AND LLW SURCHARGE, FY 2018
[Dollars in millions]
LLW surcharge
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Percent
Operating Power Reactors ..................................................
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning ...................
Research and Test Reactors ...............................................
Fuel Facilities .......................................................................
Materials Users ....................................................................
Transportation ......................................................................
Rare Earth Facilities ............................................................
Uranium Recovery ...............................................................
6 In prior years, this fee-relief category included
amount includes international assistance activities.
This fee-relief category also included conventions
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Fee-relief adjustment
$
75.0
0.0
0.0
20.0
5.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
Percent
2.6
0.0
0.0
0.7
0.2
0.0
0.0
0.0
and treaty activities that are not attributable to an
existing NRC licensee or class of licensees, and it
included international cooperation activities that
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85.1
4.4
0.3
4.6
3.4
0.5
0.0
1.7
Total
$
$
¥3.4
¥0.2
0.0
¥0.2
¥0.1
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
¥0.8
¥0.2
0.0
0.5
0.0
0.0
0.0
¥0.1
are not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or
class of licensees.
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TABLE IV—ALLOCATION OF FEE-RELIEF ADJUSTMENT AND LLW SURCHARGE, FY 2018—Continued
[Dollars in millions]
LLW surcharge
Percent
Total ..............................................................................
FY 2018 Fee Collection—Revised
Annual Fees
In accordance with SECY–05–0164,
‘‘Annual Fee Calculation Method,’’
dated September 15, 2005 (ADAMS
Accession No. ML052580332), the NRC
rebaselines its annual fees every year.
‘‘Rebaselining’’ entails analyzing the
budget in detail and then allocating the
budgeted costs to various classes or
subclasses of licensees. It also includes
Fee-relief adjustment
$
100.0
Percent
3.4
updating the number of NRC licensees
in its fee calculation methodology.
The NRC revised its annual fees in
§§ 171.15 and 171.16 to recover
approximately 90 percent of the NRC’s
FY 2018 budget authority (less the feerecovery exclusions and the estimated
amount to be recovered through 10 CFR
part 170 fees). The total estimated 10
CFR part 170 collections for this final
rule are $280.8 million, a decrease of
Total
$
$
¥3.9
100.0
¥0.5
$16.6 million from the FY 2017 fee rule.
The NRC, therefore, must recover $508.5
million through annual fees from its
licensees; an amount identical to the
annual fees collected by the FY 2017
final fee rule.
Table V shows the final rebaselined
fees for FY 2018 for a representative list
of license categories. The FY 2017
amounts are provided for comparison
purposes.7
TABLE V—REBASELINED ANNUAL FEES
FY 2017
final annual
fee
Class/category of license
FY 2018
final annual
fee
Percentage
change
Operating Power Reactors ..........................................................................................................
+ Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning ........................................................................
$4,308,000
188,000
$4,333,000
198,000
0.6
5.3
Total, Combined Fee ............................................................................................................
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning ..........................................................................
Research and Test Reactors (Non-power Reactors) ..................................................................
High Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility ...........................................................................................
Low Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility ............................................................................................
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion Facility .................................................................................
Conventional Mills ........................................................................................................................
Typical Materials Users:
Radiographers (Category 3O) ..............................................................................................
Well Loggers (Category 5A) .................................................................................................
All Other Specific Byproduct Material Licensees (Category 3P) .........................................
Broad Scope Medical (Category 7B) ...................................................................................
4,496,000
188,000
81,400
7,255,000
2,629,000
1,498,000
38,900
4,531,000
198,000
81,300
7,346,000
2,661,000
1,517,000
38,800
0.8
5.3
¥0.1
1.3
1.2
1.3
¥0.3
27,000
16,000
9,300
33,800
25,000
14,900
8,600
30,900
¥7.4
¥6.9
¥7.5
¥8.6
The work papers that support this
final rule show in detail how the NRC
allocates the budgeted resources for
each class of license and calculates the
fees.
Paragraphs a. through h. of this
section describe budgeted resources
allocated to each class of license and the
calculations of the rebaselined fees. For
more information about detailed fee
calculations for each class, please
consult the accompanying work papers.
a. Fuel Facilities
The NRC will collect $27.7 million in
annual fees from the fuel facilities class.
TABLE VI—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR FUEL FACILITIES
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Total budgeted resources ............................................................................................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
$33.9
¥9.6
$35.2
¥9.2
3.8
¥4.2
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation ..................................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge .........................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
24.3
1.6
2.5
0.0
26.0
1.3
0.5
0.0
7.0
¥1.9
¥80.0
0.0
Total remaining required annual fee recovery 8 ...................................................................
28.4
27.7
¥2.5
7 For each fee class, the FY 2017 fees and
percentage change are shown for comparison
purposes.
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8 See Table VII for percentage change for each fee
category.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
In FY 2018, the fuel facilities
budgeted resources increased slightly
due to a 5.3 percent increase in the fully
costed FTE rate and the transfer of 1
FTE of enforcement resources from the
nuclear materials user fee class to the
fuel facilities fee class to reflect the fee
class benefiting from the work being
performed by this FTE. The estimated
10 CFR part 170 billings declined by
$0.4 million as a result of completing
license renewals for GE Vallecitos and
Westinghouse, as well as declining
inspection workload for Honeywell.
There was also a reduction to the LLW
surcharge allotment because of
decreased usage of LLW by this fee class
as a percentage of licensees.
The NRC allocates annual fees to
individual fuel facility licensees based
on the effort/fee determination matrix
developed in the FY 1999 final fee rule
(64 FR 31447; June 10, 1999). To briefly
recap, the matrix groups licensees
within this fee class into various fee
categories. The matrix lists processes
conducted at licensed sites and assigns
effort factors for the safety and
safeguards activities associated with
each process (these effort levels are
presented in Table VII). The annual fees
are then distributed across the fee class
based on the regulatory effort reflected
in the matrix.
TABLE VII—EFFORT FACTORS FOR FUEL FACILITIES, FY 2018
Facility type
(fee category)
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a)) ....................................................................................
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b)) .....................................................................................
Limited Operations (1.A.(2)(a)) ....................................................................................................
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b)) ..............................................................
Hot Cell (and others) (1.A.(2)(c)) .................................................................................................
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.) ..........................................................................................................
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1)) ...............................................................................
In FY 2018, the total remaining
required annual fee recovery amount of
$27.7 million is comprised of safety
activities, safeguards activities and the
fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge.
For FY 2018, the total budgeted
resources to be recovered as annual fees
for safety activities are $15.0 million. To
calculate the annual fee, the NRC
allocates this amount to each fee
category based on its percent of the total
regulatory effort for safety activities.
Similarly, the NRC allocates the
budgeted resources to be recovered as
Effort factors
Number of
facilities
annual fees for safeguards activities,
$12.2 million, to each fee category based
on its percent of the total regulatory
effort for safeguards activities. Finally,
the portion of the fee-relief adjustment/
LLW surcharge associated with the fuel
facility fee class—$0.5 million—is
allocated to each fee category based on
its percentage of the total regulatory
effort for both safety and safeguards
activities. The annual fee per licensee is
then calculated by dividing the total
allocated budgeted resources for the fee
category by the number of licensees in
Safety
2
3
0
0
0
1
1
Safeguards
88
70
0
0
0
21
12
96
30
0
0
0
23
7
that fee category. In comparison to FY
2017, there was a decrease of 2.5
percent for the total remaining required
annual fee recovery in FY 2018 (see
Table VI). However, there was an
increase of approximately 1.3 percent in
each fee category in FY 2018. The
differences in the changes to the total
required annual fee recovery and the
annual fees for each fee category is due
to two licensees leaving the fee class in
FY 2017. The fee for each facility is
summarized in Table VIII.
TABLE VIII—ANNUAL FEES FOR FUEL FACILITIES
Facility type
(fee category)
FY 2017 final
annual fee
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a)) ....................................................................................
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b)) .....................................................................................
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b)) ..............................................................
Hot Cell (and others) (1.A.(2)(c)) .................................................................................................
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.) ..........................................................................................................
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1)) ...............................................................................
b. Uranium Recovery Facilities
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
The NRC will collect $0.5 million in
annual fees from the uranium recovery
9 No
$7,255,000
2,629,000
1,366,000
710,000
3,470,000
1,498,000
facilities fee class, a decrease of 50.0
percent from FY 2017.
licensees in this fee category in FY 2018.
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FY 2018
final annual
fee
$7,346,000
2,661,000
9 N/A
10 N/A
3,513,000
1,517,000
Percentage
change
1.3
1.2
N/A
N/A
1.2
1.3
29628
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE IX—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR URANIUM RECOVERY FACILITIES
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
Total budgeted resources ............................................................................................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
$14.3
¥13.5
$13.5
¥12.9
¥5.6
¥4.4
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation ..................................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment ...................................................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
0.8
N/A
0.2
0.0
0.6
N/A
¥0.1
0.0
¥25.0
N/A
¥150.0
0.0
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
1.0
0.5
¥50.0
In comparison to FY 2017, the FY
2018 budgeted resources for uranium
recovery licensees decreased due to
reductions in associated licensing work,
realignment of the Uranium Mill
Tailings Radiation Control Act
(UMTRCA) program, and completed
reviews for license amendments for
Strata Energy and Jane Dough, offset by
increased workload for the Marsland
license amendment review.
The NRC computes the annual fee for
the uranium recovery fee class by
dividing the total annual fee recovery
amount among DOE and the other
licensees in this fee class. The annual
fee decreased for the DOE/UMTRCA
program due to the decreased budgeted
resources and an increase in 10 CFR
part 170 billings for the Atlantic
Richfield Bluewater disposal site
review. The annual fee decreased
slightly for the remaining uranium
recovery licensees due to the fee relief
credit. This was offset by a decrease in
estimated 10 CFR part 170 billings for
completed reviews for license
amendments for Strata Energy and Jane
Dough. There was an increase in 10 CFR
part 170 billings for the Marsland
license amendment review, which also
contributed to the slight decrease in
annual fees.
The NRC regulates DOE’s Title I and
Title II activities under UMTRCA 10 and
the annual fee to DOE includes the costs
specifically budgeted for the NRC’s
UMTRCA Title I and Title II activities,
as well as 10 percent of the remaining
budgeted costs for this fee class. The
annual fee decreased for the overall fee
class due to the decrease in budgeted
resources. The NRC assesses the
remaining 90 percent of its budgeted
costs to the rest of the licensees in this
fee class, as described in the work
papers. This is reflected in Table X as
follows:
TABLE X—COSTS RECOVERED THROUGH ANNUAL FEES; URANIUM RECOVERY FEE CLASS
FY 2017
final
annual
fee
Summary of costs
DOE Annual Fee Amount (UMTRCA Title I and Title II) General Licenses:
UMTRCA Title I and Title II budgeted costs less 10 CFR part 170 receipts ......................
10 percent of generic/other uranium recovery budgeted costs ...........................................
10 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment .........................................................
FY 2018
final
annual
fee
Percentage
change
$80,921
47,723
¥6,724
¥85.9
150.1
¥130.6
Total Annual Fee Amount for DOE (rounded) ..............................................................
Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium Recovery Licenses:
90 percent of generic/other uranium recovery budgeted costs less the amounts specifically budgeted for UMTRCA Title I and Title II activities .................................................
90 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment .........................................................
616,000
122,000
¥80.2
171,714
197,464
429,509
¥60,517
150.1
¥130.6
Total Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium Recovery Licenses ...............................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
$574,595
19,079
21,940
369,178
368,992
¥0.1
activity’s relative weight (for more
information, see the work papers). Table
XI displays the benefit factors per
licensee and per fee category, for each
of the non-DOE fee categories included
in the uranium recovery fee class as
follows:
The matrix methodology for uranium
recovery licensees first identifies the
licensee categories included within this
fee class (excluding DOE). These
categories are: Conventional uranium
mills and heap leach facilities; uranium
In Situ Recovery (ISR) and resin ISR
facilities; mill tailings disposal facilities;
and uranium water treatment facilities.
The matrix identifies the types of
operating activities that support and
benefit these licensees, along with each
10 The Congress established the two programs,
Title I and Title II, under UMTRCA to protect the
public and the environment from uranium milling.
The UMTRCA Title I program is for remedial action
at abandoned mill tailings sites where tailings
resulted largely from production of uranium for the
weapons program. The NRC also regulates DOE’s
UMTRCA Title II program, which is directed
toward uranium mill sites licensed by the NRC or
Agreement States in or after 1978.
Further, for the non-DOE licensees,
the NRC continues to use a matrix to
determine the effort levels associated
with conducting the generic regulatory
actions for the different licensees in this
fee class; this is similar to the NRC’s
approach for fuel facilities, described
previously.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
29629
TABLE XI—BENEFIT FACTORS FOR URANIUM RECOVERY LICENSES
Number of
licensees
Fee category
Benefit factor
per licensee
Total
value
Benefit factor
percent total
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)) .............................................
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)) ....................................................
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(c)) ............................................
Section 11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing tailings sites (2.A.(4)) .............
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5)) ...................................................................
1
5
1
1
1
150
190
215
85
25
150
950
215
85
25
10.5
66.7
15.1
6.0
1.7
Total ..........................................................................................................
9
665
1,425
100.0
Applying these factors to the
approximately $368,992 in budgeted
costs to be recovered from non-DOE
uranium recovery licensees results in
the total annual fees for each fee
category. The annual fee per licensee is
calculated by dividing the total
allocated budgeted resources for the fee
category by the number of licensees in
that fee category, as summarized in
Table XII.
TABLE XII—ANNUAL FEES FOR URANIUM RECOVERY LICENSEES
[Other than DOE]
FY 2017
final annual
fee
Facility type
(fee category)
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)) .........................................................................
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)) ...............................................................................
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(c)) ........................................................................
Section 11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing tailings sites (2.A.(4)) .........................................
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5)) ...............................................................................................
c. Operating Power Reactors
The NRC will collect $428.9 million
in annual fees from the power reactor
fee class in FY 2018, as shown in Table
XIII. The FY 2017 fees and percentage
$38,900
49,200
55,700
22,000
6,500
FY 2018
final annual
fee
Percentage
change
¥0.3
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
$38,800
49,200
55,700
22,000
6,500
change are shown for comparison
purposes.
TABLE XIII—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR OPERATING POWER REACTORS
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
$670.3
¥256.3
$669.9
¥239.6
0.0
¥6.5
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation ..................................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge .........................................................................................
Billing adjustment .........................................................................................................................
414.0
0.3
11.1
1.1
430.4
0.3
¥0.8
¥0.9
4.0
0.0
¥107.2
¥181.8
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
Total operating reactors ...............................................................................................................
426.5
99
428.9
99
0.6
0.0
Annual fee per reactor .................................................................................................................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Total budgeted resources ............................................................................................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
4.308
4.333
0.6
In comparison to FY 2017, the
operating power reactors budgeted
resources decreased slightly by $0.4
million due to a decline in FTEs needed
for Fukushima-related work and
combined license reviews. This decline
in FTEs, however, was offset by
increases in contract costs associated
with research in the areas of safety and
security of digital systems, materials
degradation, the aging of cables, and the
effects of concrete degradation.11 In FY
2018, contract costs also increased to
support the new reactor design
certification and early site permit
reviews, as well as related infrastructure
and technical assistance.
Estimated billings under 10 CFR part
170 also slightly declined primarily due
to South Carolina Electric and Gas
Company’s decision to abandon the
11 These contract costs were funded with prior
year unobligated carryover in FY 2017, and thus,
were not included in the FY 2017 final fee rule.
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construction of the two new nuclear
units at V.C. Summer Nuclear Station.
The budgeted resources are divided
equally among the 99 operating power
reactors, resulting in an annual fee of
$4,333,000 per reactor. Additionally,
each licensed power reactor is assessed
the FY 2018 spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning annual fee of
$198,000 (see Table XIV and the
discussion that follows). The combined
FY 2018 annual fee for operating power
reactors is, therefore, $4,531,000.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
On May 24, 2016, the NRC amended
its licensing, inspection, and annual fee
regulations to establish a variable
annual fee structure for light-water
small modular reactors (SMRs). Under
the variable annual fee structure,
effective June 23, 2016, an SMR’s
annual fee would be calculated as a
function of its licensed thermal power
rating. Currently, there are no operating
SMRs; therefore, the NRC will not assess
an annual fee in FY 2018 for this type
of licensee.
d. Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor
Decommissioning
reactors, and from 10 CFR part 72
licensees that do not hold a 10 CFR part
50 license, to collect the budgeted costs
for spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning.
The NRC will collect $24.2 million in
annual fees from 10 CFR part 50 power
TABLE XIV—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR THE SPENT FUEL STORAGE/REACTOR DECOMMISSIONING FEE
CLASS
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
Total budgeted resources ............................................................................................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
$29.5
¥7.9
$33.8
¥10.2
14.6
29.1
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation costs ........................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment ...................................................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
21.6
0.8
0.5
0.1
23.7
0.7
¥0.2
0.0
9.7
12.5
¥140.0
¥100.0
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
23.0
24.2
5.2
Total spent fuel storage facilities ..........................................................................................
122
122
0.0
Annual fee per facility ..................................................................................................................
0.188
0.198
5.3
Compared to FY 2017, the FY 2018
budgeted resources for spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning
increased due to: (1) An increase in
resources to support the safety, security,
emergency preparedness, and
environmental reviews for two
applications for consolidated interim
storage facilities; and (2) efforts to
consolidate the standard review plan for
all facilities in the fee class. For this fee
class, estimated billings under 10 CFR
part 170 increased slightly due to an
anticipated increase in workload for the
Holtec International consolidated
interim storage facility application, a
renewal request for DOE Idaho, and an
amendment request by TN Americas.
This increase in 10 CFR part 170
estimated billings was partly offset due
to suspension of the review for the
Waste Control Specialists consolidated
interim storage facility application.
The required annual fee recovery
amount is divided equally among 122
licensees, resulting in an FY 2018
annual fee of $198,000 per licensee.
e. Research and Test Reactors (NonPower Reactors)
The NRC will collect $0.325 million
in annual fees from the research and test
reactor licensee class.
TABLE XV—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR RESEARCH AND TEST REACTORS
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
$1.982
¥1.724
$2.009
¥1.698
1.4
¥1.5
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation ..................................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment ...................................................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
0.258
0.034
0.031
0.003
0.311
0.027
¥0.010
¥0.003
20.5
-20.6
¥67.7
¥200.0
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
0.326
0.325
¥0.3
Total research and test reactors .................................................................................................
4
4
0.0
Total annual fee per reactor .................................................................................................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Total budgeted resources ............................................................................................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
0.0814
0.0813
¥0.1
For this fee class, the budgeted
resources increased due to an increase
in the fully costed FTE rate. Despite the
increase in budgeted resources, the final
FY 2018 annual fee decreased due to an
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reduction in generic transportation costs
from FY 2017. These were offset by a
decline in estimated 10 CFR part 170
billings due to the lower than projected
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workload associated with the delayed
construction and license application
submission schedules of two medical
isotope production facilities. This
decline was offset by increases in
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estimated 10 CFR part 170 billings for
Aerotest’s license renewal and
continued project management activities
for the four research and test reactor
sites.
The required annual fee-recovery
amount is divided equally among the
four research and test reactors subject to
annual fees and results in an FY 2018
annual fee of $81,300 for each licensee.
f. Rare Earth
The NRC has not allocated any
budgeted resources to this fee class;
therefore, the NRC is not issuing an
annual fee in FY 2018.
29631
g. Materials Users
The NRC will collect $32.4 million in
annual fees from materials users
licensed under 10 CFR parts 30, 40, and
70.
TABLE XVI—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR MATERIALS USERS
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
Total budgeted resources for licensees not regulated by Agreement States .............................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts ..................................................................................
$33.7
¥0.9
$32.1
¥0.9
¥4.7
0.0
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources ...........................................................................................
Allocated generic transportation ..................................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge .........................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
32.8
1.6
0.9
0.1
31.1
1.3
0.0
0.0
¥5.2
¥18.8
¥100.0
¥100.0
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
35.4
32.4
¥8.5
The annual fee for these categories of
materials users’ licenses is developed as
follows: Annual Fee = Constant x
[Application Fee + (Average Inspection
Cost/Inspection Priority)] + Inspection
Multiplier × (Average Inspection Cost/
Inspection Priority) + Unique Category
Costs. The total annual fee recovery for
FY 2018 consists of the following: $24.9
million for general costs, $7.2 million
for inspection costs, $0.3 million for
unique costs for medical licenses, and
$0.04 million for the fee relief
adjustment/LLW surcharge. To
equitably and fairly allocate the $32.4
million required to be collected among
approximately 2,600 diverse materials
users licensees, the NRC continues to
calculate the annual fees for each fee
category within this class based on the
10 CFR part 170 application fees and
estimated inspection costs for each fee
category. Because the application fees
and inspection costs are indicative of
the complexity of the materials license,
this approach provides a proxy for
allocating the generic and other
regulatory costs to the diverse fee
categories. This fee-calculation method
also considers the inspection frequency
(priority), which is indicative of the
safety risk and resulting regulatory costs
associated with the categories of
licenses.
The NRC is decreasing the annual fees
for most materials licensees in this fee
class in FY 2018 due to a reduction in
budgeted resources for oversight
activities through implementation of
process enhancements and rebaselining
of the materials program under Project
Aim.
The constant multiplier is established
in order to recover the total general
costs (including allocated generic
transportation costs) of $24.9 million.
To derive the constant multiplier, the
general cost amount is divided by the
product of all fee categories (application
fee plus the inspection fee divided by
inspection priority) then multiplied by
the number of licensees. This
calculation results in a constant
multiplier of 1.36 for FY 2018. The
average inspection cost is the average
inspection hours for each fee category
multiplied by the professional hourly
rate of $275. The inspection priority is
the interval between routine
inspections, expressed in years. The
inspection multiplier is established in
order to recover the $7.2 million in
inspection costs. To derive the
inspection multiplier, the inspection
costs amount is divided by the product
of all fee categories (inspection fee
divided by inspection priority) then
multiplied by the number of licensees.
This calculation results in an inspection
multiplier of 1.39 for FY 2018. The
unique category costs are any special
costs that the NRC has budgeted for a
specific category of licenses. For FY
2018, unique category costs include
approximately $0.3 million in budgeted
costs for the implementation of revised
10 CFR part 35, ‘‘Medical Use of
Byproduct Material,’’ which has been
allocated to holders of NRC human-use
licenses.
The annual fee assessed to each
licensee also includes a share of the $0.1
million fee-relief credit assessment
allocated to the materials users fee class
(see Table IV, ‘‘Allocation of Fee-Relief
Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY
2018,’’ in Section III, ‘‘Discussion,’’ of
this document), and for certain
categories of these licensees, a share of
the approximately $0.2 million LLW
surcharge costs allocated to the fee
class. The annual fee for each fee
category is shown in the revision to
§ 171.16(d).
h. Transportation
The NRC will collect $1.1 million in
annual fees to recover generic
transportation budgeted resources. The
FY 2017 values are shown for
comparison purposes.
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TABLE XVII—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR TRANSPORTATION
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
Total Budgeted Resources ..........................................................................................................
Less Estimated 10 CFR part 170 Receipts .................................................................................
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¥3.1
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final
$7.9
¥3.1
Percentage
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TABLE XVII—ANNUAL FEE SUMMARY CALCULATIONS FOR TRANSPORTATION—Continued
[Dollars in millions]
FY 2017
final
Summary fee calculations
FY 2018
final
Percentage
change
Net 10 CFR part 171 Resources .........................................................................................
Less Generic Transportation Resources 12 .................................................................................
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge .........................................................................................
Billing adjustments .......................................................................................................................
5.8
¥4.5
0.0
0.0
4.7
¥3.6
0.0
0.0
¥19.0
¥20.0
0.0
0.0
Total required annual fee recovery ......................................................................................
1.5
1.1
¥28.5
In comparison to FY 2017, the total
budgeted resources for FY 2018 for
generic transportation activities
decreased due to a decline in the
expected number of major licensing
actions to be completed in FY 2018 and
a reduction in the Certificates of
Compliance (CoCs) for DOE (from 22 to
21). There was also a decline in
budgeted resources within licensing and
rulemaking support due to a transfer of
certain budgeted resources to the spent
fuel storage/reactor decommissioning
fee class.
Consistent with the policy established
in the NRC’s FY 2006 final fee rule (71
FR 30721; May 30, 2006), the NRC
recovers generic transportation costs
unrelated to DOE by including those
costs in the annual fees for licensee fee
classes. The NRC continues to assess a
separate annual fee under § 171.16, fee
category 18.A. for DOE transportation
activities. The amount of the allocated
generic resources is calculated by
multiplying the percentage of total CoCs
used by each fee class (and DOE) by the
total generic transportation resources to
be recovered. The final annual fee
decrease for DOE is mainly due to a
decrease in CoCs from 22 to 21 in FY
2018.
This resource distribution to the
licensee fee classes and DOE is shown
in Table XVIII. Note that for the research
and test reactors fee class, the NRC
allocates the distribution to only those
licensees that are subject to annual fees.
Although four CoCs benefit the entire
research and test reactor class, only 4
out of 31 research and test reactors are
subject to annual fees. Consequently,
the number of CoCs used to determine
the proportion of generic transportation
resources allocated to research and test
reactors annual fees has been adjusted
to 0.5 so the research and test reactors
subject to annual fees are charged a fair
and equitable portion of the total. For
more information, see the work papers.
TABLE XVIII—DISTRIBUTION OF TRANSPORTATION RESOURCES, FY 2018
[Dollars in millions]
Number of CoCs
benefiting fee
class or DOE
Licensee fee class/DOE
Percentage
of total
CoCs
Allocated generic
transportation
resources
Materials Users ................................................................................................................
Operating Power Reactors ..............................................................................................
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor ............................................................................................
Decommissioning .............................................................................................................
Research and Test Reactors ...........................................................................................
Fuel Facilities ...................................................................................................................
25.0
5.0
27.9
5.6
$1.3
0.3
14.0
0.5
24.0
15.6
0.6
26.8
0.7
0.0
1.3
Sub-Total of Generic Transportation Resources .....................................................
DOE .................................................................................................................................
68.5
21.0
76.5
23.5
3.6
1.1
Total ..........................................................................................................................
89.5
100.0
4.7
The NRC assesses an annual fee to
DOE based on the 10 CFR part 71 CoCs
it holds. The NRC, therefore, does not
allocate these DOE-related resources to
other licensees’ annual fees because
these resources specifically support
DOE.
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FY 2018—Policy Change
The NRC makes one policy change for
FY 2018:
Changes to Small Materials Users Fee
Categories for Locations of Use
The NRC adds new fee subcategories
to seven existing fee categories under 10
CFR 170.31, ‘‘Schedule of Fees for
12 New
Materials Licenses and Other Regulatory
Services, Including Inspections, and
Import and Export Licenses,’’ and 10
CFR 171.16, ‘‘Annual Fees: Materials
Licensees, Holders of Certificates of
Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source
and Device Registrations, Holders of
Quality Assurance Program Approvals,
and Government Agencies Licensed by
the NRC.’’ Generally speaking, 10 CFR
170.31 assigns the same fee to each
licensee in the fee category, regardless
of the number of locations where the
licensee is authorized to work. Yet for
some of these fee categories, the NRC
staff recently determined that it spends
a disproportionate amount of time on
licensees with six or more locations
compared to licensees in the same fee
category with fewer than six locations.
Therefore, the NRC is revising its fee
categories so that these fees better align
with the actual costs of providing
regulatory services.
Previously—in the FY 2015 final fee
rule—the NRC added three fee
subcategories under one fee category,
3.L. (research and development broad
scope) for licenses with six or more
locations of use. Although there are 14
additional fee categories that could be
modified, the NRC determined that most
line item added to enhance clarity.
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affected licenses are covered under 7 of
the 14 fee categories. Accordingly, the
NRC is adding subcategories to these
seven fee categories:
• Manufacturing broad scope licenses
under fee category 3.A.
• Other manufacturing licenses under
fee category 3.B.
• Medical product distribution
licenses under fee category 3.C.
• Industrial radiography licenses
under fee category 3.O.
• Other byproduct licenses (e.g.,
portable and fixed gauges, measuring
systems) under fee category 3.P.
• Medical licenses under fee
categories 7.A. and 7.B.
To more accurately reflect the cost of
services provided by the NRC, this
change results in each fee category
having subcategories for 1–5, 6–20, and
more than 20 locations of use. The NRC
is also amending footnotes 9, 18, and 19,
as numbered in the final rule, in
§ 171.16 and footnotes 7, 9, and 10 in
§ 170.31 to reflect the new fee
subcategories.
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FY 2018—Administrative Changes
The NRC is making ten 13 of the
eleven proposed administrative changes
in this final rule:
1. Revise the methodology of charging
licensees for overhead time for project
managers (PMs) and resident inspectors
(RIs).
The NRC is revising the methodology
for charging licensees for overhead time
for PMs and RIs. The prior approach
was that the NRC included an overhead
cost of 6 percent of direct billable costs
to all licensees’ invoices. The overhead
charge was intended to recover the full
cost for PM and RI activities that
provide a direct benefit to the assigned
licensee or site.
In FY 2015 to FY 2017, this 6-percent
value was based on the analysis of 4
years of billing data (FY 2011 to FY
2014) for overhead activities recorded in
the time and labor system by a PM or
RI and billed to the dockets to which the
PM or the RI were officially assigned.
The NRC has reviewed the process and,
as a process enhancement, created
docket-related fee-billable cost activity
codes to replace the prior 6-percent
approach. Consistent with 10 CFR
170.12(c)(1), which requires the NRC to
assess fees to recover full cost for each
RI (including the senior RI) assigned to
a specific plant or facility (i.e., ‘‘all time
in a non-leave status,’’ excluding time
spent in support of activities at another
site), RIs (including senior RIs) will
begin recording time to these new
13 The change identified as item No.10 is not
being made as part of the final rule.
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docket-related fee-billable cost activity
codes at the end of FY 2018. These new
docket-related fee-billable cost activity
codes will not be used by PMs. Agency
efforts have significantly reduced the
use of non-fee-billable overhead
associated with PMs through
improvements in the timekeeping
system, additional staff training, and
more robust control of hours recorded to
the cost activity codes by the PMs. The
agency continues to monitor the proper
use of the limited range of indirect
activities.
The first invoice without the 6percent overhead charge will be issued
in January 2019. Instead, the licensee
invoices will include the actual hours
for RI activities that support and
directly benefit the assigned licensee or
site. The licensees should expect to see
a cost activity code on their invoices
which references these RI indirect
hours.
2. Add definitions for inputs in the
professional hourly rate calculation in
10 CFR part 170, ‘‘Fees for Facilities,
Materials, Import and Export Licenses,
and Other Regulatory Services under the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as
Amended.’’
In response to the recommendations
in the U.S. Government Accountability
Office (GAO) report titled ‘‘Nuclear
Regulatory Commission: Regulatory FeeSetting Calculations Need Greater
Transparency’’ (GAO–17–232), dated
February 2, 2017, the NRC committed to
add definitions for the professional
hourly rate components in 10 CFR part
170 during the FY 2018 fee rulemaking.
The NRC, therefore, adds the definitions
for ‘‘agency support (corporate support
and the IG),’’ ‘‘mission-direct program
salaries and benefits,’’ and ‘‘missionindirect program support’’ to 10 CFR
170.3, ‘‘Definitions.’’
3. Delete the definition of ‘‘overhead
and general and administrative costs’’
from 10 CFR 170.3 and 10 CFR 171.5.
The term ‘‘overhead and general and
administrative costs’’ is currently
defined in 10 CFR 170.3 and 10 CFR
171.5, but it is not used in 10 CFR parts
170 and 171. Nor do the subordinate
elements of the definition—
‘‘Government benefits,’’ ‘‘travel costs,’’
‘‘overhead,’’ ‘‘administrative support
costs,’’ and ‘‘indirect costs’’—appear
elsewhere in 10 CFR parts 170 and 171.
The NRC, therefore, deletes these
definitions to enhance clarity.
4. Amend language under 10 CFR
170.11, ‘‘Exemptions,’’ to add a new
paragraph to include the timeframe in
which a request for a fee exemption
must be submitted to the Chief
Financial Officer (CFO) under 10 CFR
part 170.
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29633
The NRC is amending its exemption
requirements to specify that a request
for a fee exemption under 10 CFR
170.11(a)(1) must be submitted to the
CFO within 90 days of the date of the
NRC’s receipt of the work.
5. Amend language under 10 CFR
170.31, ‘‘Schedule of Fees for Materials
Licenses and Other Regulatory Services,
Including Inspections, and Import and
Export Licenses,’’ and 10 CFR 171.16,
‘‘Annual Fees: Materials Licensees,
Holders of Certificates of Compliance,
Holders of Sealed Source and Device
Registrations, Holders of Quality
Assurance Program Approvals, and
Government Agencies Licensed by the
NRC,’’ to enhance clarity.
When a materials license (or part of a
materials license) changes from
operational to decommissioning status,
it transitions to fee category 14.A. There
are two aspects of the fee treatment that
follows transition to fee category 14.A.
First, the materials license (or part of a
materials license) that transitions to fee
category 14.A is assessed full cost fees
under 10 CFR part 170, even if, before
the transition to this fee category, the
licensee was assessed flat fees under 10
CFR part 170. Second, the materials
license (or part of a materials license)
that transitions to fee category 14.A is
not assessed annual fees under 10 CFR
part 171. If only part of a materials
license is transitioned to fee category
14.A, the licensee may be charged
annual fees (and any applicable 10 CFR
part 170 fees) for other activities
authorized under the license that are not
in decommissioning status. This final
rule adds a new footnote to the table in
10 CFR 170.31 and to the table in 10
CFR 171.16 to emphasize the fee
treatment that follows a transition to fee
category 14.A.
The NRC also adds new language to
the description of fee category 14.A. in
both 10 CFR 170.31 and 171.16 in order
to enhance clarity regarding when a
materials license (or part of a materials
license) transitions to fee category 14.A.
Specifically, this transition occurs when
a licensee has permanently ceased
principal activities. For guidance on
what constitutes ‘‘permanently ceasing
principal activities,’’ please see
Regulatory Issue Summary 2015–19,
‘‘Decommissioning Timeliness Rule
Implementation and Associated
Regulatory Relief’’ (September 27, 2016,
ADAMS Accession No. ML16008A242).
6. Amend language under 10 CFR
171.3 and 10 CFR 171.16(a) to clarify
when the assessment of annual fees
begins for uranium recovery and fuel
facility licensees.
Both uranium recovery and fuel
facilities licenses include a condition
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that the NRC must complete a postconstruction, pre-operational inspection
to authorize a licensee to possess and
use source material. In the FY 2007 final
fee rule, the NRC added language to 10
CFR 171.3 and 10 CFR 171.16(a) to
codify its policy that annual fees for
uranium enrichment facilities will be
assessed after the NRC verifies through
inspection that the facility has been
constructed in accordance with the
requirements of the license. The NRC is
amending those sections to codify the
policy that the assessment of annual
fees for uranium recovery or fuel facility
licensees, including uranium
enrichment facility licensees, begins
after the NRC inspection verifies that
the facility has been constructed in
accordance with the requirements of the
license.
7. Amend footnote 9 to the table in 10
CFR 171.16(d) for clarity.
The NRC revises footnote 9 to clarify
that nuclear medicine licensees under
fee category 7.A. are not assessed a
separate annual fee for pacemaker
licenses.
8. Delete footnote 15 to the table in 10
CFR 171.16(d).
The NRC deletes footnote 15 because
footnote 16 is more comprehensive and
already includes the relevant
information from footnote 15. The
current footnote 16 is renumbered as
footnote 15, and the footnotes that
follow current footnote 16 are
renumbered. All references to these
footnotes in fee categories are adjusted
accordingly.
9. Amend footnote 16 to the table in
10 CFR 171.16(d) for clarity.
The NRC renumbers footnote 16 as
footnote 15, as indicated, and revises it
to clarify that licensees paying fees
under fee category 17 are not subject to
additional fees listed in the table.
10. Proposal to add a new footnote to
the table in 10 CFR 171.16(d) for clarity.
In the proposed fee rule, the NRC
proposed to add a new footnote
(footnote 20 in the proposed fee rule) to
clarify when licensees are exempt from
paying annual fees under a specific fee
category when they are licensed under
multiple fee categories. Specifically, the
NRC proposed to add references to the
new footnote 20 for fee categories 2.B.,
3.N., and 3.P. The NRC, however,
determined that the proposed footnote
20 was redundant to footnotes 17 and 18
for fee category 2B; to footnote 19 for fee
category 3.P., as well as new fee
categories 3.P(1) and 3.P(2). The
language in the proposed footnote 20
was also determined to be redundant to
the description for fee category 3.N.
Therefore, the NRC does not add this
footnote to the table in § 171.16(d).
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11. Amend language under 10 CFR
171.17, ‘‘Proration,’’ to add a new
sentence on the proration of fees.
This final rule revises language
regarding (1) reactors; (2) licensees
under 10 CFR part 72, ‘‘Licensing
Requirements for the Independent
Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel, HighLevel Radioactive Waste, and ReactorRelated Greater Than Class C Waste,’’
who do not hold 10 CFR part 50,
‘‘Domestic Licensing of Production and
Utilization Facilities,’’ licenses; and (3)
materials licensees with annual fees of
$100,000 or greater for a single fee
category. The NRC is basing the
proration of annual fees for terminated
and downgraded licensees on the fee
rule in effect at the time the termination
or downgrade action is official. The
NRC bases the determinations on the
proration requirements under 10 CFR
171.17(a)(2) and (3).
Prior to this final rule, proration was
based on the fee rule for the current
fiscal year. This prevents the NRC from
accurately billing the licensee at the
time the termination or downgrade
action is official based on the proration
requirements under 10 CFR 171.17(a)(2)
and (3). The NRC had wait until the
current year’s fee rule was effective
(typically during the fourth quarter of a
fiscal year) to either bill additional
amounts or process refunds to the
licensee based on the new fee rule
amount.
This amendment allows the NRC to
prorate annual fees based on the fee rule
in effect at the time the termination or
downgrade action is official based on
the proration requirements under 10
CFR 171.17(a)(2) and (3), thereby
providing improved transparency for fee
adjustments in the fourth quarter of the
fiscal year. This change supports the fair
and equitable assessment of fees
because it ties annual fee proration to
when the license actually becomes
downgraded or terminated.
Update to the Fees Transformation
Initiative
The SRM, dated October 19, 2016
(ADAMS Accession No. ML16293A902),
for SECY–16–0097, ‘‘Fee Setting
Improvements and Fiscal Year 2017
Proposed Fee Rule’’ (ADAMS Accession
No. ML16194A365) directed staff to
explore, as a voluntary pilot, whether a
flat fee structure could be established
for routine licensing matters in the area
uranium recovery, and to accelerate the
fees setting process improvements
including the transition to an electronic
billing system. With respect to the
voluntary flat fees pilot, the staff has
developed a project plan and is on target
to complete this activity by September
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2020. With respect to the fees setting
process improvements, all 14 of the
activities scheduled for FY 2017 and an
additional 3 scheduled for FY 2018
were completed in FY 2017. These
improvements included adding
additional content to the FY 2018
Congressional Budget Justification (CBJ)
to help licensees understand how the
planned workload in the budget
impacted fees, validating the budgeting
process by comparing budgeted
amounts with actual amounts in the
CBJ, posting the estimated cost of
various licensing actions for both the
Reactors and Materials programs on the
NRC’s public website, and modifying
the calculation of full-cost fees to
facilitate publishing the proposed and
final fee rules earlier.
Two remaining fee setting
improvements are scheduled to be
completed for FY 2018. First, the change
to the methodology for recovering RI/
PM overhead costs is discussed in this
document. Second, the NRC is adding
an additional tab to the final fee rule
work papers to improve transparency
with the part 170 estimates impact on
part 171 annual fees by disclosing the
ratios of the estimated part 170 to part
171 collections for each fee class with
the actual ratio of collections for FY
2017.
For the remaining process changes
recommended for future consideration,
the NRC is well-positioned to complete
them on schedule. For more
information, please see the fees
transformation accomplishments
schedule, located on the license fees
website at: https://www.nrc.gov/aboutnrc/regulatory/licensing/feestransformation-accomplishments.html.
III. Public Comment Analysis
Overview of Public Comments
The NRC received 13 written
comment submissions on the proposed
rule. A comment submission for the
purpose of this rule is defined as a
written communication or document
submitted to the NRC by an individual
or entity, with one or more distinct
comments addressing a subject or an
issue. A comment, on the other hand,
refers to a statement made in the
submission addressing a subject or
issue. In general, the commenters were
supportive of the specific proposed
regulatory changes, although most
commenters expressed concerns about
broader fee-policy issues related to
transparency, fairness, and overall size
of the budget.
