Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 6, September 18, 2024
(1)
Additional requirements.
a. In addition to the requirements of this
chapter, all licensees are subject to the requirements of 641-Chapters 38, 40
and 41. Furthermore, licensees engaged in industrial/nonmedical radiographic
operations are subject to the requirements of 641-Chapter 45; licensees using
radionuclides in the healing arts are subject to the requirements of
641-41.2 (136C) and 641-Chapter
42; and licensees engaged in land disposal of radioactive material are subject
to the requirements of 641-Chapter 40.
b. An Iowa radioactive materials license
requires that the person have a permanent storage area in Iowa where records
are maintained pertaining to licensed activities, equipment maintenance and
quality assurance, personnel monitoring, and personnel certification and where
material can be stored. The records may be stored on a van, if appropriate. The
storage area must be accessible during inspections. An Iowa mailing address is
not required.
(2)
Source material.
a. Any
person is exempt from this chapter to the extent that such person receives,
possesses, uses, owns, or transfers source material in any chemical mixture,
compound, solution, or alloy in which the source material is by weight less
than 1/20 of 1 percent (0.05 percent) of the mixture, compound, solution, or
alloy.
b. Any person is exempt from
this chapter to the extent that such person receives, possesses, uses, or
transfers unrefined and unprocessed ore containing source material; provided
that, except as authorized in a specific license, such person shall not refine
or process such ore.
c. Any person
is exempt from the requirements for a license set forth in this chapter and
from the rules in this chapter and 641-Chapter 40 to the extent that such
person receives, possesses, uses, or transfers:
(1) Any quantities of thorium contained in:
1. Incandescent gas mantles,
2. Vacuum tubes,
3. Welding rods,
4. Electric lamps for illuminating purposes,
provided that each lamp does not contain more than 50 milligrams of
thorium,
5. Germicidal lamps,
sunlamps, and lamps for outdoor or industrial lighting, provided that each lamp
does not contain more than 2 grams of thorium,
6. Rare earth metals and compounds, mixtures,
and products containing not more than 0.25 percent by weight thorium, uranium,
or any combination of these, or
7.
Personnel neutron dosimeters, provided that each dosimeter does not contain
more than 50 milligrams of thorium.
(2) Source material contained in the
following products:
1. Glazed ceramic
tableware manufactured before November 5, 2014, provided that the glaze
contains not more than 20 percent by weight source material,
2. Glassware containing not more than 2
percent by weight source material or, for glassware manufactured before
November 5, 2014, 10 percent by weight source material, but not including
commercially manufactured glass brick, pane glass, ceramic tile, or other glass
or ceramic used in construction,
3.
Glass enamel or glass enamel frit containing not more than 10 percent by weight
source material imported or ordered for importation into the United States, or
initially distributed by manufacturers in the United States, before July 25,
1983, or
4. Piezoelectric ceramic
containing not more than 2 percent by weight source material.
(3) Photographic film, negatives,
and prints containing uranium or thorium.
(4) Any finished product or part fabricated
of, or containing, tungsten-thorium or magnesium-thorium alloys, provided that
the thorium content of the alloy does not exceed 4 percent by weight and that
this exemption shall not be deemed to authorize the chemical, physical, or
metallurgical treatment or processing of any such product or part.
(5) Uranium contained in counterweights
installed in aircraft, rockets, projectiles, and missiles, or stored or handled
in connection with installation or removal of such counterweights, provided
that:
1. Reserved.
2. Each counterweight has been impressed with
the following legend clearly legible through any plating or other covering:
"DEPLETED URANIUM,"
3. Each
counterweight is durably and legibly labeled or marked with the identification
of the manufacturer and the statement: "UNAUTHORIZED ALTERATIONS PROHIBITED,"
and
4. This exemption shall not be
deemed to authorize the chemical, physical, or metallurgical treatment or
processing of any such counterweights other than repair or restoration of any
plating or other covering.
(6) Natural or depleted uranium metal used as
shielding constituting part of any shipping container, provided that:
1. The shipping container is conspicuously
and legibly impressed with the legend "CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE SHIELDING-URANIUM,"
and
2. The uranium metal is encased
in mild steel or equally fire-resistant metal of minimum wall thickness of 1/8
inch (3.2 mm).
(7)
Thorium or uranium contained in or on finished optical lenses and mirrors,
provided that each lens or mirror does not contain more than 10 percent by
weight of thorium or uranium or, for lenses manufactured before November 5,
2014, 30 percent by weight of thorium; and that this exemption does not
authorize either:
1. The shaping, grinding, or
polishing of such lens or mirror or manufacturing processes other than the
assembly of such lens or mirror into optical systems and devices without any
alteration of the lens or mirror, or
2. The receipt, possession, use, or transfer
of uranium or thorium contained in contact lenses, or in spectacles, or in
eyepieces in binoculars or other optical instruments.
(8) Reserved.
(9) Thorium contained in any finished
aircraft engine part containing nickel-thoria alloy, provided that:
1. The thorium is dispersed in the
nickel-thoria alloy in the form of finely divided thoria (thorium dioxide),
and
2. The thorium content in the
nickel-thoria alloy does not exceed 4 percent by weight.
d. The exemptions in
39.4(2) do not authorize the manufacture of any of the products
described.
e. The requirements
specified in 39.4(2)"c"(5)"2" and "3" need not be met by
counterweights manufactured prior to December 31, 1969, provided that such
counterweights are impressed with the legend, "CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE
MATERIAL-URANIUM," as previously required by the rules.
f. No person may initially transfer for sale
or distribution a product containing source material to persons exempt under
these rules, or equivalent regulations of an agreement state or the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, unless authorized by a license issued under
10
CFR 40.52 to initially transfer such products
for sale or distribution.
(1) Persons
initially transferring for sale or distributing source material in products
covered by the exemptions in these rules before November 5, 2014, without
specific authorization may continue such distribution for one year beyond this
date. Initial distribution may also be continued until the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission takes final action on a pending application for license or license
amendment to specifically authorize distribution submitted no later than one
year beyond this date.
(2) Persons
authorized to manufacture, process, or produce these materials or products
containing source material by the agency, an agreement state, or the Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, and persons who import finished products or parts, for
sale or distribution must be authorized by a license issued under
10
CFR 40.52 for distribution only and are
exempt from the requirements of 641-Chapter 40 and 39.4(25)"a"
and "b."
(3)
Radioactive material other than
source material,
a. Exempt
concentrations.
(1) Except as provided in
39.4(3)"a"(2), any person is exempt from this chapter to the
extent that such person receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns or acquires
products containing radioactive material introduced in concentrations not in
excess of those listed in Appendix A of this chapter.
(2) No person may introduce radioactive
material into a product or material knowing or having reason to believe that it
will be transferred to persons exempt under 39.4(3)"a"(1) or
equivalent regulations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or any
agreement state, except in accordance with a specific license issued pursuant
to
10
CFR 32.11.
(3) An exemption is granted to persons who
receive, possess, use, process, transfer, distribute, and dispose of materials
containing or contaminated at concentrations less than 20 picocuries per gram
of radium.
(4) This rule shall not
be deemed to authorize the import of radioactive material or products
containing radioactive material.
(5) A manufacturer, processor, or producer of
a product or material is exempt from the requirements for a license and from
these rules to the extent that the manufacturer, processor, or producer
transfers radioactive material contained in a product or material in
concentrations not in excess of the requirements in Appendix A of this chapter
and introduced into the product or material by a licensee holding a specific
license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission expressly authorizing
such introduction. This exemption does not apply to the transfer of radioactive
material contained in any food, beverage, cosmetic, drug, or other commodity or
product designed for ingestion or inhalation by, or application to, a human
being.
b.
Exempt
quantities.
(1) Except as provided
in 39.4(3)"b"(3), (4), and (5), any person is exempt from the
requirements for a license and from these rules to the extent that such person
receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns, or acquires radioactive material in
individual quantities, each of which does not exceed the applicable quantity
set forth in Appendix B of this chapter.
(2) Any person who possesses radioactive
material received or acquired under a general license is exempt from the
requirements for a license set forth in this chapter to the extent that such
person possesses, uses, transfers or owns such radioactive material.
(3) This paragraph
(39.4(3)"b") does not authorize for purposes of commercial
distribution the production, packaging, repackaging or transfer of radioactive
material or the incorporation of radioactive material into products intended
for commercial distribution.
(4) No
person may, for purposes of commercial distribution, transfer radioactive
material in the individual quantities set forth in Appendix B of this chapter,
knowing or having reason to believe that such quantities of radioactive
material will be transferred to persons exempt under 39.4(3) or equivalent
regulations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, any agreement state or
licensing state, except in accordance with a specific license issued by the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 32.18 of 10 CFR 32,
which license states that the radioactive material may be transferred by the
licensee to persons exempt under 39.4(3)"b" or the equivalent
regulations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an agreement state, or
licensing state. Authority to transfer possession or control by the
manufacturer, processor, or producer of any equipment, device, commodity, or
other product containing byproduct material whose subsequent possession, use,
transfer, and disposal by all other persons are exempted from regulatory
requirements may be obtained only from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, D.C. 20555.
(5) No
person may, for purposes of producing an increased radiation level, combine
quantities of radioactive material covered by this exemption so that the
aggregate quantity exceeds the limits set forth in Appendix B of this chapter,
except for radioactive material combined within a device placed in use before
May 3, 1999, or as otherwise permitted by the rules in this
chapter.
c. Exempt items.
(1) Certain items containing radioactive
material. Except for persons who apply radioactive material to or persons who
incorporate radioactive material into the following products, or persons who
initially transfer for sale or distribution the following products containing
radioactive material, any person is exempt from the requirements for a license
set forth in this chapter and from these rules to the extent that the person
receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns, or acquires the following products:
1. Timepieces or hands or dials containing
not more than the following specified quantities of radioactive material and
not exceeding the following specified radiation dose rate:
* 25 millicuries (925 MBq) of tritium per timepiece;
* 5 millicuries (185 MBq) of tritium per hand;
* 15 millicuries (555 MBq) of tritium per dial (bezels when
used shall be considered as part of the dial);
* 100 microcuries (3.7 MBq) of promethium-147 per watch or 200
microcuries (7.4 MBq) of promethium-147 per any other timepiece;
* 20 microcuries (0.74 MBq) of promethium-147 per watch hand or
40 microcuries (1.48 MBq) of promethium-147 per other timepiece hand;
* 60 microcuries (2.22 MBq) of promethium-147 per watch dial or
120 microcuries (4.44 MBq) of promethium-147 per other timepiece dial (bezels
when used shall be considered as part of the dial);
* One microcurie (37 kBq) of radium-226 per timepiece in intact
timepieces manufactured prior to November 30, 2007.
2. The radiation dose rate from hands and
dials containing promethium-147 will not exceed, when measured through 50
milligrams per square centimeter of absorber:
* For wrist watches, 0.1 millirad (1 µGy) per hour at 10
centimeters from any surface.
* For pocket watches, 0.1 millirad (1 µGy) per hour at 1
centimeter from any surface.
* For any other timepiece, 0.2 millirad (2 µGy) per hour
at 10 centimeters from any surface.
3. Precision balances containing not more
than 1 millicurie (37 MBq) of tritium per balance or not more than 0.5
millicurie (18.5 MBq) of tritium per balance part manufactured before December
17, 2007.
4. Marine compasses
containing not more than 750 millicuries (27.8 GBq) of tritium gas and other
marine navigational instruments containing not more than 250 millicuries (9.25
GBq) of tritium gas manufactured before December 17, 2007.
5. Electron tubes, provided that each tube
does not contain more than one of the following specified quantities of
radioactive material:
* 150 millicuries (5.55 GBq) of tritium per microwave receiver
protector tube or 10 millicuries (370 MBq) of tritium per any other electron
tube;
* 1 microcurie (37 kBq) of cobalt-60;
* 5 microcuries (185 kBq) of nickel-63;
* 30 microcuries (1.11 MBq) of krypton-85;
* 5 microcuries (185 kBq) of cesium-137; and
* 30 microcuries (1.11 MBq) of promethium-147.
And provided further, that the radiation dose rate from each
electron tube containing radioactive material will not exceed 1 millirad (10
µGy) per hour at 1 centimeter from any surface when measured through 7
milligrams per square centimeter of absorber. For purposes of 39.4(3)
"c"(1)"5," the term "electron tubes" includes spark gap tubes,
power tubes, gas tubes including glow lamps, receiving tubes, microwave tubes,
indicator tubes, pick-up tubes, radiation detection tubes, and any other
completely sealed tube that is designed to conduct or control electrical
currents.
6. Ionizing
radiation measuring instruments, for purposes of internal calibration or
standardization, containing one or more sources of radioactive material,
provided that:
* Each source contains no more than one exempt quantity set
forth in Appendix B of this chapter;
* Each device contains no more than ten exempt quantities. For
purposes of this requirement, a device's source(s) may contain either one type
of or different types of radionuclides, and an individual exempt quantity may
be composed of fractional parts of one or more of the exempt quantities in
Appendix B of this chapter, provided that the sum of such fractions shall not
exceed unity; or
* For americium-241, 0.05 microcurie (1.85 kBq) is considered
an exempt quantity under 39.4(3)"c"(1)"6."
7. Ionization chamber smoke detectors
containing not more than 1 microcurie (µCi) of americium-241 per detector
in the form of a foil and designed to protect life and property from fires.
Any person who desires to apply byproduct material to, or to
incorporate byproduct material into, the products exempted in subparagraph
39.4(3)"c"(1), or who desires to initially transfer for sale
or distribution such products containing byproduct material, should apply for a
specific license with the Nuclear Regulatory Commission pursuant to
10
CFR 32.14, which license states that the
product may be distributed by the licensee to persons exempt from the
regulations pursuant to subparagraph
39.4(3)"c"(1).
(2) Self-luminous products containing
radioactive material.
1. Tritium, krypton-85,
or promethium-147. Except for persons who manufacture, process, produce, or
initially transfer for sale or distribution self-luminous products containing
tritium, krypton-85, or promethium-147, any person is exempt from these rules
to the extent that such person receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns, or
acquires tritium, krypton-85 or promethium-147 in self-luminous products
manufactured, processed, produced, imported, or initially transferred in
accordance with a specific license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission pursuant to Section 32.22 of 10 CFR Part 32, which license
authorizes the initial transfer of the product for use under these rules. Any
person who desires to manufacture, process, produce or initially transfer for
sale or distribution self-luminous products containing tritium, krypton-85, or
promethium-147 for use according to this paragraph shall apply for a license
under
10
CFR 32.22 and for a certificate of
registration in accordance with
10 CFR
32.210. The exemption in 39.4(3)
"c"(2) does not apply to tritium, krypton-85, or
promethium-147 used in products primarily for frivolous purposes or in toys or
adornments.
2. Radium-226. Any
person is exempt from these rules to the extent that such person receives,
possesses, uses, transfers, or owns articles containing less than 0.1
microcurie (3.7 kBq) of radium-226 which were acquired prior to the effective
date of these rules.
(3)
Gas and aerosol detectors containing radioactive material.
1. Except for persons who manufacture,
process, produce, or initially transfer for sale or distribution gas and
aerosol detectors containing radioactive material, any person is exempt from
the requirements for a license set forth in this chapter and from the
requirements contained in 641-Chapters 38, 40, and 41 to the extent that such
person receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns, or acquires radioactive
material in gas and aerosol detectors designed to protect health, safety or
property and manufactured, processed, produced, or initially transferred in
accordance with a specific license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission pursuant to Section 32.26 of 10 CFR Part 32, which license
authorizes the initial transfer of the product for use under this rule. This
exemption also covers gas and aerosol detectors manufactured or distributed
before November 20, 2007, in accordance with a specific license issued by a
state under comparable provisions to
10
CFR 32.26 authorizing distribution to persons
exempt from regulatory requirements.
2. Any person who desires to manufacture,
process, or produce gas and aerosol detectors containing radioactive material,
or to initially transfer such products for use pursuant to 39.4(3)
"c"(3)"1," shall apply for a license under
10
CFR 32.26 and for a certificate of
registration in accordance with
10 CFR
32.210.
(4)
1.
Static elimination devices which contain, as a sealed source or sources,
byproduct material consisting of a total of not more than 18.5 MBq (500
µCi) of polonium-210 per device.
2. Ion generating tubes designed for
ionization of air that contain, as a sealed source or sources, byproduct
material consisting of a total of not more than 18.5 MBq (500 µCi) of
polonium-210 per device or of a total of not more than 1.85 GBq (50 mCi) of
hydrogen-3 (tritium) per device.