The commenters are listed in Table
XIX.
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TABLE XIX—FY 2018 PROPOSED FEE RULE COMMENTER SUBMISSIONS
Commenter
Affiliation
ADAMS
Accession No.
John Snider .....................................
Aaron Ahern ....................................
W. B. Smith .....................................
Stephen Cowne ...............................
David Shafer ...................................
J. Bradley Fewell .............................
Duane Bollig ....................................
Joyce Goldfield ................................
Douglas Weaver ..............................
Joseph Pollock ................................
Pamela Cowan ................................
Tyson R. Smith ...............................
Richard J. Freudenberger ...............
Anderson Engineering ..............................................................................
Unknown ...................................................................................................
Unknown ...................................................................................................
URENCO USA .........................................................................................
U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Legacy Management ...................
Exelon Generation Co. LLC .....................................................................
Water Remediation Technology LLC .......................................................
Unknown ...................................................................................................
Westinghouse Electric Co ........................................................................
Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) .................................................................
NEI ............................................................................................................
Honeywell International Inc ......................................................................
Nuclear Fuel Services Inc ........................................................................
ML18038B689
ML18046A092
ML18052B512
ML18053A945
ML18053A946
ML18054B354
ML18057B073
ML18057B550
ML18057B551
ML18058A206
ML18058A247
ML18058A305
ML18068A693
Information about obtaining the
complete text of the comment
submissions is available in Section XIV,
‘‘Availability of Documents,’’ of this
document.
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IV. Public Comments and NRC
Responses
The NRC has carefully considered the
public comments received on the
proposed rule. The comments have been
organized by topic. Comments from
multiple commenters raising similar
specific concerns were combined to
capture the common essential issues
raised by the commenters. Comments
from a single commenter have been
quoted to ensure accuracy; brackets
within those comments are used show
changes that have been made to the
quoted comments. The NRC responses
are preceded by a short summary of the
issues raised by the commenters.
A. Transparency and Public
Participation
Comment: To ensure a meaningful
opportunity to comment on proposed
fees, the commenters request that the
NRC re-issue the proposed rule to reflect
any final FY 2018 appropriations. If
timing constrains the NRC’s ability to
re-issue the proposed rule, the
commenter requests that the NRC make
publicly available as soon as possible a
document reflecting how any FY 2018
appropriation will alter FY 2018 fees.
Doing so will allow licensees to plan
their internal budgets with more fidelity
than continuing to rely on a proposed
fee rule that is no longer valid. (EXN,
NEI–1, NEI–2, NFS)
Response: Several commenters
expressed a general desire for the NRC
to re-publish the proposed rule for
comment based on the final enacted
appropriations; alternatively, the
commenters wanted the newly
determined fees based on the final
appropriations to be made publicly
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available in advance of the final rule.
The NRC disagrees with these
comments. The NRC strives to ensure
that the proposed fee rule is as accurate
as possible and explains its assumptions
about the budgetary resources in order
to provide the best information available
regarding the fiscal year’s proposed fees.
However, the NRC must comply with
statutory requirements, including
OBRA–90 and the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). The OBRA–90
requires the NRC to collect
approximately 90 percent of its budget
authority through fees assessed by the
end of the fiscal year. Because the Office
of Management and Budget has found
the fee rule to be a major rule under the
Congressional Review Act, the effective
date of the final rule cannot be less than
60 days from the date of publication but
must allow timely final billing prior to
the end of the fiscal year. Because
section 553 of the APA requires the NRC
to give the public an opportunity to
comment on a republished proposed
rule, the NRC cannot republish the FY
2018 proposed fee rule, and meet its
statutory requirement. No changes were
made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
B. Budget Formulation
Comment: In today’s economic
environment, NRC licensees are
collectively taking actions to reduce the
operating costs to secure continued
operations. As reactors shut down,
licensees idle facilities, and others delay
operations, the NRC should take
commensurate actions to reduce its
budget, pursue meaningful efficiencies
in operations, develop appropriate
metrics, and improve the transparency
and process for developing its budgets.
(EXN, NEI–1, NEI–2, NFS, WEC)
Response: Several commenters
expressed concern regarding the NRC’s
budget related to the loss of licensees
from particular fee classes, the challenge
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Acronym
AE
AA
WBS
UUSA
DOE
EXN
WRT
JG
WEC
NEI–1
NEI–2
HW
NFS
to fees that result from potentially larger
budgets, the proper use of metrics and
methods to determine the appropriate
budget size and justifications, and a
request for a public comment period on
the proposed budget.
The fees assessed to licensees and
applicants by the NRC must conform to
OBRA–90, which requires the NRC to
collect approximately 90 percent of its
annual budget authority (less certain
excluded items) through both user fees
and annual fees. The NRC can assess
these annual fees only to licensees or
certificate holders, and the annual fee
schedule must be fair and equitably
allocate annual fees among the NRC’s
many licensees. To ensure compliance
with OBRA–90, the NRC makes
continual organizational improvements
to align the resources needed to support
its regulatory activities. These actions
help mitigate impacts on the remaining
licensees from licensees that leave a fee
class by helping the NRC continue to
develop budgets that account for
regulating a fee class with a declining
number of licensees.
The NRC continues to examine and
pursue improvements to its process and
increases in efficiency that will allow it
to meet its statutory responsibilities as
the industry changes. The NRC
continues to develop methods that
would allow for more rapid adaption to
future needs, changes to the technology,
and the size of the licensed community.
With regard to the request for a public
comment period on the proposed
budget, the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) establishes the Executive
Branch budget process through
circulars, memoranda, and guidance
documents. The OMB Circular No. A–11
(Circular A–11) is updated annually and
contains extensive instructions and
schedules for agency submission of
budget requests and justification
materials to OMB.
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No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of these comments.
C. Work Papers
Comment: Both the proposed rule and
the work papers state that the operating
power reactor annual fee increases in
part due to increased support for new
reactor design certification and early
site permit reviews. However, neither
document provides any more
explanation as to the reason this work
is increasing. Instead, one must consult
the FY2018 Congressional Budget
Justification to understand the purpose
of this work (and even then, it remains
at a fairly high level). Exelon
recommends that at least the same level
of explanation in the Congressional
Budget Justification also be included in
the proposed fee rule.
The proposed rule and work papers
list contract and Full Time Equivalent
resources for general areas of research
(e.g., ‘‘engineering research’’ and ‘‘risk
analysis’’), but provides no explanation
of the exact research activities being
conducted. Breaking down these general
research areas into more specific topics
(with associated costs) would give
licensees a more fulsome understanding
of the NRC activities that our fees are
funding. Moreover, the NRC should
make clear how these research activities
advance the agency’s goals and
objectives as set forth in its Strategic
Plan.
Similarly, the proposed rule states
that certain mission-direct non-labor
contract costs increased in FY[ ]2018
because those activities were funded in
FY[ ]2017 with prior year unobligated
carryover. However, the proposed rule
and work papers do not describe
whether the total contract costs for FY
2018 are increasing compared to FY
2017 (irrespective of the funding
source). Since the work papers reflect
these contract costs as having zero
resources allocated in FY 2017 (due to
being funded by carryover), it is
impossible to tell if more (or less) work
is being done in these areas relative to
last year. Exelon requests that, to the
extent possible, in future final fee rules
or work papers, the NRC identify which
activities will be funded with carryover,
and the amount of carryover allocated to
each of those activities. This will enable
licensees to compare total costs
associated with NRC activities from year
to year, regardless of how they were
funded. (EXN)
Response: The commenter is
requesting additional detail in the work
papers in order to better understand the
change in work being performed,
improved clarity regarding the use of
carryover funding, and additional
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information regarding research efforts.
Different information is provided in
different publications, including the
work papers and the CBJ because these
documents serve different purposes.
The fee rule and the supporting work
papers, for instance, are published in
order for the public and licensees to
understand how fees are determined for
a fee class and a fee category. Because
consistent with the requirements of
OBRA–90, fees are calculated based on
the budget authority enacted for the
current FY and not carryover, the fee
rule and supporting work papers do not
include information pertaining to
carryover and including such
information in these documents could
cause confusion. The CBJ, alternatively,
provides the agency explanation and
justification for the resources being
requested for the next FY to allow the
agency to complete its mission, and it
provides the reasoning for changes in
the agency resource requests.
Further, with respect to providing
additional information regarding exact
research activities, there are some
limitations regarding the level of detail
that can be shared on specific contracts.
The NRC is preparing additional
guidance for project managers on types
of information that can be shared with
contracts specifically assigned to
licensee efforts. The CBJ provides an
overview of the research activities being
conducted during FY 2018. These
activities include accident tolerant fuel
confirmatory research, digital systems,
materials degradation, cable aging, and
concrete degradation. Additional
information on research efforts is also
available from the NRC’s website at
https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/
regulatory/research.html. Including this
information in the work papers for the
proposed fee rule in future years is more
likely to cause confusion regarding the
scope of the fee rule. Additional
information regarding the costs
associated with research can be derived
by comparing the work papers from the
proposed fee rule to the final fee rule,
which would allow the impact
associated with the use of carryover to
be identified between FYs. Work papers
for the proposed and final fee rules for
the last several years can be readily
accessed at https://www.nrc.gov/aboutnrc/regulatory/licensing/fees.html.
No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of this comment.
Comment: The U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE) has reviewed the
proposed 10 CFR 170 and 171 fee
schedule for fiscal year 2018. DOE finds
that the basis for the total annual fee
amount and the level of effort to support
the general licenses for Uranium Mill
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Tailings Radiation Control Act
[(UMTRCA)] sites is not presented in
the proposed rule or the associated work
papers. Additionally, the bases for
allocation percentages for DOE and
other uranium recovery licensees and
the generic/other uranium recovery
costs in the proposed rule and work
papers are not presented. DOE requests
that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) clarify the rationale
for the various fee components that are
used to determine the total charge. This
will help DOE evaluate whether the
proposed NRC scope is consistent with
anticipated DOE activities and establish
the basis for DOE’s estimate of annual
uranium licensee fees in its budget
request to Congress. (DOE)
Response: The NRC described the
overall methodology for determining
fees for uranium recovery facilities,
including DOE, in the FY 2002 fee rule
(67 FR 42625; June 24, 2002), and the
NRC continues to use this methodology.
As the NRC explained in the proposed
fee rule, the NRC recovers fees from
DOE through both user fees charged
under 10 CFR part 170 for specific
UMTRCA oversight activities and
annual fees charged under 10 CFR part
171 for generic and other costs related
to UMTRCA and other uranium
recovery activities. As shown in the
work papers referenced in the proposed
fee rule, the NRC calculated the total
amount of budgeted resources for
UMTRCA activities related to DOE sites
in the FY 2018 CBJ by computing the
cost of staff hours budgeted to conduct
the work (in terms of full-time
equivalent, or FTE) and the budgeted
contract costs. The total amount of
budgeted resources was reduced by the
amount expected to be recovered by part
170 user fees for site-specific UMTRCA
activities. The NRC estimated the
amount of part 170 user fees by
analyzing billing data and the actual
contractual work charged to DOE for the
previous four quarters. The estimate,
therefore, reflects any recent reductions
in NRC oversight activities. The
remainder of the UMTRCA budgeted
amount related to DOE sites is charged
to DOE for generic activities. In addition
to those generic costs, DOE is charged
for 10 percent of the overall generic
costs attributable to the uranium
recovery program. In other words, the
DOE fee includes the costs of generic
activities related to DOE sites and 10
percent of the overall generic costs
attributable to the uranium recovery
program. The remaining 90 percent of
the overall generic costs is charged to
other members of the uranium recovery
class.
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The proposed fee rule described the
methodology used by the NRC staff to
determine the annual fees for uranium
recovery facilities. In addition, Tables
IX through XII of the proposed rule
show the application of the NRC’s
rebaselining methodology. The
supporting work papers for the fee
calculations provided detail on the FTE
and contract resources for each product
activity that were allocated to uranium
recovery fee class. The work papers also
provided information on all the values
of the effort/benefit factors used in the
uranium recovery matrix for FY 2018.
No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of this comment.
D. Small Business Standards
Comment: [Because the NRC has a
different definition for small business in
comparison to the Small Business
Administration (SBA), i]t makes it
difficult to keep track of [the] same
definition creating additional
recordkeeping which is not necessary
and does not add to creation of
business. The definition defined by the
SBA better reflects the intent of a ‘‘small
business.’’ The NRC [should] update its
definition of small business for license
purposes to [be the] same as SBA. (AE)
Response: One commenter expressed
concern regarding the NRC’s small
business definition. Under the SBA’s
regulations, other federal agencies may,
at their discretion, establish their own
standards through notice and comment
rulemaking. The NRC updated its small
business standards through notice and
comment rulemaking, and those
standards are separately codified at
§ 2.810. Comments with respect to the
NRC’s size standards, therefore, are
outside the scope of this rulemaking. No
changes were made to the final rule as
a result of this comment.
Comment: To ensure consistency
between Part 171 and Part 170 annual
fees, NRC/[Office of the Chief Financial
officer (OCFO)] should enact a process
that addresses whether NRC has
recognized a uranium water treatment
licensee as a small entity for Part 171
fees, and if so, these licensees should be
billed for the Part 170 annual fees in an
amount that is commensurate with its
small-entity designation. [Waste
Remediation Technology (WRT)] is
currently designated as a small entity
under NRC regulations. It makes logical
sense to designate small entities for
fixed-fee amounts as they have limited
employees, market share, and revenue.
Coupled with the items noted above, the
argument for changing the Part 170 fee
category to a fixed-fee amount for
entities such as WRT appears to make
sense. (WRT)
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Response: The NRC’s small business
standards only apply to 10 CFR part 171
fees. Fees under 10 CFR part 170 are set
as either full cost recovery (billed by the
hour at the professional hourly rate of
$275) or at a fixed fee depending on the
fee class and fee category. As part of the
Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990, the
NRC reviews the actual hours expended
performing licensing actions and
develops estimates of the average
professional staff hours needed to
process licensing actions. The most
recent review was perform in FY 2017
and the next review is scheduled for FY
2019. Each year, the NRC calculates new
flat fees for specific licensing actions
based on the estimated average hours
and the new professional hourly rate. As
such, flat fees recover the full costs for
a particular licensing action on average.
No changes were made to the final rule
as a result of this comment.
E. Fee Exemptions
Comment: WRT disagrees with NRC’s
proposal that would limit the timeframe
in which a request for a fee exemption
must be submitted; limiting it to within
ninety (90) days of the date of the NRC’s
receipt of the work. An applicant or a
licensee should not be restricted
regarding when it can request an
exemption. In the case of a full-cost fee
category, if the limit was set at within
90 days of receipt of an application or
the work, that would allow for no more
than one (1) quarterly invoice cycle
from NRC. That is not enough time into
the work for the applicant to assess
billings and whether it has a need to
request an exemption. An applicant
should not be restricted as to when in
the timeline it can request an
exemption. In the alternative, if NRC
sees fit to establish a timeline, a licensee
should be permitted 180 days to appeal
thereby allowing for a thorough review
of two quarterly invoices. Without such
a timeframe, any licensee would have
the incentive to dispute every single
quarterly invoice and delay payment
until a ruling is rendered by OCFO.
WRT does not support abuse of the
appeal process and believes this
solution provides a disincentive to do so
while maintaining fairness in the
process. (WRT)
Response: The proposed 90-day
timing requirement applies to only
those exemption requests submitted
under § 170.11(a)(1)—therefore, this 90day timeframe is limited to only those
who are seeking fee exemptions after
submitting a request or report to the
NRC. Because the basis for a fee
exemption under § 170.11(a)(1) exists at
the time the entity submits the request/
report to the NRC, the new 90-day
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timeframe will help ensure
administrative efficiency and
timeliness. Relatedly, because the basis
for a fee exemption under § 170.11(a)(1)
exists at the time the entity submits the
request/report to the NRC, providing
additional time to review invoices
would not result in any material change
to whether an exemption should be
granted. Notably, this new timing
requirement does not apply to
applicants that submit an application
for the NRC to review—those applicants
remain free to seek a fee exemption at
any time. No changes were made to the
final rule as a result of this comment.
F. Uranium Recovery
Comment: WRT is also aware of a
planned pilot program to be initiated for
several of NRC’s classes of licensees to
establish fixed fees for certain activities
such as National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) processes. WRT fully
supports the use of fixed fee programs
to assure licensees or would-belicensees of the amount of human and
financial resources that will be
necessary for obtaining and maintaining
an NRC license, especially in the case of
where a company such as WRT
generates no revenue from the uranium
source material generated by its services
and the [Community Water Systems]
that are being forced to comply with an
unfunded federal mandate. To the
extent practicable, WRT would like to
offer its input and/or participate in this
program to determine what
accommodations can be made for it in
the future in the event license
amendments are sought or the next
license renewal is required. (WRT)
Response: The commenter appears to
be referencing the flat fee pilot program
that the NRC is currently in the process
of developing for uranium recovery
licensees. No licensees are actively
participating in the flat fee pilot
program at this time. At this point, the
NRC has developed a new data
reporting structure, trained staff on its
use, and is actively collecting data on
licensing costs in order to develop
information that would allow the
development of recommendations to the
Commission regarding a potential flat
fee program. The NRC expects to
complete its data collection by the end
of FY 2018. The staff expects to engage
the public on whether to implement any
flat fee program for uranium recovery
licensees and applicants as part of the
FY 2020 fee rulemaking. No changes
were made to the final rule as a result
of this comment.
Comment: If Wyoming becomes an
Agreement State for the purposes of
regulating uranium recovery by the
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beginning of FY 2019 (October 1, 2018)
as NRC has stated, the remaining three
licensees are not—nor should they be
placed—in a position to pay for the
current NRC programmatic
infrastructure associated with this
category of licensee. NRC has assured
stakeholders that they are considering
various funding options to avoid this
potential outcome; yet, industry has had
no visibility of what could be a
significant NRC policy and fee rule
decision which will impact licensees’
purses in less than 8 months. We urge
you to engage the potentially remaining
NRC licensees on this matter today.
Further, it is unclear whether
conducting a ‘‘flat fee’’ pilot for this
category of licensees in FY 2020, as
stated by NRC during the February 12,
2018 meeting, is the best use of limited
NRC and industry resources. NRC
should consult with the potentially
remaining licensees and revisit this
decision. (NEI–1)
Response: The NRC is aware of the
challenge and is currently evaluating
options to ensure that annual fees for
the uranium recovery fee class remain
fair and equitable if Wyoming becomes
an Agreement State in FY 2019. The
NRC plans to share the results of the
evaluation with stakeholders once it is
complete. With respect to the flat fee
pilot program, the NRC has already
developed and implemented the new
data structure necessary to collect
information that would be used to
inform recommendations that the staff
would provide to the Commission on
the uranium recovery fee class. Only a
minimal effort is required to complete
the collection of data. The data
collection process is expected to be
completed by November 2018. Based on
Wyoming’s status and the collected
data, the staff will evaluate how best to
proceed and whether the flat fee pilot
program continues to be a good use of
resources or whether other changes
should be pursued. No changes were
made to the final rule as a result of this
comment.
Comment: WRT asserts that the fee
category for uranium drinking water
treatment licensees should be changed
from its current designation 2.A. (5),
with the associated ‘‘full-cost’’ fee, to a
category with a fixed annual fee. WRT
suggests category 2.F. (Program Codes
11200 or 11300), All Other Source
Material Licenses, or similar. Charging a
full-cost fee to either a company like
WRT, or an individual community
water system (CWS) is unsustainable for
them to comply with the radionuclidetreatment mandate of the [Safe Drinking
Water Act (SDWA)]. These types of
costs, licensing or otherwise, likely are
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a primary reason why many CWSs do
not treat their water or resort to
alternative and, potentially less
protective, approaches such as blending
water.
The basic premise that uranium
drinking water treatment should be in
the same overall fee category (the 2.A.
activities) with uranium recovery
activities is misguided. All the licensed
activities in this category are identified
as licensees processing and/or
recovering uranium source material for
the inherent value of the source
material, primarily for introduction to or
refining in the commercial nuclear fuel
cycle—that is where these activities
derive their income. Many of these
identified licensees also generate 11e.
(2) Byproduct material and other kinds
of regulated wastes, whereas WRT does
not. The action phrases of these various
identified licensees and/or activities
listed in the 2.A. category of the
Schedule speak directly to this point—
refining uranium mill concentrates,
uranium recovery operations such as
milling, ISR, etc. Even the sourcematerial byproduct activities of 2.A. (3)
and (4) are activities that are subsequent
to uranium recovery or processing
operations. All such licensed activities
are designed for the licensee to derive
their income from the value of the
uranium source material and are fuelcycle or similar such facilities. Further,
the level of risk associated with these
licensed activities is very low, but those
associated with WRT are even lower,
and this low level of risk has been
demonstrated through the Agreement
State-licensed uranium water treatment
systems data submitted in WRT’s 2016
license renewal application.
Now, compare these activities above
with the action phrase of drinking water
treatment currently in category 2.A.
(5)—‘‘removal of source material
contaminants.’’ This uranium source
material has no inherent value;
[Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA)] deemed it a contaminant under
the SDWA that needed to be removed
(not recovered) from drinking water
sources based on concerns for public
health and safety. The public and
private CWSs that must deal with this
issue derive no income from the
uranium, but instead, it costs them to
comply with an unfunded federal
mandate. Thus, either WRT or a CWS
choosing to perform its own uranium
water treatment must bear these costs.
As a result, WRT cannot sustain these
full-cost fees on its own based on the
business model used by the licensee,
and CWSs cannot sustain such costs on
their own, whether WRT passes such
costs on to them for payment, or if such
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CWSs elect to perform such activities
themselves and are forced to pay such
costs as an NRC licensee.
It can similarly be argued that WRT is
not a ‘‘producer’’ of source material, but
rather a ‘‘service provider’’ consistent
with NRC regulations and guidance.
Indeed, WRT’s initial license
application and the format of its current
license shows that the identified
licensed activities in this license are
services provided to third-party entities
such as CWSs and not as a part of a
mining/milling operation conducted by
the same licensee.
Therefore, WRT believes it would be
a great source of relief to CWSs
requiring uranium water treatment in
accord with an unfunded federal
mandate or entities such as WRT
seeking to assist such CWSs in these
endeavors if the fee category for WRT or
other similar licensees was revised to a
reasonable fixed fee amount.
In the case of WRT’s license, support
for using the ‘‘other source material’’
designation of fee category 2.F. comes
from the fact that nearly all of the
Agreement State licenses (seven (7)—
CA, GA, IL, NM, NC, TX, WI) that WRT
holds for uranium and/or radium water
treatment have both a fee category
similar to NRC’s ‘‘other’’ category 2.F.,
and a reasonable fixed fee. Two other
Agreement States, Colorado and New
Jersey, have issued WRT serviceprovider licenses, both with reasonable
fixed annual fees, also similar to that of
NRC fee category 2.F. Indeed, the use of
the term ‘‘other’’ when describing
certain source material licensees fits
squarely within the way NRC
regulations address WRT. For example,
in addition to having the only NRC
license of its kind through its
performance-based, multi-site nature,
NRC’s most recent rulemaking regarding
small quantities of source material or
the rule that address the amount of
source material that may be possessed at
any one time and during a calendar year
in total (i.e., 10 CFR . . . 40.22) reduced
the amount of such possessed source
material from fifteen (15) pounds at any
one time and 150 pounds in a calendar
year to much lower limits based on
identified entities that were not
considered in previous rulemaking and
in an attempt to protect public health
and safety. However, in this rulemaking,
NRC specifically identified licensees
such as WRT as excluded from such
lower limits and allowed a general
license to remain in effect under the
previous 15/150 limits. Thus, by this
exclusion, NRC specifically identified
WRT as a licensee with extremely low
risk and capable of handling such levels
of source material. Further, the low
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level of risk and low requirements for
license maintenance (e.g., site
registration) are further supported by
technical and environmental data in
WRT’s license renewal application
showing the previously projected health
and safety risks are indeed extremely
conservative and the actual risk is much
lower. These unique factors further
support treating WRT in a manner
different from other 2.A licensees.
(WRT)
Response: While WRT’s comment
articulates a number of arguments to
support changing the current fee
category designation for uranium
drinking water treatment licensees, the
NRC considers this change to be outside
the scope of this rulemaking because
members of the public would not have
had sufficient notice of the change
requested by the commenter. Further,
the NRC would need additional
information not currently available to it
in order to determine whether a flat fee
would be appropriate and provide a
method for setting the fee at an
appropriate level in order to recover the
NRC costs. The staff will take this
comment into consideration as it
prepares the policy paper in support of
the FY 2019 proposed fee rule. As a
result, the NRC expects to seek public
comment on this issue as part of the FY
2019 fee rulemaking, and that would
provide sufficient notice to the public
and an opportunity to provide
comments on the fee category. For FY
2018, WRT requested and was granted
a partial fee-waiver (ADAMS Accession
No. ML18102A477) in relation to the
NRC’s review of its license renewal
application. No changes were made to
the final rule as a result of this
comment.
G. Variance Between Proposed Fee Rule
and Final Fee Rule Amounts
Comment: [T]here appears to be
greater variance between the annual fees
in the proposed and final fee rules in
recent years. These fluctuations make it
more difficult to manage costs
associated with NRC activities over the
course of each year. Accordingly, we
would welcome any improvements to
developing the fee rule that lead to less
variability between the proposed and
final rules. (HW)
Response: One commenter expressed
concern over the recent variance
between the proposed rule and the final
rule fee amounts. The agency strives to
produce fees that accurately reflect the
information available to it at the time
that the proposed rule is issued for
public comment. In the absence of an
enacted appropriation, the agency uses
the best information available, including
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the CBJ, information regarding historic
appropriations, and a discussion of
assumptions used in developing the
budgetary resources used to calculate
fees. Further, the NRC strives to provide
conservative estimates in its proposed
rule in order to provide licensees and
applicants with information regarding
the potential highest fees. Even with the
NRC’s effort to include conservative
estimates in the proposed rule, changes
associated with the enacted
appropriations (including direction to
use carryover, exclusion of activities
from the fee-recoverable budget, and
other changes) can cause the final fees
to be different than the proposed rule.
As a result of the FY 2018 enacted
appropriations, the total annual fees to
be recovered for fuel facilities is $27.7
million, which is a 2.5 percent decrease
from FY 2017. However, average annual
fees for each fee category in this fee
class increased varied from 1.2 to 1.3
percent due to the loss of two licensees.
No changes were made to the final rule
as a result of this comment.
H. Invoicing
Comment: As Westinghouse
understands the new [Enterprise Project
Identifier (EPID)/Cost Activity Code
(CAC)] structure, it is provided to
increase visibility on the NRC charges.
The EPIDs identify individual projects
and the CACs are generically identified
and defined by the Office of the Chief
Financial Officer (OCFO); based on the
new structure, there is the possibility for
one EPID to have multiple CACs. Based
on the Westinghouse invoice, we are
seeing mixed results in terms of
transparency. In some areas, there are
EPIDs with multiple CACs (for example,
inspections are divided into
preparation, travel, and performing the
inspection), which we understand is the
expectation to increase transparency on
the invoices. However, in most areas,
there is one CAC per EPID, so there is
no further breakdown of the changes
within the project and does not increase
the transparency on the invoices. We
would expect that the NRC offices
would abide by the OCFO’s new process
and adopt more than one CAC per EPID.
(WEC)
Response: This comment is outside
the scope of this rulemaking because the
purpose of the NRC’s annual fee
recovery rulemaking is to update the
NRC’s fee schedules to recover
approximately 90 percent of the NRC’s
budget authority for the current fiscal
year, and to make other necessary
corrections or appropriate changes to
specific aspects of the NRC’s fee
regulations. However, as an
informational update, the NRC notes
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that the use and guidance for EPIDs
continues to be improved across the
agency, which should continue to
provide additional transparency to
licensees and applicants. No changes
were made to the final rule as a result
of this comment.
Comment: Recent improvements in
the clarity and transparency of invoices
issued to licensees are greatly
appreciated. However, additional action
is needed to address remaining areas of
concern. One such area occurs in billing
of inspection costs. Estimates of direct
inspection hours are available for each
inspection (totaling approximately 1,863
hours/site under the baseline inspection
program), but invoices currently do not
distinguish between direct inspection
hours and inspection support activities.
The cost for these support activities,
which include documentation,
preparation, travel and significance
determination efforts, are in many cases
double or triple the cost of direct
inspection hours (Average 3,488 hours/
site). The absence of estimates for
support activities necessary for each
inspection and a clear identification of
support hours presents a challenge for
accountability and tracking of
inspection costs. Invoices should
identify costs associated with the
separate and distinct aspects of
inspections (e.g., direct inspection
hours, preparation, documentation,
travel, significance determination
process). (NEI–2)
Response: This comment is outside
the scope of this rulemaking because the
purpose of the NRC’s annual fee
recovery rulemaking is to update the
NRC’s fee schedules to recover
approximately 90 percent of the NRC’s
budget authority for the current fiscal
year, and to make other necessary
corrections or appropriate changes to
specific aspects of the NRC’s fee
regulations. However, as an
informational update, the NRC remains
dedicated to improving transparency in
its fee billing. On January 30, 2015, the
staff submitted SECY–15–0015, ‘‘Project
Aim 2020 Report and
Recommendations’’ (ADAMS Accession
No. ML15012A594), to the Commission.
That paper included, in part,
recommendations associated with
simplifying how the NRC calculates its
fees, improving transparency in the fee
billing process, and improving the
timeliness of the NRC’s communications
about fee changes. The Commission
approved these recommendations and
since that time, the staff has been
actively implementing them.
The NRC is implementing a number
of initiatives in response to the
Commission’s direction to provide
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better fee billing information to
licensees, including information related
to the costs of inspections. For example:
(a) As part of the fee transformation
initiative, the agency posted resource
estimate summaries, which were based
on historical inspection data, at https://
www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1727/
ML17271A262.pdf (ADAMS Accession
No. ML17271A262). These summaries
include information related to direct
inspection costs. The table also includes
a line item for documentation,
preparation, travel to and from the site,
plant status, etc. Actual effort may vary
based on regional and site needs.
(b) As noted on the NRC’s website at
https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/
regulatory/licensing/sample-invoice.pdf,
the bill to the licensee includes the
names of the inspectors for the invoice
period, the hours charged, the hourly
rate, and total amount billed to the
licensee in the invoice period. The bill
also includes the cost activity code that
the inspectors charged to. The cost
activity code distinguishes the
inspection-related work from the
inspection support-related work.
(c) The agency increased
standardization of the financial charging
system used by inspectors and all NRC
personnel. The new system allows the
grouping of costs for a single inspection
or other project so that costs are no
longer commingled within the invoice
for multiple projects, and consolidates
all the charges under a given project for
the invoice period.
(d) The Division of Inspection and
Regional Support within the NRC’s
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation is
also working on a new document that
will be made publicly available to
explain the highlights and overall
structure of the Reactor Oversight
Process budget model.
The NRC also notes that each
inspection procedure includes the direct
inspection resource estimates, in hours,
required to complete the inspection.
Because inspections also include
necessary indirect inspection resources
such as preparation, documentation and
travel, and can vary in complexity
depending on the issue being evaluated,
the associated hours may deviate from
the estimates in the inspection
procedure in some cases. The agency
looks for trends and biennially evaluates
every baseline inspection procedure to
determine if resource estimates need to
be reallocated.
In summary, the agency provides
anticipated hours for inspections
through the inspection procedure
resource estimates and has taken action
to provide better detail and
transparency in the invoice. No changes
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were made to the final rule as a result
of this comment.
I. Low-Level Waste Surcharge
Comment: [W]e believe the staff
should validate the ‘‘Low Level Waste
Surcharge’’ (LLW) figures in table IV of
the proposed rule (page 3411 of the
Federal Register Notice). Specifically, it
seems illogical that the fuel facilities
would be allocated the highest LLW
surcharge percentage considering the
number of facilities and plants
nationwide in some stage of
decommissioning. Since NRC fees are
based in part on the LLW surcharge,
NRC should work with the Department
of Energy to ensure the accuracy,
completeness and timeliness of data
entered into DOE’s Manifest Information
Management System (MIMS). MIMS
contains data on four generator classes,
and it is unclear whether fuel cycle
facilities are aligned with the class
generically identified as ‘‘industrial.’’
(NEI–1)
Response: The DOE was required by
law (42 U.S.C. 2021g(a)) to establish a
computerized database to monitor lowlevel radioactive wastes. The DOE
created and is responsible for the MIMS
database that was created to monitor the
management of commercial LLW in the
United States. The LLW surcharge
percentages included in Table IV in the
proposed FY 2018 fee rule for Operating
Power Reactors, Fuel Facilities, and
Materials Users reflect the 5-year
average of the data available in MIMS
for the relevant licensees. Fuel facilities
are aligned with the MIMS Class
identified as ‘‘Industry’’ and the Fuel
Facilities percentage is based on a
fraction of the 5-year average for the
Industry Class.
At the time the proposed FY 2018 fee
rule was issued, the most recent data
available from the MIMS database was
from 2016. The final FY 2018 fee rule
includes updated LLW surcharge
percentages which account for the 2017
MIMS data that was recently populated
into the database by DOE. The 2017 data
included a significant increase to the
volume reported under the ‘‘Utility’’
Class, which is used to determine the
percentage for Power Reactors. The
increase to the volume reported under
the Utility Class in 2017 shifted the
percentages for Fuel Facilities and
Power Reactors as seen in Table IV,
‘‘Allocation of Fee-Relief and LLW
Surcharge FY 2018.’’ As a result,
compared to the proposed FY 2018 fee
rule, the percentage of the LLW
surcharge for Operating Power Reactors
increased from 41.0 percent to 75
percent, Fuel Facilities decreased from
46 percent to 20 percent, and Material
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Users decreased from 13 percent to 5
percent. Please refer to Table IV and the
accompanying discussion for additional
details.
J. Efficiency
Comment: The NRC needs to continue
to pursue improvements in efficient
operations. Over several years, the NRC
has pursued efficiency improvements
through Project AIM and other
initiatives that has resulted in small
declines of support functions included
in the professional hourly rate. These
improvements have not translated into
the professional hourly rate or annual
fees. (NEI–1, NEI–2, WEC)
Response: This comment pertains to
agency efficiency and is therefore
outside the scope of this rulemaking
because the purpose of the NRC’s
annual fee rulemaking is to update the
NRC’s fee schedules to recover
approximately 90 percent of the NRC’s
budget authority for the current fiscal
year, and to make other necessary
corrections or appropriate changes to
specific aspects of the NRC’s fee
regulations. However, as an
informational update, the NRC notes
that it has completed several initiatives
to improve the efficiency of the agency,
some of which include: Reducing the
size of the agency through early buyouts and retirements, as well as
reducing corporate support. The NRC
continues to look for additional
methods to improve the efficiency and
flexibility. No changes were made to the
final rule as a result of these comments.
Comment: In the Proposed Fee Rule,
NRC proposes eleven administrative
changes. The first change is to ‘‘revise
the methodology of charging licensees
for overhead time for project managers
(PMs) and resident inspectors (Rls).’’
The revised methodology proposes
removing the 6% of direct billable costs
added as an overhead cost to all
licensees’ invoices, and replace with the
‘‘actual hours for activities that support
and directly benefit the assigned
licensee or site.’’
While Westinghouse applauds NRC
for removing the unnecessary allocation,
it is unclear how the replacement
system (i.e., ‘‘docket-related fee-billable
cost activity codes’’) will drive efficient
work from project managers. We would
expect that, to the maximum extent
practical, activities that support and
directly benefit Westinghouse would be
assigned to a specific Enterprise Project
Identifier (EPID), rather than a general
‘‘project management’’ EPID/Cost
Activity Code (CAC). Based on
Westinghouse’s most recently received
invoices, the project manager was
responsible for between 24% and 99%
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of the invoiced charges to a given
docket, so it seems unnecessary to have
a separate ‘‘project management’’ EPID/
CAC. Additionally, Westinghouse
requests publically available guidance
to the staff on what is ‘‘fee-billable.’’
(WEC)
Response: This comment appears to
address four distinct issues: (1) Removal
of the 6-percent charge; (2) replacement
methodology for the 6-percent charge;
(3) use of the project management CAC/
EPID; and (4) publicly available
guidance on fee-billable activities.
While the first two items are within the
scope of the rule, items 3 and 4 are
outside the scope of this rulemaking
because the purpose of the NRC’s
annual fee recovery rulemaking is to
update the NRC’s fee schedules to
recover approximately 90 percent of the
NRC’s budget authority for the current
fiscal year, and to make other necessary
corrections or appropriate changes to
specific aspects of the NRC’s fee
regulations. However, the NRC will
provide an informational update on
items 3 and 4.
First, the commenter, like other
commenters, appears to be generally
supportive of the removal of the
6-percent overhead charge for the part
170 bills.
Second, the commenter expresses
concern that the replacement system
described in the proposed fee rule (i.e.,
using new docket-related fee-billable
CACs) will not result in efficient work
from PMs. For PMs, the NRC has
decided that no new CACs will be
implemented as part of the replacement
system; only RIs will be using the new
CACs established to replace the
6-percent charge. The replacement
system is discussed in more detail above
under ‘‘FY 2018—Administrative
Changes, 1. Revise the Methodology of
charging licensees for overhead time for
project managers (PMs) and resident
inspectors (RIs).’’
Third, the commenter requests that
activities that support and directly
benefit Westinghouse be assigned to a
specific EPID and not assigned to a
general project management CAC/EPID.
As an informational update, the NRC
notes that PMs typically use the general
project management CAC/EPID
combination (e.g., 000958/L–2017–
PMP–0023) to capture direct fee-billable
services that are not associated with a
specific request or activity. Such
activities include, for example, time that
the PM for a facility spends in
discussions with the licensee regarding
licensee operations, licensee plans for
future license amendment and license
renewal submittals, as well as other
issues. The use of a more specific EPID
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would refer to a specific request or
activity, and the work recorded under
that CAC/EPID combination (e.g.,
000958/L–2012–TOP–002) would
indicate substantive work on that
specific request or activity. When
looking at all of the CAC/EPID
combinations, time spent on fee-billable
general project management activities
account for significantly less of the total
part 170 fees charged to a particular
docket. The NRC, however, appreciates
the confusion that could be caused by
the general project management CAC
description and will consider whether
improvements can be made with respect
to the CAC.
Fourth, the commenter requests
publicly available fee-billable guidance
for the staff. As an informational update,
the NRC notes that the use and guidance
for EPIDs continues to be improved
across the agency, which should
continue to provide additional
transparency to licensees and
applicants. At this time, the NRC does
not intend to make additional guidance
publically available. In 10 CFR part 170,
the regulations identify the specific
types of the activities that will incur
fees for services.
K. Fuel Facilities
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns regarding the ratio of part 170
fees for service to the part 171 annual
fees for the Fuel Facilities fee class.
They raised concerns regarding the
differences in these ratios between
different fee classes including the higher
ratio of part 170 billing in the Operating
Power Reactor fee class. They
questioned the reason for these higher
non-direct services in the Fuel Facilities
fee class and whether the activities are
reasonable and appropriate, and
requested that the NRC provide
additional information regarding these
non-direct services. (HW, UUSA)
Response: All NRC fee classes have
slightly different ratios of 10 CFR part
170 fees versus 10 CFR part 171 fees
because the amount of fees collected by
the agency under 10 CFR part 170 are
directly impacted by licensee decisions.
For the power reactors, for instance, the
NRC has been working on new reactor
application and design certification
reviews, and Fukushima-related
activities, license renewal activities, and
other complex license amendments
such as extended power-up rates have
been completed or are winding down.
These activities contribute to the lower
ratio of 10 CFR part 170 fees versus 10
CFR part 171 fees for the power reactor
fee class. By contrast, licensees in the
fuel facilities fee class have indicated
that they have no desire to make
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changes to their licenses, which reduces
the amount of fees that can be collected
under 10 CFR part 170. Further, in a fee
class with a small number of licensees
(like fuel facilities), these licensing
decisions can have a much larger impact
on the ratio than with large fee classes
(like the power reactors).
With regard to the request for
additional information, in public
meetings conducted on February 12,
2018, and March 27, 2018, the NRC staff
provided an overview of the fuel
facilities budget and an illustrative
breakdown of NRC costs recovered by
10 CFR part 170 services fees and 10
CFR part 171 annual fees. Slides from
these public meetings are available in
ADAMS under Accession Nos.
ML18040A317 and ML18082A599,
respectively. Also you can view them at
https://adams.nrc.gov/wba/.
No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of these comments.
Comment: Several commenters raised
concerns regarding the prioritization of
resources in the fuel facilities fee class
to the most safety significant issues.
They requested that the NRC improve
the timeliness of license amendments
and renewals, transition routine
inspections to the resident inspectors,
where applicable, reduce inspection
frequencies to reflect historical
inspection results, and eliminate
unnecessary rulemaking initiatives, and
maintenance of guidance documents.
(NEI–1, NEI–2)
Response: The NRC staff agrees that
regulatory initiatives that are of the most
benefit in terms of safety or safeguards
should be given higher priority. The
agency carefully considers the benefits
of regulatory initiatives it pursues. For
example, the rulemaking process
(including associated guidance
documents) is a very deliberate and
open public process that invites input
and feedback from a broad range of
stakeholders. We do appreciate that
stakeholders may have different views
regarding the need for, or benefit to be
derived from, various regulatory
initiatives. The NRC carefully considers
all stakeholder input in its
determination of whether or not to
recommend proceeding with a given
initiative. For rulemakings, this
determination is documented in a
regulatory analysis which informs the
Commission’s decision on whether or
not to ultimately proceed. In addition,
public meetings with licensees on the
cumulative effects of regulation have
been an effective forum for dialogue on
regulatory initiatives being considered
and taken by the NRC. No changes were
made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
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Comment: Several commenters
provided views regarding the effort
factors matrix, including requests to
maintain the current matrix, requests to
change the existing matrix’s calculation
methodology, and proposed changes to
the classification of a licensee’s specific
effort factors. (HW, NFS, UUSA)
Response: In response to industry
concerns about the fairness and equity
of annual fees charged to fuel facilities,
the NRC analyzed its past practice of
using an effort factors matrix to
calculate annual fees for the fuel
facilities fee class to determine if
revisions to the current method may be
warranted. The NRC held two public
meetings to discuss possible alternative
approaches to the method of calculating
annual fees for the fuel facility fee class
including changes to the effort factors
matrix. As part of that process, the NRC
received numerous comments on the
current and alternative methods for
determining annual fees. The comments
were mixed as to whether NRC should
continue working on changes to the
methodology for calculating annual fees.
Some stakeholders indicated that NRC
should continue with this effort, while
others stated that NRC should consider
alternatives, such as a reduction of
budgeted resources, before changing the
current fuel facility effort factors matrix.
During the meetings, the staff
indicated that it did not intend to make
any changes to the method of
calculating annual fees in the FY 2018
fee rule since it is in the process of
engaging stakeholders, and any
recommendations related to the effort
factors matrix would be addressed as
part of recommendations for the FY
2019 proposed fee rule. The NRC staff
will consider these comments, and any
other comments on the effort factors
matrix, as it prepares the proposed fee
rule for FY 2019. No changes were made
to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
L. Comments Regarding the Size of the
Fuel Facilities Budget
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern that the fuel facility
business line’s budget is too large given
the activities performed and the number
of licensees. One commenter expressed
concern that the level of resources
assigned to the fuel facilities fee class
was too large in light of the risk profile
for the facilities. (HW, NEI–1, NFS,
UUSA, WEC)
Response: The fuel facilities business
line is responsible for ensuring the
safety and security of fuel cycle and
greater than critical mass facilities. The
business line leads the licensing and
oversight of these facilities, as well as
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domestic material control and
accounting and international safeguards
implementation activities for the NRC.
The business line also supports
rulemaking and environmental review
activities for fuel facilities.
The NRC has taken steps to right-size
the fuel facilities budget to ensure that
it reflects the reduced workload in the
business line. A peak workload was
experienced in FY 2012. The FY 2018
fuel facilities budget of $35.1 million is
a third less than the FY 2012 fuel
facilities budget of $54.4 million.
Further, the 114 FTE in the FY 2018 fuel
facilities budget is over a third less than
the 184 FTE in the FY 2012 fuel
facilities budget.
The NRC’s FY 2018 fuel facilities
budget has increased slightly from the
FY 2017 fuel facilities budget. This
small increase resulted from (a) the
transfer of 1 FTE of enforcement
resources from the nuclear materials
users fee class to the fuel facilities fee
class to reflect the fee class benefiting
from the work being performed by this
FTE, and (b) an increase in the NRC
fully costed FTE rate. However, the
‘‘Congressional Budget Justification,
Fiscal Year 2019,’’ (NUREG–1100,
Volume 34) includes a decrease of 6
FTE for the fuel facilities business line
budget relative to the FY 2018 CBJ,
which continues the overall downward
trend in the fuel facilities budget.
In public meetings conducted on
February 12, 2018, and March 27, 2018,
the NRC provided an overview of the
fuel facilities budget and an illustrative
breakdown of NRC costs recovered by
10 CFR part 170 services fees and 10
CFR part 171 annual fees. Slides from
these public meetings are available in
ADAMS under Accession Nos.
ML18040A317 and ML18082A599,
respectively.
Regarding the assertion that the NRC
should reduce its budget commensurate
with the reduction in the number of fuel
facilities that pay fees, the NRC agrees,
but that reduction is not linearly
proportional as there is a cost for the
infrastructure that must be maintained
independent of the number of
operational fuel facilities. These
infrastructure costs include indirect
services and the business line portion of
corporate support. Indirect services
include rulemaking, maintaining
guidance for licensees, maintaining
procedures for NRC staff, training, and
travel. Corporate support includes, for
example, the cost for information
management, information technology,
security, facilities management, rent,
utilities, financial management,
acquisitions, human resources, and
policy support.
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The NRC continues to actively
evaluate resource requirements, both in
terms of overall budget numbers and
FTEs, to address changes that occur
between budget formulation and
execution. The NRC will continue to
assess resource requirements and
evaluate programmatic efficiencies that
could result in additional resource
reductions, and make changes as
appropriate during budget execution.
One commenter expressed concern
regarding the total number of FTEs
assigned to a business line. The
commenter stated that the resources
supporting fuel facilities were 82 FTEs
in FY 2017, and the resources increased
to 114 FTEs in FY 2018. The numbers
identified by the commenter refer to
different categories of personnel and are
not directly comparable. In FY 2017,
81.7 FTEs were identified as missiondirect resources. In FY 2018, the
mission-direct resources increased to
82.7 FTEs. This is the 1 FTE increase
discussed previously. The 114 FTEs
identified by the commenter refers to
the FTE included in the FY 2018 CBJ,
which includes both mission-direct and
mission-indirect resources.
No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of these comments.
M. Decline in Part 170 Fee Collections
Comment: There are eight operating
commercial nuclear power plants that
have announced premature closings
between now and 2025. As power
reactors announce premature
shutdowns and 10 CFR part 170 user fee
collections decrease, the remaining
operating power reactors will bear the
burden of increased annual fees unless
the fee-recoverable portion of the NRC’s
budget authority decreases. This
disparity between lower 10 CFR part
170 user fees and rising 10 CFR part 171
annual fees cannot be maintained and
must be promptly corrected. (NEI–2,
EXN)
Response: The NRC is aware of and
accounts for the decreasing number of
nuclear power reactor licensees. For
instance, as part of our budgeting
process, the NRC tracks licensee plans
to cease operations and adjusts its
budget requests to reflect the anticipated
work and ensure that agency will
continue to meet its statutory
requirements.
The NRC, however, must comply with
OBRA–90, which requires the NRC to
collect approximately 90 percent of its
annual budget authority (less certain
excluded items) through both user fees
and annual fees. The NRC can assess
these annual fees only to licensees or
certificate holders, and the annual fee
schedule must be fair and must
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equitably allocate annual fees among the
NRC’s many licensees. To ensure
compliance with OBRA–90, the NRC
makes continual organizational
improvements to budget only the
resources needed to support its
regulatory activities.
The amount of user fees collected
under 10 CFR part 170 depends on a
number of different factors including
the professional hourly rate, licensee
and applicant decisions to pursue
licensing actions, and the amount of
hours necessary to resolve any licensing
actions. Due to OBRA–90 requirements,
examining changes in the 10 CFR part
170 fees and the 10 CFR part 171 fees
separately may not account for the
overall decreases in the fee class budget
or the realized efficiencies. Over the last
several years, the fee class budget for the
Operating Power Reactors fee class has
decreased from $762.1 million in FY
2015 to $669.9 million in the FY 2018
final rule. In the ‘‘Congressional Budget
Justification: Fiscal Year 2019’’
(NUREG–1100, Volume 34), the Nuclear
Reactor Safety program shows
continuing declines in requested
budgetary resources for FY 2019.
Despite the decreasing number of
operating nuclear power plants, the
number of licensing actions completed
per year has slightly increased over the
past two fiscal years and demonstrates
the improving efficiencies realized from
the Project Aim initiatives including
reductions in FTEs and improved
management focus on process
improvements. The NRC continues to
pursue additional improvements to
efficiency and ensuring that its
budgetary request accurately reflects the
anticipated work.
No changes were made to the final
rule as a result of these comments.
Comment: Several commenters
expressed concern regarding the
declining fraction of fees recovered
under 10 CFR part 170 (Service Fees)
relative to 10 CFR part 171 (Annual
Fees), as well as the NRC’s overall
budget for the Fuel Facilities Fee Class.
The commenters noted that these fees
were being borne by a decreasing
number of facilities with a decreasing
number of licensing actions. They also
asked for more information on what
specific activities contribute to the nondirect portion of the budget that is
recovered in the annual fees charged to
licensees. (NEI–1, UUSA, WEC)
Response: The NRC is aware of the
current economic state of the fuel cycle
industry and remains mindful of the
impact of its budget on the fees for
licensees. The Fuel Facilities Fee Class
supports the activities of the fuel
facilities business line, including both
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direct-billable licensing actions and
those general activities that indirectly
support the agency’s mission in these
areas. The overall budget for the fuel
facilities business line has decreased
significantly in recent years. For
example, the number of budgeted staff
positions in the fuel facilities business
line has decreased from 184 FTE in FY
2012 to 114 FTE in FY 2018, or 38
percent. The NRC continues to adjust its
proposed budget in line with
anticipated work load for the business
line.
Since FY 2012, services billed directly
to individual fuel facility licensees
under 10 CFR part 170 have decreased.
The reasons for this include: Fewer
applications for new licenses, license
renewals, and license amendments;
fewer inspections; and less construction
inspection activity. The decrease in 10
CFR part 170 collections in recent years
has meant that the amount to be
recovered by annual fees has not
decreased commensurate with the
overall decrease in the budget for the
fuel facilities business line. Further, the
decline in the number of operating fuel
facilities (from ten in FY 2012 to seven
in FY 2018) has led to an increase in the
annual fee burden for the remaining fuel
facilities, even though the total
budgeted resources for this fee class
have dropped during that time period.
The business line must maintain
certain minimum requirements in order
to meet the NRC’s regulatory and
statutory oversight role. This includes
maintaining expertise in a number of
technical areas, including: Integrated
safety analysis, radiation protection,
criticality safety, chemical safety, fire
safety, emergency management,
environmental protection,
decommissioning, management
measures, material control and
accounting, physical protection, and
information security. Budgeted
resources in technical areas are
recovered through annual fees as well as
user fees.
In a public meeting on March 27,
2018, the NRC staff discussed how the
annual fees support other activities that
are necessary for the Fuel Facilities Fee
Class as a whole. The presentations
from the meeting address these areas
and are available in ADAMS under
Accession No. ML18082A604.
As discussed in the meeting, these
activities include, among others, fuel
facilities’ proportion of corporate
support functions for the NRC (for
example, infrastructure, financial and
information services, and other
administrative functions), supervisory
and management functions, and nonbillable licensing and oversight
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activities (for example, program
development and program
maintenance). The cost of these areas
together constitute about three-quarters
of what is recovered through 10 CFR
part 171 annual fees, and thus about
half of the total business line budget.
The remainder of the annual fee portion
includes small amounts to support
rulemaking and guidance development,
staff training and related travel, and
event response. Further detail is
presented in the slides on stakeholder
feedback from the March 27, 2018
meeting (available in ADAMS under
Accession No. ML18082A604). No
changes were made to this final rule as
a result of these comments.
N. Comments Generally Supporting
Actions of the Agency
Several commenters expressed
comments generally in favor of actions
that the agency is taking with respect to
fees, billing, and other aspects of the fee
rule process. Comments generally in
favor of the agency’s actions included
comments supporting the public
meetings on the proposed fee rule and
invoicing, the move to new formats for
invoices, plans to support e-billing, and
the removal of the 6-percent overhead
charge for the 10 CFR part 170 bills. No
new or different information was
developed as a result of these
comments, and thus, no changes to the
rule were made because of these
comments.
O. Comments on Matters Not Related to
This Rulemaking
Several commenters raised issues
outside the scope of the FY 2018 fee
rule. Commenters raised concerns with
the agency’s budgeting process and
requesting public meetings on the
agency’s proposed budget. Other
commenters were concerned with the
agency’s overall size. A few commenters
raised concerns regarding the fees that
are assessed as part of §§ 11.15(e) and
25.17(f); however, those portions of the
NRC’s regulations are not within the
scope of the FY 2018 fee rule. Another
commenter raised concerns regarding
copyright and tort reform for small
businesses, and a commenter requested
a ban on offsite drilling.
These matters are outside the scope of
this rulemaking. The primary purpose of
the NRC’s annual fee recovery final rule
is to update the NRC’s fee schedules to
recover approximately 90 percent of the
NRC’s budgeted authority for the
current fiscal year, and to make other
necessary corrections or appropriate
changes to specific aspects of the NRC’s
fee regulations in order to ensure
compliance with OBRA–90.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
The NRC takes very seriously the
importance of examining and improving
the efficiency of its operations and the
prioritization of its regulatory activities.
Recognizing the importance of
continuous reexamination and
improvement of the way the agency
does business, the NRC has undertaken,
and continues to undertake, a number of
significant initiatives aimed at
improving the efficiency of NRC
operations and enhancing the agency’s
approach to regulating. Though
comments addressing these issues may
not be within the scope of this final
rule, the NRC will consider this input in
its future program operations.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
As required by the Regulatory
Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA),14 the NRC has prepared a
regulatory flexibility analysis relating to
this rule. The regulatory flexibility
analysis is available as indicated in
Section XIV, Availability of Documents,
of this document.
VI. Regulatory Analysis
Under OBRA–90, the NRC is required
to recover approximately 90 percent of
its budget authority in FY 2018. The
NRC established fee methodology
guidelines for 10 CFR part 170 in 1978,
and established additional fee
methodology guidelines for 10 CFR part
171 in 1986. In subsequent rulemakings,
the NRC has adjusted its fees without
changing the underlying principles of
its fee policy to ensure that the NRC
continues to comply with the statutory
requirements for cost recovery in
OBRA–90.
In this rulemaking, the NRC continues
this long-standing approach. Therefore,
the NRC did not identify any
alternatives to the current fee structure
guidelines and did not prepare a
regulatory analysis for this rulemaking.
other licensee fee classes), does not
apply to this final rule and that a backfit
analysis is not required. A backfit
analysis is not required because these
amendments do not require the
modification of, or addition to, systems,
structures, components, or the design of
a facility, or the design approval or
manufacturing license for a facility, or
the procedures or organization required
to design, construct, or operate a
facility.
VIII. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub.
L. 111–274) requires Federal agencies to
write documents in a clear, concise, and
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 31885).
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
The NRC has determined that this
rule amends the NRC’s administrative
requirements in 10 CFR part 170 and 10
CFR part 171. Therefore, this action is
categorically excluded from needing
environmental review as described in 10
CFR 51.22(c)(1). Consequently, neither
an environmental impact statement nor
an environmental assessment has been
prepared for this final rule.
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not contain a collection
of information as defined in the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and, therefore, is not
subject to the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
Public Protection Notification
The NRC may not conduct or sponsor,
and a person is not required to respond
to, a collection of information unless the
document requesting or requiring the
collection displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
The NRC has determined that the
backfit rule, 10 CFR 50.109 (and similar
provisions in the NRC’s regulations for
XI. Congressional Review Act
This final rule is a rule as defined in
the Congressional Review Act of 1996
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XII. Voluntary Consensus Standards
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act of 1995, Public
Law 104–113, requires that Federal
agencies use technical standards that are
developed or adopted by voluntary
consensus standards bodies unless the
use of such a standard is inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise
impractical. In this final rule, the NRC
amends the licensing, inspection, and
annual fees charged to its licensees and
applicants, as necessary, to recover
approximately 90 percent of its budget
authority in FY 2018, as required by
OBRA–90. This action does not
constitute the establishment of a
standard that contains generally
applicable requirements.
XIII. Availability of Guidance
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act requires all
Federal agencies to prepare a written
compliance guide for each rule for
which the agency is required by 5 U.S.C.
604 to prepare a regulatory flexibility
analysis. The NRC, in compliance with
the law, prepared the ‘‘Small Entity
Compliance Guide’’ for the FY 2017
proposed fee rule. The NRC plans to
continue to use this compliance guide
for FY 2018 and has relabeled the
compliance guide to reflect the current
fiscal year. The FY 2018 version of the
compliance guide is available as
indicated in Section XIV, Availability of
Documents, of this document. The next
compliance guide will be developed
when the NRC completes the next small
entity biennial review in FY 2019.
XIV. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the
following table are available to
interested persons through one or more
of the following methods, as indicated.
ADAMS Accession No./weblink
SECY–16–0009, ‘‘Recommendations Resulting from the Integrated Prioritization and
Re-Baselining of Agency Activities,’’ February 9, 2016.
SECY–16–0097, ‘‘Fee Setting Improvements and Fiscal Year 2017 Proposed Fee
Rule,’’ August 22, 2016.
SECY–17–0026, ‘‘Policy Considerations and Recommendations for Remediation of
Non-Military, Unlicensed Historic Radium Sites in Non-Agreement States’’ February
22, 2017.
Staff Requirements Memorandum for SECY–17–0026, September 7, 2017 .................
FY 2018 Final Rule Work Papers ....................................................................................
FY 2018 Regulatory Flexibility Analysis ..........................................................................
14 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601–612, has
been amended by the Small Business Regulatory
(5 U.S.C. 801–808). The Office of
Management and Budget has found it to
be a major rule as defined in the
Congressional Review Act.
ML16104A158.
ML16194A365.
ML17130A783.
ML17250A841.
ML18135A044.
ML17319A288.
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, Public Law 104–
121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996).
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Document
ADAMS Accession No./weblink
FY 2018 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Small Entity Compliance Guide ...........
U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) report titled ‘‘Nuclear Regulatory Commission: Regulatory Fee-Setting Calculations Need Greater Transparency’’ (GAO–
17–232), February 2, 2017.
Regulatory Issue Summary 2015–19, ‘‘Decommissioning Timeliness Rule Implementation and Associated Regulatory Relief,’’ September 27, 2016.
NUREG–1100, Volume 33, ‘‘Congressional Budget Justification: Fiscal Year 2018’’
(May 2017).
NUREG–1100, Volume 34, ‘‘Congressional Budget Justification: Fiscal Year 2019’’
(February 2018).
NRC Form 526, Certification of Small Entity Status for the Purposes of Annual Fees
Imposed under 10 CFR Part 171.
SECY–05–0164, ‘‘Annual Fee Calculation Method,’’ dated September 15, 2005 ..........
OMB’s Circular A–25, ‘‘User Charges’’ ...........................................................................
Fees Transformation Accomplishments ..........................................................................
FY 2018 Proposed Fee Rule ...........................................................................................
FY 2018 Proposed Rule Work Papers ............................................................................
10 CFR Part 170
Byproduct material, Import and
export licenses, Intergovernmental
relations, Non-payment penalties,
Nuclear energy, Nuclear materials,
Nuclear power plants and reactors,
Source material, Special nuclear
material.
§ 170.3
Annual charges, Approvals,
Byproduct material, Holders of
certificates, Intergovernmental relations,
Nonpayment penalties, Nuclear
materials, Nuclear power plants and
reactors, Registrations, Source material,
Special nuclear material.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble and under the authority of the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended;
the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974,
as amended; and 5 U.S.C. 552 and 553,
the NRC is adopting the following
amendments to 10 CFR parts 170 and
171:
PART 170—FEES FOR FACILITIES,
MATERIALS, IMPORT AND EXPORT
LICENSES, AND OTHER
REGULATORY SERVICES UNDER THE
ATOMIC ENERGY ACT OF 1954, AS
AMENDED
1. The authority citation for part 170
continues to read as follows:
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■
Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
secs. 11, 161(w) (42 U.S.C. 2014, 2201(w));
Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, sec. 201
(42 U.S.C. 5841); 42 U.S.C. 2214; 31 U.S.C.
901, 902, 9701; 44 U.S.C. 3504 note.
2. In § 170.3, add the definitions for
Agency support (corporate support and
the IG), Mission-direct program salaries
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ML16008A242.
ML17137A246.
ML18023B460.
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/forms/
nrc526.pdf.
ML052580332.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_default.
https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/licensing/feestransformaton-accomplishments.html.
ML17313A419.
ML17348A377.
Definitions.
*
10 CFR Part 171
■
ML17319A291.
https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-17-232.
and benefits, and Mission-indirect
program support in alphabetical order
and remove the definition of Overhead
and general and administrative costs to
read as follows:
List of Subjects
29645
*
*
*
*
Agency support (corporate support
and the IG) means resources located in
executive, administrative, and other
support offices such as the Office of the
Commission, the Office of the Secretary,
the Office of the Executive Director for
Operations, the Offices of Congressional
and Public Affairs, the Office of the
Inspector General, the Office of
Administration, the Office of the Chief
Financial Officer, the Office of the Chief
Information Officer, the Office of the
Chief Human Capital Officer and the
Office of Small Business and Civil
Rights. These resources administer the
corporate or shared efforts that more
broadly support the activities of the
agency. These resources also include
information technology services, human
capital services, financial management,
and administrative support.
*
*
*
*
*
Mission-direct program salaries and
benefits means resources that are
allocated to perform core work activities
committed to fulfilling the agency’s
mission of protecting the public health
and safety, promoting the common
defense and security, and protecting the
environment. These resources include
the core work activities assigned within
the major program business lines
(Operating Reactors, New Reactors, Fuel
Facilities, Nuclear Materials Users,
Decommissioning and Low-Level Waste,
and Spent Fuel Storage and
Transportation).
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Mission-indirect program support
means resources that support the core
mission-direct activities. These
resources include supervisory and
nonsupervisory support and mission
travel and training. Supervisory and
nonsupervisory support and mission
travel and training resources assigned
under direct business line structure are
considered mission-indirect due to their
supporting role of the core mission
activities.
*
*
*
*
*
3. In § 170.11, add paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 170.11
Exemptions.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) For purposes of paragraph (a)(1) of
this section, a request for a fee
exemption must be submitted to the
CFO within 90 days of the date of the
NRC’s receipt of the work.
■
4. Revise § 170.20 to read as follows:
§ 170.20 Average cost per professional
staff-hour.
Fees for permits, licenses,
amendments, renewals, special projects,
10 CFR part 55 re-qualification and
replacement examinations and tests,
other required reviews, approvals, and
inspections under §§ 170.21 and 170.31
will be calculated using the professional
staff-hour rate of $275 per hour.
5. In § 170.21, in the table, revise fee
category K. to read as follows:
■
§ 170.21 Schedule of fees for production
or utilization facilities, review of standard
referenced design approvals, special
projects, inspections, and import and
export licenses.
*
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*
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*
29646
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF FACILITY FEES
[See footnotes at end of table]
Fees 1 2
Facility categories and type of fees
*
*
*
*
*
*
K. Import and export licenses: 6
Licenses for the import and export only of production or utilization facilities or the export only of components for production
or utilization facilities issued under 10 CFR part 110.
1. Application for import or export of production or utilization facilities 4 (including reactors and other facilities) and exports of components requiring Commission and Executive Branch review, for example, actions under 10 CFR
110.40(b). Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request .......................................................
2. Application for export of reactor and other components requiring Executive Branch review, for example, those actions under 10 CFR 110.41(a). Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request ......................
3. Application for export of components requiring the assistance of the Executive Branch to obtain foreign government
assurances. Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request ....................................................
4. Application for export of facility components and equipment not requiring Commission or Executive Branch review,
or obtaining foreign government assurances. Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request
5. Minor amendment of any active export or import license, for example, to extend the expiration date, change domestic information, or make other revisions which do not involve any substantive changes to license terms or conditions
or to the type of facility or component authorized for export and, therefore, do not require in-depth analysis or review
or consultation with the Executive Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign government authorities. Minor amendment to license .................................................................................................................................................................................
*
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
1 Fees
will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under § 2.202 of this chapter or
for amendments resulting specifically from the requirements of these orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties or other civil sanctions, fees
will be charged for any resulting licensee-specific activities not otherwise exempted from fees under this chapter. Fees will be charged for approvals issued under a specific exemption provision of the Commission’s regulations under title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10
CFR 50.12, 10 CFR 73.5) and any other sections in effect now or in the future, regardless of whether the approval is in the form of a license
amendment, letter of approval, safety evaluation report, or other form.
2 Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff time and appropriate contractual support services expended. For applications
currently on file and for which fees are determined based on the full cost expended for the review, the professional staff hours expended for the
review of the application up to August 24, 2018 will be determined at the professional rates in effect when the service was provided.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
4 Imports only of major components for end-use at NRC-licensed reactors are authorized under NRC general import license in 10 CFR 110.27.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
6 Because the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, excludes international activities from the fee-recoverable budget in fiscal year 2018, import and export licensing actions will not be charged fees.
6. In § 170.31, revise the table to read
as follows:
■
§ 170.31 Schedule of fees for materials
licenses and other regulatory services,
including inspections, and import and
export licenses.
*
*
*
*
*
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES
[See footnotes at end of table]
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
Fee 2 3
1. Special nuclear material: 11
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of U–235 or plutonium for fuel fabrication activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear Material (High Enriched Uranium) 6 [Program Code(s): 21213] ...........................................
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in Dispersible Form Used for Fabrication of Power Reactor Fuel 6 [Program Code(s): 21210]
(2) All other special nuclear materials licenses not included in Category 1.A. (1) which are licensed for fuel cycle activities.6
(a) Facilities with limited operations 6 [Program Code(s): 21240, 21310, 21320] ................................................................
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment demonstration facilities.6 [Program Code(s): 21205] ..........................................................
(c) Others, including hot cell facilities.6 [Program Code(s): 21130, 21133] .........................................................................
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of spent fuel and reactor-related Greater than Class C (GTCC) waste at an independent spent fuel storage installation (ISFSI) 6 [Program Code(s): 23200].
C. Licenses for possession and use of special nuclear material of less than a critical mass as defined in § 70.4 in sealed
sources contained in devices used in industrial measuring systems, including x-ray fluorescence analyzers.4
Application [Program Code(s): 22140].
D. All other special nuclear material licenses, except licenses authorizing special nuclear material in sealed or unsealed
form in combination that would constitute a critical mass, as defined in § 70.4 of this chapter, for which the licensee shall
pay the same fees as those under Category 1.A.4
Application [Program Code(s): 22110, 22111, 22120, 22131, 22136, 22150, 22151, 22161, 22170, 23100, 23300,
23310].
E. Licenses or certificates for construction and operation of a uranium enrichment facility [Program Code(s): 21200] ............
F. Licenses for possession and use of special nuclear material greater than critical mass as defined in § 70.4 of this chapter, for development and testing of commercial products, and other non-fuel-cycle activities.4 6 [Program Code(s): 22155].
2. Source material: 11
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of source material for refining uranium mill concentrates to uranium hexafluoride or
for deconverting uranium hexafluoride in the production of uranium oxides for disposal.6 [Program Code(s): 11400].
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Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full
Full
Full
Full
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
$1,300.
$2,600.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
29647
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
Fee 2 3
(2) Licenses for possession and use of source material in recovery operations such as milling, in-situ recovery, heap-leaching, ore buying stations, ion-exchange facilities, and in processing of ores containing source material for extraction of
metals other than uranium or thorium, including licenses authorizing the possession of byproduct waste material (tailings)
from source material recovery operations, as well as licenses authorizing the possession and maintenance of a facility in
a standby mode.6
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11100] ............................................................................
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11500] .........................................................................................
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11510] .................................................................................
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11550] ........................................................................................
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11555] ..................................................................................................
(f) Other facilities 6 [Program Code(s): 11700] .....................................................................................................................
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt of byproduct material, as defined in Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from
other persons for possession and disposal, except those licenses subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2) or Category
2.A.(4) 6 [Program Code(s): 11600, 12000].
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt of byproduct material, as defined in Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from
other persons for possession and disposal incidental to the disposal of the uranium waste tailings generated by the licensee’s milling operations, except those licenses subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2) 6 [Program Code(s): 12010].
(5) Licenses that authorize the possession of source material related to removal of contaminants (source material) from
drinking water 6 [Program Code(s): 11820].
B. Licenses which authorize the possession, use, and/or installation of source material for shielding 7 8 .................................
Application [Program Code(s): 11210].
C. Licenses to distribute items containing source material to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 40 of
this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 11240].
D. Licenses to distribute source material to persons generally licensed under part 40 of this chapter .....................................
Application [Program Code(s): 11230, 11231].
E. Licenses for possession and use of source material for processing or manufacturing of products or materials containing
source material for commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 11710].
F. All other source material licenses.
Application [Program Code(s): 11200, 11220, 11221, 11300, 11800, 11810].
3. Byproduct material: 11
A. Licenses of broad scope for the possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations
of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03211, 03212, 03213].
(1) Licenses of broad scope for the possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number
of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04010, 04012, 04014].
(2) Licenses of broad scope for the possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number
of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04011, 04013, 04015].
B. Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03214, 03215, 22135, 22162].
(1) Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04110, 04112, 04114, 04116].
(2) Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: More
than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04111, 04113, 04115, 04117].
C. Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02500, 02511, 02513].
(1) Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and
distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing
byproduct material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04210, 04212, 04214].
(2) Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and
distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing
byproduct material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04211, 04213, 04215].
D. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
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Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Full
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
$1,200.
$2,200.
$2,700.
$2,600.
$2,600.
$12,900.
$17,100.
$21,400.
$3,500.
$4,700.
$5,900.
$5,100.
$6,800.
$8,500.
N/A.
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Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
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Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
Fee 2 3
E. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of materials in which the source
is not removed from its shield (self-shielded units).
Application [Program Code(s): 03510, 03520].
F. Licenses for possession and use of less than or equal to 10,000 curies of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of materials in which the source is exposed for irradiation purposes. This category also includes underwater
irradiators for irradiation of materials where the source is not exposed for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03511].
G. Licenses for possession and use of greater than 10,000 curies of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of
materials in which the source is exposed for irradiation purposes. This category also includes underwater irradiators for
irradiation of materials where the source is not exposed for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03521].
H. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material that require
device review to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter. The category does not include specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons exempt
from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03254, 03255, 03257].
I. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material or quantities
of byproduct material that do not require device evaluation to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30
of this chapter. This category does not include specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03250, 03251, 03252, 03253, 03256].
J. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material that require
sealed source and/or device review to persons generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter. This category does not
include specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03240, 03241, 03243].
K. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material or quantities
of byproduct material that do not require sealed source and/or device review to persons generally licensed under part 31
of this chapter. This category does not include specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03242, 03244].
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for
research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 01100, 01110, 01120, 03610, 03611, 03612, 03613].
(1) Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04610, 04612, 04614, 04616, 04618, 04620, 04622].
(2) Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: More
than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04611, 04613, 04615, 04617, 04619, 04621, 04623].
M. Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 03620].
N. Licenses that authorize services for other licensees, except:
(1) Licenses that authorize only calibration and/or leak testing services are subject to the fees specified in fee Category 3.P.; and
(2) Licenses that authorize waste disposal services are subject to the fees specified in fee Categories 4.A., 4.B., and
4.C.
Application [Program Code(s): 03219, 03225, 03226].
O. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography
operations. Number of locations of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03310, 03320].
(1) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography operations. Number of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04310, 04312].
(2) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography operations. Number of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04311, 04313].
P. All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.9 Number of locations of use:
1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02400, 02410, 03120, 03121, 03122, 03123, 03124, 03130, 03140, 03220, 03221,
03222, 03800, 03810, 22130].
(1) All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.9 Number of locations of
use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04410, 04412, 04414, 04416, 04418, 04420, 04422, 04424, 04426, 04428, 04430,
04432, 04434, 04436, 04438].
(2) All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.9 Number of locations of
use: More than 20.
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$3,200.
$6,400.
$61,400.
$6,600.
$9,800.
$2,000.
$1,100.
$5,400.
$7,200.
$9,000.
$7,000.
$7,200.
$3,100.
$4,200.
$5,200.
$3,400.
$4,500.
$5,700.
29649
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
4.
5.
6.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
7.
Fee 2 3
Application [Program Code(s): 04411, 04413, 04415, 04417, 04419, 04421, 04423, 04425, 04427, 04429, 04431,
04433, 04435, 04437, 04439].
Q. Registration of a device(s) generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter. Registration.
R. Possession of items or products containing radium-226 identified in 10 CFR 31.12 which exceed the number of items or
limits specified in that section.5
1. Possession of quantities exceeding the number of items or limits in 10 CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5) but less than or equal
to 10 times the number of items or limits specified.
Application [Program Code(s): 02700].
2. Possession of quantities exceeding 10 times the number of items or limits specified in 10 CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5).
Application [Program Code(s): 02710].
S. Licenses for production of accelerator-produced radionuclides .............................................................................................
Application [Program Code(s): 03210].
Waste disposal and processing: 11
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material
from other persons for the purpose of contingency storage or commercial land disposal by the licensee; or licenses authorizing contingency storage of low-level radioactive waste at the site of nuclear power reactors; or licenses for receipt
of waste from other persons for incineration or other treatment, packaging of resulting waste and residues, and transfer
of packages to another person authorized to receive or dispose of waste material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03231, 03233, 03236, 06100, 06101].
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material
from other persons for the purpose of packaging or repackaging the material. The licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to receive or dispose of the material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03234].
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of prepackaged waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material from other persons. The licensee will dispose of the material by transfer to another person authorized to
receive or dispose of the material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03232].
Well logging: 11
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material for well logging,
well surveys, and tracer studies other than field flooding tracer studies.
Application [Program Code(s): 03110, 03111, 03112].
B. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material for field flooding tracer studies. ......................................................
Licensing [Program Code(s): 03113].
Nuclear laundries: 11
A. Licenses for commercial collection and laundry of items contaminated with byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03218].
Medical licenses: 11
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices, or
similar beam therapy devices. Number of locations of use: 1–5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02300, 02310].
(1) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. Number of locations of use: 6–20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04510, 04512].
(2) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. Number of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04511, 04513].
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and 70 of
this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license.
Number of locations of use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02110].
(1) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and
70 of this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license. Number of locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04710].
(2) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and
70 of this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license. Number of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04711].
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material
in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices.10
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$700.
$2,500.
$2,500.
$14,100.
Full Cost.
$6,800.
$5,000.
$4,500.
Full Cost.
$21,900.
$11,000.
$14,600.
$18,300.
$8,600.
$11,400.
$14,200.
$5,500.
29650
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
Fee 2 3
Application [Program Code(s): 02120, 02121, 02200, 02201, 02210, 02220, 02230, 02231, 02240, 22160].
8. Civil defense: 11
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material for civil defense activities.
Application [Program Code(s): 03710].
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety evaluation:
A. Safety evaluation of devices or products containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material, except reactor fuel devices, for commercial distribution.
Application—each device.
B. Safety evaluation of devices or products containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material manufactured in accordance with the unique specifications of, and for use by, a single applicant, except reactor fuel devices.
Application—each device.
C. Safety evaluation of sealed sources containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material, except
reactor fuel, for commercial distribution.
Application—each source.
D. Safety evaluation of sealed sources containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material, manufactured in accordance with the unique specifications of, and for use by, a single applicant, except reactor fuel.
Application—each source.
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Evaluation of casks, packages, and shipping containers.
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and plutonium air packages ...........................................................................................
2. Other Casks ......................................................................................................................................................................
B. Quality assurance program approvals issued under part 71 of this chapter.
1. Users and Fabricators. Application ..................................................................................................................................
Inspections ............................................................................................................................................................................
2. Users. Application .............................................................................................................................................................
Inspections ............................................................................................................................................................................
C. Evaluation of security plans, route approvals, route surveys, and transportation security devices (including immobilization devices).
11. Review of standardized spent fuel facilities ..................................................................................................................................
12. Special projects: Including approvals, pre-application/licensing activities, and inspections ........................................................
Application [Program Code: 25110].
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of Compliance ..................................................................................................................
B. Inspections related to storage of spent fuel under § 72.210 of this chapter ..................................................................................
14. Decommissioning/Reclamation 11
A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear material licenses and other approvals authorizing decommissioning, decontamination, reclamation, or site restoration activities under parts 30, 40, 70, 72, and 76 of this chapter, including master materials licenses (MMLs). The transition to this fee category occurs when a licensee has permanently ceased principal activities. [Program Code(s): 03900, 11900, 21135, 21215, 21240, 21325, 22200].
B. Site-specific decommissioning activities associated with unlicensed sites, including MMLs, regardless of whether or not
the sites have been previously licensed.
15. Import and Export licenses: 12
Licenses issued under part 110 of this chapter for the import and export only of special nuclear material, source material, tritium and other byproduct material, and the export only of heavy water, or nuclear grade graphite (fee categories 15.A.
through 15.E.).
A. Application for export or import of nuclear materials, including radioactive waste requiring Commission and Executive
Branch review, for example, those actions under 10 CFR 110.40(b).
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
B. Application for export or import of nuclear material, including radioactive waste, requiring Executive Branch review, but
not Commission review. This category includes applications for the export and import of radioactive waste and requires
the NRC to consult with domestic host state authorities (i.e., Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Commission, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, etc.).
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
C. Application for export of nuclear material, for example, routine reloads of low enriched uranium reactor fuel and/or natural uranium source material requiring the assistance of the Executive Branch to obtain foreign government assurances.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
D. Application for export or import of nuclear material not requiring Commission or Executive Branch review, or obtaining
foreign government assurances.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
E. Minor amendment of any active export or import license, for example, to extend the expiration date, change domestic information, or make other revisions which do not involve any substantive changes to license terms and conditions or to
the type/quantity/chemical composition of the material authorized for export and, therefore, do not require in-depth analysis, review, or consultations with other Executive Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign government authorities. Minor
amendment.
Licenses issued under part 110 of this chapter for the import and export only of Category 1 and Category 2 quantities of radioactive material listed in appendix P to part 110 of this chapter (fee categories 15.F. through 15.R.). Category 1 (Appendix P,
10 CFR Part 110) Exports:
F. Application for export of appendix P Category 1 materials requiring Commission review (e.g., exceptional circumstance
review under 10 CFR 110.42(e)(4)) and to obtain one government-to-government consent for this process. For additional
consent see fee category 15.I.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
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$2,500.
$5,400.
$8,900.
$5,200.
$1,000.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
$4,200.
Full Cost.
$4,200.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
29651
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS FEES—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Category of materials licenses and type of fees 1
Fee 2 3
G. Application for export of appendix P Category 1 materials requiring Executive Branch review and to obtain one government-to-government consent for this process. For additional consents see fee category 15.I.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
H. Application for export of appendix P Category 1 materials and to obtain one government-to-government consent for this
process. For additional consents see fee category 15.I.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
I. Requests for each additional government-to-government consent in support of an export license application or active export license.
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
Category 2 (Appendix P, 10 CFR Part 110) Exports:
J. Application for export of appendix P Category 2 materials requiring Commission review (e.g., exceptional circumstance
review under 10 CFR 110.42(e)(4)).
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
K. Applications for export of appendix P Category 2 materials requiring Executive Branch review ..........................................
Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
L. Application for the export of Category 2 materials. Application—new license, or amendment; or license exemption request.
M. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
N. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
O. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
P. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
Q. [Reserved] ...............................................................................................................................................................................
Minor Amendments (Category 1 and 2, Appendix P, 10 CFR Part 110, Export):
R. Minor amendment of any active export license, for example, to extend the expiration date, change domestic information,
or make other revisions which do not involve any substantive changes to license terms and conditions or to the type/
quantity/chemical composition of the material authorized for export and, therefore, do not require in-depth analysis, review, or consultations with other Executive Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign authorities. Minor amendment.
16. Reciprocity: Agreement State licensees who conduct activities under the reciprocity provisions of 10 CFR 150.20. Application.
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope issued to Government agencies ................................................................................
Application [Program Code(s): 03614].