3.
Such devices authorized before November 5, 2014, for use under the general
license that was provided in 39.4(22) "a" and equivalent
regulations of an agreement state or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission and
manufactured, tested and labeled by the manufacturer in accordance with the
specifications contained in a specific license issued by the
agency.
(5) Radioactive
drug: capsules containing carbon-14 urea for "in vivo" diagnostic use for
humans.
1. Except as provided in
paragraphs"b" and "c" of this subrule, any
person is exempt from the requirements for a license set forth in this chapter
and in 641-41.2 (136C) provided that
such person receives, possesses, uses, transfers, owns, or acquires capsules
containing 37 kBq 1µCi carbon-14 urea (allowing for nominal variation
that may occur during the manufacturing process) each, for "in vivo" diagnostic
use for humans.
2. Any person who
desires to use the capsules for research involving human subjects shall apply
for and receive a specific license pursuant to
641-41.2 (136C).
3. Any person who desires to manufacture,
prepare, process, produce, package, repackage, or transfer for commercial
distribution such capsules shall apply for and receive a specific license
pursuant to 39.4(20) of this rule.
4. Nothing in this subrule relieves persons
from complying with applicable FDA or other federal or state requirements
governing receipt, administration, and use of drugs.
(6) Certain industrial devices. Except for
persons who manufacture, process, produce, or initially transfer for sale or
distribution industrial devices containing radioactive material designed and
manufactured for the purpose of detecting, measuring, gauging or controlling
thickness, density, level, interface location, radiation, leakage, or
qualitative or quantitative chemical composition, or for producing an ionized
atmosphere, any person is exempt from the requirements for a license set forth
in this chapter to the extent that such person receives, possesses, uses,
transfers, owns, or acquires radioactive material, in these certain detecting,
measuring, gauging, or controlling devices and certain devices for producing an
ionized atmosphere, and manufactured, processed, produced, or initially
transferred in accordance with a specific license issued under
10 CFR
32.30, which license authorizes the initial
transfer of the device for use under these rules. This exemption does not cover
sources not incorporated into a device, such as calibration and reference
sources. Any person who desires to manufacture, process, produce, or initially
transfer for sale or distribution industrial devices containing byproduct
material for use under these rules should apply for a license under
10 CFR
32.30 and for a certificate of registration
in accordance with
10 CFR
32.210.
(20)
Types of licenses.
There are two types of licenses for radioactive materials: general and
specific.
a. General licenses provided in this
chapter are effective without the filing of applications with the agency or the
issuance of licensing documents to the particular persons, although the filing
of a certificate or registration application with the agency may be required by
the particular general license. The general licensee is subject to all other
applicable portions of these rules and any limitations of the general
license.
b. Specific licenses
require the submission of an application to the agency and the issuance of a
licensing document by the agency. The licensee is subject to all applicable
portions of these rules as well as any limitations specified in the licensing
document.
c. All licensees and
registrants must submit the appropriate fee in 641-subrule 38.8(2).
(21)
General
licenses-source material.
a. A general license is hereby issued
authorizing commercial and industrial firms, research, educational and medical
institutions, and federal, state and local government agencies to receive,
possess, use and transfer uranium and thorium, in their natural isotopic
concentrations and in the form of depleted uranium, for research, development,
educational, commercial, or operational purposes in the following forms and
quantities:
(1) No more than 1.5 kg (3.3 lb)
of uranium and thorium in dispersible forms (e.g., gaseous, liquid, powder,
etc.) at any one time. Any material processed by the general licensee that
alters the chemical or physical form of the material containing source material
must be accounted for as a dispersible form. A person authorized to possess,
use, and transfer source material under this paragraph may not receive more
than a total of 7 kg (15.4 lb) of uranium and thorium in any one calendar year.
Persons possessing source material in excess of these limits as of November 5,
2014, may continue to possess up to 7 kg (15.4 lb) of uranium and thorium at
any one time for one year beyond this date, or until the agency takes final
action on a pending application submitted on or before November 5, 2015, for a
specific license for such material; and receive up to 70 kg (154 lb) of uranium
or thorium in any one calendar year until December 31,2014, or until the agency
takes final action on a pending application submitted on or before November 5,
2015, for a specific license for such material; and
(2) No more than a total of 7 kg (15.4 lb) of
uranium and thorium at any one time. A person authorized to possess, use, and
transfer source material under this paragraph may not receive more than a total
of 70 kg (154 lb) of uranium and thorium in any one calendar year. A person may
not alter the chemical or physical form of the source material possessed under
this paragraph unless it is accounted for under the limits of
39.4(21)"a"(1); or
(3) No more than 7 kg (15.4 lb) of uranium,
removed during the treatment of drinking water, at any one time. A person may
not remove more than 70 kg (154 lb) of uranium from drinking water during a
calendar year under this paragraph; or
(4) No more than 7 kg (15.4 lb) of uranium
and thorium at laboratories for the purpose of determining the concentration of
uranium and thorium contained within the material being analyzed at any one
time. A person authorized to possess, use, and transfer source material under
this paragraph may not receive more than a total of 70 kg (154 lb) of source
material in any one calendar year.
b. Any person who receives, possesses, uses,
or transfers source material in accordance with the general license issued in
39.4(21)
"a":
(1) Is
prohibited from administering source material, or the radiation therefrom,
either externally or internally, to human beings except as may be authorized by
the agency in a specific license.
(2) Shall not abandon such source material.
Source material may be disposed of as follows:
1. A cumulative total of 0.5 kg (1.1 lb) of
source material in a solid, nondispersible form may be transferred each
calendar year, by a person authorized to receive, possess, use, and transfer
source material under this general license to persons receiving the material
for permanent disposal. The recipient of source material transferred under the
provisions of this paragraph is exempt from the requirements to obtain a
license under this chapter to the extent the source material is permanently
disposed. This provision does not apply to any person who is in possession of
source material under a specific license issued under this chapter;
or
2. In accordance with
641-40.70
(136C).
(3) Is subject to
the provisions in 641-38.4 (136C),
641-38.9 (136C), 39.4(21),
39.4(32)"a" through "d" and
"f,"39.4(41), 39.4(51), 39.4(52),
641-40.95 (136C),
641-40.96 (136C), and
641-40.97 (136C).
(4) Reserved.
(5) Shall not export such source material
except in accordance with 10 CFR Part 110.
c. Any person who receives, possesses, uses,
or transfers source material in accordance with 39.4(21)"a"
shall conduct activities so as to minimize contamination of the facility and
the environment. When activities involving such source material are permanently
ceased at any site, if evidence of significant contamination is identified, the
general licensee shall notify the agency about such contamination and may
consult with the agency as to the appropriateness of sampling and restoration
activities to ensure that any contamination or residual source material
remaining at the site where source material was used under this general license
is not likely to result in exposures that exceed the limits in
641-40.29 (136C).
d. A general license is hereby issued
authorizing the receipt of title to source material without regard to quantity.
This general license does not authorize any person to receive, possess, use, or
transfer source material.
e.
Depleted uranium in industrial products and devices.
(1) A general license is hereby issued to
receive, acquire, possess, use, or transfer, in accordance with the provisions
of 39.4(21)"e"(2), (3), (4), and (5), depleted uranium
contained in industrial products or devices for the purpose of providing a
concentrated mass in a small volume of the product or device.
(2) The general license in
39.4(21)"e"(1) applies only to industrial products or devices
which have been manufactured either in accordance with a specific license
issued to the manufacturer of the products or devices pursuant to
39.4(29)"m" or in accordance with a specific license issued to
the manufacturer by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement
state which authorizes manufacture of the products or devices for distribution
to persons generally licensed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an
agreement state.
(3)
1. Persons who receive, acquire, possess, or
use depleted uranium pursuant to the general license established by
39.4(21)
"e"(1) shall file Agency Form "Registration
Certificate-Use of Depleted Uranium Under General License" with the agency. The
form shall be submitted within 30 days after the first receipt or acquisition
of such depleted uranium. The general licensee shall furnish on the Agency Form
"Registration Certificate-Use of Depleted Uranium Under a General License" the
following information and such other information as may be required by that
form:
* Name and address of the general licensee;
* A statement that the general licensee has developed and will
maintain procedures designed to establish physical control over the depleted
uranium described in 39.4(21)"e"(1) and designed to prevent
transfer of such depleted uranium in any form, including metal scrap, to
persons not authorized to receive the depleted uranium; and
* Name and title, address, and telephone number of the
individual duly authorized to act for and on behalf of the general licensee in
supervising the procedures identified in
39.4(21)"e"(3)"1."