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance. Evaluation of casks, packages, and shipping containers (including spent fuel, high-level
waste, and other casks, and plutonium air packages).
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act (UMTRCA) activities ..........................................................................................
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
1 Types
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
N/A.
$1,800.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
Full Cost.
of fees—Separate charges, as shown in the schedule, will be assessed for pre-application consultations and reviews; applications for
new licenses, approvals, or license terminations; possession-only licenses; issuances of new licenses and approvals; certain amendments and
renewals to existing licenses and approvals; safety evaluations of sealed sources and devices; generally licensed device registrations; and certain inspections. The following guidelines apply to these charges:
(a) Application and registration fees. Applications for new materials licenses and export and import licenses; applications to reinstate expired,
terminated, or inactive licenses, except those subject to fees assessed at full costs; applications filed by Agreement State licensees to register
under the general license provisions of 10 CFR 150.20; and applications for amendments to materials licenses that would place the license in a
higher fee category or add a new fee category must be accompanied by the prescribed application fee for each category.
(1) Applications for licenses covering more than one fee category of special nuclear material or source material must be accompanied by the
prescribed application fee for the highest fee category.
(2) Applications for new licenses that cover both byproduct material and special nuclear material in sealed sources for use in gauging devices
will pay the appropriate application fee for fee category 1.C. only.
(b) Licensing fees. Fees for reviews of applications for new licenses, renewals, and amendments to existing licenses, pre-application consultations and other documents submitted to the NRC for review, and project manager time for fee categories subject to full cost fees are due upon
notification by the Commission in accordance with § 170.12(b).
(c) Amendment fees. Applications for amendments to export and import licenses must be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for
each license affected. An application for an amendment to an export or import license or approval classified in more than one fee category must
be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for the category affected by the amendment, unless the amendment is applicable to two or
more fee categories, in which case the amendment fee for the highest fee category would apply.
(d) Inspection fees. Inspections resulting from investigations conducted by the Office of Investigations and nonroutine inspections that result
from third-party allegations are not subject to fees. Inspection fees are due upon notification by the Commission in accordance with § 170.12(c).
(e) Generally licensed device registrations under 10 CFR 31.5. Submittals of registration information must be accompanied by the prescribed
fee.
2 Fees will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under 10 CFR 2.202 or for
amendments resulting specifically from the requirements of these orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties or other civil sanctions, fees will
be charged for any resulting licensee-specific activities not otherwise exempted from fees under this chapter. Fees will be charged for approvals
issued under a specific exemption provision of the Commission’s regulations under title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10 CFR
30.11, 40.14, 70.14, 73.5, and any other sections in effect now or in the future), regardless of whether the approval is in the form of a license
amendment, letter of approval, safety evaluation report, or other form. In addition to the fee shown, an applicant may be assessed an additional
fee for sealed source and device evaluations as shown in fee categories 9.A. through 9.D.
3 Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff time multiplied by the appropriate professional hourly rate established in
§ 170.20 in effect when the service is provided, and the appropriate contractual support services expended.
4 Licensees paying fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., and 1.E. are not subject to fees under categories 1.C., 1.D. and 1.F. for sealed sources
authorized in the same license, except for an application that deals only with the sealed sources authorized by the license.
5 Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in this
category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources are possessed for storage only.)
6 Licensees subject to fees under fee categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., or 2.A. must pay the largest applicable fee and are not subject to additional
fees listed in this table.
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29652
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
7 Licensees paying fees under 3.C., 3.C.1, or 3.C.2 are not subject to fees under 2.B. for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
8 Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B. for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
9 Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees under 3.P., 3.P.1, or 3.P.2 for calibration or leak testing services authorized
on the same license.
10 Licensees paying fees under 7.B., 7.B.1, or 7.B.2 are not subject to paying fees under 7.C. for broad scope licenses issued under parts 30,
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices authorized on the same license.
11 A materials license (or part of a materials license) that transitions to fee category 14.A is assessed full-cost fees under 10 CFR part 170, but
is not assessed an annual fee under 10 CFR part 171. If only part of a materials license is transitioned to fee category 14.A, the licensee may be
charged annual fees (and any applicable 10 CFR part 170 fees) for other activities authorized under the license that are not in decommissioning
status.
12 Because the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, excludes international activities from the fee-recoverable budget in fiscal year 2018, import and export licensing actions will not be charged fees.
PART 171—ANNUAL FEES FOR
REACTOR LICENSES AND FUEL
CYCLE LICENSES AND MATERIALS
LICENSES, INCLUDING HOLDERS OF
CERTIFICATES OF COMPLIANCE,
REGISTRATIONS, AND QUALITY
ASSURANCE PROGRAM APPROVALS
AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES
LICENSED BY THE NRC
7. The authority citation for part 171
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
secs. 11, 161(w), 223, 234 (42 U.S.C. 2014,
2201(w), 2273, 2282); Energy Reorganization
Act of 1974, sec. 201 (42 U.S.C. 5841); 42
U.S.C. 2214; 44 U.S.C. 3504 note.
8. In § 171.3, revise the last sentence
to read as follows:
■
§ 171.3
Scope.
* * * Notwithstanding the other
provisions in this section, the
regulations in this part do not apply to
uranium recovery and fuel facility
licensees until after the Commission
verifies through inspection that the
facility has been constructed in
accordance with the requirements of the
license.
§ 171.5
[Amended]
9. In § 171.5, remove the definition of
Overhead and general and
administrative costs.
■ 10. In § 171.15, revise paragraphs
(b)(1), (b)(2) introductory text, (c)(1),
(c)(2) introductory text, (d)(1)
introductory text, (d)(1)(ii), (d)(2) and
(3), and (f) to read as follows:
■
§ 171.15 Annual fees: Reactor licenses
and independent spent fuel storage
licenses.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
*
*
*
*
*
(b)(1) The FY 2018 annual fee for each
operating power reactor that must be
collected by September 30, 2018, is
$4,333,000.
(2) The FY 2018 annual fees are
comprised of a base annual fee for
power reactors licensed to operate, a
base spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning annual fee, and
associated additional charges (fee-relief
adjustment). The activities comprising
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the spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning base annual fee are
shown in paragraphs (c)(2)(i) and (ii) of
this section. The activities comprising
the FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment are
shown in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section. The activities comprising the
FY 2018 base annual fee for operating
power reactors are as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(c)(1) The FY 2018 annual fee for each
power reactor holding a 10 CFR part 50
license that is in a decommissioning or
possession-only status and has spent
fuel onsite, and for each independent
spent fuel storage 10 CFR part 72
licensee who does not hold a 10 CFR
part 50 license, is $198,000.
(2) The FY 2018 annual fee is
comprised of a base spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning annual fee
(which is also included in the operating
power reactor annual fee shown in
paragraph (b) of this section) and a feerelief adjustment. The activities
comprising the FY 2018 fee-relief
adjustment are shown in paragraph
(d)(1) of this section. The activities
comprising the FY 2018 spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning
rebaselined annual fee are:
*
*
*
*
*
(d)(1) The fee-relief adjustment
allocated to annual fees includes a
surcharge for the activities listed in
paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, plus
the amount remaining after total
budgeted resources for the activities
included in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and
(iii) of this section are reduced by the
appropriations the NRC receives for
these types of activities. If the NRC’s
appropriations for these types of
activities are greater than the budgeted
resources for the activities included in
paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
section for a given fiscal year, annual
fees will be reduced. The activities
comprising the FY 2018 fee-relief
adjustment are as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Activities not attributable to an
existing NRC licensee or class of
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licenses (e.g., support for the Agreement
State program); and
*
*
*
*
*
(2) The total FY 2018 fee-relief
adjustment allocated to the operating
power reactor class of licenses is a
$3,349,085 fee-relief credit, not
including the amount allocated to the
spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning class. The FY 2018
operating power reactor fee-relief
adjustment to be assessed to each
operating power reactor is
approximately a $33,829 fee-relief
credit. This amount is calculated by
dividing the total operating power
reactor fee-relief adjustment,
$3,349,085, by the number of operating
power reactors (99).
(3) The FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment
allocated to the spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning class of
licenses is a $172,641 fee-relief credit.
The FY 2018 spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning fee relief adjustment
to be assessed to each operating power
reactor, each power reactor in
decommissioning or possession-only
status that has spent fuel onsite, and to
each independent spent fuel storage 10
CFR part 72 licensee who does not hold
a 10 CFR part 50 license, is a $1,415 feerelief credit. This amount is calculated
by dividing the total fee-relief
adjustment costs allocated to this class
by the total number of power reactors
licenses, except those that permanently
ceased operations and have no fuel
onsite, and 10 CFR part 72 licensees
who do not hold a 10 CFR part 50
license.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) The FY 2018 annual fees for
licensees authorized to operate a
research or test (non-power) reactor
licensed under 10 CFR part 50, unless
the reactor is exempted from fees under
§ 171.11(a), are as follows:
Research reactor ..................
Test reactor ..........................
$81,300
81,300
11. In § 171.16, revise paragraphs
(a)(2), (d), (e) introductory text, and
(e)(2) to read as follows:
■
E:\FR\FM\25JNR2.SGM
25JNR2
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
§ 171.16 Annual fees: Materials licensees,
holders of certificates of compliance,
holders of sealed source and device
registrations, holders of quality assurance
program approvals, and government
agencies licensed by the NRC.
(a) * * *
(2) Notwithstanding the other
provisions in this section, the
regulations in this part do not apply to
uranium recovery and fuel facility
licensees until after the Commission
verifies through inspection that the
facility has been constructed in
accordance with the requirements of the
license.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) The FY 2018 annual fees are
comprised of a base annual fee and an
29653
allocation for fee-relief adjustment. The
activities comprising the FY 2018 feerelief adjustment are shown for
convenience in paragraph (e) of this
section. The FY 2018 annual fees for
materials licensees and holders of
certificates, registrations, or approvals
subject to fees under this section are
shown in the following table:
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS ANNUAL FEES AND FEES FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY NRC
[See footnotes at end of table]
Annual
fees 1 2 3
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses
1. Special nuclear material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of U–235 or plutonium for fuel fabrication activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear Material (High Enriched Uranium) 15 [Program Code(s): 21130] ..........................................
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in Dispersible Form Used for Fabrication of Power Reactor Fuel 15 [Program Code(s):
21210] ................................................................................................................................................................................
(2) All other special nuclear materials licenses not included in Category 1.A.(1) which are licensed for fuel cycle activities.
(a) Facilities with limited operations 15 [Program Code(s): 21310, 21320] ...........................................................................
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment demonstration facility 15 .......................................................................................................
(c) Others, including hot cell facility 15 ..................................................................................................................................
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of spent fuel and reactor-related Greater than Class C (GTCC) waste at an independent spent fuel storage installation (ISFSI) 11,15 [Program Code(s): 23200] .....................................................................
C. Licenses for possession and use of special nuclear material of less than a critical mass, as defined in § 70.4 of this
chapter, in sealed sources contained in devices used in industrial measuring systems, including x-ray fluorescence analyzers. [Program Code(s): 22140] .............................................................................................................................................
D. All other special nuclear material licenses, except licenses authorizing special nuclear material in sealed or unsealed
form in combination that would constitute a critical mass, as defined in § 70.4 of this chapter, for which the licensee shall
pay the same fees as those under Category 1.A. [Program Code(s): 22110, 22111, 22120, 22131, 22136, 22150, 22151,
22161, 22170, 23100, 23300, 23310] ......................................................................................................................................
E. Licenses or certificates for the operation of a uranium enrichment facility 15 [Program Code(s): 21200] ..............................
F. Licenses for possession and use of special nuclear materials greater than critical mass, as defined in § 70.4 of this
chapter, for development and testing of commercial products, and other non-fuel cycle activities.4 [Program Code: 22155]
2. Source material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of source material for refining uranium mill concentrates to uranium hexafluoride or
for deconverting uranium hexafluoride in the production of uranium oxides for disposal.15 [Program Code: 11400] ............
(2) Licenses for possession and use of source material in recovery operations such as milling, in-situ recovery, heapleaching, ore buying stations, ion-exchange facilities and in-processing of ores containing source material for extraction of metals other than uranium or thorium, including licenses authorizing the possession of byproduct waste material (tailings) from source material recovery operations, as well as licenses authorizing the possession and maintenance of a facility in a standby mode.
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach facilities 15 [Program Code(s): 11100] ....................................................................
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities 15 [Program Code(s): 11500] ................................................................................
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities 15 [Program Code(s): 11510] .........................................................................
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities 15 [Program Code(s): 11550] ................................................................................
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities 15 [Program Code(s): 11555] ................................................................................................
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt of byproduct material, as defined in Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act,
from other persons for possession and disposal, except those licenses subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2) or
Category 2.A.(4) 15 [Program Code(s): 11600, 12000] .....................................................................................................
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt of byproduct material, as defined in Section 11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act,
from other persons for possession and disposal incidental to the disposal of the uranium waste tailings generated by
the licensee’s milling operations, except those licenses subject to the fees in Category 2.A.(2) 15 [Program Code(s):
12010] ................................................................................................................................................................................
(5) Licenses that authorize the possession of source material related to removal of contaminants (source material)
from drinking water 15 [Program Code(s): 11820] .............................................................................................................
B. Licenses that authorize possession, use, and/or installation of source material for shielding.16 17 [Program Code: 11210]
C. Licenses to distribute items containing source material to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 40 of
this chapter. [Program Code: 11240] .......................................................................................................................................
D. Licenses to distribute source material to persons generally licensed under part 40 of this chapter [Program Code(s):
11230 and 11231] .....................................................................................................................................................................
E. Licenses for possession and use of source material for processing or manufacturing of products or materials containing
source material for commercial distribution. [Program Code: 11710] ......................................................................................
F. All other source material licenses. [Program Code(s): 11200, 11220, 11221, 11300, 11800, 11810] ...................................
3. Byproduct material:
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$7,346,000
2,661,000
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
2,900
7,500
3,513,000
5,500
1,517,000
38,800
49,200
55,700
5 N/A
5 N/A
5 N/A
22,000
6,500
3,200
5,200
6,000
7,400
9,200
29654
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS ANNUAL FEES AND FEES FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY NRC—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Annual
fees 1 2 3
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses
A. Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for
processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of
use: 1–5. [Program Code(s): 03211, 03212, 03213] ................................................................................................................
(1) Licenses of broad scope for the possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number
of locations of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s): 04010, 04012, 04014] ...............................................................................
(2) Licenses of broad scope for the possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number
of locations of use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04011, 04013, 04015] .................................................................
B. Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program
Code(s): 03214, 03215, 22135, 22162] ....................................................................................................................................
(1) Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 6–20.
[Program Code(s): 04110, 04112, 04114, 04116] ............................................................................................................
(2) Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing byproduct material for commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: More
than 20. [Program Code(s): 04111, 04113, 04115, 04117] ..............................................................................................
C. Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program Code(s): 02500, 02511, 02513] .......
(1) Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and
distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing
byproduct material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s):
04210, 04212, 04214] ........................................................................................................................................................
(2) Licenses issued under §§ 32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing or manufacturing and
distribution or redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and devices containing
byproduct material. This category does not apply to licenses issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose processing or manufacturing is exempt under § 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: More than 20. [Program
Code(s): 04211, 04213, 04215] .........................................................................................................................................
D. [Reserved] ................................................................................................................................................................................
E. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of materials in which the source
is not removed from its shield (self-shielded units) [Program Code(s): 03510, 03520] ..........................................................
F. Licenses for possession and use of less than or equal to 10,000 curies of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of materials in which the source is exposed for irradiation purposes. This category also includes underwater
irradiators for irradiation of materials in which the source is not exposed for irradiation purposes [Program Code(s):
03511] .......................................................................................................................................................................................
G. Licenses for possession and use of greater than 10,000 curies of byproduct material in sealed sources for irradiation of
materials in which the source is exposed for irradiation purposes. This category also includes underwater irradiators for
irradiation of materials in which the source is not exposed for irradiation purposes [Program Code(s): 03521] ...................
H. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material that require
device review to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter, except specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter [Program Code(s): 03254, 03255, 03257] ............................................................................
I. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material or quantities
of byproduct material that do not require device evaluation to persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30
of this chapter, except for specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to
persons exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30 of this chapter [Program Code(s): 03250, 03251, 03252,
03253, 03256] ...........................................................................................................................................................................
J. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material that require
sealed source and/or device review to persons generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter, except specific licenses
authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to persons generally licensed under part 31
of this chapter [Program Code(s): 03240, 03241, 03243] ........................................................................................................
K. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of this chapter to distribute items containing byproduct material or quantities
of byproduct material that do not require sealed source and/or device review to persons generally licensed under part 31
of this chapter, except specific licenses authorizing redistribution of items that have been authorized for distribution to
persons generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter [Program Code(s): 03242, 03244] .................................................
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for
research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program
Code(s): 01100, 01110, 01120, 03610, 03611, 03612, 03613] ...............................................................................................
(1) Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of product material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s): 04610, 04612, 04614, 04616, 04618, 04620, 04622] ..............................................................................
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30,700
40,600
50,600
11,400
15,100
18,900
11,500
15,200
18,800
5 N/A
10,100
11,000
91,000
11,100
15,500
4,300
3,100
14,600
19,300
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
29655
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS ANNUAL FEES AND FEES FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY NRC—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Annual
fees 1 2 3
Category of materials licenses
4.
5.
6.
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
7.
(2) Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter
for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution. Number of locations of use: More than
20. [Program Code(s): 04611, 04613, 04615, 04617, 04619, 04621, 04623] ..................................................................
M. Other licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 30 of this chapter for research and development that do not authorize commercial distribution [Program Code(s): 03620] ..............................................................
N. Licenses that authorize services for other licensees, except: (1) Licenses that authorize only calibration and/or leak testing services are subject to the fees specified in fee Category 3.P.; and (2) Licenses that authorize waste disposal services are subject to the fees specified in fee categories 4.A., 4.B., and 4.C. [Program Code(s): 03219, 03225, 03226] .......
O. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography operations. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding authorized under part 40 of
this chapter when authorized on the same license Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program Code(s): 03310, 03320] ....
(1) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography operations. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding authorized
under part 40 of this chapter when authorized on the same license. Number of locations of use: 6–20. [Program
Code(s): 04310, 04312] .....................................................................................................................................................
(2) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material issued under part 34 of this chapter for industrial radiography operations. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding authorized
under part 40 of this chapter when authorized on the same license. Number of locations of use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04311, 04313] ...........................................................................................................................................
P. All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.18 Number of locations of use:
1–5. [Program Code(s): 02400, 02410, 03120, 03121, 03122, 03123, 03124, 03140, 03130, 03220, 03221, 03222,
03800, 03810, 22130] ...............................................................................................................................................................
(1) All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.18 Number of locations
of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s): 04410, 04412, 04414, 04416, 04418, 04420, 04422, 04424, 04426, 04428, 04430,
04432, 04434, 04436, 04438] ...........................................................................................................................................
(2) All other specific byproduct material licenses, except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.18 Number of locations
of use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04411, 04413, 04415, 04417, 04419, 04421, 04423, 04425, 04427, 04429,
04431, 04433, 04435, 04437, 04439] ...............................................................................................................................
Q. Registration of devices generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter ...............................................................................
R. Possession of items or products containing radium–226 identified in 10 CFR 31.12 which exceed the number of items or
limits specified in that section: 14
(1) Possession of quantities exceeding the number of items or limits in 10 CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5) but less than or
equal to 10 times the number of items or limits specified [Program Code(s): 02700] .....................................................
(2) Possession of quantities exceeding 10 times the number of items or limits specified in 10 CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5)
[Program Code(s): 02710] .................................................................................................................................................
S. Licenses for production of accelerator-produced radionuclides [Program Code(s): 03210] ...................................................
Waste disposal and processing:
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material
from other persons for the purpose of contingency storage or commercial land disposal by the licensee; or licenses authorizing contingency storage of low-level radioactive waste at the site of nuclear power reactors; or licenses for receipt
of waste from other persons for incineration or other treatment, packaging of resulting waste and residues, and transfer
of packages to another person authorized to receive or dispose of waste material [Program Code(s): 03231, 03233,
03235, 03236, 06100, 06101] ...................................................................................................................................................
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material
from other persons for the purpose of packaging or repackaging the material. The licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to receive or dispose of the material [Program Code(s): 03234] ................................
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of prepackaged waste byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material from other persons. The licensee will dispose of the material by transfer to another person authorized to
receive or dispose of the material [Program Code(s): 03232] .................................................................................................
Well logging:
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material for well logging,
well surveys, and tracer studies other than field flooding tracer studies [Program Code(s): 03110, 03111, 03112] .............
B. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material for field flooding tracer studies. [Program Code(s): 03113] ...........
Nuclear laundries:
A. Licenses for commercial collection and laundry of items contaminated with byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material [Program Code(s): 03218] .......................................................................................................................
Medical licenses:
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices, or
similar beam therapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.9 Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program Code(s): 02300, 02310] ................................
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24,000
13,300
17,600
25,000
33,400
41,600
8,600
11,400
14,400
13 N/A
7,100
7,500
30,200
5 N/A
18,900
10,800
14,900
5 N/A
35,600
20,600
29656
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS ANNUAL FEES AND FEES FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY NRC—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Annual
fees 1 2 3
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Category of materials licenses
(1) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for
shielding when authorized on the same license.9 Number of locations of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s): 04510,
04512] ................................................................................................................................................................................
(2) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for
shielding when authorized on the same license.9 19 Number of locations of use: More than 20. [Program Code(s):
04511, 04513] ....................................................................................................................................................................
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and 70 of
this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license.9
Number of locations of use: 1–5. [Program Code(s): 02110] ..................................................................................................
(1) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and
70 of this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license.9 Number of locations of use: 6–20. [Program Code(s): 04710] .............................................
(2) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical institutions or two or more physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and
70 of this chapter authorizing research and development, including human use of byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material for shielding when authorized on the same license.9 Number of locations of use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04711] ...............................
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices. This category also includes the possession and use of source material
for shielding when authorized on the same license.9 19 [Program Code(s): 02120, 02121, 02200, 02201, 02210, 02220,
02230, 02231, 02240, 22160] ...................................................................................................................................................
8. Civil defense:
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material for civil defense activities [Program Code(s): 03710] .............................................................................................................................................
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety evaluation:
A. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of devices or products containing byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material, except reactor fuel devices, for commercial distribution ..................................................................
B. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of devices or products containing byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material manufactured in accordance with the unique specifications of, and for use by, a single applicant,
except reactor fuel devices .......................................................................................................................................................
C. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of sealed sources containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material, except reactor fuel, for commercial distribution .....................................................................................
D. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of sealed sources containing byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material, manufactured in accordance with the unique specifications of, and for use by, a single applicant,
except reactor fuel ....................................................................................................................................................................
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Certificates of Compliance or other package approvals issued for design of casks, packages, and shipping containers.
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and plutonium air packages ...........................................................................................
2. Other Casks ......................................................................................................................................................................
B. Quality assurance program approvals issued under part 71 of this chapter.
1. Users and Fabricators .......................................................................................................................................................
2. Users .................................................................................................................................................................................
C. Evaluation of security plans, route approvals, route surveys, and transportation security devices (including immobilization
devices) .....................................................................................................................................................................................
11. Standardized spent fuel facilities ...................................................................................................................................................
12. Special Projects [Program Code(s): 25110] ..................................................................................................................................
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of Compliance ..................................................................................................................
B. General licenses for storage of spent fuel under 10 CFR 72.210 ..........................................................................................
14. Decommissioning/Reclamation:
A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear material licenses and other approvals authorizing decommissioning, decontamination, reclamation, or site restoration activities under parts 30, 40, 70, 72, and 76 of this chapter, including master materials licenses (MMLs). The transition to this fee category occurs when a licensee has permanently ceased principal activities. [Program Code(s): 03900, 11900, 21135, 21215, 21240, 21325, 22200] .......................................................................
B. Site-specific decommissioning activities associated with unlicensed sites, including MMLs, whether or not the sites have
been previously licensed ..........................................................................................................................................................
15. Import and Export licenses ............................................................................................................................................................
16. Reciprocity .....................................................................................................................................................................................
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30,100
34,100
30,900
40,700
50,500
13,900
7,100
7,300
12,100
7,000
1,400
6 N/A
6N/A
6 N/A
6 N/A
6 N/A
6 N/A
6 N/A
6 N/A
12 N/A
7 20 0
7 N/A
8 N/A
8 N/A
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
29657
SCHEDULE OF MATERIALS ANNUAL FEES AND FEES FOR GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY NRC—Continued
[See footnotes at end of table]
Annual
fees 1 2 3
Category of materials licenses
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope issued to Government agencies.15 [Program Code(s): 03614] .................................
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance .......................................................................................................................................................
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act (UMTRCA) activities ..........................................................................................
320,000
10 1,082,000
122,000
1
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with RULES2
Annual fees will be assessed based on whether a licensee held a valid license with the NRC authorizing possession and use of radioactive
material during the current FY. The annual fee is waived for those materials licenses and holders of certificates, registrations, and approvals who
either filed for termination of their licenses or approvals or filed for possession only/storage licenses before October 1 of the current FY, and permanently ceased licensed activities entirely before this date. Annual fees for licensees who filed for termination of a license, downgrade of a license, or for a possession-only license during the FY and for new licenses issued during the FY will be prorated in accordance with the provisions of § 171.17. If a person holds more than one license, certificate, registration, or approval, the annual fee(s) will be assessed for each license, certificate, registration, or approval held by that person. For licenses that authorize more than one activity on a single license (e.g.,
human use and irradiator activities), annual fees will be assessed for each category applicable to the license.
2 Payment of the prescribed annual fee does not automatically renew the license, certificate, registration, or approval for which the fee is paid.
Renewal applications must be filed in accordance with the requirements of parts 30, 40, 70, 71, 72, or 76 of this chapter.
3 Each FY, fees for these materials licenses will be calculated and assessed in accordance with § 171.13 and will be published in the FEDERAL
REGISTER for notice and comment.
4 Other facilities include licenses for extraction of metals, heavy metals, and rare earths.
5 There are no existing NRC licenses in these fee categories. If NRC issues a license for these categories, the Commission will consider establishing an annual fee for this type of license.
6 Standardized spent fuel facilities, 10 CFR parts 71 and 72 Certificates of Compliance and related Quality Assurance program approvals, and
special reviews, such as topical reports, are not assessed an annual fee because the generic costs of regulating these activities are primarily attributable to users of the designs, certificates, and topical reports.
7Licensees in this category are not assessed an annual fee because they are charged an annual fee in other categories while they are licensed to operate.
8 No annual fee is charged because it is not practical to administer due to the relatively short life or temporary nature of the license.
9 Separate annual fees will not be assessed for pacemaker licenses issued to medical institutions that also hold nuclear medicine licenses
under fee categories 7.A, 7.A.1, 7.A.2, 7.B., 7.B.1, 7.B.2, or 7.C.
10 This includes Certificates of Compliance issued to the U.S. Department of Energy that are not funded from the Nuclear Waste Fund.
11 See § 171.15(c).
12 See § 171.15(c).
13 No annual fee is charged for this category because the cost of the general license registration program applicable to licenses in this category will be recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees.
14 Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in this
category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources are possessed for storage only.)
15Licensees subject to fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., 2.A., and licensees paying fees under fee category 17 must pay the largest applicable fee and are not subject to additional fees listed in this table.
16 Licensees paying fees under 3.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B. for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
17 Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B. for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
18 Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees under 3.P., 3.P.1, or 3.P.2 for calibration or leak testing services authorized
on the same license.
19 Licensees paying fees under 7.B., 7.B.1, or 7.B.2 are not subject to paying fees under 7.C. for broad scope license licenses issued under
parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material, except licenses for
byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices authorized on the same license.
20 No annual fee is charged for a materials license (or part of a materials license) that has transitioned to this fee category because the decommissioning costs will be recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees, but annual fees may be charged for other activities authorized under the license that are not in decommissioning status.
(e) The fee-relief adjustment allocated
to annual fees includes the budgeted
resources for the activities listed in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, plus the
total budgeted resources for the
activities included in paragraphs (e)(2)
and (3) of this section, as reduced by the
appropriations the NRC receives for
these types of activities. If the NRC’s
appropriations for these types of
activities are greater than the budgeted
resources for the activities included in
paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of this section
for a given fiscal year, a negative feerelief adjustment (or annual fee
reduction) will be allocated to annual
fees. The activities comprising the FY
VerDate Sep<11>2014
20:04 Jun 22, 2018
Jkt 244001
2018 fee-relief adjustment are as
follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Activities not attributable to an
existing NRC licensee or class of
licenses (e.g., support for the Agreement
State program); and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. In § 171.17, revise paragraph (a)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 171.17
Proration.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Reactors, 10 CFR part 72 licensees
who do not hold 10 CFR part 50
licenses, and materials licenses with
annual fees of $100,000 or greater for a
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
single fee category. The NRC will base
the proration of annual fees for
terminated and downgraded licensees
on the fee rule in effect at the time the
action is official. The NRC will base the
determinations on the proration
requirements under paragraphs (a)(2)
and (3) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 11th day
of June 2018.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Maureen E. Wylie,
Chief Financial Officer.
[FR Doc. 2018–13320 Filed 6–22–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
E:\FR\FM\25JNR2.SGM
25JNR2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 122 (Monday, June 25, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 29622-29657]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-13320]
[[Page 29621]]
Vol. 83
Monday,
No. 122
June 25, 2018
Part II
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee Recovery for Fiscal Year 2018; Final
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 122 / Monday, June 25, 2018 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 29622]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
10 CFR Parts 170 and 171
[NRC-2017-0026]
RIN 3150-AJ95
Revision of Fee Schedules; Fee Recovery for Fiscal Year 2018
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is amending the
licensing, inspection, special project, and annual fees charged to its
applicants and licensees. These amendments are necessary to implement
the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, as amended (OBRA-90)
which requires the NRC to recover approximately 90 percent of its
annual budget through fees.
DATES: This final rule is effective on August 24, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Please refer to Docket ID NRC-2017-0026 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 Website: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and search for Docket ID NRC-2017-0026. Address
questions about NRC dockets to Carol Gallagher; telephone: 301-415-
3463; email: [email protected]. For technical questions, contact
the individual listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section of
this document.
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 [email protected]. The
ADAMS accession number for each document referenced (if it is available
in ADAMS) is provided the first time that it is mentioned in this
document. For the convenience of the reader, the ADAMS accession
numbers and instructions about obtaining materials referenced in this
document are provided in the ``Availability of Documents'' section of
this document.
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.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brian Harris, Office of the Chief
Financial Officer, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC
20555-0001, telephone: 301-415-6382, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background; Statutory Authority
II. Discussion
III. Public Comment Analysis
IV. Public Comments and NRC Response
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
VI. Regulatory Analysis
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
VIII. Plain Writing
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
XI. Congressional Review Act
XII. Voluntary Consensus Standards
XIII. Availability of Guidance
XIV. Availability of Documents
I. Background; Statutory Authority
The NRC's fee regulations are primarily governed by two laws: (1)
The Independent Offices Appropriation Act, 1952 (IOAA) (31 U.S.C.
9701), and (2) OBRA-90 (42 U.S.C. 2214). The IOAA generally authorizes
and encourages Federal regulatory agencies to recover--to the fullest
extent possible--costs attributable to services provided to
identifiable recipients. The OBRA-90 requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of its budget authority for the fiscal year
(FY) through fees; in FY 2018, amounts appropriated for waste-
incidental-to-reprocessing (WIR), generic homeland security activities,
advanced reactor regulatory infrastructure activities, international
activities, and Inspector General (IG) services for the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board are excluded from this fee-recovery
requirement. The OBRA-90 requires the NRC to use its IOAA authority
first to collect service fees for NRC work that provides specific
benefits to identifiable applicants and licensees (such as licensing
work, inspections, and special projects). The regulations at part 170
of title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) authorize these
fees. But, because the NRC's fee recovery under the IOAA (10 CFR part
170) does not equal 90 percent of the NRC's budget authority for the
fiscal year, the NRC also assesses ``annual fees'' under 10 CFR part
171 to recover the remaining amount necessary to meet OBRA-90's fee-
recovery requirement. These annual fees recover costs that are not
otherwise collected through 10 CFR part 170.
II. Discussion
FY 2018 Fee Collection--Overview
The NRC is issuing the FY 2018 final fee rule based on the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (Pub. L. 115-141) (the enacted
budget), in the amount of $922.0 million, an increase of $4.9 million
from FY 2017. As explained previously, certain portions of the NRC's
total budget are excluded from the NRC's fee-recovery amount--
specifically, these exclusions include: $1.3 million for WIR
activities, $1.1 million for IG services for the Defense Nuclear
Facilities Safety Board, $10.0 million for advanced reactor regulatory
infrastructure activities, and $15.2 million for generic homeland
security activities. Also, for the first time, the enacted budget
excludes $16.2 million for international activities from the fee-
recoverable budget. Additionally, OBRA-90 requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of the remaining budget authority--10 percent
of the remaining budget authority is not recovered through fees. The
NRC refers to the activities included in this 10-percent as ``fee-
relief'' activities.
After accounting for the OBRA-90 exclusions, the adjustment
associated with the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID) rescission,\1\ the fee-relief activities, and net billing
adjustments (the sum of unpaid current year invoices (estimated) minus
payments for prior year invoices), the NRC must bill approximately
$789.3 million in FY 2018 to licensees and applicants. Of this amount,
the NRC estimates that $280.8 million will be recovered through 10 CFR
part 170 user fees, which leaves approximately $508.5 million to be
recovered through 10 CFR part 171 annual fees. Table I summarizes the
fee-recovery amounts for the FY 2018 final fee rule using the enacted
budget and taking into account excluded activities, the fee-relief
activities, and net billing adjustments (individual values may not sum
to totals due to rounding). The Joint Explanatory Statement associated
with the Consolidated Appropriations, Act 2018 includes direction for
the NRC to use $15.0 million in carryover funds. The use of carryover
funds allows the NRC
[[Page 29623]]
to accomplish the work needed without additional costs to licensees
because consistent with the requirements of OBRA-90, fees are
calculated based on the budget authority enacted for the current FY and
not carryover funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, rescinds
approximately $0.1 million of unobligated balances from funds
previously transferred to the NRC from the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID). The Joint Explanatory Statement
for the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, includes an
adjustment to the NRC's fee recovery amount associated with this
rescission.
Table I--Budget and Fee Recovery Amounts 2
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
rule rule change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Budget Authority.......................................... $917.1 $922.0 0.5
Less Excluded Fee Items......................................... -23.1 -43.8 89.6
-----------------------------------------------
Balance..................................................... 894.0 878.2 -1.7
Fee Recovery Percent............................................ 90 90 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total Amount to be Recovered.................................... 804.6 790.4 -1.7
Adjustment USAID Rescission 3................................... 0.0 -0.1 -100.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total Amount to be Recovered Post USAID......................... 804.6 790.3 -1.8
10 CFR Part 171 Billing Adjustments:
Unpaid Current Year Invoices (estimated).................... 6.2 6.5 4.8
Less Payments Received in Current Year for Previous Year -4.9 -7.5 53.1
Invoices (estimated).......................................
-----------------------------------------------
Subtotal................................................ 1.3 -1.0 -176.9
-----------------------------------------------
Amount to be Recovered through 10 CFR Parts 170 and 171 Fees.... 805.9 789.3 -2.0
Less Estimated 10 CFR Part 170 Fees............................. -297.3 -280.8 -1.2
-----------------------------------------------
10 CFR Part 171 Fee Collections Required.................... 508.6 508.5 0.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Fee Collection--Professional Hourly Rate
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ For each table, numbers may not add due to rounding.
\3\ The adjustment to the NRC's fee recovery amount associated
with the USAID rescission is shown in Table 1. Because the USAID
rescission amount was approximately $0.1 million, the proportion of
the USAID rescission applicable to each fee class is not shown in
the accompanying tables for each fee class. Additional information
on the amount of the USAID rescission applicable to each fee class
is available in the work papers (ADAMS Accession No. ML18135A044).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NRC uses a professional hourly rate to assess fees for specific
services provided by the NRC under 10 CFR part 170. The professional
hourly rate also helps determine flat fees (which are used for the
review of certain types of license applications). This rate will be
applicable to all activities for which fees are assessed under
Sec. Sec. 170.21 and 170.31.
The NRC's professional hourly rate is derived by adding budgeted
resources for: (1) Mission-direct program salaries and benefits; (2)
mission-indirect program support; and (3) agency support (corporate
support and the IG), and then subtracting certain offsetting receipts,
and dividing this total by the mission-direct full-time equivalents
(FTE) converted to hours. The NRC is adding the definitions for
``mission-direct program salaries and benefits,'' ``mission-indirect
program support,'' and ``agency support (corporate support and the
IG)'' to 10 CFR 170.3, ``Definitions.'' The mission-direct FTE
converted to hours is the product of the mission-direct FTE multiplied
by the estimated annual mission-direct FTE productive hours. The only
budgeted resources excluded from the professional hourly rate are those
for mission-direct contract resources, which are generally billed to
licensees separately. The following shows the professional hourly rate
calculation (for this equation, ``budgeted resources'' does not include
mission-direct contract resources):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR25JN18.008
For FY 2018, the NRC is increasing the professional hourly rate
from $263 to $275. The 4.6 percent increase in the FY 2018 professional
hourly rate is due primarily to the 7.3 percent decline in the number
of mission-direct FTE compared to FY 2017, offset by a 2.4 percent
decline in budgeted resources and a small increase in productive hours.
The 7.3 percent decline in the number of mission-direct FTE was larger
than the decline projected in the proposed rule due primarily to the
exclusion of advanced reactor regulatory infrastructure activities and
international activities from the fee-recoverable budget, which caused
the mission-direct FTE assigned to these activities to be excluded from
the professional hourly rate calculation. The FY 2018 estimated annual
mission-direct FTE productive hours is 1,510 hours, up from 1,500 hours
in FY 2017. This estimate, also referred to as the productive hours
assumption, reflects the average number of hours that a mission-direct
employee spends on mission-direct work in a given year. This excludes
hours charged to annual leave, sick leave, holidays, training, and
general administration tasks. Table II shows the professional hourly
rate calculation methodology. The FY 2017 amounts are provided for
comparison purposes.
[[Page 29624]]
Table II--Professional Hourly Rate Calculation
[Dollars in millions, except as noted]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
rule rule change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mission-Direct Program Salaries & Benefits...................... $340.6 $325.7 -4.4
Mission-Indirect Program Support................................ 137.3 135.0 -1.7
Agency Support (Corporate Support and the IG)................... 309.6 308.1 -0.4
-----------------------------------------------
Subtotal.................................................... 787.5 768.8 -2.4
Less Offsetting Receipts 4...................................... -0.1 0.0 100.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total Budgeted Resources Included in Professional Hourly $787.4 $768.8 -2.4
Rate.......................................................
Mission-Direct FTE (Whole numbers).............................. 1,996 1,851 -7.3
Annual Mission-Direct FTE Productive Hours (Whole numbers)...... 1,500 1,510 0.7
Mission-Direct FTE Converted to Hours (Mission-Direct FTE 3.0 2.8 -6.7
multiplied by Annual Mission-..................................
Direct FTE Productive Hours) (In Millions)......................
Professional Hourly Rate (Total Budgeted Resources Included in 263 275 4.6
Professional Hourly Rate Divided by Mission-Direct FTE
Converted to Hours) (Whole Numbers)............................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Fee Collection--Flat Application Fee Changes
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The fees collected by the NRC for Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) services and indemnity (financial protection required of
licensees for public liability claims at 10 CFR part 140) are
subtracted from the budgeted resources amount when calculating the
10 CFR part 170 professional hourly rate, per the guidance in Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) Circular A-25, User Charges. The
budgeted resources for FOIA activities are allocated under the
product for Information Services within the Corporate Support
business line. The indemnity activities are allocated under the
Licensing Actions and the Research & Test Reactors products within
the Operating Reactors business line.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NRC is amending the flat application fees that it charges to
applicants for import and export licenses, applicants for materials
licenses and other regulatory services, and holders of materials in its
schedule of fees in Sec. Sec. 170.21 and 170.31 to reflect the revised
professional hourly rate of $275 and the exclusion of international
activities from the fee-recoverable budget. The NRC calculates these
flat fees by multiplying the average professional staff hours needed to
process the licensing actions by the professional hourly rate for FY
2018. The NRC analyzes the actual hours spent performing licensing
actions and then estimates the average professional staff hours that
are needed to process licensing actions as part of its biennial review
of fees, which is required by Section 205(a) of the Chief Financial
Officers Act of 1990 (31 U.S.C. 902(a)(8)). The NRC performed this
review in FY 2017 and will perform this review again in FY 2019. The
higher professional hourly rate of $275 is the primary reason for the
increase in flat application fees. Please see the work papers for more
detail (ADAMS Accession No. ML18135044).
The NRC rounds these flat fees in such a way that ensures both
convenience for its stakeholders and that any rounding effects are
minimal. Accordingly, fees under $1,000 are rounded to the nearest $10,
fees between $1,000 and $100,000 are rounded to the nearest $100, and
fees greater than $100,000 are rounded to the nearest $1,000.
The licensing flat fees are applicable for certain materials
licensing actions (see fee categories 1.C. through 1.D., 2.B. through
2.F., 3.A. through 3.S., 4.B. through 5.A., 6.A. through 9.D., 10.B.,
15.A. through 15.L., 15.R., and 16 of Sec. 170.31). Because the
enacted budget excludes international activities from the fee-
recoverable budget, import and export licensing actions, wholly funded
through the international activities product line, (see fee categories
K.1. through K.5. of Sec. 170.21 and fee categories 15.A. through
15.R. of Sec. 170.31) will not be charged fees under the final rule.
To implement this, the NRC has revised fee categories K.1. through K.5.
of Sec. 170.21 and fee categories 15.A.
through 15.R. of Sec. 170.31 and included a new footnote in these
tables.\5\ Applications filed on or after the effective date of the FY
2018 final fee rule will be subject to the revised fees in this final
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ The NRC has also removed the language relating to
international activities in Sec. Sec. 171.15(d)(1)(ii) and
171.16(e)(2) (which pertain to the fee-relief adjustment) because
the enacted budget excludes international activities from the fee-
recoverable budget and thus international activities are not
included in fee relief under the FY 2018 final fee rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Fee Collection--Fee-Relief and Low-Level Waste (LLW) Surcharge
As previously noted, OBRA-90 requires the NRC to recover
approximately 90 percent of its annual budget authority for the fiscal
year. The NRC applies the remaining 10 percent that is not recovered to
offset certain budgeted activities--see Table III for a full listing of
these ``fee-relief'' activities. If the amount budgeted for these fee-
relief activities is greater or less than 10 percent of the NRC's
annual budget authority (less the fee-recovery exclusions), then the
NRC applies a fee adjustment (either an increase or decrease) to all
licensees' annual fees, based on their percentage share of the NRC's
budget.
In FY 2018, the amount budgeted for fee-relief activities is less
than the 10-percent threshold--therefore, the NRC will assess a fee-
relief credit that decreases all licensees' annual fees based on their
percentage share of the budget. The credit is due primarily to the
exclusion of international activities from the fee-recoverable budget.
Table III summarizes the fee-relief activities budgeted for FY 2018.
The FY 2017 amounts are provided for comparison purposes.
[[Page 29625]]
Table III--Fee-Relief Activities
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 FY 2018
Fee-relief activities budgeted budgeted Percentage
costs costs change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Activities not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or
class of licensees:
a. International activities 6............................... $13.8 $0.0 -100.0
b. Agreement State oversight................................ 12.9 13.5 4.5
c. Scholarships and Fellowships............................. 17.9 15.0 -16.2
d. Medical Isotope Production Infrastructure................ 4.2 3.9 -7.1
2. Activities not assessed under 10 CFR part 170 service fees or
10 CFR part 171 annual fees based on existing law or Commission
policy:
a. Fee exemption for nonprofit educational institutions..... 9.7 8.7 -9.9
b. Costs not recovered from small entities under Sec. 7.4 6.6 -10.8
171.16(c)..................................................
c. Regulatory support to Agreement States................... 18.5 17.4 -5.9
d. Generic decommissioning/reclamation (not related to the 14.6 14.5 -1.0
power reactor and spent fuel storage fee classes)..........
e. In Situ leach rulemaking and unregistered general 1.4 1.5 7.1
licensees..................................................
f. Potential Department of Defense remediation program MOU 1.1 1.2 2.0
activities.................................................
g. Non-military radium sites................................ N/A 1.7 N/A
-----------------------------------------------
Total fee-relief activities............................. 101.5 83.9 -17.3
Less 10 percent of the NRC's total FY budget (less the fee -89.4 -87.8 1.8
recovery exclusions)...........................................
-----------------------------------------------
Fee-Relief Adjustment to be Allocated to All Licensees' 12.1 -3.9 -132.6
Annual Fees................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ In prior years, this fee-relief category included amount
includes international assistance activities. This fee-relief
category also included conventions and treaty activities that are
not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or class of licensees,
and it included international cooperation activities that are not
attributable to an existing NRC licensee or class of licensees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Table IV shows how the NRC allocates the $3.9 million fee-relief
credit to each licensee fee class. Also, in accordance with the staff
requirements memorandum (SRM) dated September 7, 2017 (ADAMS Accession
No. ML17250A841), for SECY-17-0026, ``Policy Considerations and
Recommendations for Remediation of Non-Military, Unlicensed Historic
Radium Sites in Non-Agreement States'' dated February 22, 2017 (ADAMS
Accession No. ML17130A783), the NRC has established a new fee-relief
category for non-military sites contaminated due to historic uses of
radium.
In addition to the fee-relief credit, the NRC also assesses a
generic LLW surcharge of $3.4 million. Disposal of LLW occurs at
commercially operated LLW disposal facilities that are licensed by
either the NRC or an Agreement State. Four existing LLW disposal
facilities in the United States accept various types of LLW. All are
located in Agreement States and, therefore, are regulated by an
Agreement State, rather than the NRC. The NRC allocates this surcharge
to its licensees based on data available in the U.S. Department of
Energy's (DOE's) Manifest Information Management System (MIMS). This
database contains information on total LLW volumes and NRC usage
information from four generator classes: Academic, industrial, medical,
and utility. The ratio of utility waste volumes to total LLW volumes
over a period of time is used to estimate the portion of this surcharge
that will be allocated to the power reactors, fuel facilities, and
materials fee classes. The materials portion is adjusted to account for
the fact that a large percentage of materials licensees are licensed by
the Agreement States rather than the NRC.
The LLW surcharge amounts have changed since the proposed rule.
After the NRC published the proposed rule for public comment, DOE
updated the MIMS system with 2017 data. As a result of the update, the
LLW surcharge for Operating Power Reactors fee class increased from
$1.4 million to $2.6 million. For Fuel Facilities and Material Users,
it decreased from $1.6 million to $0.7 million and from $0.4 million to
$0.2 million, respectively. Additional details about these changes to
the LLW surcharge resulting from DOE's update to the MIMS system can be
found in Section IV(I).
Table IV shows the LLW surcharge and fee-relief credit, and its
allocation across the various fee classes.
Table IV--Allocation of Fee-Relief Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2018
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LLW surcharge Fee-relief adjustment Total
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percent $ Percent $ $
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating Power Reactors........ 75.0 2.6 85.1 -3.4 -0.8
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor 0.0 0.0 4.4 -0.2 -0.2
Decommissioning................
Research and Test Reactors...... 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.0 0.0
Fuel Facilities................. 20.0 0.7 4.6 -0.2 0.5
Materials Users................. 5.0 0.2 3.4 -0.1 0.0
Transportation.................. 0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0 0.0
Rare Earth Facilities........... 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Uranium Recovery................ 0.0 0.0 1.7 -0.1 -0.1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 29626]]
Total....................... 100.0 3.4 100.0 -3.9 -0.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2018 Fee Collection--Revised Annual Fees
In accordance with SECY-05-0164, ``Annual Fee Calculation Method,''
dated September 15, 2005 (ADAMS Accession No. ML052580332), the NRC
rebaselines its annual fees every year. ``Rebaselining'' entails
analyzing the budget in detail and then allocating the budgeted costs
to various classes or subclasses of licensees. It also includes
updating the number of NRC licensees in its fee calculation
methodology.
The NRC revised its annual fees in Sec. Sec. 171.15 and 171.16 to
recover approximately 90 percent of the NRC's FY 2018 budget authority
(less the fee-recovery exclusions and the estimated amount to be
recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees). The total estimated 10 CFR
part 170 collections for this final rule are $280.8 million, a decrease
of $16.6 million from the FY 2017 fee rule. The NRC, therefore, must
recover $508.5 million through annual fees from its licensees; an
amount identical to the annual fees collected by the FY 2017 final fee
rule.
Table V shows the final rebaselined fees for FY 2018 for a
representative list of license categories. The FY 2017 amounts are
provided for comparison purposes.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ For each fee class, the FY 2017 fees and percentage change
are shown for comparison purposes.
\8\ See Table VII for percentage change for each fee category.
Table V--Rebaselined Annual Fees
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
Class/category of license annual fee annual fee change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operating Power Reactors........................................ $4,308,000 $4,333,000 0.6
+ Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning.................... 188,000 198,000 5.3
-----------------------------------------------
Total, Combined Fee......................................... 4,496,000 4,531,000 0.8
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning...................... 188,000 198,000 5.3
Research and Test Reactors (Non-power Reactors)................. 81,400 81,300 -0.1
High Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility............................. 7,255,000 7,346,000 1.3
Low Enriched Uranium Fuel Facility.............................. 2,629,000 2,661,000 1.2
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion Facility........................ 1,498,000 1,517,000 1.3
Conventional Mills.............................................. 38,900 38,800 -0.3
Typical Materials Users:
Radiographers (Category 3O)................................. 27,000 25,000 -7.4
Well Loggers (Category 5A).................................. 16,000 14,900 -6.9
All Other Specific Byproduct Material Licensees (Category 9,300 8,600 -7.5
3P)........................................................
Broad Scope Medical (Category 7B)........................... 33,800 30,900 -8.6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The work papers that support this final rule show in detail how the
NRC allocates the budgeted resources for each class of license and
calculates the fees.
Paragraphs a. through h. of this section describe budgeted
resources allocated to each class of license and the calculations of
the rebaselined fees. For more information about detailed fee
calculations for each class, please consult the accompanying work
papers.
a. Fuel Facilities
The NRC will collect $27.7 million in annual fees from the fuel
facilities class.
Table VI--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Fuel Facilities
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources........................................ $33.9 $35.2 3.8
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -9.6 -9.2 -4.2
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 24.3 26.0 7.0
Allocated generic transportation................................ 1.6 1.3 -1.9
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge............................. 2.5 0.5 -80.0
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.0 0.0 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total remaining required annual fee recovery \8\............ 28.4 27.7 -2.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 29627]]
In FY 2018, the fuel facilities budgeted resources increased
slightly due to a 5.3 percent increase in the fully costed FTE rate and
the transfer of 1 FTE of enforcement resources from the nuclear
materials user fee class to the fuel facilities fee class to reflect
the fee class benefiting from the work being performed by this FTE. The
estimated 10 CFR part 170 billings declined by $0.4 million as a result
of completing license renewals for GE Vallecitos and Westinghouse, as
well as declining inspection workload for Honeywell. There was also a
reduction to the LLW surcharge allotment because of decreased usage of
LLW by this fee class as a percentage of licensees.
The NRC allocates annual fees to individual fuel facility licensees
based on the effort/fee determination matrix developed in the FY 1999
final fee rule (64 FR 31447; June 10, 1999). To briefly recap, the
matrix groups licensees within this fee class into various fee
categories. The matrix lists processes conducted at licensed sites and
assigns effort factors for the safety and safeguards activities
associated with each process (these effort levels are presented in
Table VII). The annual fees are then distributed across the fee class
based on the regulatory effort reflected in the matrix.
Table VII--Effort Factors for Fuel Facilities, FY 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Effort factors
Facility type (fee category) Number of -------------------------------
facilities Safety Safeguards
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a))......................... 2 88 96
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b)).......................... 3 70 30
Limited Operations (1.A.(2)(a))................................. 0 0 0
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b))............ 0 0 0
Hot Cell (and others) (1.A.(2)(c)).............................. 0 0 0
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.)....................................... 1 21 23
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1))....................... 1 12 7
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In FY 2018, the total remaining required annual fee recovery amount
of $27.7 million is comprised of safety activities, safeguards
activities and the fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge. For FY 2018,
the total budgeted resources to be recovered as annual fees for safety
activities are $15.0 million. To calculate the annual fee, the NRC
allocates this amount to each fee category based on its percent of the
total regulatory effort for safety activities. Similarly, the NRC
allocates the budgeted resources to be recovered as annual fees for
safeguards activities, $12.2 million, to each fee category based on its
percent of the total regulatory effort for safeguards activities.
Finally, the portion of the fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge
associated with the fuel facility fee class--$0.5 million--is allocated
to each fee category based on its percentage of the total regulatory
effort for both safety and safeguards activities. The annual fee per
licensee is then calculated by dividing the total allocated budgeted
resources for the fee category by the number of licensees in that fee
category. In comparison to FY 2017, there was a decrease of 2.5 percent
for the total remaining required annual fee recovery in FY 2018 (see
Table VI). However, there was an increase of approximately 1.3 percent
in each fee category in FY 2018. The differences in the changes to the
total required annual fee recovery and the annual fees for each fee
category is due to two licensees leaving the fee class in FY 2017. The
fee for each facility is summarized in Table VIII.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ No licensees in this fee category in FY 2018.
Table VIII--Annual Fees for Fuel Facilities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
Facility type (fee category) annual fee annual fee change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(a))......................... $7,255,000 $7,346,000 1.3
Low-Enriched Uranium Fuel (1.A.(1)(b)).......................... 2,629,000 2,661,000 1.2
Gas Centrifuge Enrichment Demonstration (1.A.(2)(b))............ 1,366,000 \9\ N/A N/A
Hot Cell (and others) (1.A.(2)(c)).............................. 710,000 \10\ N/A N/A
Uranium Enrichment (1.E.)....................................... 3,470,000 3,513,000 1.2
UF6 Conversion and Deconversion (2.A.(1))....................... 1,498,000 1,517,000 1.3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Uranium Recovery Facilities
The NRC will collect $0.5 million in annual fees from the uranium
recovery facilities fee class, a decrease of 50.0 percent from FY 2017.
[[Page 29628]]
Table IX--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Uranium Recovery Facilities
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources........................................ $14.3 $13.5 -5.6
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -13.5 -12.9 -4.4
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 0.8 0.6 -25.0
Allocated generic transportation................................ N/A N/A N/A
Fee-relief adjustment........................................... 0.2 -0.1 -150.0
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.0 0.0 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 1.0 0.5 -50.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In comparison to FY 2017, the FY 2018 budgeted resources for
uranium recovery licensees decreased due to reductions in associated
licensing work, realignment of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation
Control Act (UMTRCA) program, and completed reviews for license
amendments for Strata Energy and Jane Dough, offset by increased
workload for the Marsland license amendment review.
The NRC computes the annual fee for the uranium recovery fee class
by dividing the total annual fee recovery amount among DOE and the
other licensees in this fee class. The annual fee decreased for the
DOE/UMTRCA program due to the decreased budgeted resources and an
increase in 10 CFR part 170 billings for the Atlantic Richfield
Bluewater disposal site review. The annual fee decreased slightly for
the remaining uranium recovery licensees due to the fee relief credit.
This was offset by a decrease in estimated 10 CFR part 170 billings for
completed reviews for license amendments for Strata Energy and Jane
Dough. There was an increase in 10 CFR part 170 billings for the
Marsland license amendment review, which also contributed to the slight
decrease in annual fees.
The NRC regulates DOE's Title I and Title II activities under
UMTRCA \10\ and the annual fee to DOE includes the costs specifically
budgeted for the NRC's UMTRCA Title I and Title II activities, as well
as 10 percent of the remaining budgeted costs for this fee class. The
annual fee decreased for the overall fee class due to the decrease in
budgeted resources. The NRC assesses the remaining 90 percent of its
budgeted costs to the rest of the licensees in this fee class, as
described in the work papers. This is reflected in Table X as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The Congress established the two programs, Title I and
Title II, under UMTRCA to protect the public and the environment
from uranium milling. The UMTRCA Title I program is for remedial
action at abandoned mill tailings sites where tailings resulted
largely from production of uranium for the weapons program. The NRC
also regulates DOE's UMTRCA Title II program, which is directed
toward uranium mill sites licensed by the NRC or Agreement States in
or after 1978.
Table X--Costs Recovered Through Annual Fees; Uranium Recovery Fee Class
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
Summary of costs annual fee annual fee change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
DOE Annual Fee Amount (UMTRCA Title I and Title II) General
Licenses:
UMTRCA Title I and Title II budgeted costs less 10 CFR part $574,595 $80,921 -85.9
170 receipts...............................................
10 percent of generic/other uranium recovery budgeted costs. 19,079 47,723 150.1
10 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment........ 21,940 -6,724 -130.6
-----------------------------------------------
Total Annual Fee Amount for DOE (rounded)............... 616,000 122,000 -80.2
Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium Recovery Licenses:
90 percent of generic/other uranium recovery budgeted costs 171,714 429,509 150.1
less the amounts specifically budgeted for UMTRCA Title I
and Title II activities....................................
90 percent of uranium recovery fee-relief adjustment........ 197,464 -60,517 -130.6
-----------------------------------------------
Total Annual Fee Amount for Other Uranium Recovery 369,178 368,992 -0.1
Licenses...............................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, for the non-DOE licensees, the NRC continues to use a
matrix to determine the effort levels associated with conducting the
generic regulatory actions for the different licensees in this fee
class; this is similar to the NRC's approach for fuel facilities,
described previously.
The matrix methodology for uranium recovery licensees first
identifies the licensee categories included within this fee class
(excluding DOE). These categories are: Conventional uranium mills and
heap leach facilities; uranium In Situ Recovery (ISR) and resin ISR
facilities; mill tailings disposal facilities; and uranium water
treatment facilities. The matrix identifies the types of operating
activities that support and benefit these licensees, along with each
activity's relative weight (for more information, see the work papers).
Table XI displays the benefit factors per licensee and per fee
category, for each of the non-DOE fee categories included in the
uranium recovery fee class as follows:
[[Page 29629]]
Table XI--Benefit Factors for Uranium Recovery Licenses
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Benefit factor Benefit factor
Fee category licensees per licensee Total value percent total
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)).. 1 150 150 10.5
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)).. 5 190 950 66.7
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities 1 215 215 15.1
(2.A.(2)(c))...................................
Section 11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing 1 85 85 6.0
tailings sites (2.A.(4)).......................
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5))............... 1 25 25 1.7
---------------------------------------------------------------
Total....................................... 9 665 1,425 100.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applying these factors to the approximately $368,992 in budgeted
costs to be recovered from non-DOE uranium recovery licensees results
in the total annual fees for each fee category. The annual fee per
licensee is calculated by dividing the total allocated budgeted
resources for the fee category by the number of licensees in that fee
category, as summarized in Table XII.
Table XII--Annual Fees for Uranium Recovery Licensees
[Other than DOE]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FY 2017 final FY 2018 final Percentage
Facility type (fee category) annual fee annual fee change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conventional and Heap Leach mills (2.A.(2)(a)).................. $38,900 $38,800 -0.3
Basic In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(b)).................. 49,200 49,200 0.0
Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities (2.A.(2)(c))............... 55,700 55,700 0.0
Section 11e.(2) disposal incidental to existing tailings sites 22,000 22,000 0.0
(2.A.(4))......................................................
Uranium water treatment (2.A.(5))............................... 6,500 6,500 0.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
c. Operating Power Reactors
The NRC will collect $428.9 million in annual fees from the power
reactor fee class in FY 2018, as shown in Table XIII. The FY 2017 fees
and percentage change are shown for comparison purposes.
Table XIII--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Operating Power Reactors
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources........................................ $670.3 $669.9 0.0
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -256.3 -239.6 -6.5
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 414.0 430.4 4.0
Allocated generic transportation................................ 0.3 0.3 0.0
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge............................. 11.1 -0.8 -107.2
Billing adjustment.............................................. 1.1 -0.9 -181.8
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 426.5 428.9 0.6
Total operating reactors........................................ 99 99 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Annual fee per reactor.......................................... 4.308 4.333 0.6
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In comparison to FY 2017, the operating power reactors budgeted
resources decreased slightly by $0.4 million due to a decline in FTEs
needed for Fukushima-related work and combined license reviews. This
decline in FTEs, however, was offset by increases in contract costs
associated with research in the areas of safety and security of digital
systems, materials degradation, the aging of cables, and the effects of
concrete degradation.\11\ In FY 2018, contract costs also increased to
support the new reactor design certification and early site permit
reviews, as well as related infrastructure and technical assistance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ These contract costs were funded with prior year
unobligated carryover in FY 2017, and thus, were not included in the
FY 2017 final fee rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated billings under 10 CFR part 170 also slightly declined
primarily due to South Carolina Electric and Gas Company's decision to
abandon the construction of the two new nuclear units at V.C. Summer
Nuclear Station.
The budgeted resources are divided equally among the 99 operating
power reactors, resulting in an annual fee of $4,333,000 per reactor.
Additionally, each licensed power reactor is assessed the FY 2018 spent
fuel storage/reactor decommissioning annual fee of $198,000 (see Table
XIV and the discussion that follows). The combined FY 2018 annual fee
for operating power reactors is, therefore, $4,531,000.
[[Page 29630]]
On May 24, 2016, the NRC amended its licensing, inspection, and
annual fee regulations to establish a variable annual fee structure for
light-water small modular reactors (SMRs). Under the variable annual
fee structure, effective June 23, 2016, an SMR's annual fee would be
calculated as a function of its licensed thermal power rating.
Currently, there are no operating SMRs; therefore, the NRC will not
assess an annual fee in FY 2018 for this type of licensee.
d. Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning
The NRC will collect $24.2 million in annual fees from 10 CFR part
50 power reactors, and from 10 CFR part 72 licensees that do not hold a
10 CFR part 50 license, to collect the budgeted costs for spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning.
Table XIV--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for the Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor Decommissioning Fee Class
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources........................................ $29.5 $33.8 14.6
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -7.9 -10.2 29.1
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 21.6 23.7 9.7
Allocated generic transportation costs.......................... 0.8 0.7 12.5
Fee-relief adjustment........................................... 0.5 -0.2 -140.0
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.1 0.0 -100.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 23.0 24.2 5.2
-----------------------------------------------
Total spent fuel storage facilities......................... 122 122 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Annual fee per facility......................................... 0.188 0.198 5.3
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Compared to FY 2017, the FY 2018 budgeted resources for spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning increased due to: (1) An increase in
resources to support the safety, security, emergency preparedness, and
environmental reviews for two applications for consolidated interim
storage facilities; and (2) efforts to consolidate the standard review
plan for all facilities in the fee class. For this fee class, estimated
billings under 10 CFR part 170 increased slightly due to an anticipated
increase in workload for the Holtec International consolidated interim
storage facility application, a renewal request for DOE Idaho, and an
amendment request by TN Americas. This increase in 10 CFR part 170
estimated billings was partly offset due to suspension of the review
for the Waste Control Specialists consolidated interim storage facility
application.
The required annual fee recovery amount is divided equally among
122 licensees, resulting in an FY 2018 annual fee of $198,000 per
licensee.
e. Research and Test Reactors (Non-Power Reactors)
The NRC will collect $0.325 million in annual fees from the
research and test reactor licensee class.
Table XV--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Research and Test Reactors
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources........................................ $1.982 $2.009 1.4
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -1.724 -1.698 -1.5
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 0.258 0.311 20.5
Allocated generic transportation................................ 0.034 0.027 -20.6
Fee-relief adjustment........................................... 0.031 -0.010 -67.7
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.003 -0.003 -200.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 0.326 0.325 -0.3
-----------------------------------------------
Total research and test reactors................................ 4 4 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total annual fee per reactor................................ 0.0814 0.0813 -0.1
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For this fee class, the budgeted resources increased due to an
increase in the fully costed FTE rate. Despite the increase in budgeted
resources, the final FY 2018 annual fee decreased due to an increase in
the fee-relief credit and a reduction in generic transportation costs
from FY 2017. These were offset by a decline in estimated 10 CFR part
170 billings due to the lower than projected workload associated with
the delayed construction and license application submission schedules
of two medical isotope production facilities. This decline was offset
by increases in
[[Page 29631]]
estimated 10 CFR part 170 billings for Aerotest's license renewal and
continued project management activities for the four research and test
reactor sites.
The required annual fee-recovery amount is divided equally among
the four research and test reactors subject to annual fees and results
in an FY 2018 annual fee of $81,300 for each licensee.
f. Rare Earth
The NRC has not allocated any budgeted resources to this fee class;
therefore, the NRC is not issuing an annual fee in FY 2018.
g. Materials Users
The NRC will collect $32.4 million in annual fees from materials
users licensed under 10 CFR parts 30, 40, and 70.
Table XVI--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Materials Users
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total budgeted resources for licensees not regulated by $33.7 $32.1 -4.7
Agreement States...............................................
Less estimated 10 CFR part 170 receipts......................... -0.9 -0.9 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Net 10 CFR part 171 resources............................... 32.8 31.1 -5.2
Allocated generic transportation................................ 1.6 1.3 -18.8
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge............................. 0.9 0.0 -100.0
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.1 0.0 -100.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 35.4 32.4 -8.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The annual fee for these categories of materials users' licenses is
developed as follows: Annual Fee = Constant x [Application Fee +
(Average Inspection Cost/Inspection Priority)] + Inspection Multiplier
x (Average Inspection Cost/Inspection Priority) + Unique Category
Costs. The total annual fee recovery for FY 2018 consists of the
following: $24.9 million for general costs, $7.2 million for inspection
costs, $0.3 million for unique costs for medical licenses, and $0.04
million for the fee relief adjustment/LLW surcharge. To equitably and
fairly allocate the $32.4 million required to be collected among
approximately 2,600 diverse materials users licensees, the NRC
continues to calculate the annual fees for each fee category within
this class based on the 10 CFR part 170 application fees and estimated
inspection costs for each fee category. Because the application fees
and inspection costs are indicative of the complexity of the materials
license, this approach provides a proxy for allocating the generic and
other regulatory costs to the diverse fee categories. This fee-
calculation method also considers the inspection frequency (priority),
which is indicative of the safety risk and resulting regulatory costs
associated with the categories of licenses.
The NRC is decreasing the annual fees for most materials licensees
in this fee class in FY 2018 due to a reduction in budgeted resources
for oversight activities through implementation of process enhancements
and rebaselining of the materials program under Project Aim.
The constant multiplier is established in order to recover the
total general costs (including allocated generic transportation costs)
of $24.9 million. To derive the constant multiplier, the general cost
amount is divided by the product of all fee categories (application fee
plus the inspection fee divided by inspection priority) then multiplied
by the number of licensees. This calculation results in a constant
multiplier of 1.36 for FY 2018. The average inspection cost is the
average inspection hours for each fee category multiplied by the
professional hourly rate of $275. The inspection priority is the
interval between routine inspections, expressed in years. The
inspection multiplier is established in order to recover the $7.2
million in inspection costs. To derive the inspection multiplier, the
inspection costs amount is divided by the product of all fee categories
(inspection fee divided by inspection priority) then multiplied by the
number of licensees. This calculation results in an inspection
multiplier of 1.39 for FY 2018. The unique category costs are any
special costs that the NRC has budgeted for a specific category of
licenses. For FY 2018, unique category costs include approximately $0.3
million in budgeted costs for the implementation of revised 10 CFR part
35, ``Medical Use of Byproduct Material,'' which has been allocated to
holders of NRC human-use licenses.
The annual fee assessed to each licensee also includes a share of
the $0.1 million fee-relief credit assessment allocated to the
materials users fee class (see Table IV, ``Allocation of Fee-Relief
Adjustment and LLW Surcharge, FY 2018,'' in Section III,
``Discussion,'' of this document), and for certain categories of these
licensees, a share of the approximately $0.2 million LLW surcharge
costs allocated to the fee class. The annual fee for each fee category
is shown in the revision to Sec. 171.16(d).
h. Transportation
The NRC will collect $1.1 million in annual fees to recover generic
transportation budgeted resources. The FY 2017 values are shown for
comparison purposes.
Table XVII--Annual Fee Summary Calculations for Transportation
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Percentage
Summary fee calculations FY 2017 final FY 2018 final change
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total Budgeted Resources........................................ $8.9 $7.9 -11.2
Less Estimated 10 CFR part 170 Receipts......................... -3.1 -3.1 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
[[Page 29632]]
Net 10 CFR part 171 Resources............................... 5.8 4.7 -19.0
Less Generic Transportation Resources \12\...................... -4.5 -3.6 -20.0
Fee-relief adjustment/LLW surcharge............................. 0.0 0.0 0.0
Billing adjustments............................................. 0.0 0.0 0.0
-----------------------------------------------
Total required annual fee recovery.......................... 1.5 1.1 -28.5
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In comparison to FY 2017, the total budgeted resources for FY 2018
for generic transportation activities decreased due to a decline in the
expected number of major licensing actions to be completed in FY 2018
and a reduction in the Certificates of Compliance (CoCs) for DOE (from
22 to 21). There was also a decline in budgeted resources within
licensing and rulemaking support due to a transfer of certain budgeted
resources to the spent fuel storage/reactor decommissioning fee class.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ New line item added to enhance clarity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the policy established in the NRC's FY 2006 final
fee rule (71 FR 30721; May 30, 2006), the NRC recovers generic
transportation costs unrelated to DOE by including those costs in the
annual fees for licensee fee classes. The NRC continues to assess a
separate annual fee under Sec. 171.16, fee category 18.A. for DOE
transportation activities. The amount of the allocated generic
resources is calculated by multiplying the percentage of total CoCs
used by each fee class (and DOE) by the total generic transportation
resources to be recovered. The final annual fee decrease for DOE is
mainly due to a decrease in CoCs from 22 to 21 in FY 2018.
This resource distribution to the licensee fee classes and DOE is
shown in Table XVIII. Note that for the research and test reactors fee
class, the NRC allocates the distribution to only those licensees that
are subject to annual fees. Although four CoCs benefit the entire
research and test reactor class, only 4 out of 31 research and test
reactors are subject to annual fees. Consequently, the number of CoCs
used to determine the proportion of generic transportation resources
allocated to research and test reactors annual fees has been adjusted
to 0.5 so the research and test reactors subject to annual fees are
charged a fair and equitable portion of the total. For more
information, see the work papers.
Table XVIII--Distribution of Transportation Resources, FY 2018
[Dollars in millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Allocated
Number of CoCs Percentage of generic
Licensee fee class/DOE benefiting fee total CoCs transportation
class or DOE resources
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Materials Users........................................... 25.0 27.9 $1.3
Operating Power Reactors.................................. 5.0 5.6 0.3
Spent Fuel Storage/Reactor................................ 14.0 15.6 0.7
Decommissioning...........................................
Research and Test Reactors................................ 0.5 0.6 0.0
Fuel Facilities........................................... 24.0 26.8 1.3
-----------------------------------------------------
Sub-Total of Generic Transportation Resources......... 68.5 76.5 3.6
DOE....................................................... 21.0 23.5 1.1
-----------------------------------------------------
Total................................................. 89.5 100.0 4.7
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The NRC assesses an annual fee to DOE based on the 10 CFR part 71
CoCs it holds. The NRC, therefore, does not allocate these DOE-related
resources to other licensees' annual fees because these resources
specifically support DOE.
FY 2018--Policy Change
The NRC makes one policy change for FY 2018:
Changes to Small Materials Users Fee Categories for Locations of Use
The NRC adds new fee subcategories to seven existing fee categories
under 10 CFR 170.31, ``Schedule of Fees for Materials Licenses and
Other Regulatory Services, Including Inspections, and Import and Export
Licenses,'' and 10 CFR 171.16, ``Annual Fees: Materials Licensees,
Holders of Certificates of Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source and
Device Registrations, Holders of Quality Assurance Program Approvals,
and Government Agencies Licensed by the NRC.'' Generally speaking, 10
CFR 170.31 assigns the same fee to each licensee in the fee category,
regardless of the number of locations where the licensee is authorized
to work. Yet for some of these fee categories, the NRC staff recently
determined that it spends a disproportionate amount of time on
licensees with six or more locations compared to licensees in the same
fee category with fewer than six locations. Therefore, the NRC is
revising its fee categories so that these fees better align with the
actual costs of providing regulatory services.
Previously--in the FY 2015 final fee rule--the NRC added three fee
subcategories under one fee category, 3.L. (research and development
broad scope) for licenses with six or more locations of use. Although
there are 14 additional fee categories that could be modified, the NRC
determined that most
[[Page 29633]]
affected licenses are covered under 7 of the 14 fee categories.
Accordingly, the NRC is adding subcategories to these seven fee
categories:
Manufacturing broad scope licenses under fee category 3.A.
Other manufacturing licenses under fee category 3.B.
Medical product distribution licenses under fee category
3.C.
Industrial radiography licenses under fee category 3.O.
Other byproduct licenses (e.g., portable and fixed gauges,
measuring systems) under fee category 3.P.
Medical licenses under fee categories 7.A. and 7.B.
To more accurately reflect the cost of services provided by the
NRC, this change results in each fee category having subcategories for
1-5, 6-20, and more than 20 locations of use. The NRC is also amending
footnotes 9, 18, and 19, as numbered in the final rule, in Sec. 171.16
and footnotes 7, 9, and 10 in Sec. 170.31 to reflect the new fee
subcategories.
FY 2018--Administrative Changes
The NRC is making ten \13\ of the eleven proposed administrative
changes in this final rule:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ The change identified as item No.10 is not being made as
part of the final rule.
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1. Revise the methodology of charging licensees for overhead time
for project managers (PMs) and resident inspectors (RIs).
The NRC is revising the methodology for charging licensees for
overhead time for PMs and RIs. The prior approach was that the NRC
included an overhead cost of 6 percent of direct billable costs to all
licensees' invoices. The overhead charge was intended to recover the
full cost for PM and RI activities that provide a direct benefit to the
assigned licensee or site.
In FY 2015 to FY 2017, this 6-percent value was based on the
analysis of 4 years of billing data (FY 2011 to FY 2014) for overhead
activities recorded in the time and labor system by a PM or RI and
billed to the dockets to which the PM or the RI were officially
assigned. The NRC has reviewed the process and, as a process
enhancement, created docket-related fee-billable cost activity codes to
replace the prior 6-percent approach. Consistent with 10 CFR
170.12(c)(1), which requires the NRC to assess fees to recover full
cost for each RI (including the senior RI) assigned to a specific plant
or facility (i.e., ``all time in a non-leave status,'' excluding time
spent in support of activities at another site), RIs (including senior
RIs) will begin recording time to these new docket-related fee-billable
cost activity codes at the end of FY 2018. These new docket-related
fee-billable cost activity codes will not be used by PMs. Agency
efforts have significantly reduced the use of non-fee-billable overhead
associated with PMs through improvements in the timekeeping system,
additional staff training, and more robust control of hours recorded to
the cost activity codes by the PMs. The agency continues to monitor the
proper use of the limited range of indirect activities.
The first invoice without the 6-percent overhead charge will be
issued in January 2019. Instead, the licensee invoices will include the
actual hours for RI activities that support and directly benefit the
assigned licensee or site. The licensees should expect to see a cost
activity code on their invoices which references these RI indirect
hours.
2. Add definitions for inputs in the professional hourly rate
calculation in 10 CFR part 170, ``Fees for Facilities, Materials,
Import and Export Licenses, and Other Regulatory Services under the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as Amended.''
In response to the recommendations in the U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO) report titled ``Nuclear Regulatory
Commission: Regulatory Fee-Setting Calculations Need Greater
Transparency'' (GAO-17-232), dated February 2, 2017, the NRC committed
to add definitions for the professional hourly rate components in 10
CFR part 170 during the FY 2018 fee rulemaking. The NRC, therefore,
adds the definitions for ``agency support (corporate support and the
IG),'' ``mission-direct program salaries and benefits,'' and ``mission-
indirect program support'' to 10 CFR 170.3, ``Definitions.''
3. Delete the definition of ``overhead and general and
administrative costs'' from 10 CFR 170.3 and 10 CFR 171.5.
The term ``overhead and general and administrative costs'' is
currently defined in 10 CFR 170.3 and 10 CFR 171.5, but it is not used
in 10 CFR parts 170 and 171. Nor do the subordinate elements of the
definition--``Government benefits,'' ``travel costs,'' ``overhead,''
``administrative support costs,'' and ``indirect costs''--appear
elsewhere in 10 CFR parts 170 and 171. The NRC, therefore, deletes
these definitions to enhance clarity.
4. Amend language under 10 CFR 170.11, ``Exemptions,'' to add a new
paragraph to include the timeframe in which a request for a fee
exemption must be submitted to the Chief Financial Officer (CFO) under
10 CFR part 170.
The NRC is amending its exemption requirements to specify that a
request for a fee exemption under 10 CFR 170.11(a)(1) must be submitted
to the CFO within 90 days of the date of the NRC's receipt of the work.
5. Amend language under 10 CFR 170.31, ``Schedule of Fees for
Materials Licenses and Other Regulatory Services, Including
Inspections, and Import and Export Licenses,'' and 10 CFR 171.16,
``Annual Fees: Materials Licensees, Holders of Certificates of
Compliance, Holders of Sealed Source and Device Registrations, Holders
of Quality Assurance Program Approvals, and Government Agencies
Licensed by the NRC,'' to enhance clarity.
When a materials license (or part of a materials license) changes
from operational to decommissioning status, it transitions to fee
category 14.A. There are two aspects of the fee treatment that follows
transition to fee category 14.A. First, the materials license (or part
of a materials license) that transitions to fee category 14.A is
assessed full cost fees under 10 CFR part 170, even if, before the
transition to this fee category, the licensee was assessed flat fees
under 10 CFR part 170. Second, the materials license (or part of a
materials license) that transitions to fee category 14.A is not
assessed annual fees under 10 CFR part 171. If only part of a materials
license is transitioned to fee category 14.A, the licensee may be
charged annual fees (and any applicable 10 CFR part 170 fees) for other
activities authorized under the license that are not in decommissioning
status. This final rule adds a new footnote to the table in 10 CFR
170.31 and to the table in 10 CFR 171.16 to emphasize the fee treatment
that follows a transition to fee category 14.A.
The NRC also adds new language to the description of fee category
14.A. in both 10 CFR 170.31 and 171.16 in order to enhance clarity
regarding when a materials license (or part of a materials license)
transitions to fee category 14.A. Specifically, this transition occurs
when a licensee has permanently ceased principal activities. For
guidance on what constitutes ``permanently ceasing principal
activities,'' please see Regulatory Issue Summary 2015-19,
``Decommissioning Timeliness Rule Implementation and Associated
Regulatory Relief'' (September 27, 2016, ADAMS Accession No.
ML16008A242).
6. Amend language under 10 CFR 171.3 and 10 CFR 171.16(a) to
clarify when the assessment of annual fees begins for uranium recovery
and fuel facility licensees.
Both uranium recovery and fuel facilities licenses include a
condition
[[Page 29634]]
that the NRC must complete a post-construction, pre-operational
inspection to authorize a licensee to possess and use source material.
In the FY 2007 final fee rule, the NRC added language to 10 CFR 171.3
and 10 CFR 171.16(a) to codify its policy that annual fees for uranium
enrichment facilities will be assessed after the NRC verifies through
inspection that the facility has been constructed in accordance with
the requirements of the license. The NRC is amending those sections to
codify the policy that the assessment of annual fees for uranium
recovery or fuel facility licensees, including uranium enrichment
facility licensees, begins after the NRC inspection verifies that the
facility has been constructed in accordance with the requirements of
the license.
7. Amend footnote 9 to the table in 10 CFR 171.16(d) for clarity.
The NRC revises footnote 9 to clarify that nuclear medicine
licensees under fee category 7.A. are not assessed a separate annual
fee for pacemaker licenses.
8. Delete footnote 15 to the table in 10 CFR 171.16(d).
The NRC deletes footnote 15 because footnote 16 is more
comprehensive and already includes the relevant information from
footnote 15. The current footnote 16 is renumbered as footnote 15, and
the footnotes that follow current footnote 16 are renumbered. All
references to these footnotes in fee categories are adjusted
accordingly.
9. Amend footnote 16 to the table in 10 CFR 171.16(d) for clarity.
The NRC renumbers footnote 16 as footnote 15, as indicated, and
revises it to clarify that licensees paying fees under fee category 17
are not subject to additional fees listed in the table.
10. Proposal to add a new footnote to the table in 10 CFR 171.16(d)
for clarity.