2. The general licensee possessing or using
depleted uranium under the general license established by
39.4(21)"e"(1) shall report in writing to the agency any
changes in information furnished by the general licensee in Agency Form
"Registration Certificate-Use of Depleted Uranium Under General License." The
report shall be submitted within 30 days after the effective date of such
change.
(4) A person who
receives, acquires, possesses, or uses depleted uranium pursuant to the general
license established by 39.4(21)
"e"(1):
1. Shall not introduce such depleted uranium,
in any form, into a chemical, physical, or metallurgical treatment or process,
except a treatment or process for repair or restoration of any plating or other
covering of the depleted uranium;
2. Shall not abandon such depleted
uranium;
3. Shall transfer or
dispose of such depleted uranium only by transfer in accordance with the
provisions of 39.4(41). In the case where the transferee receives the depleted
uranium pursuant to the general license established by
39.4(21)"e"(1), the transferor shall furnish the transferee a
copy of 641-Chapter 39 and a copy of Agency Form "Registration Certificate-Use
of Depleted Uranium Under General License." In the case where the transferee
receives the depleted uranium pursuant to a general license contained in the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's or agreement state's regulation equivalent
to 39.4(21)"e"(1), the transferor shall furnish the transferee
a copy of 641-Chapter 39 and a copy of the Agency Form "Registration
Certificate-Use of Depleted Uranium Under General License" accompanied by a
note explaining that use of the product or device is regulated by the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission or agreement state under requirements
substantially the same as those in 641-Chapters 38, 39, 40, 41 and
45;
4. Within 30 days of any
transfer, shall report in writing to the agency the name and address of the
person receiving the depleted uranium pursuant to such transfer; and
5. Shall not export such depleted uranium
except in accordance with a license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission pursuant to 10 CFR Part 110.
(5) Any person receiving, acquiring,
possessing, using, or transferring depleted uranium pursuant to the general
license established by 39.4(21)"e"(1) is exempt from the
requirements of 641-Chapter 40 with respect to the depleted uranium covered by
that general license.
f.
Any person who receives, possesses, uses, or transfers source material in
accordance with the general license granted in 39.4(21)"a" is
exempt from the provisions of 641-Chapter 40 to the extent that such receipt,
possession, use, and transfer are within the terms of this general license,
except that such person shall comply with the provisions of
641-40.29 (136C) and
641-40.70 (136C) to the extent
necessary to meet the provisions of 39.4(21)"b"(2) and
39.4(21)"c." However, this exemption does not apply to any
person who also holds a specific license issued under this chapter.
g. No person may initially transfer or
distribute source material to persons generally licensed under
39.4(21)"a"(1) and (2), or equivalent regulations of the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state, unless authorized by a
specific license issued in accordance with 39.4(39) or equivalent provisions of
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state. This prohibition does
not apply to analytical laboratories returning processed samples to the client
who initially provided the sample. Initial distribution of source material to
persons generally licensed by 39.4(21)"a" before November 5,
2014, without specific authorization may continue for one year beyond this
date. Distribution may also be continued until the agency takes final action on
a pending application for license or license amendment to specifically
authorize distribution submitted on or before November 5,
2015.
(22)
General licenses -radioactive material other than
source material. This subrule establishes general licenses for the
possession and use of radioactive material and a general license for ownership
of radioactive material. (Note: Different general licenses are issued in this
subrule, each of which has its own specific conditions and requirements.)
a. to c. Reserved.
d. Certain detecting, measuring, gauging, or
controlling devices and certain devices for producing light or an ionized
atmosphere.
(1) A general license is hereby
issued to commercial and industrial firms and research, educational and medical
institutions, individuals in the conduct of their business, and federal, state
or local government agencies to acquire, receive, possess, use or transfer, in
accordance with the provisions of 39.4(22)"d"(2), (3), and
(4), radioactive material contained in devices designed and manufactured for
the purpose of detecting, measuring, gauging or controlling thickness, density,
level, interface location, radiation, leakage, or qualitative or quantitative
chemical composition, or for producing light or an ionized
atmosphere.
(2) The general license
in 39.4(22)"d"(1) applies only to radioactive material
contained in devices which have been manufactured or initially transferred and
labeled in accordance with the specifications contained in a specific license
by this agency issued under 39.4(29)"d"; or an equivalent
specific license issued by the NRC or an agreement state or a licensing state;
or an equivalent specific license issued by a state with provisions comparable
to 39.4(29)"d," which authorizes distribution of the devices.
The devices must have been received from one of the specific licensees
described in 39.4(22)"d"(2) or through a transfer made under
39.4(22)"d"(3).
(3) Any person who acquires, receives,
possesses, uses or transfers radioactive material in a device pursuant to the
general license in 39A(22)
"d"(1):
1. Shall ensure that all labels affixed to
the device at the time of receipt and bearing a statement that removal of the
label is prohibited are maintained thereon and shall comply with all
instructions and precautions provided by such labels;
2. Shall ensure that the device is tested for
leakage of radioactive material and proper operation of the on-off mechanism
and indicator, if any, at no longer than six-month intervals or at such other
intervals as are specified in the label; However,
* Devices containing only krypton need not be tested for
leakage of radioactive material; and
* Devices containing only tritium or not more than 100
microcuries of other beta- or gamma-emitting material or both or 10 microcuries
of alpha-emitting material and devices held in storage in the original shipping
container prior to initial installation need not be tested for any
purpose;
3. Shall ensure
that the test required by 39.4(22)
"d"(3) and other testing,
installation, servicing, and removal from installation involving the
radioactive material, its shielding or containment are performed:
* In accordance with the instructions provided by the labels;
or
* By a person holding a specific license pursuant to 641-39.4
(136C), the NRC, an agreement state or a licensing state to perform such
activities;
4. Shall
maintain records showing compliance with the requirements of
39.4(22)
"d"(3). The records must show the results of tests.
The records also must show the dates of performance of, and the names of
persons performing, testing, installing, servicing, and removing from the
installation radioactive material and its shielding or containment. The
licensee shall retain these records as follows:
* Each record of a test for leakage or radioactive material
required by 39.4(22)"d"(3) must be retained for three years
after the next required leak test is performed or until the sealed source is
transferred or disposed of;
* Each record of a test of the on-off mechanism and indicator
required by 39.4(22)"d"(3) must be retained for three years
after the next required test of the on-off mechanism and indicator is performed
or until the sealed source is transferred or disposed of;
* Each record that is required by
39.4(22)"d"(3) must be retained for three years from the date
of the recorded event or until the device is transferred or disposed
of;
5. Shall immediately
suspend operation of the device if there is a failure of, or damage to, or any
indication of a possible failure of or damage to, the shielding of the
radioactive material or the on-off mechanism or indicator, or upon the
detection of 0.005 microcurie (185 Bq) or more removable radioactive material.
The device may not be operated until it has been repaired by the manufacturer
or other person holding a specific license to repair such devices that was
issued by this agency, the NRC, an agreement state or licensing state. The
device and any radioactive material from the device may only be disposed of by
transfer to a person authorized by a specific license to receive the
radioactive material in the device or as otherwise approved by this agency. A
report containing a brief description of the event and the remedial action
taken, and in the case of detection of 0.005 microcurie (185 Bq) or more
removable radioactive material or failure of or damage to a source likely to
result in contamination of the premises or the environs, a plan for ensuring
that the premises and environs are acceptable for unrestricted use, must be
furnished to the agency within 30 days. Under these circumstances, the criteria
set out in 641-40.29(136C) may be applicable, as determined by the agency on a
case-by-case basis;
6. Shall not
abandon the device containing radioactive material;
7. Shall not export the device containing
radioactive material except in accordance with 10 CFR Part 110;
8. Shall transfer or dispose of the device
containing radioactive material only by export as provided by 39.4(22)
"d"(3)"7," by transfer to another general licensee as
authorized in 39.4(22)
"d"(3)"9," to a person authorized to
receive the device by a specific license issued by the agency, the NRC, an
agreement state or a licensing state whose specific license authorizes the
person to receive the device or which authorizes waste collection, or as
otherwise approved under 39.4(22)
"d"(3):
* Shall furnish a report to this agency within 30 days after
the transfer of a device to a specific licensee or export. The report must
contain the identification of the device by manufacturer's (or initial
transferor's) name, model number, and serial number; the name, address and
license number of the person receiving the device (license number not
applicable if device is exported); and the date of the transfer;
* Shall obtain written agency approval before transferring the
device to any other specific licensee not specifically identified in
39.4(22)"d"; however, a holder of a specific license may
transfer a device for possession and use under its own specific license without
prior approval if the holder:
-Verifies that the specific license authorizes the possession
and use, or applies for and obtains an amendment to the license authorizing the
possession and use;
-Removes, alters, covers, or clearly and unambiguously augments
the existing label (otherwise required by 39.4(22)"d"(3)"1")
so that the device is labeled in compliance with
641-40.63 (136C) of these rules;
however the manufacturer, model number, and serial number must be
retained;
-Obtains manufacturer's or initial transferor's information
concerning maintenance that would be applicable under the specific license
(such as leak-testing procedures); and
-Reports the transfer under 39.4(22) "d"(3)"8"
of this chapter.