In the proposed fee rule, the NRC proposed to add a new footnote
(footnote 20 in the proposed fee rule) to clarify when licensees are
exempt from paying annual fees under a specific fee category when they
are licensed under multiple fee categories. Specifically, the NRC
proposed to add references to the new footnote 20 for fee categories
2.B., 3.N., and 3.P. The NRC, however, determined that the proposed
footnote 20 was redundant to footnotes 17 and 18 for fee category 2B;
to footnote 19 for fee category 3.P., as well as new fee categories
3.P(1) and 3.P(2). The language in the proposed footnote 20 was also
determined to be redundant to the description for fee category 3.N.
Therefore, the NRC does not add this footnote to the table in Sec.
171.16(d).
11. Amend language under 10 CFR 171.17, ``Proration,'' to add a new
sentence on the proration of fees.
This final rule revises language regarding (1) reactors; (2)
licensees under 10 CFR part 72, ``Licensing Requirements for the
Independent Storage of Spent Nuclear Fuel, High-Level Radioactive
Waste, and Reactor-Related Greater Than Class C Waste,'' who do not
hold 10 CFR part 50, ``Domestic Licensing of Production and Utilization
Facilities,'' licenses; and (3) materials licensees with annual fees of
$100,000 or greater for a single fee category. The NRC is basing the
proration of annual fees for terminated and downgraded licensees on the
fee rule in effect at the time the termination or downgrade action is
official. The NRC bases the determinations on the proration
requirements under 10 CFR 171.17(a)(2) and (3).
Prior to this final rule, proration was based on the fee rule for
the current fiscal year. This prevents the NRC from accurately billing
the licensee at the time the termination or downgrade action is
official based on the proration requirements under 10 CFR 171.17(a)(2)
and (3). The NRC had wait until the current year's fee rule was
effective (typically during the fourth quarter of a fiscal year) to
either bill additional amounts or process refunds to the licensee based
on the new fee rule amount.
This amendment allows the NRC to prorate annual fees based on the
fee rule in effect at the time the termination or downgrade action is
official based on the proration requirements under 10 CFR 171.17(a)(2)
and (3), thereby providing improved transparency for fee adjustments in
the fourth quarter of the fiscal year. This change supports the fair
and equitable assessment of fees because it ties annual fee proration
to when the license actually becomes downgraded or terminated.
Update to the Fees Transformation Initiative
The SRM, dated October 19, 2016 (ADAMS Accession No. ML16293A902),
for SECY-16-0097, ``Fee Setting Improvements and Fiscal Year 2017
Proposed Fee Rule'' (ADAMS Accession No. ML16194A365) directed staff to
explore, as a voluntary pilot, whether a flat fee structure could be
established for routine licensing matters in the area uranium recovery,
and to accelerate the fees setting process improvements including the
transition to an electronic billing system. With respect to the
voluntary flat fees pilot, the staff has developed a project plan and
is on target to complete this activity by September 2020. With respect
to the fees setting process improvements, all 14 of the activities
scheduled for FY 2017 and an additional 3 scheduled for FY 2018 were
completed in FY 2017. These improvements included adding additional
content to the FY 2018 Congressional Budget Justification (CBJ) to help
licensees understand how the planned workload in the budget impacted
fees, validating the budgeting process by comparing budgeted amounts
with actual amounts in the CBJ, posting the estimated cost of various
licensing actions for both the Reactors and Materials programs on the
NRC's public website, and modifying the calculation of full-cost fees
to facilitate publishing the proposed and final fee rules earlier.
Two remaining fee setting improvements are scheduled to be
completed for FY 2018. First, the change to the methodology for
recovering RI/PM overhead costs is discussed in this document. Second,
the NRC is adding an additional tab to the final fee rule work papers
to improve transparency with the part 170 estimates impact on part 171
annual fees by disclosing the ratios of the estimated part 170 to part
171 collections for each fee class with the actual ratio of collections
for FY 2017.
For the remaining process changes recommended for future
consideration, the NRC is well-positioned to complete them on schedule.
For more information, please see the fees transformation
accomplishments schedule, located on the license fees website at:
https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/licensing/fees-transformation-accomplishments.html.
III. Public Comment Analysis
Overview of Public Comments
The NRC received 13 written comment submissions on the proposed
rule. A comment submission for the purpose of this rule is defined as a
written communication or document submitted to the NRC by an individual
or entity, with one or more distinct comments addressing a subject or
an issue. A comment, on the other hand, refers to a statement made in
the submission addressing a subject or issue. In general, the
commenters were supportive of the specific proposed regulatory changes,
although most commenters expressed concerns about broader fee-policy
issues related to transparency, fairness, and overall size of the
budget.
The commenters are listed in Table XIX.
[[Page 29635]]
Table XIX--FY 2018 Proposed Fee Rule Commenter Submissions
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenter Affiliation ADAMS Accession No. Acronym
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
John Snider....................... Anderson Engineering...... ML18038B689 AE
Aaron Ahern....................... Unknown................... ML18046A092 AA
W. B. Smith....................... Unknown................... ML18052B512 WBS
Stephen Cowne..................... URENCO USA................ ML18053A945 UUSA
David Shafer...................... U.S. Department of Energy, ML18053A946 DOE
Office of Legacy
Management.
J. Bradley Fewell................. Exelon Generation Co. LLC. ML18054B354 EXN
Duane Bollig...................... Water Remediation ML18057B073 WRT
Technology LLC.
Joyce Goldfield................... Unknown................... ML18057B550 JG
Douglas Weaver.................... Westinghouse Electric Co.. ML18057B551 WEC
Joseph Pollock.................... Nuclear Energy Institute ML18058A206 NEI-1
(NEI).
Pamela Cowan...................... NEI....................... ML18058A247 NEI-2
Tyson R. Smith.................... Honeywell International ML18058A305 HW
Inc.
Richard J. Freudenberger.......... Nuclear Fuel Services Inc. ML18068A693 NFS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Information about obtaining the complete text of the comment
submissions is available in Section XIV, ``Availability of Documents,''
of this document.
IV. Public Comments and NRC Responses
The NRC has carefully considered the public comments received on
the proposed rule. The comments have been organized by topic. Comments
from multiple commenters raising similar specific concerns were
combined to capture the common essential issues raised by the
commenters. Comments from a single commenter have been quoted to ensure
accuracy; brackets within those comments are used show changes that
have been made to the quoted comments. The NRC responses are preceded
by a short summary of the issues raised by the commenters.
A. Transparency and Public Participation
Comment: To ensure a meaningful opportunity to comment on proposed
fees, the commenters request that the NRC re-issue the proposed rule to
reflect any final FY 2018 appropriations. If timing constrains the
NRC's ability to re-issue the proposed rule, the commenter requests
that the NRC make publicly available as soon as possible a document
reflecting how any FY 2018 appropriation will alter FY 2018 fees. Doing
so will allow licensees to plan their internal budgets with more
fidelity than continuing to rely on a proposed fee rule that is no
longer valid. (EXN, NEI-1, NEI-2, NFS)
Response: Several commenters expressed a general desire for the NRC
to re-publish the proposed rule for comment based on the final enacted
appropriations; alternatively, the commenters wanted the newly
determined fees based on the final appropriations to be made publicly
available in advance of the final rule. The NRC disagrees with these
comments. The NRC strives to ensure that the proposed fee rule is as
accurate as possible and explains its assumptions about the budgetary
resources in order to provide the best information available regarding
the fiscal year's proposed fees.
However, the NRC must comply with statutory requirements, including
OBRA-90 and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). The OBRA-90
requires the NRC to collect approximately 90 percent of its budget
authority through fees assessed by the end of the fiscal year. Because
the Office of Management and Budget has found the fee rule to be a
major rule under the Congressional Review Act, the effective date of
the final rule cannot be less than 60 days from the date of publication
but must allow timely final billing prior to the end of the fiscal
year. Because section 553 of the APA requires the NRC to give the
public an opportunity to comment on a republished proposed rule, the
NRC cannot republish the FY 2018 proposed fee rule, and meet its
statutory requirement. No changes were made to the final rule as a
result of these comments.
B. Budget Formulation
Comment: In today's economic environment, NRC licensees are
collectively taking actions to reduce the operating costs to secure
continued operations. As reactors shut down, licensees idle facilities,
and others delay operations, the NRC should take commensurate actions
to reduce its budget, pursue meaningful efficiencies in operations,
develop appropriate metrics, and improve the transparency and process
for developing its budgets. (EXN, NEI-1, NEI-2, NFS, WEC)
Response: Several commenters expressed concern regarding the NRC's
budget related to the loss of licensees from particular fee classes,
the challenge to fees that result from potentially larger budgets, the
proper use of metrics and methods to determine the appropriate budget
size and justifications, and a request for a public comment period on
the proposed budget.
The fees assessed to licensees and applicants by the NRC must
conform to OBRA-90, which requires the NRC to collect approximately 90
percent of its annual budget authority (less certain excluded items)
through both user fees and annual fees. The NRC can assess these annual
fees only to licensees or certificate holders, and the annual fee
schedule must be fair and equitably allocate annual fees among the
NRC's many licensees. To ensure compliance with OBRA-90, the NRC makes
continual organizational improvements to align the resources needed to
support its regulatory activities. These actions help mitigate impacts
on the remaining licensees from licensees that leave a fee class by
helping the NRC continue to develop budgets that account for regulating
a fee class with a declining number of licensees.
The NRC continues to examine and pursue improvements to its process
and increases in efficiency that will allow it to meet its statutory
responsibilities as the industry changes. The NRC continues to develop
methods that would allow for more rapid adaption to future needs,
changes to the technology, and the size of the licensed community.
With regard to the request for a public comment period on the
proposed budget, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) establishes
the Executive Branch budget process through circulars, memoranda, and
guidance documents. The OMB Circular No. A-11 (Circular A-11) is
updated annually and contains extensive instructions and schedules for
agency submission of budget requests and justification materials to
OMB.
[[Page 29636]]
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
C. Work Papers
Comment: Both the proposed rule and the work papers state that the
operating power reactor annual fee increases in part due to increased
support for new reactor design certification and early site permit
reviews. However, neither document provides any more explanation as to
the reason this work is increasing. Instead, one must consult the
FY2018 Congressional Budget Justification to understand the purpose of
this work (and even then, it remains at a fairly high level). Exelon
recommends that at least the same level of explanation in the
Congressional Budget Justification also be included in the proposed fee
rule.
The proposed rule and work papers list contract and Full Time
Equivalent resources for general areas of research (e.g., ``engineering
research'' and ``risk analysis''), but provides no explanation of the
exact research activities being conducted. Breaking down these general
research areas into more specific topics (with associated costs) would
give licensees a more fulsome understanding of the NRC activities that
our fees are funding. Moreover, the NRC should make clear how these
research activities advance the agency's goals and objectives as set
forth in its Strategic Plan.
Similarly, the proposed rule states that certain mission-direct
non-labor contract costs increased in FY[ ]2018 because those
activities were funded in FY[ ]2017 with prior year unobligated
carryover. However, the proposed rule and work papers do not describe
whether the total contract costs for FY 2018 are increasing compared to
FY 2017 (irrespective of the funding source). Since the work papers
reflect these contract costs as having zero resources allocated in FY
2017 (due to being funded by carryover), it is impossible to tell if
more (or less) work is being done in these areas relative to last year.
Exelon requests that, to the extent possible, in future final fee rules
or work papers, the NRC identify which activities will be funded with
carryover, and the amount of carryover allocated to each of those
activities. This will enable licensees to compare total costs
associated with NRC activities from year to year, regardless of how
they were funded. (EXN)
Response: The commenter is requesting additional detail in the work
papers in order to better understand the change in work being
performed, improved clarity regarding the use of carryover funding, and
additional information regarding research efforts. Different
information is provided in different publications, including the work
papers and the CBJ because these documents serve different purposes.
The fee rule and the supporting work papers, for instance, are
published in order for the public and licensees to understand how fees
are determined for a fee class and a fee category. Because consistent
with the requirements of OBRA-90, fees are calculated based on the
budget authority enacted for the current FY and not carryover, the fee
rule and supporting work papers do not include information pertaining
to carryover and including such information in these documents could
cause confusion. The CBJ, alternatively, provides the agency
explanation and justification for the resources being requested for the
next FY to allow the agency to complete its mission, and it provides
the reasoning for changes in the agency resource requests.
Further, with respect to providing additional information regarding
exact research activities, there are some limitations regarding the
level of detail that can be shared on specific contracts. The NRC is
preparing additional guidance for project managers on types of
information that can be shared with contracts specifically assigned to
licensee efforts. The CBJ provides an overview of the research
activities being conducted during FY 2018. These activities include
accident tolerant fuel confirmatory research, digital systems,
materials degradation, cable aging, and concrete degradation.
Additional information on research efforts is also available from the
NRC's website at https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/research.html. Including this information in the work papers for the
proposed fee rule in future years is more likely to cause confusion
regarding the scope of the fee rule. Additional information regarding
the costs associated with research can be derived by comparing the work
papers from the proposed fee rule to the final fee rule, which would
allow the impact associated with the use of carryover to be identified
between FYs. Work papers for the proposed and final fee rules for the
last several years can be readily accessed at https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/licensing/fees.html.
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
Comment: The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has reviewed the
proposed 10 CFR 170 and 171 fee schedule for fiscal year 2018. DOE
finds that the basis for the total annual fee amount and the level of
effort to support the general licenses for Uranium Mill Tailings
Radiation Control Act [(UMTRCA)] sites is not presented in the proposed
rule or the associated work papers. Additionally, the bases for
allocation percentages for DOE and other uranium recovery licensees and
the generic/other uranium recovery costs in the proposed rule and work
papers are not presented. DOE requests that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) clarify the rationale for the various fee components
that are used to determine the total charge. This will help DOE
evaluate whether the proposed NRC scope is consistent with anticipated
DOE activities and establish the basis for DOE's estimate of annual
uranium licensee fees in its budget request to Congress. (DOE)
Response: The NRC described the overall methodology for determining
fees for uranium recovery facilities, including DOE, in the FY 2002 fee
rule (67 FR 42625; June 24, 2002), and the NRC continues to use this
methodology. As the NRC explained in the proposed fee rule, the NRC
recovers fees from DOE through both user fees charged under 10 CFR part
170 for specific UMTRCA oversight activities and annual fees charged
under 10 CFR part 171 for generic and other costs related to UMTRCA and
other uranium recovery activities. As shown in the work papers
referenced in the proposed fee rule, the NRC calculated the total
amount of budgeted resources for UMTRCA activities related to DOE sites
in the FY 2018 CBJ by computing the cost of staff hours budgeted to
conduct the work (in terms of full-time equivalent, or FTE) and the
budgeted contract costs. The total amount of budgeted resources was
reduced by the amount expected to be recovered by part 170 user fees
for site-specific UMTRCA activities. The NRC estimated the amount of
part 170 user fees by analyzing billing data and the actual contractual
work charged to DOE for the previous four quarters. The estimate,
therefore, reflects any recent reductions in NRC oversight activities.
The remainder of the UMTRCA budgeted amount related to DOE sites is
charged to DOE for generic activities. In addition to those generic
costs, DOE is charged for 10 percent of the overall generic costs
attributable to the uranium recovery program. In other words, the DOE
fee includes the costs of generic activities related to DOE sites and
10 percent of the overall generic costs attributable to the uranium
recovery program. The remaining 90 percent of the overall generic costs
is charged to other members of the uranium recovery class.
[[Page 29637]]
The proposed fee rule described the methodology used by the NRC
staff to determine the annual fees for uranium recovery facilities. In
addition, Tables IX through XII of the proposed rule show the
application of the NRC's rebaselining methodology. The supporting work
papers for the fee calculations provided detail on the FTE and contract
resources for each product activity that were allocated to uranium
recovery fee class. The work papers also provided information on all
the values of the effort/benefit factors used in the uranium recovery
matrix for FY 2018.
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
D. Small Business Standards
Comment: [Because the NRC has a different definition for small
business in comparison to the Small Business Administration (SBA), i]t
makes it difficult to keep track of [the] same definition creating
additional recordkeeping which is not necessary and does not add to
creation of business. The definition defined by the SBA better reflects
the intent of a ``small business.'' The NRC [should] update its
definition of small business for license purposes to [be the] same as
SBA. (AE)
Response: One commenter expressed concern regarding the NRC's small
business definition. Under the SBA's regulations, other federal
agencies may, at their discretion, establish their own standards
through notice and comment rulemaking. The NRC updated its small
business standards through notice and comment rulemaking, and those
standards are separately codified at Sec. 2.810. Comments with respect
to the NRC's size standards, therefore, are outside the scope of this
rulemaking. No changes were made to the final rule as a result of this
comment.
Comment: To ensure consistency between Part 171 and Part 170 annual
fees, NRC/[Office of the Chief Financial officer (OCFO)] should enact a
process that addresses whether NRC has recognized a uranium water
treatment licensee as a small entity for Part 171 fees, and if so,
these licensees should be billed for the Part 170 annual fees in an
amount that is commensurate with its small-entity designation. [Waste
Remediation Technology (WRT)] is currently designated as a small entity
under NRC regulations. It makes logical sense to designate small
entities for fixed-fee amounts as they have limited employees, market
share, and revenue. Coupled with the items noted above, the argument
for changing the Part 170 fee category to a fixed-fee amount for
entities such as WRT appears to make sense. (WRT)
Response: The NRC's small business standards only apply to 10 CFR
part 171 fees. Fees under 10 CFR part 170 are set as either full cost
recovery (billed by the hour at the professional hourly rate of $275)
or at a fixed fee depending on the fee class and fee category. As part
of the Chief Financial Officers Act of 1990, the NRC reviews the actual
hours expended performing licensing actions and develops estimates of
the average professional staff hours needed to process licensing
actions. The most recent review was perform in FY 2017 and the next
review is scheduled for FY 2019. Each year, the NRC calculates new flat
fees for specific licensing actions based on the estimated average
hours and the new professional hourly rate. As such, flat fees recover
the full costs for a particular licensing action on average. No changes
were made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
E. Fee Exemptions
Comment: WRT disagrees with NRC's proposal that would limit the
timeframe in which a request for a fee exemption must be submitted;
limiting it to within ninety (90) days of the date of the NRC's receipt
of the work. An applicant or a licensee should not be restricted
regarding when it can request an exemption. In the case of a full-cost
fee category, if the limit was set at within 90 days of receipt of an
application or the work, that would allow for no more than one (1)
quarterly invoice cycle from NRC. That is not enough time into the work
for the applicant to assess billings and whether it has a need to
request an exemption. An applicant should not be restricted as to when
in the timeline it can request an exemption. In the alternative, if NRC
sees fit to establish a timeline, a licensee should be permitted 180
days to appeal thereby allowing for a thorough review of two quarterly
invoices. Without such a timeframe, any licensee would have the
incentive to dispute every single quarterly invoice and delay payment
until a ruling is rendered by OCFO. WRT does not support abuse of the
appeal process and believes this solution provides a disincentive to do
so while maintaining fairness in the process. (WRT)
Response: The proposed 90-day timing requirement applies to only
those exemption requests submitted under Sec. 170.11(a)(1)--therefore,
this 90-day timeframe is limited to only those who are seeking fee
exemptions after submitting a request or report to the NRC. Because the
basis for a fee exemption under Sec. 170.11(a)(1) exists at the time
the entity submits the request/report to the NRC, the new 90-day
timeframe will help ensure administrative efficiency and timeliness.
Relatedly, because the basis for a fee exemption under Sec.
170.11(a)(1) exists at the time the entity submits the request/report
to the NRC, providing additional time to review invoices would not
result in any material change to whether an exemption should be
granted. Notably, this new timing requirement does not apply to
applicants that submit an application for the NRC to review--those
applicants remain free to seek a fee exemption at any time. No changes
were made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
F. Uranium Recovery
Comment: WRT is also aware of a planned pilot program to be
initiated for several of NRC's classes of licensees to establish fixed
fees for certain activities such as National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) processes. WRT fully supports the use of fixed fee programs to
assure licensees or would-be-licensees of the amount of human and
financial resources that will be necessary for obtaining and
maintaining an NRC license, especially in the case of where a company
such as WRT generates no revenue from the uranium source material
generated by its services and the [Community Water Systems] that are
being forced to comply with an unfunded federal mandate. To the extent
practicable, WRT would like to offer its input and/or participate in
this program to determine what accommodations can be made for it in the
future in the event license amendments are sought or the next license
renewal is required. (WRT)
Response: The commenter appears to be referencing the flat fee
pilot program that the NRC is currently in the process of developing
for uranium recovery licensees. No licensees are actively participating
in the flat fee pilot program at this time. At this point, the NRC has
developed a new data reporting structure, trained staff on its use, and
is actively collecting data on licensing costs in order to develop
information that would allow the development of recommendations to the
Commission regarding a potential flat fee program. The NRC expects to
complete its data collection by the end of FY 2018. The staff expects
to engage the public on whether to implement any flat fee program for
uranium recovery licensees and applicants as part of the FY 2020 fee
rulemaking. No changes were made to the final rule as a result of this
comment.
Comment: If Wyoming becomes an Agreement State for the purposes of
regulating uranium recovery by the
[[Page 29638]]
beginning of FY 2019 (October 1, 2018) as NRC has stated, the remaining
three licensees are not--nor should they be placed--in a position to
pay for the current NRC programmatic infrastructure associated with
this category of licensee. NRC has assured stakeholders that they are
considering various funding options to avoid this potential outcome;
yet, industry has had no visibility of what could be a significant NRC
policy and fee rule decision which will impact licensees' purses in
less than 8 months. We urge you to engage the potentially remaining NRC
licensees on this matter today. Further, it is unclear whether
conducting a ``flat fee'' pilot for this category of licensees in FY
2020, as stated by NRC during the February 12, 2018 meeting, is the
best use of limited NRC and industry resources. NRC should consult with
the potentially remaining licensees and revisit this decision. (NEI-1)
Response: The NRC is aware of the challenge and is currently
evaluating options to ensure that annual fees for the uranium recovery
fee class remain fair and equitable if Wyoming becomes an Agreement
State in FY 2019. The NRC plans to share the results of the evaluation
with stakeholders once it is complete. With respect to the flat fee
pilot program, the NRC has already developed and implemented the new
data structure necessary to collect information that would be used to
inform recommendations that the staff would provide to the Commission
on the uranium recovery fee class. Only a minimal effort is required to
complete the collection of data. The data collection process is
expected to be completed by November 2018. Based on Wyoming's status
and the collected data, the staff will evaluate how best to proceed and
whether the flat fee pilot program continues to be a good use of
resources or whether other changes should be pursued. No changes were
made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
Comment: WRT asserts that the fee category for uranium drinking
water treatment licensees should be changed from its current
designation 2.A. (5), with the associated ``full-cost'' fee, to a
category with a fixed annual fee. WRT suggests category 2.F. (Program
Codes 11200 or 11300), All Other Source Material Licenses, or similar.
Charging a full-cost fee to either a company like WRT, or an individual
community water system (CWS) is unsustainable for them to comply with
the radionuclide-treatment mandate of the [Safe Drinking Water Act
(SDWA)]. These types of costs, licensing or otherwise, likely are a
primary reason why many CWSs do not treat their water or resort to
alternative and, potentially less protective, approaches such as
blending water.
The basic premise that uranium drinking water treatment should be
in the same overall fee category (the 2.A. activities) with uranium
recovery activities is misguided. All the licensed activities in this
category are identified as licensees processing and/or recovering
uranium source material for the inherent value of the source material,
primarily for introduction to or refining in the commercial nuclear
fuel cycle--that is where these activities derive their income. Many of
these identified licensees also generate 11e. (2) Byproduct material
and other kinds of regulated wastes, whereas WRT does not. The action
phrases of these various identified licensees and/or activities listed
in the 2.A. category of the Schedule speak directly to this point--
refining uranium mill concentrates, uranium recovery operations such as
milling, ISR, etc. Even the source-material byproduct activities of
2.A. (3) and (4) are activities that are subsequent to uranium recovery
or processing operations. All such licensed activities are designed for
the licensee to derive their income from the value of the uranium
source material and are fuel-cycle or similar such facilities. Further,
the level of risk associated with these licensed activities is very
low, but those associated with WRT are even lower, and this low level
of risk has been demonstrated through the Agreement State-licensed
uranium water treatment systems data submitted in WRT's 2016 license
renewal application.
Now, compare these activities above with the action phrase of
drinking water treatment currently in category 2.A. (5)--``removal of
source material contaminants.'' This uranium source material has no
inherent value; [Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)] deemed it a
contaminant under the SDWA that needed to be removed (not recovered)
from drinking water sources based on concerns for public health and
safety. The public and private CWSs that must deal with this issue
derive no income from the uranium, but instead, it costs them to comply
with an unfunded federal mandate. Thus, either WRT or a CWS choosing to
perform its own uranium water treatment must bear these costs. As a
result, WRT cannot sustain these full-cost fees on its own based on the
business model used by the licensee, and CWSs cannot sustain such costs
on their own, whether WRT passes such costs on to them for payment, or
if such CWSs elect to perform such activities themselves and are forced
to pay such costs as an NRC licensee.
It can similarly be argued that WRT is not a ``producer'' of source
material, but rather a ``service provider'' consistent with NRC
regulations and guidance. Indeed, WRT's initial license application and
the format of its current license shows that the identified licensed
activities in this license are services provided to third-party
entities such as CWSs and not as a part of a mining/milling operation
conducted by the same licensee.
Therefore, WRT believes it would be a great source of relief to
CWSs requiring uranium water treatment in accord with an unfunded
federal mandate or entities such as WRT seeking to assist such CWSs in
these endeavors if the fee category for WRT or other similar licensees
was revised to a reasonable fixed fee amount.
In the case of WRT's license, support for using the ``other source
material'' designation of fee category 2.F. comes from the fact that
nearly all of the Agreement State licenses (seven (7)--CA, GA, IL, NM,
NC, TX, WI) that WRT holds for uranium and/or radium water treatment
have both a fee category similar to NRC's ``other'' category 2.F., and
a reasonable fixed fee. Two other Agreement States, Colorado and New
Jersey, have issued WRT service-provider licenses, both with reasonable
fixed annual fees, also similar to that of NRC fee category 2.F.
Indeed, the use of the term ``other'' when describing certain source
material licensees fits squarely within the way NRC regulations address
WRT. For example, in addition to having the only NRC license of its
kind through its performance-based, multi-site nature, NRC's most
recent rulemaking regarding small quantities of source material or the
rule that address the amount of source material that may be possessed
at any one time and during a calendar year in total (i.e., 10 CFR . . .
40.22) reduced the amount of such possessed source material from
fifteen (15) pounds at any one time and 150 pounds in a calendar year
to much lower limits based on identified entities that were not
considered in previous rulemaking and in an attempt to protect public
health and safety. However, in this rulemaking, NRC specifically
identified licensees such as WRT as excluded from such lower limits and
allowed a general license to remain in effect under the previous 15/150
limits. Thus, by this exclusion, NRC specifically identified WRT as a
licensee with extremely low risk and capable of handling such levels of
source material. Further, the low
[[Page 29639]]
level of risk and low requirements for license maintenance (e.g., site
registration) are further supported by technical and environmental data
in WRT's license renewal application showing the previously projected
health and safety risks are indeed extremely conservative and the
actual risk is much lower. These unique factors further support
treating WRT in a manner different from other 2.A licensees. (WRT)
Response: While WRT's comment articulates a number of arguments to
support changing the current fee category designation for uranium
drinking water treatment licensees, the NRC considers this change to be
outside the scope of this rulemaking because members of the public
would not have had sufficient notice of the change requested by the
commenter. Further, the NRC would need additional information not
currently available to it in order to determine whether a flat fee
would be appropriate and provide a method for setting the fee at an
appropriate level in order to recover the NRC costs. The staff will
take this comment into consideration as it prepares the policy paper in
support of the FY 2019 proposed fee rule. As a result, the NRC expects
to seek public comment on this issue as part of the FY 2019 fee
rulemaking, and that would provide sufficient notice to the public and
an opportunity to provide comments on the fee category. For FY 2018,
WRT requested and was granted a partial fee-waiver (ADAMS Accession No.
ML18102A477) in relation to the NRC's review of its license renewal
application. No changes were made to the final rule as a result of this
comment.
G. Variance Between Proposed Fee Rule and Final Fee Rule Amounts
Comment: [T]here appears to be greater variance between the annual
fees in the proposed and final fee rules in recent years. These
fluctuations make it more difficult to manage costs associated with NRC
activities over the course of each year. Accordingly, we would welcome
any improvements to developing the fee rule that lead to less
variability between the proposed and final rules. (HW)
Response: One commenter expressed concern over the recent variance
between the proposed rule and the final rule fee amounts. The agency
strives to produce fees that accurately reflect the information
available to it at the time that the proposed rule is issued for public
comment. In the absence of an enacted appropriation, the agency uses
the best information available, including the CBJ, information
regarding historic appropriations, and a discussion of assumptions used
in developing the budgetary resources used to calculate fees. Further,
the NRC strives to provide conservative estimates in its proposed rule
in order to provide licensees and applicants with information regarding
the potential highest fees. Even with the NRC's effort to include
conservative estimates in the proposed rule, changes associated with
the enacted appropriations (including direction to use carryover,
exclusion of activities from the fee-recoverable budget, and other
changes) can cause the final fees to be different than the proposed
rule. As a result of the FY 2018 enacted appropriations, the total
annual fees to be recovered for fuel facilities is $27.7 million, which
is a 2.5 percent decrease from FY 2017. However, average annual fees
for each fee category in this fee class increased varied from 1.2 to
1.3 percent due to the loss of two licensees. No changes were made to
the final rule as a result of this comment.
H. Invoicing
Comment: As Westinghouse understands the new [Enterprise Project
Identifier (EPID)/Cost Activity Code (CAC)] structure, it is provided
to increase visibility on the NRC charges. The EPIDs identify
individual projects and the CACs are generically identified and defined
by the Office of the Chief Financial Officer (OCFO); based on the new
structure, there is the possibility for one EPID to have multiple CACs.
Based on the Westinghouse invoice, we are seeing mixed results in terms
of transparency. In some areas, there are EPIDs with multiple CACs (for
example, inspections are divided into preparation, travel, and
performing the inspection), which we understand is the expectation to
increase transparency on the invoices. However, in most areas, there is
one CAC per EPID, so there is no further breakdown of the changes
within the project and does not increase the transparency on the
invoices. We would expect that the NRC offices would abide by the
OCFO's new process and adopt more than one CAC per EPID. (WEC)
Response: This comment is outside the scope of this rulemaking
because the purpose of the NRC's annual fee recovery rulemaking is to
update the NRC's fee schedules to recover approximately 90 percent of
the NRC's budget authority for the current fiscal year, and to make
other necessary corrections or appropriate changes to specific aspects
of the NRC's fee regulations. However, as an informational update, the
NRC notes that the use and guidance for EPIDs continues to be improved
across the agency, which should continue to provide additional
transparency to licensees and applicants. No changes were made to the
final rule as a result of this comment.
Comment: Recent improvements in the clarity and transparency of
invoices issued to licensees are greatly appreciated. However,
additional action is needed to address remaining areas of concern. One
such area occurs in billing of inspection costs. Estimates of direct
inspection hours are available for each inspection (totaling
approximately 1,863 hours/site under the baseline inspection program),
but invoices currently do not distinguish between direct inspection
hours and inspection support activities. The cost for these support
activities, which include documentation, preparation, travel and
significance determination efforts, are in many cases double or triple
the cost of direct inspection hours (Average 3,488 hours/site). The
absence of estimates for support activities necessary for each
inspection and a clear identification of support hours presents a
challenge for accountability and tracking of inspection costs. Invoices
should identify costs associated with the separate and distinct aspects
of inspections (e.g., direct inspection hours, preparation,
documentation, travel, significance determination process). (NEI-2)
Response: This comment is outside the scope of this rulemaking
because the purpose of the NRC's annual fee recovery rulemaking is to
update the NRC's fee schedules to recover approximately 90 percent of
the NRC's budget authority for the current fiscal year, and to make
other necessary corrections or appropriate changes to specific aspects
of the NRC's fee regulations. However, as an informational update, the
NRC remains dedicated to improving transparency in its fee billing. On
January 30, 2015, the staff submitted SECY-15-0015, ``Project Aim 2020
Report and Recommendations'' (ADAMS Accession No. ML15012A594), to the
Commission. That paper included, in part, recommendations associated
with simplifying how the NRC calculates its fees, improving
transparency in the fee billing process, and improving the timeliness
of the NRC's communications about fee changes. The Commission approved
these recommendations and since that time, the staff has been actively
implementing them.
The NRC is implementing a number of initiatives in response to the
Commission's direction to provide
[[Page 29640]]
better fee billing information to licensees, including information
related to the costs of inspections. For example:
(a) As part of the fee transformation initiative, the agency posted
resource estimate summaries, which were based on historical inspection
data, at https://www.nrc.gov/docs/ML1727/ML17271A262.pdf (ADAMS
Accession No. ML17271A262). These summaries include information related
to direct inspection costs. The table also includes a line item for
documentation, preparation, travel to and from the site, plant status,
etc. Actual effort may vary based on regional and site needs.
(b) As noted on the NRC's website at https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/licensing/sample-invoice.pdf, the bill to the licensee
includes the names of the inspectors for the invoice period, the hours
charged, the hourly rate, and total amount billed to the licensee in
the invoice period. The bill also includes the cost activity code that
the inspectors charged to. The cost activity code distinguishes the
inspection-related work from the inspection support-related work.
(c) The agency increased standardization of the financial charging
system used by inspectors and all NRC personnel. The new system allows
the grouping of costs for a single inspection or other project so that
costs are no longer commingled within the invoice for multiple
projects, and consolidates all the charges under a given project for
the invoice period.
(d) The Division of Inspection and Regional Support within the
NRC's Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation is also working on a new
document that will be made publicly available to explain the highlights
and overall structure of the Reactor Oversight Process budget model.
The NRC also notes that each inspection procedure includes the
direct inspection resource estimates, in hours, required to complete
the inspection. Because inspections also include necessary indirect
inspection resources such as preparation, documentation and travel, and
can vary in complexity depending on the issue being evaluated, the
associated hours may deviate from the estimates in the inspection
procedure in some cases. The agency looks for trends and biennially
evaluates every baseline inspection procedure to determine if resource
estimates need to be reallocated.
In summary, the agency provides anticipated hours for inspections
through the inspection procedure resource estimates and has taken
action to provide better detail and transparency in the invoice. No
changes were made to the final rule as a result of this comment.
I. Low-Level Waste Surcharge
Comment: [W]e believe the staff should validate the ``Low Level
Waste Surcharge'' (LLW) figures in table IV of the proposed rule (page
3411 of the Federal Register Notice). Specifically, it seems illogical
that the fuel facilities would be allocated the highest LLW surcharge
percentage considering the number of facilities and plants nationwide
in some stage of decommissioning. Since NRC fees are based in part on
the LLW surcharge, NRC should work with the Department of Energy to
ensure the accuracy, completeness and timeliness of data entered into
DOE's Manifest Information Management System (MIMS). MIMS contains data
on four generator classes, and it is unclear whether fuel cycle
facilities are aligned with the class generically identified as
``industrial.'' (NEI-1)
Response: The DOE was required by law (42 U.S.C. 2021g(a)) to
establish a computerized database to monitor low-level radioactive
wastes. The DOE created and is responsible for the MIMS database that
was created to monitor the management of commercial LLW in the United
States. The LLW surcharge percentages included in Table IV in the
proposed FY 2018 fee rule for Operating Power Reactors, Fuel
Facilities, and Materials Users reflect the 5-year average of the data
available in MIMS for the relevant licensees. Fuel facilities are
aligned with the MIMS Class identified as ``Industry'' and the Fuel
Facilities percentage is based on a fraction of the 5-year average for
the Industry Class.
At the time the proposed FY 2018 fee rule was issued, the most
recent data available from the MIMS database was from 2016. The final
FY 2018 fee rule includes updated LLW surcharge percentages which
account for the 2017 MIMS data that was recently populated into the
database by DOE. The 2017 data included a significant increase to the
volume reported under the ``Utility'' Class, which is used to determine
the percentage for Power Reactors. The increase to the volume reported
under the Utility Class in 2017 shifted the percentages for Fuel
Facilities and Power Reactors as seen in Table IV, ``Allocation of Fee-
Relief and LLW Surcharge FY 2018.'' As a result, compared to the
proposed FY 2018 fee rule, the percentage of the LLW surcharge for
Operating Power Reactors increased from 41.0 percent to 75 percent,
Fuel Facilities decreased from 46 percent to 20 percent, and Material
Users decreased from 13 percent to 5 percent. Please refer to Table IV
and the accompanying discussion for additional details.
J. Efficiency
Comment: The NRC needs to continue to pursue improvements in
efficient operations. Over several years, the NRC has pursued
efficiency improvements through Project AIM and other initiatives that
has resulted in small declines of support functions included in the
professional hourly rate. These improvements have not translated into
the professional hourly rate or annual fees. (NEI-1, NEI-2, WEC)
Response: This comment pertains to agency efficiency and is
therefore outside the scope of this rulemaking because the purpose of
the NRC's annual fee rulemaking is to update the NRC's fee schedules to
recover approximately 90 percent of the NRC's budget authority for the
current fiscal year, and to make other necessary corrections or
appropriate changes to specific aspects of the NRC's fee regulations.
However, as an informational update, the NRC notes that it has
completed several initiatives to improve the efficiency of the agency,
some of which include: Reducing the size of the agency through early
buy-outs and retirements, as well as reducing corporate support. The
NRC continues to look for additional methods to improve the efficiency
and flexibility. No changes were made to the final rule as a result of
these comments.
Comment: In the Proposed Fee Rule, NRC proposes eleven
administrative changes. The first change is to ``revise the methodology
of charging licensees for overhead time for project managers (PMs) and
resident inspectors (Rls).'' The revised methodology proposes removing
the 6% of direct billable costs added as an overhead cost to all
licensees' invoices, and replace with the ``actual hours for activities
that support and directly benefit the assigned licensee or site.''
While Westinghouse applauds NRC for removing the unnecessary
allocation, it is unclear how the replacement system (i.e., ``docket-
related fee-billable cost activity codes'') will drive efficient work
from project managers. We would expect that, to the maximum extent
practical, activities that support and directly benefit Westinghouse
would be assigned to a specific Enterprise Project Identifier (EPID),
rather than a general ``project management'' EPID/Cost Activity Code
(CAC). Based on Westinghouse's most recently received invoices, the
project manager was responsible for between 24% and 99%
[[Page 29641]]
of the invoiced charges to a given docket, so it seems unnecessary to
have a separate ``project management'' EPID/CAC. Additionally,
Westinghouse requests publically available guidance to the staff on
what is ``fee-billable.'' (WEC)
Response: This comment appears to address four distinct issues: (1)
Removal of the 6-percent charge; (2) replacement methodology for the 6-
percent charge; (3) use of the project management CAC/EPID; and (4)
publicly available guidance on fee-billable activities. While the first
two items are within the scope of the rule, items 3 and 4 are outside
the scope of this rulemaking because the purpose of the NRC's annual
fee recovery rulemaking is to update the NRC's fee schedules to recover
approximately 90 percent of the NRC's budget authority for the current
fiscal year, and to make other necessary corrections or appropriate
changes to specific aspects of the NRC's fee regulations. However, the
NRC will provide an informational update on items 3 and 4.
First, the commenter, like other commenters, appears to be
generally supportive of the removal of the 6-percent overhead charge
for the part 170 bills.
Second, the commenter expresses concern that the replacement system
described in the proposed fee rule (i.e., using new docket-related fee-
billable CACs) will not result in efficient work from PMs. For PMs, the
NRC has decided that no new CACs will be implemented as part of the
replacement system; only RIs will be using the new CACs established to
replace the 6-percent charge. The replacement system is discussed in
more detail above under ``FY 2018--Administrative Changes, 1. Revise
the Methodology of charging licensees for overhead time for project
managers (PMs) and resident inspectors (RIs).''
Third, the commenter requests that activities that support and
directly benefit Westinghouse be assigned to a specific EPID and not
assigned to a general project management CAC/EPID. As an informational
update, the NRC notes that PMs typically use the general project
management CAC/EPID combination (e.g., 000958/L-2017-PMP-0023) to
capture direct fee-billable services that are not associated with a
specific request or activity. Such activities include, for example,
time that the PM for a facility spends in discussions with the licensee
regarding licensee operations, licensee plans for future license
amendment and license renewal submittals, as well as other issues. The
use of a more specific EPID would refer to a specific request or
activity, and the work recorded under that CAC/EPID combination (e.g.,
000958/L-2012-TOP-002) would indicate substantive work on that specific
request or activity. When looking at all of the CAC/EPID combinations,
time spent on fee-billable general project management activities
account for significantly less of the total part 170 fees charged to a
particular docket. The NRC, however, appreciates the confusion that
could be caused by the general project management CAC description and
will consider whether improvements can be made with respect to the CAC.
Fourth, the commenter requests publicly available fee-billable
guidance for the staff. As an informational update, the NRC notes that
the use and guidance for EPIDs continues to be improved across the
agency, which should continue to provide additional transparency to
licensees and applicants. At this time, the NRC does not intend to make
additional guidance publically available. In 10 CFR part 170, the
regulations identify the specific types of the activities that will
incur fees for services.
K. Fuel Facilities
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns regarding the ratio of
part 170 fees for service to the part 171 annual fees for the Fuel
Facilities fee class. They raised concerns regarding the differences in
these ratios between different fee classes including the higher ratio
of part 170 billing in the Operating Power Reactor fee class. They
questioned the reason for these higher non-direct services in the Fuel
Facilities fee class and whether the activities are reasonable and
appropriate, and requested that the NRC provide additional information
regarding these non-direct services. (HW, UUSA)
Response: All NRC fee classes have slightly different ratios of 10
CFR part 170 fees versus 10 CFR part 171 fees because the amount of
fees collected by the agency under 10 CFR part 170 are directly
impacted by licensee decisions. For the power reactors, for instance,
the NRC has been working on new reactor application and design
certification reviews, and Fukushima-related activities, license
renewal activities, and other complex license amendments such as
extended power-up rates have been completed or are winding down. These
activities contribute to the lower ratio of 10 CFR part 170 fees versus
10 CFR part 171 fees for the power reactor fee class. By contrast,
licensees in the fuel facilities fee class have indicated that they
have no desire to make changes to their licenses, which reduces the
amount of fees that can be collected under 10 CFR part 170. Further, in
a fee class with a small number of licensees (like fuel facilities),
these licensing decisions can have a much larger impact on the ratio
than with large fee classes (like the power reactors).
With regard to the request for additional information, in public
meetings conducted on February 12, 2018, and March 27, 2018, the NRC
staff provided an overview of the fuel facilities budget and an
illustrative breakdown of NRC costs recovered by 10 CFR part 170
services fees and 10 CFR part 171 annual fees. Slides from these public
meetings are available in ADAMS under Accession Nos. ML18040A317 and
ML18082A599, respectively. Also you can view them at https://adams.nrc.gov/wba/.
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
Comment: Several commenters raised concerns regarding the
prioritization of resources in the fuel facilities fee class to the
most safety significant issues. They requested that the NRC improve the
timeliness of license amendments and renewals, transition routine
inspections to the resident inspectors, where applicable, reduce
inspection frequencies to reflect historical inspection results, and
eliminate unnecessary rulemaking initiatives, and maintenance of
guidance documents. (NEI-1, NEI-2)
Response: The NRC staff agrees that regulatory initiatives that are
of the most benefit in terms of safety or safeguards should be given
higher priority. The agency carefully considers the benefits of
regulatory initiatives it pursues. For example, the rulemaking process
(including associated guidance documents) is a very deliberate and open
public process that invites input and feedback from a broad range of
stakeholders. We do appreciate that stakeholders may have different
views regarding the need for, or benefit to be derived from, various
regulatory initiatives. The NRC carefully considers all stakeholder
input in its determination of whether or not to recommend proceeding
with a given initiative. For rulemakings, this determination is
documented in a regulatory analysis which informs the Commission's
decision on whether or not to ultimately proceed. In addition, public
meetings with licensees on the cumulative effects of regulation have
been an effective forum for dialogue on regulatory initiatives being
considered and taken by the NRC. No changes were made to the final rule
as a result of these comments.
[[Page 29642]]
Comment: Several commenters provided views regarding the effort
factors matrix, including requests to maintain the current matrix,
requests to change the existing matrix's calculation methodology, and
proposed changes to the classification of a licensee's specific effort
factors. (HW, NFS, UUSA)
Response: In response to industry concerns about the fairness and
equity of annual fees charged to fuel facilities, the NRC analyzed its
past practice of using an effort factors matrix to calculate annual
fees for the fuel facilities fee class to determine if revisions to the
current method may be warranted. The NRC held two public meetings to
discuss possible alternative approaches to the method of calculating
annual fees for the fuel facility fee class including changes to the
effort factors matrix. As part of that process, the NRC received
numerous comments on the current and alternative methods for
determining annual fees. The comments were mixed as to whether NRC
should continue working on changes to the methodology for calculating
annual fees. Some stakeholders indicated that NRC should continue with
this effort, while others stated that NRC should consider alternatives,
such as a reduction of budgeted resources, before changing the current
fuel facility effort factors matrix.
During the meetings, the staff indicated that it did not intend to
make any changes to the method of calculating annual fees in the FY
2018 fee rule since it is in the process of engaging stakeholders, and
any recommendations related to the effort factors matrix would be
addressed as part of recommendations for the FY 2019 proposed fee rule.
The NRC staff will consider these comments, and any other comments on
the effort factors matrix, as it prepares the proposed fee rule for FY
2019. No changes were made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
L. Comments Regarding the Size of the Fuel Facilities Budget
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern that the fuel
facility business line's budget is too large given the activities
performed and the number of licensees. One commenter expressed concern
that the level of resources assigned to the fuel facilities fee class
was too large in light of the risk profile for the facilities. (HW,
NEI-1, NFS, UUSA, WEC)
Response: The fuel facilities business line is responsible for
ensuring the safety and security of fuel cycle and greater than
critical mass facilities. The business line leads the licensing and
oversight of these facilities, as well as domestic material control and
accounting and international safeguards implementation activities for
the NRC. The business line also supports rulemaking and environmental
review activities for fuel facilities.
The NRC has taken steps to right-size the fuel facilities budget to
ensure that it reflects the reduced workload in the business line. A
peak workload was experienced in FY 2012. The FY 2018 fuel facilities
budget of $35.1 million is a third less than the FY 2012 fuel
facilities budget of $54.4 million. Further, the 114 FTE in the FY 2018
fuel facilities budget is over a third less than the 184 FTE in the FY
2012 fuel facilities budget.
The NRC's FY 2018 fuel facilities budget has increased slightly
from the FY 2017 fuel facilities budget. This small increase resulted
from (a) the transfer of 1 FTE of enforcement resources from the
nuclear materials users fee class to the fuel facilities fee class to
reflect the fee class benefiting from the work being performed by this
FTE, and (b) an increase in the NRC fully costed FTE rate. However, the
``Congressional Budget Justification, Fiscal Year 2019,'' (NUREG-1100,
Volume 34) includes a decrease of 6 FTE for the fuel facilities
business line budget relative to the FY 2018 CBJ, which continues the
overall downward trend in the fuel facilities budget.
In public meetings conducted on February 12, 2018, and March 27,
2018, the NRC provided an overview of the fuel facilities budget and an
illustrative breakdown of NRC costs recovered by 10 CFR part 170
services fees and 10 CFR part 171 annual fees. Slides from these public
meetings are available in ADAMS under Accession Nos. ML18040A317 and
ML18082A599, respectively.
Regarding the assertion that the NRC should reduce its budget
commensurate with the reduction in the number of fuel facilities that
pay fees, the NRC agrees, but that reduction is not linearly
proportional as there is a cost for the infrastructure that must be
maintained independent of the number of operational fuel facilities.
These infrastructure costs include indirect services and the business
line portion of corporate support. Indirect services include
rulemaking, maintaining guidance for licensees, maintaining procedures
for NRC staff, training, and travel. Corporate support includes, for
example, the cost for information management, information technology,
security, facilities management, rent, utilities, financial management,
acquisitions, human resources, and policy support.
The NRC continues to actively evaluate resource requirements, both
in terms of overall budget numbers and FTEs, to address changes that
occur between budget formulation and execution. The NRC will continue
to assess resource requirements and evaluate programmatic efficiencies
that could result in additional resource reductions, and make changes
as appropriate during budget execution.
One commenter expressed concern regarding the total number of FTEs
assigned to a business line. The commenter stated that the resources
supporting fuel facilities were 82 FTEs in FY 2017, and the resources
increased to 114 FTEs in FY 2018. The numbers identified by the
commenter refer to different categories of personnel and are not
directly comparable. In FY 2017, 81.7 FTEs were identified as mission-
direct resources. In FY 2018, the mission-direct resources increased to
82.7 FTEs. This is the 1 FTE increase discussed previously. The 114
FTEs identified by the commenter refers to the FTE included in the FY
2018 CBJ, which includes both mission-direct and mission-indirect
resources.
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
M. Decline in Part 170 Fee Collections
Comment: There are eight operating commercial nuclear power plants
that have announced premature closings between now and 2025. As power
reactors announce premature shutdowns and 10 CFR part 170 user fee
collections decrease, the remaining operating power reactors will bear
the burden of increased annual fees unless the fee-recoverable portion
of the NRC's budget authority decreases. This disparity between lower
10 CFR part 170 user fees and rising 10 CFR part 171 annual fees cannot
be maintained and must be promptly corrected. (NEI-2, EXN)
Response: The NRC is aware of and accounts for the decreasing
number of nuclear power reactor licensees. For instance, as part of our
budgeting process, the NRC tracks licensee plans to cease operations
and adjusts its budget requests to reflect the anticipated work and
ensure that agency will continue to meet its statutory requirements.
The NRC, however, must comply with OBRA-90, which requires the NRC
to collect approximately 90 percent of its annual budget authority
(less certain excluded items) through both user fees and annual fees.
The NRC can assess these annual fees only to licensees or certificate
holders, and the annual fee schedule must be fair and must
[[Page 29643]]
equitably allocate annual fees among the NRC's many licensees. To
ensure compliance with OBRA-90, the NRC makes continual organizational
improvements to budget only the resources needed to support its
regulatory activities.
The amount of user fees collected under 10 CFR part 170 depends on
a number of different factors including the professional hourly rate,
licensee and applicant decisions to pursue licensing actions, and the
amount of hours necessary to resolve any licensing actions. Due to
OBRA-90 requirements, examining changes in the 10 CFR part 170 fees and
the 10 CFR part 171 fees separately may not account for the overall
decreases in the fee class budget or the realized efficiencies. Over
the last several years, the fee class budget for the Operating Power
Reactors fee class has decreased from $762.1 million in FY 2015 to
$669.9 million in the FY 2018 final rule. In the ``Congressional Budget
Justification: Fiscal Year 2019'' (NUREG-1100, Volume 34), the Nuclear
Reactor Safety program shows continuing declines in requested budgetary
resources for FY 2019.
Despite the decreasing number of operating nuclear power plants,
the number of licensing actions completed per year has slightly
increased over the past two fiscal years and demonstrates the improving
efficiencies realized from the Project Aim initiatives including
reductions in FTEs and improved management focus on process
improvements. The NRC continues to pursue additional improvements to
efficiency and ensuring that its budgetary request accurately reflects
the anticipated work.
No changes were made to the final rule as a result of these
comments.
Comment: Several commenters expressed concern regarding the
declining fraction of fees recovered under 10 CFR part 170 (Service
Fees) relative to 10 CFR part 171 (Annual Fees), as well as the NRC's
overall budget for the Fuel Facilities Fee Class. The commenters noted
that these fees were being borne by a decreasing number of facilities
with a decreasing number of licensing actions. They also asked for more
information on what specific activities contribute to the non-direct
portion of the budget that is recovered in the annual fees charged to
licensees. (NEI-1, UUSA, WEC)
Response: The NRC is aware of the current economic state of the
fuel cycle industry and remains mindful of the impact of its budget on
the fees for licensees. The Fuel Facilities Fee Class supports the
activities of the fuel facilities business line, including both direct-
billable licensing actions and those general activities that indirectly
support the agency's mission in these areas. The overall budget for the
fuel facilities business line has decreased significantly in recent
years. For example, the number of budgeted staff positions in the fuel
facilities business line has decreased from 184 FTE in FY 2012 to 114
FTE in FY 2018, or 38 percent. The NRC continues to adjust its proposed
budget in line with anticipated work load for the business line.
Since FY 2012, services billed directly to individual fuel facility
licensees under 10 CFR part 170 have decreased. The reasons for this
include: Fewer applications for new licenses, license renewals, and
license amendments; fewer inspections; and less construction inspection
activity. The decrease in 10 CFR part 170 collections in recent years
has meant that the amount to be recovered by annual fees has not
decreased commensurate with the overall decrease in the budget for the
fuel facilities business line. Further, the decline in the number of
operating fuel facilities (from ten in FY 2012 to seven in FY 2018) has
led to an increase in the annual fee burden for the remaining fuel
facilities, even though the total budgeted resources for this fee class
have dropped during that time period.
The business line must maintain certain minimum requirements in
order to meet the NRC's regulatory and statutory oversight role. This
includes maintaining expertise in a number of technical areas,
including: Integrated safety analysis, radiation protection,
criticality safety, chemical safety, fire safety, emergency management,
environmental protection, decommissioning, management measures,
material control and accounting, physical protection, and information
security. Budgeted resources in technical areas are recovered through
annual fees as well as user fees.
In a public meeting on March 27, 2018, the NRC staff discussed how
the annual fees support other activities that are necessary for the
Fuel Facilities Fee Class as a whole. The presentations from the
meeting address these areas and are available in ADAMS under Accession
No. ML18082A604.
As discussed in the meeting, these activities include, among
others, fuel facilities' proportion of corporate support functions for
the NRC (for example, infrastructure, financial and information
services, and other administrative functions), supervisory and
management functions, and non-billable licensing and oversight
activities (for example, program development and program maintenance).
The cost of these areas together constitute about three-quarters of
what is recovered through 10 CFR part 171 annual fees, and thus about
half of the total business line budget. The remainder of the annual fee
portion includes small amounts to support rulemaking and guidance
development, staff training and related travel, and event response.
Further detail is presented in the slides on stakeholder feedback from
the March 27, 2018 meeting (available in ADAMS under Accession No.
ML18082A604). No changes were made to this final rule as a result of
these comments.
N. Comments Generally Supporting Actions of the Agency
Several commenters expressed comments generally in favor of actions
that the agency is taking with respect to fees, billing, and other
aspects of the fee rule process. Comments generally in favor of the
agency's actions included comments supporting the public meetings on
the proposed fee rule and invoicing, the move to new formats for
invoices, plans to support e-billing, and the removal of the 6-percent
overhead charge for the 10 CFR part 170 bills. No new or different
information was developed as a result of these comments, and thus, no
changes to the rule were made because of these comments.
O. Comments on Matters Not Related to This Rulemaking
Several commenters raised issues outside the scope of the FY 2018
fee rule. Commenters raised concerns with the agency's budgeting
process and requesting public meetings on the agency's proposed budget.
Other commenters were concerned with the agency's overall size. A few
commenters raised concerns regarding the fees that are assessed as part
of Sec. Sec. 11.15(e) and 25.17(f); however, those portions of the
NRC's regulations are not within the scope of the FY 2018 fee rule.
Another commenter raised concerns regarding copyright and tort reform
for small businesses, and a commenter requested a ban on offsite
drilling.
These matters are outside the scope of this rulemaking. The primary
purpose of the NRC's annual fee recovery final rule is to update the
NRC's fee schedules to recover approximately 90 percent of the NRC's
budgeted authority for the current fiscal year, and to make other
necessary corrections or appropriate changes to specific aspects of the
NRC's fee regulations in order to ensure compliance with OBRA-90.
[[Page 29644]]
The NRC takes very seriously the importance of examining and
improving the efficiency of its operations and the prioritization of
its regulatory activities. Recognizing the importance of continuous
reexamination and improvement of the way the agency does business, the
NRC has undertaken, and continues to undertake, a number of significant
initiatives aimed at improving the efficiency of NRC operations and
enhancing the agency's approach to regulating. Though comments
addressing these issues may not be within the scope of this final rule,
the NRC will consider this input in its future program operations.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Certification
As required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, as amended
(RFA),\14\ the NRC has prepared a regulatory flexibility analysis
relating to this rule. The regulatory flexibility analysis is available
as indicated in Section XIV, Availability of Documents, of this
document.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 5 U.S.C. 603. The RFA, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, has been amended
by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
Public Law 104-121, Title II, 110 Stat. 847 (1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Regulatory Analysis
Under OBRA-90, the NRC is required to recover approximately 90
percent of its budget authority in FY 2018. The NRC established fee
methodology guidelines for 10 CFR part 170 in 1978, and established
additional fee methodology guidelines for 10 CFR part 171 in 1986. In
subsequent rulemakings, the NRC has adjusted its fees without changing
the underlying principles of its fee policy to ensure that the NRC
continues to comply with the statutory requirements for cost recovery
in OBRA-90.
In this rulemaking, the NRC continues this long-standing approach.
Therefore, the NRC did not identify any alternatives to the current fee
structure guidelines and did not prepare a regulatory analysis for this
rulemaking.
VII. Backfitting and Issue Finality
The NRC has determined that the backfit rule, 10 CFR 50.109 (and
similar provisions in the NRC's regulations for other licensee fee
classes), does not apply to this final rule and that a backfit analysis
is not required. A backfit analysis is not required because these
amendments do not require the modification of, or addition to, systems,
structures, components, or the design of a facility, or the design
approval or manufacturing license for a facility, or the procedures or
organization required to design, construct, or operate a facility.
VIII. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-274) requires Federal
agencies to write documents in a clear, concise, and 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
31885).
IX. National Environmental Policy Act
The NRC has determined that this rule amends the NRC's
administrative requirements in 10 CFR part 170 and 10 CFR part 171.
Therefore, this action is categorically excluded from needing
environmental review as described in 10 CFR 51.22(c)(1). Consequently,
neither an environmental impact statement nor an environmental
assessment has been prepared for this final rule.
X. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not contain a collection of information as defined
in the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) and,
therefore, is not subject to the requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
Public Protection Notification
The NRC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information unless the document requesting
or requiring the collection displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
XI. Congressional Review Act
This final rule is a rule as defined in the Congressional Review
Act of 1996 (5 U.S.C. 801-808). The Office of Management and Budget has
found it to be a major rule as defined in the Congressional Review Act.
XII. Voluntary Consensus Standards
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995,
Public Law 104-113, requires that Federal agencies use technical
standards that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies unless the use of such a standard is inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical. In this final rule, the NRC
amends the licensing, inspection, and annual fees charged to its
licensees and applicants, as necessary, to recover approximately 90
percent of its budget authority in FY 2018, as required by OBRA-90.
This action does not constitute the establishment of a standard that
contains generally applicable requirements.
XIII. Availability of Guidance
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act requires all
Federal agencies to prepare a written compliance guide for each rule
for which the agency is required by 5 U.S.C. 604 to prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis. The NRC, in compliance with the law,
prepared the ``Small Entity Compliance Guide'' for the FY 2017 proposed
fee rule. The NRC plans to continue to use this compliance guide for FY
2018 and has relabeled the compliance guide to reflect the current
fiscal year. The FY 2018 version of the compliance guide is available
as indicated in Section XIV, Availability of Documents, of this
document. The next compliance guide will be developed when the NRC
completes the next small entity biennial review in FY 2019.
XIV. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the following table are available to
interested persons through one or more of the following methods, as
indicated.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Document ADAMS Accession No./weblink
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SECY-16-0009, ``Recommendations ML16104A158.
Resulting from the Integrated
Prioritization and Re-Baselining of
Agency Activities,'' February 9, 2016.
SECY-16-0097, ``Fee Setting Improvements ML16194A365.
and Fiscal Year 2017 Proposed Fee
Rule,'' August 22, 2016.
SECY-17-0026, ``Policy Considerations ML17130A783.
and Recommendations for Remediation of
Non-Military, Unlicensed Historic
Radium Sites in Non-Agreement States''
February 22, 2017.
Staff Requirements Memorandum for SECY- ML17250A841.
17-0026, September 7, 2017.
FY 2018 Final Rule Work Papers.......... ML18135A044.
FY 2018 Regulatory Flexibility Analysis. ML17319A288.
[[Page 29645]]
FY 2018 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory ML17319A291.
Commission Small Entity Compliance
Guide.
U.S. Government Accountability Office https://www.gao.gov/products/
(GAO) report titled ``Nuclear GAO-17-232.
Regulatory Commission: Regulatory Fee-
Setting Calculations Need Greater
Transparency'' (GAO-17-232), February
2, 2017.
Regulatory Issue Summary 2015-19, ML16008A242.
``Decommissioning Timeliness Rule
Implementation and Associated
Regulatory Relief,'' September 27, 2016.
NUREG-1100, Volume 33, ``Congressional ML17137A246.
Budget Justification: Fiscal Year
2018'' (May 2017).
NUREG-1100, Volume 34, ``Congressional ML18023B460.
Budget Justification: Fiscal Year
2019'' (February 2018).
NRC Form 526, Certification of Small https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
Entity Status for the Purposes of doc-collections/forms/
Annual Fees Imposed under 10 CFR Part nrc526.pdf.
171.
SECY-05-0164, ``Annual Fee Calculation ML052580332.
Method,'' dated September 15, 2005.
OMB's Circular A-25, ``User Charges''... https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/circulars_default.
Fees Transformation Accomplishments..... https://www.nrc.gov/about-nrc/regulatory/licensing/fees-transformaton-accomplishments.html.
FY 2018 Proposed Fee Rule............... ML17313A419.
FY 2018 Proposed Rule Work Papers....... ML17348A377.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Subjects
10 CFR Part 170
Byproduct material, Import and export licenses, Intergovernmental
relations, Non-payment penalties, Nuclear energy, Nuclear materials,
Nuclear power plants and reactors, Source material, Special nuclear
material.
10 CFR Part 171
Annual charges, Approvals, Byproduct material, Holders of
certificates, Intergovernmental relations, Nonpayment penalties,
Nuclear materials, Nuclear power plants and reactors, Registrations,
Source material, Special nuclear material.
For the reasons set out in the preamble and under the authority of
the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended; the Energy Reorganization
Act of 1974, as amended; and 5 U.S.C. 552 and 553, the NRC is adopting
the following amendments to 10 CFR parts 170 and 171:
PART 170--FEES FOR FACILITIES, MATERIALS, IMPORT AND EXPORT
LICENSES, AND OTHER REGULATORY SERVICES UNDER THE ATOMIC ENERGY ACT
OF 1954, AS AMENDED
0
1. The authority citation for part 170 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954, secs. 11, 161(w) (42
U.S.C. 2014, 2201(w)); Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, sec. 201
(42 U.S.C. 5841); 42 U.S.C. 2214; 31 U.S.C. 901, 902, 9701; 44
U.S.C. 3504 note.
0
2. In Sec. 170.3, add the definitions for Agency support (corporate
support and the IG), Mission-direct program salaries and benefits, and
Mission-indirect program support in alphabetical order and remove the
definition of Overhead and general and administrative costs to read as
follows:
Sec. 170.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Agency support (corporate support and the IG) means resources
located in executive, administrative, and other support offices such as
the Office of the Commission, the Office of the Secretary, the Office
of the Executive Director for Operations, the Offices of Congressional
and Public Affairs, the Office of the Inspector General, the Office of
Administration, the Office of the Chief Financial Officer, the Office
of the Chief Information Officer, the Office of the Chief Human Capital
Officer and the Office of Small Business and Civil Rights. These
resources administer the corporate or shared efforts that more broadly
support the activities of the agency. These resources also include
information technology services, human capital services, financial
management, and administrative support.
* * * * *
Mission-direct program salaries and benefits means resources that
are allocated to perform core work activities committed to fulfilling
the agency's mission of protecting the public health and safety,
promoting the common defense and security, and protecting the
environment. These resources include the core work activities assigned
within the major program business lines (Operating Reactors, New
Reactors, Fuel Facilities, Nuclear Materials Users, Decommissioning and
Low-Level Waste, and Spent Fuel Storage and Transportation).
Mission-indirect program support means resources that support the
core mission-direct activities. These resources include supervisory and
nonsupervisory support and mission travel and training. Supervisory and
nonsupervisory support and mission travel and training resources
assigned under direct business line structure are considered mission-
indirect due to their supporting role of the core mission activities.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 170.11, add paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 170.11 Exemptions.
* * * * *
(c) For purposes of paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a request for
a fee exemption must be submitted to the CFO within 90 days of the date
of the NRC's receipt of the work.
0
4. Revise Sec. 170.20 to read as follows:
Sec. 170.20 Average cost per professional staff-hour.
Fees for permits, licenses, amendments, renewals, special projects,
10 CFR part 55 re-qualification and replacement examinations and tests,
other required reviews, approvals, and inspections under Sec. Sec.
170.21 and 170.31 will be calculated using the professional staff-hour
rate of $275 per hour.
0
5. In Sec. 170.21, in the table, revise fee category K. to read as
follows:
Sec. 170.21 Schedule of fees for production or utilization
facilities, review of standard referenced design approvals, special
projects, inspections, and import and export licenses.
* * * * *
[[Page 29646]]
Schedule of Facility Fees
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Facility categories and type of fees Fees 1 2
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
K. Import and export licenses: \6\
Licenses for the import and export only of
production or utilization facilities or the export
only of components for production or utilization
facilities issued under 10 CFR part 110.
1. Application for import or export of N/A
production or utilization facilities \4\
(including reactors and other facilities) and
exports of components requiring Commission and
Executive Branch review, for example, actions
under 10 CFR 110.40(b). Application--new
license, or amendment; or license exemption
request........................................
2. Application for export of reactor and other N/A
components requiring Executive Branch review,
for example, those actions under 10 CFR
110.41(a). Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption request........
3. Application for export of components N/A
requiring the assistance of the Executive
Branch to obtain foreign government assurances.
Application--new license, or amendment; or
license exemption request......................
4. Application for export of facility components N/A
and equipment not requiring Commission or
Executive Branch review, or obtaining foreign
government assurances. Application--new
license, or amendment; or license exemption
request........................................
5. Minor amendment of any active export or N/A
import license, for example, to extend the
expiration date, change domestic information,
or make other revisions which do not involve
any substantive changes to license terms or
conditions or to the type of facility or
component authorized for export and, therefore,
do not require in-depth analysis or review or
consultation with the Executive Branch, U.S.
host state, or foreign government authorities.
Minor amendment to license.....................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Fees will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or
other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under Sec. 2.202 of
this chapter or for amendments resulting specifically from the
requirements of these orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties
or other civil sanctions, fees will be charged for any resulting
licensee-specific activities not otherwise exempted from fees under
this chapter. Fees will be charged for approvals issued under a
specific exemption provision of the Commission's regulations under
title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10 CFR 50.12, 10
CFR 73.5) and any other sections in effect now or in the future,
regardless of whether the approval is in the form of a license
amendment, letter of approval, safety evaluation report, or other
form.
\2\ Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff
time and appropriate contractual support services expended. For
applications currently on file and for which fees are determined based
on the full cost expended for the review, the professional staff hours
expended for the review of the application up to August 24, 2018 will
be determined at the professional rates in effect when the service was
provided.
* * * * * * *
\4\ Imports only of major components for end-use at NRC-licensed
reactors are authorized under NRC general import license in 10 CFR
110.27.
* * * * * * *
\6\ Because the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, excludes
international activities from the fee-recoverable budget in fiscal
year 2018, import and export licensing actions will not be charged
fees.
0
6. In Sec. 170.31, revise the table to read as follows:
Sec. 170.31 Schedule of fees for materials licenses and other
regulatory services, including inspections, and import and export
licenses.
* * * * *
Schedule of Materials Fees
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category of materials licenses and type of
fees \1\ Fee 2 3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Special nuclear material: \11\
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of
U-235 or plutonium for fuel fabrication
activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear Material Full Cost.
(High Enriched Uranium) \6\ [Program
Code(s): 21213].
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in Full Cost.
Dispersible Form Used for Fabrication
of Power Reactor Fuel \6\ [Program
Code(s): 21210].
(2) All other special nuclear materials
licenses not included in Category 1.A.
(1) which are licensed for fuel cycle
activities.\6\
(a) Facilities with limited operations Full Cost.
\6\ [Program Code(s): 21240, 21310,
21320].
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment Full Cost.
demonstration facilities.\6\ [Program
Code(s): 21205].
(c) Others, including hot cell Full Cost.
facilities.\6\ [Program Code(s):
21130, 21133].
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of Full Cost.
spent fuel and reactor-related Greater
than Class C (GTCC) waste at an
independent spent fuel storage
installation (ISFSI) \6\ [Program
Code(s): 23200].
C. Licenses for possession and use of $1,300.
special nuclear material of less than a
critical mass as defined in Sec. 70.4
in sealed sources contained in devices
used in industrial measuring systems,
including x-ray fluorescence
analyzers.\4\
Application [Program Code(s): 22140].
D. All other special nuclear material $2,600.
licenses, except licenses authorizing
special nuclear material in sealed or
unsealed form in combination that would
constitute a critical mass, as defined in
Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, for which
the licensee shall pay the same fees as
those under Category 1.A.\4\
Application [Program Code(s): 22110,
22111, 22120, 22131, 22136, 22150,
22151, 22161, 22170, 23100, 23300,
23310].
E. Licenses or certificates for Full Cost.
construction and operation of a uranium
enrichment facility [Program Code(s):
21200].
F. Licenses for possession and use of Full Cost.
special nuclear material greater than
critical mass as defined in Sec. 70.4
of this chapter, for development and
testing of commercial products, and other
non-fuel-cycle activities.4 6 [Program
Code(s): 22155].
2. Source material: \11\
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of Full Cost.
source material for refining uranium mill
concentrates to uranium hexafluoride or
for deconverting uranium hexafluoride in
the production of uranium oxides for
disposal.\6\ [Program Code(s): 11400].
[[Page 29647]]
(2) Licenses for possession and use of
source material in recovery operations
such as milling, in-situ recovery, heap-
leaching, ore buying stations, ion-
exchange facilities, and in processing of
ores containing source material for
extraction of metals other than uranium
or thorium, including licenses
authorizing the possession of byproduct
waste material (tailings) from source
material recovery operations, as well as
licenses authorizing the possession and
maintenance of a facility in a standby
mode.\6\
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach Full Cost.
facilities \6\ [Program Code(s):
11100].
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities Full Cost.
\6\ [Program Code(s): 11500].
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery Full Cost.
facilities \6\ [Program Code(s):
11510].
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities Full Cost.
\6\ [Program Code(s): 11550].
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities \6\ Full Cost.
[Program Code(s): 11555].
(f) Other facilities \6\ [Program Full Cost.
Code(s): 11700].
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt of Full Cost.
byproduct material, as defined in Section
11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from
other persons for possession and
disposal, except those licenses subject
to the fees in Category 2.A.(2) or
Category 2.A.(4) \6\ [Program Code(s):
11600, 12000].
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt of Full Cost.
byproduct material, as defined in Section
11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from
other persons for possession and disposal
incidental to the disposal of the uranium
waste tailings generated by the
licensee's milling operations, except
those licenses subject to the fees in
Category 2.A.(2) \6\ [Program Code(s):
12010].
(5) Licenses that authorize the possession Full Cost.
of source material related to removal of
contaminants (source material) from
drinking water \6\ [Program Code(s):
11820].
B. Licenses which authorize the $1,200.
possession, use, and/or installation of
source material for shielding 7 8.
Application [Program Code(s): 11210].
C. Licenses to distribute items containing $2,200.
source material to persons exempt from
the licensing requirements of part 40 of
this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 11240].
D. Licenses to distribute source material $2,700.
to persons generally licensed under part
40 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 11230,
11231].
E. Licenses for possession and use of $2,600.
source material for processing or
manufacturing of products or materials
containing source material for commercial
distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 11710].
F. All other source material licenses. $2,600.
Application [Program Code(s): 11200,
11220, 11221, 11300, 11800, 11810].
3. Byproduct material: \11\
A. Licenses of broad scope for the $12,900.
possession and use of byproduct material
issued under parts 30 and 33 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing
of items containing byproduct material
for commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03211,
03212, 03213].
(1) Licenses of broad scope for the $17,100.
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and 33
of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing
byproduct material for commercial
distribution. Number of locations of
use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04010, 04012, 04014].
(2) Licenses of broad scope for the $21,400.
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and 33
of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing
byproduct material for commercial
distribution. Number of locations of
use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04011, 04013, 04015].
B. Other licenses for possession and use $3,500.
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for processing or
manufacturing of items containing
byproduct material for commercial
distribution. Number of locations of use:
1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03214,
03215, 22135, 22162].
(1) Other licenses for possession and $4,700.
use of byproduct material issued
under part 30 of this chapter for
processing or manufacturing of items
containing byproduct material for
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04110, 04112, 04114, 04116].
(2) Other licenses for possession and $5,900.
use of byproduct material issued
under part 30 of this chapter for
processing or manufacturing of items
containing byproduct material for
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04111, 04113, 04115, 04117].
C. Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. $5,100.
32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter that
authorize the processing or manufacturing
and distribution or redistribution of
radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent
kits, and/or sources and devices
containing byproduct material. This
category does not apply to licenses
issued to nonprofit educational
institutions whose processing or
manufacturing is exempt under Sec.
170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use:
1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02500,
02511, 02513].
(1) Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. $6,800.
32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter
that authorize the processing or
manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of
radiopharmaceuticals, generators,
reagent kits, and/or sources and
devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not
apply to licenses issued to nonprofit
educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt
under Sec. 170.11(a)(4). Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04210, 04212, 04214].
(2) Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. $8,500.
32.72 and/or 32.74 of this chapter
that authorize the processing or
manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of
radiopharmaceuticals, generators,
reagent kits, and/or sources and
devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not
apply to licenses issued to nonprofit
educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt
under Sec. 170.11(a)(4). Number of
locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04211, 04213, 04215].
D. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
[[Page 29648]]
E. Licenses for possession and use of $3,200.
byproduct material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is not removed from its shield
(self-shielded units).
Application [Program Code(s): 03510,
03520].
F. Licenses for possession and use of less $6,400.
than or equal to 10,000 curies of
byproduct material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation of
materials where the source is not exposed
for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03511].
G. Licenses for possession and use of $61,400.
greater than 10,000 curies of byproduct
material in sealed sources for
irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes
underwater irradiators for irradiation of
materials where the source is not exposed
for irradiation purposes.
Application [Program Code(s): 03521].
H. Licenses issued under subpart A of part $6,600.
32 of this chapter to distribute items
containing byproduct material that
require device review to persons exempt
from the licensing requirements of part
30 of this chapter. The category does not
include specific licenses authorizing
redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements of
part 30 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03254,
03255, 03257].
I. Licenses issued under subpart A of part $9,800.
32 of this chapter to distribute items
containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require device evaluation to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements of
part 30 of this chapter. This category
does not include specific licenses
authorizing redistribution of items that
have been authorized for distribution to
persons exempt from the licensing
requirements of part 30 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03250,
03251, 03252, 03253, 03256].
J. Licenses issued under subpart B of part $2,000.
32 of this chapter to distribute items
containing byproduct material that
require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter. This
category does not include specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03240,
03241, 03243].
K. Licenses issued under subpart B of part $1,100.
32 of this chapter to distribute items
containing byproduct material or
quantities of byproduct material that do
not require sealed source and/or device
review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter. This
category does not include specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of
items that have been authorized for
distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Application [Program Code(s): 03242,
03244].
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession $5,400.
and use of byproduct material issued
under parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for
research and development that do not
authorize commercial distribution. Number
of locations of use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 01100,
01110, 01120, 03610, 03611, 03612,
03613].
(1) Licenses of broad scope for $7,200.
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and 33
of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04610, 04612, 04614, 04616,
04618, 04620, 04622].
(2) Licenses of broad scope for $9,000.
possession and use of byproduct
material issued under parts 30 and 33
of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04611, 04613, 04615, 04617,
04619, 04621, 04623].
M. Other licenses for possession and use $7,000.
of byproduct material issued under part
30 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize
commercial distribution.
Application [Program Code(s): 03620].
N. Licenses that authorize services for $7,200.
other licensees, except:
(1) Licenses that authorize only
calibration and/or leak testing
services are subject to the fees
specified in fee Category 3.P.; and
(2) Licenses that authorize waste
disposal services are subject to the
fees specified in fee Categories
4.A., 4.B., and 4.C..
Application [Program Code(s):
03219, 03225, 03226].
O. Licenses for possession and use of $3,100.
byproduct material issued under part 34
of this chapter for industrial
radiography operations. Number of
locations of use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 03310,
03320].
(1) Licenses for possession and use of $4,200.
byproduct material issued under part
34 of this chapter for industrial
radiography operations. Number of
locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04310, 04312].
(2) Licenses for possession and use of $5,200.
byproduct material issued under part
34 of this chapter for industrial
radiography operations. Number of
locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04311, 04313].
P. All other specific byproduct material $3,400.
licenses, except those in Categories 4.A.
through 9.D.\9\ Number of locations of
use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02400,
02410, 03120, 03121, 03122, 03123,
03124, 03130, 03140, 03220, 03221,
03222, 03800, 03810, 22130].
(1) All other specific byproduct $4,500.
material licenses, except those in
Categories 4.A. through 9.D.\9\
Number of locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04410, 04412, 04414, 04416,
04418, 04420, 04422, 04424,
04426, 04428, 04430, 04432,
04434, 04436, 04438].
(2) All other specific byproduct $5,700.
material licenses, except those in
Categories 4.A. through 9.D.\9\
Number of locations of use: More than
20.
[[Page 29649]]
Application [Program Code(s):
04411, 04413, 04415, 04417,
04419, 04421, 04423, 04425,
04427, 04429, 04431, 04433,
04435, 04437, 04439].
Q. Registration of a device(s) generally $700.
licensed under part 31 of this chapter.
Registration.
R. Possession of items or products
containing radium-226 identified in 10
CFR 31.12 which exceed the number of
items or limits specified in that
section.\5\
1. Possession of quantities exceeding $2,500.
the number of items or limits in 10
CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5) but less than
or equal to 10 times the number of
items or limits specified.
Application [Program Code(s):
02700].
2. Possession of quantities exceeding $2,500.
10 times the number of items or
limits specified in 10 CFR
31.12(a)(4) or (5).
Application [Program Code(s):
02710].
S. Licenses for production of accelerator- $14,100.
produced radionuclides.
Application [Program Code(s): 03210].
4. Waste disposal and processing: \11\
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the Full Cost.
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of contingency storage or
commercial land disposal by the licensee;
or licenses authorizing contingency
storage of low-level radioactive waste at
the site of nuclear power reactors; or
licenses for receipt of waste from other
persons for incineration or other
treatment, packaging of resulting waste
and residues, and transfer of packages to
another person authorized to receive or
dispose of waste material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03231,
03233, 03236, 06100, 06101].
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the $6,800.
receipt of waste byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material from other persons for the
purpose of packaging or repackaging the
material. The licensee will dispose of
the material by transfer to another
person authorized to receive or dispose
of the material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03234].
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the $5,000.
receipt of prepackaged waste byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material from other persons. The
licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to
receive or dispose of the material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03232].
5. Well logging: \11\
A. Licenses for possession and use of $4,500.
byproduct material, source material, and/
or special nuclear material for well
logging, well surveys, and tracer studies
other than field flooding tracer studies.
Application [Program Code(s): 03110,
03111, 03112].
B. Licenses for possession and use of Full Cost.
byproduct material for field flooding
tracer studies..
Licensing [Program Code(s): 03113]....
6. Nuclear laundries: \11\
A. Licenses for commercial collection and $21,900.
laundry of items contaminated with
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material.
Application [Program Code(s): 03218].
7. Medical licenses: \11\
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, $11,000.
and 70 of this chapter for human use of
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in gamma stereotactic
radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices,
or similar beam therapy devices. Number
of locations of use: 1-5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02300,
02310].
(1) Licenses issued under parts 30, $14,600.
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for
human use of byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained
in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery
units, teletherapy devices, or
similar beam therapy devices. Number
of locations of use: 6-20.
Application [Program Code(s): 04510,
04512].
(2) Licenses issued under parts 30, $18,300.
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for
human use of byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained
in gamma stereotactic radiosurgery
units, teletherapy devices, or
similar beam therapy devices. Number
of locations of use: More than 20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04511, 04513].
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to $8,600.
medical institutions or two or more
physicians under parts 30, 33, 35, 40,
and 70 of this chapter authorizing
research and development, including human
use of byproduct material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes the
possession and use of source material for
shielding when authorized on the same
license. Number of locations of use:
1[dash]5.
Application [Program Code(s): 02110].
(1) Licenses of broad scope issued to $11,400.
medical institutions or two or more
physicians under parts 30, 33, 35,
40, and 70 of this chapter
authorizing research and development,
including human use of byproduct
material, except licenses for
byproduct material, source material,
or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes
the possession and use of source
material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.