9. Shall
transfer the device to another general licensee only if:
* The device remains in use at a particular location. In this
case, the transferor shall give the transferee a copy of these rules and any
safety documents identified in the label of the device. Within 30 days of the
transfer, the transferor shall report to this agency the manufacturer's (or
initial transferor's) name; the model number and the serial number of the
device transferred; the transferee's name and mailing address for the location
of use; and the name, title, and telephone number of the responsible individual
identified by the transferee in accordance with 39.4(22)
"d"(3)"12" to have knowledge of and authority to take actions
to ensure compliance with the appropriate rules and requirements; or
* The device is held in storage, by an intermediate person, in
the original shipping container at its intended location of use prior to
initial use by a general licensee;
10. Shall comply with the provisions of
641-40.95 (136C) and
641-40.96 (136C), but shall be
exempt from the other requirements of 641-Chapter 40;
11. Shall respond to written requests from
this agency to provide information relating to the general license within 30
calendar days of the date of the request, or other item specified in the
request. If the general licensee cannot provide the requested information
within the allotted time, it shall, within that same time period, request a
longer period to supply the information by submitting a letter to the agency
and providing written justification as to why it cannot comply;
12. Shall appoint an individual responsible
for having knowledge of the appropriate rules and requirements and the
authority for taking required actions to comply with appropriate rules and
requirements. The general licensee, through this individual, shall ensure the
day-to-day compliance with appropriate rules and requirements. This appointment
does not relieve the general licensee of any of its responsibility in this
regard;
13. Shall register as
follows:
* Shall register devices as approved in the Sealed Source and
Device Registry. Each address for a location of use, as described in 39.4(22)
"d"(3)"13," represents a separate general licensee and
requires a separate registration and fee;
* If in possession of devices meeting the criteria of
39.4(22)"d"(3)"13," shall register these devices annually with
the agency and shall pay the fee required in 641-paragraph
38.8(2)"c." Registration must be done by verifying,
correcting, and adding to the information provided in a request for
registration received from the agency. The registration information must be
submitted 30 days from the date of the request for registration or as otherwise
indicated in the request. In addition, a general licensee holding devices
meeting the criteria of 39.4(22)"d"(3)"13" is subject to the
bankruptcy notification requirement of 39.4(32)"e";
* In registering devices, the general licensee shall furnish
the following information and any other information specifically requested by
the agency:
-Name and mailing address of the general licensee;
-Information about each device: the manufacturer (or initial
transferor), model number, serial number, the radioisotope and activity (as
indicated on the label);
-Name, title, and telephone number of the responsible person
designated as a representative of the general licensee;
-Address or location at which the device(s) is both used and
stored. For portable devices, the address of the primary place of
storage;
-Certification by the responsible representative of the general
licensee that the information concerning the device(s) has been verified
through a physical inventory and check of label information;
-Certification by the responsible representative of the general
licensee that the licensee is aware of the requirements of the general
license.
* Persons generally licensed by this agency under 39.4(22)
"d"(3)"13" or an agreement state are not subject to
registration requirements of 39.4(22) "d"(3)"13" if the
devices are used in areas subject to this agency's jurisdiction for a period of
less than 180 days in any calendar year. The agency will not request
registration information from such licensees;
14. Shall report changes to the mailing
address for the location of use (including change in name of general licensee)
to the agency within 30 days of the effective date of the change. For a
portable device, a report of address change is only required for a change in
the device's primary place of storage; and
15. May not hold devices that are not in use
for longer than two years. If devices with shutters are not being used, the
shutter must be locked in the closed position. The testing required by
39.4(22)"d" need not be performed during the period of storage
only. However, when devices are put back into service or transferred to another
person, and have not been tested within the required test interval, they must
be tested for leakage before use or transfer and the shutter tested before use.
Devices kept in standby for future use are excluded from the two-year time
limit if the general licensee performs quarterly physical inventories of these
devices while they are in standby.
(4) The general license in
39.4(22)"d"(1) does not authorize the manufacture or import of
devices containing radioactive material.
(5) A general license to install devices
generally licensed in 39.4(22)
"d." Any person who holds a
specific license issued by an agreement state authorizing the holder to
manufacture, install, or service a device described in
39.4(22)
"d" within such agreement state is hereby granted a
general license to install and service such device in any non-agreement state
and a general license to install and service such device in offshore waters, as
defined in 641-45.1 (136C), provided that:
1. The device has been manufactured, labeled,
installed, and serviced in accordance with the applicable provision of the
specific license issued to such person by the agreement state, and
2. Such person ensures that any labels
required to be affixed to the device under regulations of the agreement state
which licensed manufacture of the device bear a statement that removal of the
label is prohibited.
e. Luminous safety devices for aircraft.
(1) A general license is hereby issued to
own, receive, acquire, possess, and use tritium or promethium-147 contained in
luminous safety devices for use in aircraft, provided:
1. Each device contains not more than 10
curies (370 GBq) of tritium or 300 millicuries (11.1 GBq) of promethium-147;
and
2. Each device has been
manufactured, assembled or imported in accordance with a specific license
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, or each device has been
manufactured or assembled in accordance with the specifications contained in a
specific license issued by the agency or any agreement state to the
manufacturer or assembler of such device pursuant to licensing requirements
equivalent to those in Section 32.53 of 10 CFR Part 32.
(2) Persons who own, receive, acquire,
possess, or use luminous safety devices pursuant to the general license in
39.4(22)"e"(1) are exempt from the requirements of 641-Chapter
40 except that they shall comply with the provisions of
641-40.95 (136C) and
641-40.96 (136C).
(3) This general license does not authorize
the manufacture, assembly, or repair of luminous safety devices containing
tritium or promethium-147.
(4) This
general license does not authorize the ownership, receipt, acquisition,
possession or use of promethium-147 contained in instrument dials.
(5) This general license is subject to the
provisions of 641-38.4 (136C) to
641-38.5 (136C), 39.4(32),
39.4(41), 39.4(51), and
641-39.5
(136C).
f. Ownership of
radioactive material. A general license is hereby issued to own radioactive
material without regard to quantity. Notwithstanding any other provisions of
this chapter, this general license does not authorize the manufacture,
production, transfer, receipt, possession or use of radioactive
material.
g. Calibration and
reference sources.
(1) A general license is
hereby issued to those persons listed below to own, receive, acquire, possess,
use, and transfer, in accordance with the provisions of 39.4(22)
"g"(4) and (5), americium-241 in the form of calibration or
reference sources:
1. Any person who holds a
specific license issued by the agency which authorizes the person to receive,
possess, use, and transfer radioactive material; and
2. Any person who holds a specific license
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission which authorizes the person to
receive, possess, use, and transfer special nuclear
material.
(2) A general
license is hereby issued to own, receive, possess, use, and transfer plutonium
in the form of calibration or reference sources in accordance with the
provisions of 39.4(22)"g"(4) and (5) to any person who holds a
specific license issued by the agency which authorizes the person to receive,
possess, use, and transfer radioactive material.
(3) A general license is hereby issued to
own, receive, possess, use, and transfer radium-226 in the form of calibration
or reference sources in accordance with the provisions of
39.4(22)"g"(4) and (5) to any person who holds a specific
license issued by the agency which authorizes the person to receive, possess,
use, and transfer radioactive material.
(4) The general licenses in 39.4(22)
"g"(1), (2), and (3) apply only to calibration or reference
sources which have been manufactured in accordance with the specifications
contained in a specific license issued to the manufacturer or importer of the
sources by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission pursuant to Section 32.57 of
10 CFR Part 32 or Section 70.39 of 10 CFR Part 70 or which have been
manufactured in accordance with the specifications contained in a specific
license issued to the manufacturer by the agency, any agreement state or
licensing state pursuant to licensing requirements equivalent to those
contained in Section 32.57 of 10 CFR Part 32 or Section 70.39 of 10 CFR Part
70.
(5) The general licenses
provided in 39.4(22)
"g"(1), (2), and (3) are subject to the
provisions of 641-38.4 (136C) to
641-38.5 (136C), 39.4(32),
39.4(41), 39.4(51), 641-39.5 (136C), and 641-Chapter
40. In addition, persons who own, receive, acquire, possess, use, or transfer
one or more calibration or reference sources pursuant to these general
licenses:
1. Shall not possess at any one
time, at any one location of storage or use, more than 5 microcuries (185 kBq)
of americium-241, 5 microcuries (185 kBq) of plutonium, or 5 microcuries (185
kBq) of radium-226 in such sources;
2. Shall not receive, possess, use, or
transfer such source unless the source, or the storage container, bears a label
which includes one of the following statements, as appropriate, or a
substantially similar statement which contains the information called for in
one of the following statements, as appropriate:
* The receipt, possession, use and transfer of this source,
Model_______, Serial No._______, are subject to a general license and the
regulations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or of a state with which
the Commission has entered into an agreement for the exercise of regulatory
authority. Do not remove this label.
CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL-THIS SOURCE CONTAINS
(AMERICIUM-241).
(PLUTONIUM) (showing only the name of the appropriate material)
DO NOT TOUCH RADIOACTIVE PORTION OF THIS SOURCE.
_________________________
Name of manufacturer or importer
OR
* The receipt, possession, use and transfer of this source,
Model_______, Serial No._______, are subject to a general license and the
regulations of a licensing state. Do not remove this label.
CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL-THIS SOURCE CONTAINS
RADIUM-226.
DO NOT TOUCH RADIOACTIVE PORTION OF THIS SOURCE.
_________________________
Name of manufacturer or importer
3. Shall not transfer, abandon, or dispose of
such source except by transfer to a person authorized by a license from the
agency, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an agreement state or a
licensing state to receive the source;
4. Shall store such source, except when the
source is being used, in a closed container adequately designed and constructed
to contain americium-241, plutonium, or radium-226 which might otherwise escape
during storage; and
5. Shall not
use such source for any purpose other than the calibration of radiation
detectors or the standardization of other sources.
(6) These general licenses do not authorize
the manufacture of calibration or reference sources containing americium-241,
plutonium, or radium-226.
h. Reserved.
i. General license for use of radioactive
material for certain in vitro clinical or laboratory testing. The New Drug
Provisions of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act also govern the
availability and use of any specific diagnostic drugs in interstate commerce.
(1) A general license is hereby issued to any
physician, veterinarian, clinical laboratory or hospital to receive, acquire,
possess, transfer or use, for any of the following stated tests, in accordance
with the provisions of 39.4(22)
"i"(2), (3), (4), (5), and (6),
the following radioactive materials in prepackaged units for use in in vitro
clinical or laboratory tests not involving internal or external administration
of radioactive material, or the radiation therefrom, to human beings or
animals:
1. Carbon-14, in units not exceeding
10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
2.
Cobalt-57, in units not exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
3. Hydrogen-3 (tritium), in units not
exceeding 50 microcuries (1.85 MBq) each.
4. Iodine-125, in units not exceeding 10
microcuries (370 kBq) each.
5. Mock
iodine-125 reference or calibration sources, in units not exceeding 0.05
microcurie (1.85 kBq) of iodine-129 and 0.005 microcurie (1.85 Bq) of
americium-241 each.
6. Iodine-131,
in units not exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
7. Iron-59, in units not exceeding 20
microcuries (740 kBq) each.
8.
Selenium-75, in units not exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq)
each.
(2) No person shall
receive, acquire, possess, use or transfer radioactive material pursuant to the
general license established by 39.4(22)
"i"(1) until the person
has filed an Agency Form "Certificate-In Vitro Testing with Radioactive
Material Under General License" with the agency and received from the agency a
validated copy of the form with certification number assigned. The physician,
veterinarian, clinical laboratory or hospital shall furnish the following
information on the form and such other information as may be required by the
form:
1. Name and address of the physician,
veterinarian, clinical laboratory or hospital;
2. The location of use; and
3. A statement that the physician,
veterinarian, clinical laboratory or hospital has appropriate radiation
measuring instruments to carry out in vitro clinical or laboratory tests with
radioactive material as authorized under the general license in
39.4(22)"i"(1) and that such tests will be performed only by
personnel competent in the use of such instruments and in the handling of the
radioactive material.
(3)
A person who receives, acquires, possesses or uses radioactive material
pursuant to the general license established by 39.4(22)
"i"(1)
shall comply with the following:
1. The
general licensee shall not possess at any one time, pursuant to the general
license in 39.4(22)"i"(1), at any one location of storage or
use, a total amount of iodine-125, iodine-131, selenium-75, iron-59, or
cobalt-57 in excess of 200 microcuries (7.4 MBq).
2. The general licensee shall store the
radioactive material, until used, in the original shipping container or in a
container providing equivalent radiation protection.
3. The general licensee shall use the
radioactive material only for the uses authorized by 39.4(22)
"i"(1).
4. The
general licensee shall not transfer the radioactive material to a person who is
not authorized to receive it pursuant to a license issued by the agency, the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, any agreement state or licensing state, nor
transfer the radioactive material in any manner other than in the unopened,
labeled shipping container as received from the supplier.
5. The general licensee shall dispose of the
mock iodine-125 reference or calibration sources described in 39.4(22)
"i"(1)"8" as required by 641-subrule
40.70(1).
(4) The general
licensee shall not receive, acquire, possess, or use radioactive material
pursuant to 39.4(22)
"i"(1):
1. Except as prepackaged units which are
labeled in accordance with the provisions of an applicable specific license
issued pursuant to 39.4(29)"h" or in accordance with the
provisions of a specific license issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, any agreement state or licensing state which authorizes the
manufacture and distribution of iodine-125, iodine-131, carbon-14, hydrogen-3
(tritium), iron-59, selenium-75, cobalt-57, or mock iodine-125 to persons
generally licensed under 39.4(22)"i" or its equivalent,
and
2. Unless one of the following
statements, as appropriate, or a substantially similar statement which contains
the information called for in one of the following statements, appears on a
label affixed to each prepackaged unit or appears in a leaflet or brochure
which accompanies the package:
* This radioactive material shall be received, acquired,
possessed, and used only by physicians, veterinarians, clinical laboratories or
hospitals and only for in vitro clinical or laboratory tests not involving
internal or external administration of the material, or the radiation
therefrom, to human beings or animals. Its receipt, acquisition, possession,
use, and transfer are subject to the regulations and a general license of the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or of a state with which the Commission has
entered into an agreement for the exercise of regulatory authority.
_____________________________
Name of manufacturer
* This radioactive material shall be received, acquired,
possessed, and used only by physicians, veterinarians, clinical laboratories or
hospitals and only for in vitro clinical or laboratory tests not involving
internal or external administration of the material, or the radiation
therefrom, to human beings or animals. Its receipt, acquisition, possession,
use and transfer are subject to the regulations and a general license of a
licensing state.
_____________________________
Name of manufacturer
(5) The physician, veterinarian, clinical
laboratory or hospital possessing or using radioactive material under the
general license of 39.4(22)"i"(1) shall report in writing to
the agency any changes in the information furnished in the "Certificate-In
Vitro Testing with Radioactive Material Under General License," Agency Form V.
The report shall be furnished within 30 days after the effective date of such
change.
(6) Any person using
radioactive material pursuant to the general license of 39.4(22)
"i"(1) is exempt from the requirements of 641-Chapter 40 with
respect to radioactive material covered by that general license, except that
such persons using the mock iodine-125 described in 39.4(22)
"i"(1)"8" shall comply with the provisions of 641-subrule
40.70(1) and rules 641-40.95 (136C) and
641-40.96(136C).
j. Ice
detection devices.