Number of locations of use:
6[dash]20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04710].
(2) Licenses of broad scope issued to $14,200.
medical institutions or two or more
physicians under parts 30, 33, 35,
40, and 70 of this chapter
authorizing research and development,
including human use of byproduct
material, except licenses for
byproduct material, source material,
or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes
the possession and use of source
material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.
Number of locations of use: More than
20.
Application [Program Code(s):
04711].
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30, $5,500.
35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human
use of byproduct material, source
material, and/or special nuclear
material, except licenses for byproduct
material, source material, or special
nuclear material in sealed sources
contained in teletherapy devices.\10\
[[Page 29650]]
Application [Program Code(s): 02120,
02121, 02200, 02201, 02210, 02220,
02230, 02231, 02240, 22160].
8. Civil defense: \11\
A. Licenses for possession and use of $2,500.
byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material for civil
defense activities.
Application [Program Code(s): 03710].
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety
evaluation:
A. Safety evaluation of devices or $5,400.
products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material, except reactor fuel devices,
for commercial distribution.
Application--each device.
B. Safety evaluation of devices or $8,900.
products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear
material manufactured in accordance with
the unique specifications of, and for use
by, a single applicant, except reactor
fuel devices.
Application--each device.
C. Safety evaluation of sealed sources $5,200.
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material,
except reactor fuel, for commercial
distribution.
Application--each source.
D. Safety evaluation of sealed sources $1,000.
containing byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material,
manufactured in accordance with the
unique specifications of, and for use by,
a single applicant, except reactor fuel.
Application--each source.
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Evaluation of casks, packages, and
shipping containers.
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and Full Cost.
plutonium air packages.
2. Other Casks........................ Full Cost.
B. Quality assurance program approvals
issued under part 71 of this chapter.
1. Users and Fabricators. Application. $4,200.
Inspections........................... Full Cost.
2. Users. Application................. $4,200.
Inspections........................... Full Cost.
C. Evaluation of security plans, route Full Cost.
approvals, route surveys, and
transportation security devices
(including immobilization devices).
11. Review of standardized spent fuel Full Cost.
facilities.
12. Special projects: Including approvals, pre- Full Cost.
application/licensing activities, and
inspections.
Application [Program Code: 25110].
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of Full Cost.
Compliance.
B. Inspections related to storage of spent Full Cost.
fuel under Sec. 72.210 of this chapter.
14. Decommissioning/Reclamation \11\
A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear Full Cost.
material licenses and other approvals
authorizing decommissioning,
decontamination, reclamation, or site
restoration activities under parts 30,
40, 70, 72, and 76 of this chapter,
including master materials licenses
(MMLs). The transition to this fee
category occurs when a licensee has
permanently ceased principal activities.
[Program Code(s): 03900, 11900, 21135,
21215, 21240, 21325, 22200].
B. Site-specific decommissioning Full Cost.
activities associated with unlicensed
sites, including MMLs, regardless of
whether or not the sites have been
previously licensed.
15. Import and Export licenses: \12\
Licenses issued under part 110 of this chapter
for the import and export only of special
nuclear material, source material, tritium
and other byproduct material, and the export
only of heavy water, or nuclear grade
graphite (fee categories 15.A. through
15.E.).
A. Application for export or import of N/A.
nuclear materials, including radioactive
waste requiring Commission and Executive
Branch review, for example, those actions
under 10 CFR 110.40(b).
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
B. Application for export or import of N/A.
nuclear material, including radioactive
waste, requiring Executive Branch review,
but not Commission review. This category
includes applications for the export and
import of radioactive waste and requires
the NRC to consult with domestic host
state authorities (i.e., Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Compact Commission, the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
etc.).
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
C. Application for export of nuclear N/A.
material, for example, routine reloads of
low enriched uranium reactor fuel and/or
natural uranium source material requiring
the assistance of the Executive Branch to
obtain foreign government assurances.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
D. Application for export or import of N/A.
nuclear material not requiring Commission
or Executive Branch review, or obtaining
foreign government assurances.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
E. Minor amendment of any active export or N/A.
import license, for example, to extend
the expiration date, change domestic
information, or make other revisions
which do not involve any substantive
changes to license terms and conditions
or to the type/quantity/chemical
composition of the material authorized
for export and, therefore, do not require
in-depth analysis, review, or
consultations with other Executive
Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign
government authorities. Minor amendment.
Licenses issued under part 110 of this chapter
for the import and export only of Category 1
and Category 2 quantities of radioactive
material listed in appendix P to part 110 of
this chapter (fee categories 15.F. through
15.R.). Category 1 (Appendix P, 10 CFR Part
110) Exports:
F. Application for export of appendix P N/A.
Category 1 materials requiring Commission
review (e.g., exceptional circumstance
review under 10 CFR 110.42(e)(4)) and to
obtain one government-to-government
consent for this process. For additional
consent see fee category 15.I.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
[[Page 29651]]
G. Application for export of appendix P N/A.
Category 1 materials requiring Executive
Branch review and to obtain one
government-to-government consent for this
process. For additional consents see fee
category 15.I.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
H. Application for export of appendix P N/A.
Category 1 materials and to obtain one
government-to-government consent for this
process. For additional consents see fee
category 15.I.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
I. Requests for each additional government- N/A.
to-government consent in support of an
export license application or active
export license.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
Category 2 (Appendix P, 10 CFR Part 110)
Exports:
J. Application for export of appendix P N/A.
Category 2 materials requiring Commission
review (e.g., exceptional circumstance
review under 10 CFR 110.42(e)(4)).
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
K. Applications for export of appendix P N/A.
Category 2 materials requiring Executive
Branch review.
Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption
request.
L. Application for the export of Category N/A.
2 materials. Application--new license, or
amendment; or license exemption request.
M. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
N. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
O. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
P. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
Q. [Reserved]............................. N/A.
Minor Amendments (Category 1 and 2, Appendix
P, 10 CFR Part 110, Export):
R. Minor amendment of any active export N/A.
license, for example, to extend the
expiration date, change domestic
information, or make other revisions
which do not involve any substantive
changes to license terms and conditions
or to the type/quantity/chemical
composition of the material authorized
for export and, therefore, do not require
in-depth analysis, review, or
consultations with other Executive
Branch, U.S. host state, or foreign
authorities. Minor amendment.
16. Reciprocity: Agreement State licensees who $1,800.
conduct activities under the reciprocity
provisions of 10 CFR 150.20. Application.
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope Full Cost.
issued to Government agencies.
Application [Program Code(s): 03614].
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance. Evaluation Full Cost.
of casks, packages, and shipping
containers (including spent fuel, high-
level waste, and other casks, and
plutonium air packages).
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Full Cost.
Act (UMTRCA) activities.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Types of fees--Separate charges, as shown in the schedule, will be
assessed for pre-application consultations and reviews; applications
for new licenses, approvals, or license terminations; possession-only
licenses; issuances of new licenses and approvals; certain amendments
and renewals to existing licenses and approvals; safety evaluations of
sealed sources and devices; generally licensed device registrations;
and certain inspections. The following guidelines apply to these
charges:
(a) Application and registration fees. Applications for new materials
licenses and export and import licenses; applications to reinstate
expired, terminated, or inactive licenses, except those subject to
fees assessed at full costs; applications filed by Agreement State
licensees to register under the general license provisions of 10 CFR
150.20; and applications for amendments to materials licenses that
would place the license in a higher fee category or add a new fee
category must be accompanied by the prescribed application fee for
each category.
(1) Applications for licenses covering more than one fee category of
special nuclear material or source material must be accompanied by the
prescribed application fee for the highest fee category.
(2) Applications for new licenses that cover both byproduct material and
special nuclear material in sealed sources for use in gauging devices
will pay the appropriate application fee for fee category 1.C. only.
(b) Licensing fees. Fees for reviews of applications for new licenses,
renewals, and amendments to existing licenses, pre-application
consultations and other documents submitted to the NRC for review, and
project manager time for fee categories subject to full cost fees are
due upon notification by the Commission in accordance with Sec.
170.12(b).
(c) Amendment fees. Applications for amendments to export and import
licenses must be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for each
license affected. An application for an amendment to an export or
import license or approval classified in more than one fee category
must be accompanied by the prescribed amendment fee for the category
affected by the amendment, unless the amendment is applicable to two
or more fee categories, in which case the amendment fee for the
highest fee category would apply.
(d) Inspection fees. Inspections resulting from investigations conducted
by the Office of Investigations and nonroutine inspections that result
from third-party allegations are not subject to fees. Inspection fees
are due upon notification by the Commission in accordance with Sec.
170.12(c).
(e) Generally licensed device registrations under 10 CFR 31.5.
Submittals of registration information must be accompanied by the
prescribed fee.
\2\ Fees will not be charged for orders related to civil penalties or
other civil sanctions issued by the Commission under 10 CFR 2.202 or
for amendments resulting specifically from the requirements of these
orders. For orders unrelated to civil penalties or other civil
sanctions, fees will be charged for any resulting licensee-specific
activities not otherwise exempted from fees under this chapter. Fees
will be charged for approvals issued under a specific exemption
provision of the Commission's regulations under title 10 of the Code
of Federal Regulations (e.g., 10 CFR 30.11, 40.14, 70.14, 73.5, and
any other sections in effect now or in the future), regardless of
whether the approval is in the form of a license amendment, letter of
approval, safety evaluation report, or other form. In addition to the
fee shown, an applicant may be assessed an additional fee for sealed
source and device evaluations as shown in fee categories 9.A. through
9.D.
\3\ Full cost fees will be determined based on the professional staff
time multiplied by the appropriate professional hourly rate
established in Sec. 170.20 in effect when the service is provided,
and the appropriate contractual support services expended.
\4\ Licensees paying fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., and 1.E. are not
subject to fees under categories 1.C., 1.D. and 1.F. for sealed
sources authorized in the same license, except for an application that
deals only with the sealed sources authorized by the license.
\5\ Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational
purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in
this category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources
are possessed for storage only.)
\6\ Licensees subject to fees under fee categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., or
2.A. must pay the largest applicable fee and are not subject to
additional fees listed in this table.
[[Page 29652]]
\7\ Licensees paying fees under 3.C., 3.C.1, or 3.C.2 are not subject to
fees under 2.B. for possession and shielding authorized on the same
license.
\8\ Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\9\ Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees
under 3.P., 3.P.1, or 3.P.2 for calibration or leak testing services
authorized on the same license.
\10\ Licensees paying fees under 7.B., 7.B.1, or 7.B.2 are not subject
to paying fees under 7.C. for broad scope licenses issued under parts
30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct
material, source material, and/or special nuclear material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices authorized
on the same license.
\11\ A materials license (or part of a materials license) that
transitions to fee category 14.A is assessed full-cost fees under 10
CFR part 170, but is not assessed an annual fee under 10 CFR part 171.
If only part of a materials license is transitioned to fee category
14.A, the licensee may be charged annual fees (and any applicable 10
CFR part 170 fees) for other activities authorized under the license
that are not in decommissioning status.
\12\ Because the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018, excludes
international activities from the fee-recoverable budget in fiscal
year 2018, import and export licensing actions will not be charged
fees.
PART 171--ANNUAL FEES FOR REACTOR LICENSES AND FUEL CYCLE LICENSES
AND MATERIALS LICENSES, INCLUDING HOLDERS OF CERTIFICATES OF
COMPLIANCE, REGISTRATIONS, AND QUALITY ASSURANCE PROGRAM APPROVALS
AND GOVERNMENT AGENCIES LICENSED BY THE NRC
0
7. The authority citation for part 171 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954, secs. 11, 161(w), 223, 234
(42 U.S.C. 2014, 2201(w), 2273, 2282); Energy Reorganization Act of
1974, sec. 201 (42 U.S.C. 5841); 42 U.S.C. 2214; 44 U.S.C. 3504
note.
0
8. In Sec. 171.3, revise the last sentence to read as follows:
Sec. 171.3 Scope.
* * * Notwithstanding the other provisions in this section, the
regulations in this part do not apply to uranium recovery and fuel
facility licensees until after the Commission verifies through
inspection that the facility has been constructed in accordance with
the requirements of the license.
Sec. 171.5 [Amended]
0
9. In Sec. 171.5, remove the definition of Overhead and general and
administrative costs.
0
10. In Sec. 171.15, revise paragraphs (b)(1), (b)(2) introductory
text, (c)(1), (c)(2) introductory text, (d)(1) introductory text,
(d)(1)(ii), (d)(2) and (3), and (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 171.15 Annual fees: Reactor licenses and independent spent fuel
storage licenses.
* * * * *
(b)(1) The FY 2018 annual fee for each operating power reactor that
must be collected by September 30, 2018, is $4,333,000.
(2) The FY 2018 annual fees are comprised of a base annual fee for
power reactors licensed to operate, a base spent fuel storage/reactor
decommissioning annual fee, and associated additional charges (fee-
relief adjustment). The activities comprising the spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning base annual fee are shown in paragraphs
(c)(2)(i) and (ii) of this section. The activities comprising the FY
2018 fee-relief adjustment are shown in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section. The activities comprising the FY 2018 base annual fee for
operating power reactors are as follows:
* * * * *
(c)(1) The FY 2018 annual fee for each power reactor holding a 10
CFR part 50 license that is in a decommissioning or possession-only
status and has spent fuel onsite, and for each independent spent fuel
storage 10 CFR part 72 licensee who does not hold a 10 CFR part 50
license, is $198,000.
(2) The FY 2018 annual fee is comprised of a base spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning annual fee (which is also included in
the operating power reactor annual fee shown in paragraph (b) of this
section) and a fee-relief adjustment. The activities comprising the FY
2018 fee-relief adjustment are shown in paragraph (d)(1) of this
section. The activities comprising the FY 2018 spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning rebaselined annual fee are:
* * * * *
(d)(1) The fee-relief adjustment allocated to annual fees includes
a surcharge for the activities listed in paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this
section, plus the amount remaining after total budgeted resources for
the activities included in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this
section are reduced by the appropriations the NRC receives for these
types of activities. If the NRC's appropriations for these types of
activities are greater than the budgeted resources for the activities
included in paragraphs (d)(1)(ii) and (iii) of this section for a given
fiscal year, annual fees will be reduced. The activities comprising the
FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment are as follows:
* * * * *
(ii) Activities not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or
class of licenses (e.g., support for the Agreement State program); and
* * * * *
(2) The total FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment allocated to the
operating power reactor class of licenses is a $3,349,085 fee-relief
credit, not including the amount allocated to the spent fuel storage/
reactor decommissioning class. The FY 2018 operating power reactor fee-
relief adjustment to be assessed to each operating power reactor is
approximately a $33,829 fee-relief credit. This amount is calculated by
dividing the total operating power reactor fee-relief adjustment,
$3,349,085, by the number of operating power reactors (99).
(3) The FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment allocated to the spent fuel
storage/reactor decommissioning class of licenses is a $172,641 fee-
relief credit. The FY 2018 spent fuel storage/reactor decommissioning
fee relief adjustment to be assessed to each operating power reactor,
each power reactor in decommissioning or possession-only status that
has spent fuel onsite, and to each independent spent fuel storage 10
CFR part 72 licensee who does not hold a 10 CFR part 50 license, is a
$1,415 fee-relief credit. This amount is calculated by dividing the
total fee-relief adjustment costs allocated to this class by the total
number of power reactors licenses, except those that permanently ceased
operations and have no fuel onsite, and 10 CFR part 72 licensees who do
not hold a 10 CFR part 50 license.
* * * * *
(f) The FY 2018 annual fees for licensees authorized to operate a
research or test (non-power) reactor licensed under 10 CFR part 50,
unless the reactor is exempted from fees under Sec. 171.11(a), are as
follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Research reactor........................................ $81,300
Test reactor............................................ 81,300
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
11. In Sec. 171.16, revise paragraphs (a)(2), (d), (e) introductory
text, and (e)(2) to read as follows:
[[Page 29653]]
Sec. 171.16 Annual fees: Materials licensees, holders of certificates
of compliance, holders of sealed source and device registrations,
holders of quality assurance program approvals, and government agencies
licensed by the NRC.
(a) * * *
(2) Notwithstanding the other provisions in this section, the
regulations in this part do not apply to uranium recovery and fuel
facility licensees until after the Commission verifies through
inspection that the facility has been constructed in accordance with
the requirements of the license.
* * * * *
(d) The FY 2018 annual fees are comprised of a base annual fee and
an allocation for fee-relief adjustment. The activities comprising the
FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment are shown for convenience in paragraph
(e) of this section. The FY 2018 annual fees for materials licensees
and holders of certificates, registrations, or approvals subject to
fees under this section are shown in the following table:
Schedule of Materials Annual Fees and Fees for Government Agencies
Licensed by NRC
[See footnotes at end of table]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual fees 1
Category of materials licenses 2 3
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Special nuclear material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of U-235 or
plutonium for fuel fabrication activities.
(a) Strategic Special Nuclear Material (High $7,346,000
Enriched Uranium) \15\ [Program Code(s): 21130]
(b) Low Enriched Uranium in Dispersible Form 2,661,000
Used for Fabrication of Power Reactor Fuel \15\
[Program Code(s): 21210].......................
(2) All other special nuclear materials licenses not
included in Category 1.A.(1) which are licensed for
fuel cycle activities.
(a) Facilities with limited operations \15\ N/A
[Program Code(s): 21310, 21320]................
(b) Gas centrifuge enrichment demonstration N/A
facility \15\..................................
(c) Others, including hot cell facility \15\.... N/A
B. Licenses for receipt and storage of spent fuel N/A
and reactor-related Greater than Class C (GTCC)
waste at an independent spent fuel storage
installation (ISFSI) \11,15\ [Program Code(s):
23200].............................................
C. Licenses for possession and use of special 2,900
nuclear material of less than a critical mass, as
defined in Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, in sealed
sources contained in devices used in industrial
measuring systems, including x-ray fluorescence
analyzers. [Program Code(s): 22140]................
D. All other special nuclear material licenses, 7,500
except licenses authorizing special nuclear
material in sealed or unsealed form in combination
that would constitute a critical mass, as defined
in Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, for which the
licensee shall pay the same fees as those under
Category 1.A. [Program Code(s): 22110, 22111,
22120, 22131, 22136, 22150, 22151, 22161, 22170,
23100, 23300, 23310]...............................
E. Licenses or certificates for the operation of a 3,513,000
uranium enrichment facility \15\ [Program Code(s):
21200].............................................
F. Licenses for possession and use of special 5,500
nuclear materials greater than critical mass, as
defined in Sec. 70.4 of this chapter, for
development and testing of commercial products, and
other non-fuel cycle activities.\4\ [Program Code:
22155].............................................
2. Source material:
A. (1) Licenses for possession and use of source 1,517,000
material for refining uranium mill concentrates to
uranium hexafluoride or for deconverting uranium
hexafluoride in the production of uranium oxides
for disposal.\15\ [Program Code: 11400]............
(2) Licenses for possession and use of source
material in recovery operations such as
milling, in-situ recovery, heap-leaching, ore
buying stations, ion-exchange facilities and in-
processing of ores containing source material
for extraction of metals other than uranium or
thorium, including licenses authorizing the
possession of byproduct waste material
(tailings) from source material recovery
operations, as well as licenses authorizing the
possession and maintenance of a facility in a
standby mode.
(a) Conventional and Heap Leach facilities 38,800
\15\ [Program Code(s): 11100]..............
(b) Basic In Situ Recovery facilities \15\ 49,200
[Program Code(s): 11500]...................
(c) Expanded In Situ Recovery facilities 55,700
\15\ [Program Code(s): 11510]..............
(d) In Situ Recovery Resin facilities \15\ \5\ N/A
[Program Code(s): 11550]...................
(e) Resin Toll Milling facilities \15\ [Program \5\ N/A
Code(s): 11555]................................
(3) Licenses that authorize the receipt of \5\ N/A
byproduct material, as defined in Section
11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from other
persons for possession and disposal, except
those licenses subject to the fees in Category
2.A.(2) or Category 2.A.(4) \15\ [Program
Code(s): 11600, 12000].........................
(4) Licenses that authorize the receipt of 22,000
byproduct material, as defined in Section
11e.(2) of the Atomic Energy Act, from other
persons for possession and disposal incidental
to the disposal of the uranium waste tailings
generated by the licensee's milling operations,
except those licenses subject to the fees in
Category 2.A.(2) \15\ [Program Code(s): 12010].
(5) Licenses that authorize the possession of 6,500
source material related to removal of
contaminants (source material) from drinking
water \15\ [Program Code(s): 11820]............
B. Licenses that authorize possession, use, and/or 3,200
installation of source material for shielding.16 17
[Program Code: 11210]..............................
C. Licenses to distribute items containing source 5,200
material to persons exempt from the licensing
requirements of part 40 of this chapter. [Program
Code: 11240].......................................
D. Licenses to distribute source material to persons 6,000
generally licensed under part 40 of this chapter
[Program Code(s): 11230 and 11231].................
E. Licenses for possession and use of source 7,400
material for processing or manufacturing of
products or materials containing source material
for commercial distribution. [Program Code: 11710].
F. All other source material licenses. [Program 9,200
Code(s): 11200, 11220, 11221, 11300, 11800, 11810].
3. Byproduct material:
[[Page 29654]]
A. Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of 30,700
byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of
this chapter for processing or manufacturing of
items containing byproduct material for commercial
distribution. Number of locations of use: 1-5.
[Program Code(s): 03211, 03212, 03213].............
(1) Licenses of broad scope for the possession 40,600
and use of byproduct material issued under
parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for processing
or manufacturing of items containing byproduct
material for commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 6-20. [Program Code(s):
04010, 04012, 04014]...........................
(2) Licenses of broad scope for the possession 50,600
and use of byproduct material issued under
parts 30 and 33 of this chapter for processing
or manufacturing of items containing byproduct
material for commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: More than 20. [Program
Code(s): 04011, 04013, 04015]..................
B. Other licenses for possession and use of 11,400
byproduct material issued under part 30 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of items
containing byproduct material for commercial
distribution. Number of locations of use: 1-5.
[Program Code(s): 03214, 03215, 22135, 22162]......
(1) Other licenses for possession and use of 15,100
byproduct material issued under part 30 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of
items containing byproduct material for
commercial distribution. Number of locations of
use: 6-20. [Program Code(s): 04110, 04112,
04114, 04116]..................................
(2) Other licenses for possession and use of 18,900
byproduct material issued under part 30 of this
chapter for processing or manufacturing of
items containing byproduct material for
commercial distribution. Number of locations of
use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04111,
04113, 04115, 04117]...........................
C. Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. 32.72 and/or 11,500
32.74 of this chapter that authorize the processing
or manufacturing and distribution or redistribution
of radiopharmaceuticals, generators, reagent kits,
and/or sources and devices containing byproduct
material. This category does not apply to licenses
issued to nonprofit educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt under Sec.
170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of use: 1-5.
[Program Code(s): 02500, 02511, 02513].............
(1) Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. 32.72 and/ 15,200
or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the
processing or manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals,
generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and
devices containing byproduct material. This
category does not apply to licenses issued to
nonprofit educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt under
Sec. 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of
use: 6-20. [Program Code(s): 04210, 04212,
04214].........................................
(2) Licenses issued under Sec. Sec. 32.72 and/ 18,800
or 32.74 of this chapter that authorize the
processing or manufacturing and distribution or
redistribution of radiopharmaceuticals,
generators, reagent kits, and/or sources and
devices containing byproduct material. This
category does not apply to licenses issued to
nonprofit educational institutions whose
processing or manufacturing is exempt under
Sec. 170.11(a)(4). Number of locations of
use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04211,
04213, 04215]..................................
D. [Reserved]....................................... \5\ N/A
E. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 10,100
material in sealed sources for irradiation of
materials in which the source is not removed from
its shield (self-shielded units) [Program Code(s):
03510, 03520]......................................
F. Licenses for possession and use of less than or 11,000
equal to 10,000 curies of byproduct material in
sealed sources for irradiation of materials in
which the source is exposed for irradiation
purposes. This category also includes underwater
irradiators for irradiation of materials in which
the source is not exposed for irradiation purposes
[Program Code(s): 03511]...........................
G. Licenses for possession and use of greater than 91,000
10,000 curies of byproduct material in sealed
sources for irradiation of materials in which the
source is exposed for irradiation purposes. This
category also includes underwater irradiators for
irradiation of materials in which the source is not
exposed for irradiation purposes [Program Code(s):
03521].............................................
H. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of 11,100
this chapter to distribute items containing
byproduct material that require device review to
persons exempt from the licensing requirements of
part 30 of this chapter, except specific licenses
authorizing redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons exempt from
the licensing requirements of part 30 of this
chapter [Program Code(s): 03254, 03255, 03257].....
I. Licenses issued under subpart A of part 32 of 15,500
this chapter to distribute items containing
byproduct material or quantities of byproduct
material that do not require device evaluation to
persons exempt from the licensing requirements of
part 30 of this chapter, except for specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of items that
have been authorized for distribution to persons
exempt from the licensing requirements of part 30
of this chapter [Program Code(s): 03250, 03251,
03252, 03253, 03256]...............................
J. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of 4,300
this chapter to distribute items containing
byproduct material that require sealed source and/
or device review to persons generally licensed
under part 31 of this chapter, except specific
licenses authorizing redistribution of items that
have been authorized for distribution to persons
generally licensed under part 31 of this chapter
[Program Code(s): 03240, 03241, 03243].............
K. Licenses issued under subpart B of part 32 of 3,100
this chapter to distribute items containing
byproduct material or quantities of byproduct
material that do not require sealed source and/or
device review to persons generally licensed under
part 31 of this chapter, except specific licenses
authorizing redistribution of items that have been
authorized for distribution to persons generally
licensed under part 31 of this chapter [Program
Code(s): 03242, 03244].............................
L. Licenses of broad scope for possession and use of 14,600
byproduct material issued under parts 30 and 33 of
this chapter for research and development that do
not authorize commercial distribution. Number of
locations of use: 1-5. [Program Code(s): 01100,
01110, 01120, 03610, 03611, 03612, 03613]..........
(1) Licenses of broad scope for possession and 19,300
use of product material issued under parts 30
and 33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize commercial
distribution. Number of locations of use: 6-20.
[Program Code(s): 04610, 04612, 04614, 04616,
04618, 04620, 04622]...........................
[[Page 29655]]
(2) Licenses of broad scope for possession and 24,000
use of byproduct material issued under parts 30
and 33 of this chapter for research and
development that do not authorize commercial
distribution. Number of locations of use: More
than 20. [Program Code(s): 04611, 04613, 04615,
04617, 04619, 04621, 04623]....................
M. Other licenses for possession and use of 13,300
byproduct material issued under part 30 of this
chapter for research and development that do not
authorize commercial distribution [Program Code(s):
03620].............................................
N. Licenses that authorize services for other 17,600
licensees, except: (1) Licenses that authorize only
calibration and/or leak testing services are
subject to the fees specified in fee Category 3.P.;
and (2) Licenses that authorize waste disposal
services are subject to the fees specified in fee
categories 4.A., 4.B., and 4.C. [Program Code(s):
03219, 03225, 03226]...............................
O. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 25,000
material issued under part 34 of this chapter for
industrial radiography operations. This category
also includes the possession and use of source
material for shielding authorized under part 40 of
this chapter when authorized on the same license
Number of locations of use: 1-5. [Program Code(s):
03310, 03320]......................................
(1) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 33,400
material issued under part 34 of this chapter
for industrial radiography operations. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding authorized
under part 40 of this chapter when authorized
on the same license. Number of locations of
use: 6-20. [Program Code(s): 04310, 04312].....
(2) Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 41,600
material issued under part 34 of this chapter
for industrial radiography operations. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding authorized
under part 40 of this chapter when authorized
on the same license. Number of locations of
use: More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04311,
04313].........................................
P. All other specific byproduct material licenses, 8,600
except those in Categories 4.A. through 9.D.\18\
Number of locations of use: 1-5. [Program Code(s):
02400, 02410, 03120, 03121, 03122, 03123, 03124,
03140, 03130, 03220, 03221, 03222, 03800, 03810,
22130].............................................
(1) All other specific byproduct material 11,400
licenses, except those in Categories 4.A.
through 9.D.\18\ Number of locations of use: 6-
20. [Program Code(s): 04410, 04412, 04414,
04416, 04418, 04420, 04422, 04424, 04426,
04428, 04430, 04432, 04434, 04436, 04438]......
(2) All other specific byproduct material 14,400
licenses, except those in Categories 4.A.
through 9.D.\18\ Number of locations of use:
More than 20. [Program Code(s): 04411, 04413,
04415, 04417, 04419, 04421, 04423, 04425,
04427, 04429, 04431, 04433, 04435, 04437,
04439].........................................
Q. Registration of devices generally licensed under \13\ N/A
part 31 of this chapter............................
R. Possession of items or products containing radium-
226 identified in 10 CFR 31.12 which exceed the
number of items or limits specified in that
section: \14\
(1) Possession of quantities exceeding the 7,100
number of items or limits in 10 CFR 31.12(a)(4)
or (5) but less than or equal to 10 times the
number of items or limits specified [Program
Code(s): 02700]................................
(2) Possession of quantities exceeding 10 times 7,500
the number of items or limits specified in 10
CFR 31.12(a)(4) or (5) [Program Code(s): 02710]
S. Licenses for production of accelerator-produced 30,200
radionuclides [Program Code(s): 03210].............
4. Waste disposal and processing:
A. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of \5\ N/A
waste byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material from other persons for the
purpose of contingency storage or commercial land
disposal by the licensee; or licenses authorizing
contingency storage of low-level radioactive waste
at the site of nuclear power reactors; or licenses
for receipt of waste from other persons for
incineration or other treatment, packaging of
resulting waste and residues, and transfer of
packages to another person authorized to receive or
dispose of waste material [Program Code(s): 03231,
03233, 03235, 03236, 06100, 06101].................
B. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of 18,900
waste byproduct material, source material, or
special nuclear material from other persons for the
purpose of packaging or repackaging the material.
The licensee will dispose of the material by
transfer to another person authorized to receive or
dispose of the material [Program Code(s): 03234]...
C. Licenses specifically authorizing the receipt of 10,800
prepackaged waste byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material from other
persons. The licensee will dispose of the material
by transfer to another person authorized to receive
or dispose of the material [Program Code(s): 03232]
5. Well logging:
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 14,900
material, source material, and/or special nuclear
material for well logging, well surveys, and tracer
studies other than field flooding tracer studies
[Program Code(s): 03110, 03111, 03112].............
B. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct \5\ N/A
material for field flooding tracer studies.
[Program Code(s): 03113]...........................
6. Nuclear laundries:
A. Licenses for commercial collection and laundry of 35,600
items contaminated with byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material [Program
Code(s): 03218]....................................
7. Medical licenses:
A. Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of 20,600
this chapter for human use of byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in gamma stereotactic
radiosurgery units, teletherapy devices, or similar
beam therapy devices. This category also includes
the possession and use of source material for
shielding when authorized on the same license.\9\
Number of locations of use: 1-5. [Program Code(s):
02300, 02310]......................................
[[Page 29656]]
(1) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 30,100
70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct
material, source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained in gamma
stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.\9\ Number of
locations of use: 6-20. [Program Code(s):
04510, 04512]..................................
(2) Licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 34,100
70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct
material, source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained in gamma
stereotactic radiosurgery units, teletherapy
devices, or similar beam therapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.9 19 Number of
locations of use: More than 20. [Program
Code(s): 04511, 04513].........................
B. Licenses of broad scope issued to medical 30,900
institutions or two or more physicians under parts
30, 33, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter authorizing
research and development, including human use of
byproduct material, except licenses for byproduct
material, source material, or special nuclear
material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy
devices. This category also includes the possession
and use of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.\9\ Number of
locations of use: 1-5. [Program Code(s): 02110]....
(1) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical 40,700
institutions or two or more physicians under
parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter
authorizing research and development, including
human use of byproduct material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in teletherapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.\9\ Number of
locations of use: 6-20. [Program Code(s):
04710].........................................
(2) Licenses of broad scope issued to medical 50,500
institutions or two or more physicians under
parts 30, 33, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter
authorizing research and development, including
human use of byproduct material, except
licenses for byproduct material, source
material, or special nuclear material in sealed
sources contained in teletherapy devices. This
category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding when
authorized on the same license.\9\ Number of
locations of use: More than 20. [Program
Code(s): 04711]................................
C. Other licenses issued under parts 30, 35, 40, and 13,900
70 of this chapter for human use of byproduct
material, source material, and/or special nuclear
material, except licenses for byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material in
sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices.
This category also includes the possession and use
of source material for shielding when authorized on
the same license.9 19 [Program Code(s): 02120,
02121, 02200, 02201, 02210, 02220, 02230, 02231,
02240, 22160]......................................
8. Civil defense:
A. Licenses for possession and use of byproduct 7,100
material, source material, or special nuclear
material for civil defense activities [Program
Code(s): 03710]....................................
9. Device, product, or sealed source safety evaluation:
A. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of 7,300
devices or products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material,
except reactor fuel devices, for commercial
distribution.......................................
B. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of 12,100
devices or products containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material
manufactured in accordance with the unique
specifications of, and for use by, a single
applicant, except reactor fuel devices.............
C. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of 7,000
sealed sources containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material,
except reactor fuel, for commercial distribution...
D. Registrations issued for the safety evaluation of 1,400
sealed sources containing byproduct material,
source material, or special nuclear material,
manufactured in accordance with the unique
specifications of, and for use by, a single
applicant, except reactor fuel.....................
10. Transportation of radioactive material:
A. Certificates of Compliance or other package
approvals issued for design of casks, packages, and
shipping containers.
1. Spent Fuel, High-Level Waste, and plutonium \6\ N/A
air packages...................................
2. Other Casks.................................. \6\N/A
B. Quality assurance program approvals issued under
part 71 of this chapter.
1. Users and Fabricators........................ \6\ N/A
2. Users........................................ \6\ N/A
C. Evaluation of security plans, route approvals, \6\ N/A
route surveys, and transportation security devices
(including immobilization devices).................
11. Standardized spent fuel facilities.................. \6\ N/A
12. Special Projects [Program Code(s): 25110]........... \6\ N/A
13. A. Spent fuel storage cask Certificate of Compliance \6\ N/A
B. General licenses for storage of spent fuel under \12\ N/A
10 CFR 72.210......................................
14. Decommissioning/Reclamation:
A. Byproduct, source, or special nuclear material 7 20 0
licenses and other approvals authorizing
decommissioning, decontamination, reclamation, or
site restoration activities under parts 30, 40, 70,
72, and 76 of this chapter, including master
materials licenses (MMLs). The transition to this
fee category occurs when a licensee has permanently
ceased principal activities. [Program Code(s):
03900, 11900, 21135, 21215, 21240, 21325, 22200]...
B. Site-specific decommissioning activities \7\ N/A
associated with unlicensed sites, including MMLs,
whether or not the sites have been previously
licensed...........................................
15. Import and Export licenses.......................... \8\ N/A
16. Reciprocity......................................... \8\ N/A
[[Page 29657]]
17. Master materials licenses of broad scope issued to 320,000
Government agencies.\15\ [Program Code(s): 03614]......
18. Department of Energy:
A. Certificates of Compliance....................... \10\ 1,082,000
B. Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act 122,000
(UMTRCA) activities................................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Annual fees will be assessed based on whether a licensee held a
valid license with the NRC authorizing possession and use of
radioactive material during the current FY. The annual fee is waived
for those materials licenses and holders of certificates,
registrations, and approvals who either filed for termination of their
licenses or approvals or filed for possession only/storage licenses
before October 1 of the current FY, and permanently ceased licensed
activities entirely before this date. Annual fees for licensees who
filed for termination of a license, downgrade of a license, or for a
possession-only license during the FY and for new licenses issued
during the FY will be prorated in accordance with the provisions of
Sec. 171.17. If a person holds more than one license, certificate,
registration, or approval, the annual fee(s) will be assessed for each
license, certificate, registration, or approval held by that person.
For licenses that authorize more than one activity on a single license
(e.g., human use and irradiator activities), annual fees will be
assessed for each category applicable to the license.
\2\ Payment of the prescribed annual fee does not automatically renew
the license, certificate, registration, or approval for which the fee
is paid. Renewal applications must be filed in accordance with the
requirements of parts 30, 40, 70, 71, 72, or 76 of this chapter.
\3\ Each FY, fees for these materials licenses will be calculated and
assessed in accordance with Sec. 171.13 and will be published in the
Federal Register for notice and comment.
\4\ Other facilities include licenses for extraction of metals, heavy
metals, and rare earths.
\5\ There are no existing NRC licenses in these fee categories. If NRC
issues a license for these categories, the Commission will consider
establishing an annual fee for this type of license.
\6\ Standardized spent fuel facilities, 10 CFR parts 71 and 72
Certificates of Compliance and related Quality Assurance program
approvals, and special reviews, such as topical reports, are not
assessed an annual fee because the generic costs of regulating these
activities are primarily attributable to users of the designs,
certificates, and topical reports.
\7\Licensees in this category are not assessed an annual fee because
they are charged an annual fee in other categories while they are
licensed to operate.
\8\ No annual fee is charged because it is not practical to administer
due to the relatively short life or temporary nature of the license.
\9\ Separate annual fees will not be assessed for pacemaker licenses
issued to medical institutions that also hold nuclear medicine
licenses under fee categories 7.A, 7.A.1, 7.A.2, 7.B., 7.B.1, 7.B.2,
or 7.C.
\10\ This includes Certificates of Compliance issued to the U.S.
Department of Energy that are not funded from the Nuclear Waste Fund.
\11\ See Sec. 171.15(c).
\12\ See Sec. 171.15(c).
\13\ No annual fee is charged for this category because the cost of the
general license registration program applicable to licenses in this
category will be recovered through 10 CFR part 170 fees.
\14\ Persons who possess radium sources that are used for operational
purposes in another fee category are not also subject to the fees in
this category. (This exception does not apply if the radium sources
are possessed for storage only.)
\15\Licensees subject to fees under categories 1.A., 1.B., 1.E., 2.A.,
and licensees paying fees under fee category 17 must pay the largest
applicable fee and are not subject to additional fees listed in this
table.
\16\ Licensees paying fees under 3.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\17\ Licensees paying fees under 7.C. are not subject to fees under 2.B.
for possession and shielding authorized on the same license.
\18\ Licensees paying fees under 3.N. are not subject to paying fees
under 3.P., 3.P.1, or 3.P.2 for calibration or leak testing services
authorized on the same license.
\19\ Licensees paying fees under 7.B., 7.B.1, or 7.B.2 are not subject
to paying fees under 7.C. for broad scope license licenses issued
under parts 30, 35, 40, and 70 of this chapter for human use of
byproduct material, source material, and/or special nuclear material,
except licenses for byproduct material, source material, or special
nuclear material in sealed sources contained in teletherapy devices
authorized on the same license.
\20\ No annual fee is charged for a materials license (or part of a
materials license) that has transitioned to this fee category because
the decommissioning costs will be recovered through 10 CFR part 170
fees, but annual fees may be charged for other activities authorized
under the license that are not in decommissioning status.
(e) The fee-relief adjustment allocated to annual fees includes the
budgeted resources for the activities listed in paragraph (e)(1) of
this section, plus the total budgeted resources for the activities
included in paragraphs (e)(2) and (3) of this section, as reduced by
the appropriations the NRC receives for these types of activities. If
the NRC's appropriations for these types of activities are greater than
the budgeted resources for the activities included in paragraphs (e)(2)
and (3) of this section for a given fiscal year, a negative fee-relief
adjustment (or annual fee reduction) will be allocated to annual fees.
The activities comprising the FY 2018 fee-relief adjustment are as
follows:
* * * * *
(2) Activities not attributable to an existing NRC licensee or
class of licenses (e.g., support for the Agreement State program); and
* * * * *
0
12. In Sec. 171.17, revise paragraph (a) introductory text to read as
follows:
Sec. 171.17 Proration.
* * * * *
(a) Reactors, 10 CFR part 72 licensees who do not hold 10 CFR part
50 licenses, and materials licenses with annual fees of $100,000 or
greater for a single fee category. The NRC will base the proration of
annual fees for terminated and downgraded licensees on the fee rule in
effect at the time the action is official. The NRC will base the
determinations on the proration requirements under paragraphs (a)(2)
and (3) of this section.
* * * * *
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 11th day of June 2018.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Maureen E. Wylie,
Chief Financial Officer.
[FR Doc. 2018-13320 Filed 6-22-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P