(1) A general license is
hereby issued to own, receive, acquire, possess, use, and transfer strontium-90
contained in ice detection devices, provided each device contains not more than
50 microcuries (1.85 MBq) of strontium-90 and each device has been manufactured
or imported in accordance with a specific license issued by the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission or each device has been manufactured in accordance with
the specifications contained in a specific license issued by the agency or an
agreement state to the manufacturer of such device pursuant to licensing
requirements equivalent to those in Section 32.61 of 10 CFR Part 32.
(2) Persons who own, receive, acquire,
possess, use, or transfer strontium-90 contained in ice detection devices
pursuant to the general license in 39.4(22)
"j"(1)
1. Shall, upon occurrence of visually
observable damage such as a bend or crack or discoloration from overheating to
the device, discontinue use of the device until it has been inspected, tested
for leakage and repaired by a person holding a specific license from the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state to manufacture or service
such devices; or shall dispose of the device pursuant to the provisions of
641-subrule 40.70(1);
2. Shall
ensure that all labels affixed to the device at the time of receipt, and which
bear a statement which prohibits removal of the labels, are maintained thereon;
and
3. Are exempt from the
requirements of 641-Chapter 40 except that such persons shall comply with the
provisions of 641-subrule 40.70(1), and rules 641-40.95(136C) and
641-40.96
(136C).
(3) This general
license does not authorize the manufacture, assembly, disassembly or repair of
strontium-90 in ice detection devices.
(4) This general license is subject to the
provisions of 641-38.4 (136C) to
641-38.5 (136C), 39.4(32),
39.4(41), 39.4(51), and
641-39.5
(136C).
k. Certain items
and self-luminous products containing radium-226.
(1) A general license is hereby issued to any
person to acquire, receive, possess, use, or transfer, in accordance with
39.4(22)
"k"(2), (3), and (4), radium-226 contained in the
following products manufactured prior to November 30, 2007.
1. Antiquities originally intended for use by
the general public. For the purposes of this subrule, "antiquities" means
products originally intended for use by the general public and distributed in
the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries including, but not limited
to, radium emanator jars, revigators, radium water jars, radon generators,
refrigerator cards, radium bath salts, and healing pads.
2. Intact and non-intact timepieces
containing greater than 1 microcurie (0.037 megabecquerel), and timepiece hands
and dials no longer installed in timepieces.
3. Luminous items installed in air, marine,
or land vehicles.
4. All other
luminous products, provided that no more than 100 items are used or stored at
the same location at any one time.
5. Small radium sources containing no more
than 1 microcurie (0.037 megabecquerel) of radium-226. For the purposes of this
subrule, "small radium sources" means discrete survey instrument check sources,
sources contained in radiation measuring instruments, sources used in
educational demonstrations (such as cloud chambers and spinthariscopes),
electron tubes, lightning rods, ionization sources, static eliminators, or as
designated by the agency.
(2) Persons who acquire, receive, possess,
use, or transfer byproduct material under the general license issued in
39.4(22) "k"(1) shall comply with the provisions of
641-40.95 (136C) and
641-40.96 (136C), but shall be
exempt from the other requirements of 641-Chapter 40, to the extent that the
receipt, possession, use, or transfer of byproduct material is within the terms
of the general license; provided, however, that this exemption shall not be
deemed to apply to any such person specifically licensed under
39.4(24).
(3) Any person who
acquires, receives, possesses, uses, or transfers byproduct material in
accordance with the general license in 39.4(22)
"k"(1) shall:
1. Notify the agency if there is any
indication of possible damage to the product which could result in a loss of
the radioactive material. A report containing a brief description of the event
and the remedial action taken must be furnished to the Iowa Department of
Public Health, Bureau of Radiological Health, Lucas State Office Building, 5th
Floor, 321 East 12th Street, Des Moines, Iowa, within 30 calendar
days.
2. Not abandon products
containing radium-226. The product, and any radioactive material from the
product, may only be disposed of according to
641-40.77 (136C) or by transfer
to aperson authorized by a specific license to receive the radium-226 in the
product or as otherwise approved by the agency.
3. Not export products containing radium-226
except in accordance with 10 CFR Part 110.
4. Dispose of products containing radium-226
at a disposal facility authorized to dispose of radioactive material in
accordance with any federal or state solid or hazardous waste law, including
the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as authorized under the Energy Policy Act of
2005, by transfer to a person authorized to receive radium-226 by a specific
license issued under 39.4(24), or equivalent NRC or agreement state
requirements, or as otherwise approved by the agency.
5. Respond in writing to a written request
from the agency to provide information relating to the general license within
30 calendar days of the request, or other time specified in the
request.
(4) The general
license in 39.4(22)"k"(1) does not authorize the manufacture,
assembly, disassembly, repair, or import of products containing radium-226,
except that timepieces may be disassembled and repaired.
(24)
Filing
application for specific licenses.
a. Applications for specific licenses shall
be filed on a form prescribed by the agency and include the fee required in
641-subrule 38.8(2).
b. The agency
may at any time after the filing of the original application, and before the
expiration of the license, require further statements in order to enable the
agency to determine whether the application should be granted or denied or
whether a license should be modified or revoked.
c. Each application shall be signed by the
applicant or licensee or a person duly authorized to act for and on the
applicant's or licensee's behalf.
d. An application for a license may include a
request for a license authorizing one or more activities.
e. Applications and documents submitted to
the agency may be made available for public inspection except that the agency
may withhold any document or part thereof from public inspection if disclosure
of its content is not required in the public interest and would adversely
affect the interest of a person concerned.
f.
(1) Each
application to possess radioactive materials in unsealed form, on foils or
plated sources, or sealed in glass in excess of the quantities in Appendix G of
this chapter, must contain either:
1. An
evaluation showing that the maximum dose to a person offsite due to a release
of radioactive materials would not exceed 1 rem effective dose equivalent or 5
rems to the thyroid; or
2. An
emergency plan for responding to a release of radioactive
material.
(2) One or more
of the following factors may be used to support an evaluation submitted under
39.4(24)
"f"(1)"1" of this subrule:
1. The radioactive material is physically
separated so that only a portion could be involved in an accident;
2. All or part of the radioactive material is
not subject to release during an accident because of the way it is stored or
packaged;
3. The release fraction
in the respirable size range would be lower than the release fraction shown in
Appendix G due to the chemical or physical form of the material;
4. The solubility of the radioactive material
would reduce the dose received;
5.
Facility design or engineered safety features in the facility would cause the
release fraction to be lower than shown in Appendix G;
6. Operating restrictions or procedures would
prevent a release fraction as large as that shown in Appendix G; or
7. Other factors appropriated for the
specific facility.
(3) An
emergency plan for responding to a release of radioactive material submitted
under 39.4(24)
"f"(1)"2" must include the following
information:
1. Facility description. A brief
description of the licensee's facility and area near the site.
2. Types of accidents. An identification of
each type of radioactive materials accident for which protective actions may be
needed.
3. Classification of
accidents. A classification system for classifying accidents as alerts or site
area emergencies.
4. Detection of
accidents. Identification of the means of detecting each type of accident in a
timely manner.
5. Mitigation of
consequences. A brief description of the means and equipment for mitigating the
consequences of each type of accident, including those provided to protect
workers onsite, and a description of the program for maintaining the
equipment.
6. Assessment of
releases. A brief description of the methods and equipment to assess releases
of radioactive materials.
7.
Responsibilities. A brief description of the responsibilities of licensee
personnel should an accident occur, including identification of personnel
responsible for promptly notifying offsite response organizations and the
agency; also, responsibilities for developing, maintaining, and updating the
plan.
8. Notification and
coordination. A commitment to and a brief description of the means to promptly
notify offsite response organizations and request offsite assistance, including
medical assistance for the treatment of contaminated injured onsite workers
when appropriate. A control point must be established. The notification and
coordination must be planned so that unavailability of some equipment will not
prevent the notification and coordination. The licensee shall also commit to
notify the agency immediately after notification of the appropriate offsite
response organizations and not later than one hour after the licensee declares
an emergency.
9. Information to be
communicated. A brief description of the types of information of facility
status, radioactive releases, and recommended protective actions, if necessary,
to be given to offsite response organizations and to the agency.
10. Training. A brief description of the
frequency, performance objectives and plans for the training that the licensee
will provide workers on how to respond to an emergency including any special
instructions and orientation tours the licensee would offer to fire, police,
medical, and other emergency personnel. The training shall familiarize
personnel with site-specific emergency procedures. Also, the training shall
thoroughly prepare site personnel for their responsibilities in the event of
accident scenarios postulated as most probable for the specific site, including
the use of team training for such scenarios.
11. Safe shutdown. A brief description of the
means of restoring the facility to a safe condition after an
accident.
12. Exercises. Provisions
for conducting quarterly communications checks with offsite response
organizations and biennial onsite exercises to test response to simulated
emergencies. Quarterly communications checks with offsite response
organizations must include the check and update of all necessary telephone
numbers. The licensee shall invite offsite response organizations to
participate in the biennial exercises. Participation of offsite response
organizations in biennial exercises although recommended is not required.
Exercises must use accident scenarios postulated as most probable for the
specific site and the scenarios shall not be known to most exercise
participants. The licensee shall critique each exercise using individuals not
having direct implementation responsibility for the plan. Critiques of
exercises must evaluate the appropriateness of the plan, emergency procedures,
facilities, equipment, training of personnel, and overall effectiveness of the
response. Deficiencies found by the critiques must be corrected.
13. Hazardous chemicals. A certification that
the applicant has met its responsibilities under the Emergency Planning and
Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986, Title III, Pub.L.No. 99-499, if applicable
to the applicant's activities at the proposed place of use of the radioactive
material.
(4) The
licensee shall allow the offsite response organizations expected to respond in
case of an accident 60 days to comment on the licensee's emergency plan before
submitting it to the agency. The licensee shall provide any comments received
within the 60 days to the agency with the emergency plan.
g.
(1)
Except as provided in 39.4(24)
"g"(2), (3), and (4), an
application for a specific license to use radioactive material in the form of a
sealed source or in a device that contains the sealed source must either:
1. Identify the source or device by
manufacturer and model number as registered with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission under
10 CFR
32.210 or with an agreement state, or for a
source or a device containing radium-226 or accelerator-produced radioactive
material as registered with a state under provisions comparable to
10 CFR
32.210; or
2. Contain the information identified in
10 CFR
32.210(c).
(2) For sources or devices manufactured prior
to November 5, 2014, that are not registered with the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission under
10 CFR
32.210 or with an agreement state, and for
which the applicant is unable to provide all the categories of information
specified in
10 CFR
32.210(c), the application
must include:
1. All available information
identified in
10 CFR
32.210(c) concerning the
source and, if applicable, the device; and
2. Sufficient additional information to
demonstrate that there is reasonable assurance that the radiation safety
properties of the source or device are adequate to protect health and minimize
danger to life and property. Such information must include a description of the
source or device, a description of radiation safety features, the intended use
and associated operating experience, and the results of a current leak
test.
(3) For sealed
sources and devices allowed to be distributed without registration of safety
information in accordance with
10 CFR
32.210(g)(1), the applicant
may supply only the manufacturer, model number, and radionuclide and
quantity.
(4) If it is not feasible
to identify each sealed source and device individually, the applicant may
propose constraints on the number and type of sealed sources and devices to be
used and the conditions under which they will be used, in lieu of identifying
each sealed source and device.
h. An application from a medical facility or
an educational institution to produce positron emission tomography (PET)
radioactive drugs for noncommercial transfer to licensees in the facility's or
educational institution's consortium authorized for medical use under
641-41.2 (136C) or equivalent
NRC or agreement state requirements shall include:
(1) A request for authorization for the
production of PET radionuclides or evidence of an existing license issued under
this chapter or equivalent NRC or agreement state requirements for a PET
production facility within its consortium from which it receives PET
radionuclides.
(2) Evidence that
the applicant is qualified to produce radioactive drugs for medical use by
meeting one of the criteria in 39.4(29)"j"(1)"2."
(3) Identification of the individual(s)
authorized to prepare the PET radioactive drugs if the applicant is a pharmacy,
and documentation that each individual meets the requirements of an authorized
nuclear pharmacist as specified in 39.4(29)
"j"(2)"2."
(4)
Information identified in 39.4(29)"j"(1)"3" on the PET drugs
to be noncommercially transferred to members of the facility's consortium.
(25)
General requirements for the issuance of specific licenses. A
license application will be approved if the agency determines that:
a. The applicant is qualified by reason of
training and experience to use the material in question for the purpose
requested in accordance with 641-Chapters 38, 39, 40, 41 and 45 in such a
manner as to minimize danger to public health and safety or property;
b. The applicant's proposed equipment,
facilities, and procedures are adequate to minimize danger to public health and
safety or property;
c. The issuance
of the license will not be inimical to the health and safety of the public;
and
d. The applicant satisfies any
applicable special requirements in 39.4(26), 39.4(27), 39.4(28),
641-41.2 (136C), or 641-Chapter
45.
e. In the case of an
application for a license to receive and possess radioactive material for
commercial waste disposal by land burial, or for the conduct of any other
activity which the agency determines will significantly affect the quality of
the environment, the agency, before commencement of construction of the plant
or facility in which the activity will be conducted, has concluded, after
weighing the environmental, economic, technical and other benefits against
environmental costs and considering available alternatives, that the action
called for is the issuance of the proposed license, with any appropriate
conditions to protect environmental values. Commencement of construction prior
to such conclusion shall be grounds for denial of a license to receive and
possess radioactive material in such plant or facility. As used in this
paragraph, the term "commencement of construction" means any clearing of land,
excavation, or other substantial action that would adversely affect the
environment of a site. The term does not mean site exploration, necessary roads
for site exploration, borings to determine foundation conditions, or other
preconstruction monitoring or testing to establish background information
related to the suitability of the site or the protection of environmental
values.
(26)
Financial assurance and record keeping for decommissioning.
a. Each applicant for a specific license
authorizing the possession and use of unsealed radioactive material of
half-life greater than 120 days and in quantities exceeding
1.0E5 times the applicable quantities set forth in
Appendix F of 641-Chapter 40 shall submit a decommissioning funding plan as
described in 39.4(26)"e." The decommissioning funding plan
must also be submitted when a combination of isotopes is involved if R divided
by 105 is greater than 1 (unity rule), where R is
defined here as the sum of the ratios of the quantity of each isotope to the
applicable value in Appendix F.
b.
(1) Each holder of or applicant for a
specific license authorizing possession and use of sealed sources or plated
foils of half-life greater than 120 days and in quantities exceeding
1012times the applicable quantities set forth in
39.4(26)"d" (or when a combination of isotopes is involved if
R, as defined in 39.4(26)"a," divided by
1012is greater than 1) shall submit a
decommissioning funding plan as described in
39.4(26)"e."
(2)
Each applicant for a specific license authorizing possession and use of
radioactive material of half-life greater than 120 days and in quantities
specified in 39.4(26)
"d" shall either:
1. Submit a decommissioning funding plan as
described in 39.4(26)"e"; or
2. Submit a certification that financial
assurance for decommissioning has been provided in the amount prescribed by
39.4(26)"d" using one of the methods described in
39.4(26)"f" For an applicant, this certification may state
that the appropriate assurance will be obtained after the application has been
approved and the license issued but prior to the receipt of licensed material.
If the applicant defers execution of the financial instrument until after the
license has been issued, a signed original of the financial instrument obtained
to satisfy the requirements of 39.4(26)"f" must be submitted
before receipt of licensed material. If the applicant does not defer execution
of the financial instrument, the applicant shall submit, as part of the
certification, a signed original of the financial instrument obtained to
satisfy the requirements of 39.4(26)"f."
c.
(1) Each holder of a specific license issued
on or after July 1, 1993, which is of a type described in 39.4(26)
"a" or "b," shall provide financial assurance
for decommissioning in accordance with the criteria set forth in this
subrule.
(2) Each holder of a
specific license issued before July 1, 1993, and of a type described in
39.4(26)"a," shall submit, on or before January 1, 2007, a
decommissioning funding plan or a certification of financial assurance for
decommissioning in an amount at least equal to $1,125,000 in accordance with
the criteria set forth in this subrule. If the licensee submits the
certification of financial assurance rather than a decommissioning funding plan
at this time, the licensee shall include a decommissioning funding plan in any
application for license renewal.
(3) Each holder of a specific license issued
before September 30, 1992, and of a type described in
39.4(36)"b," shall submit, on or before July 1, 1993, a
certificate of financial assurance for decommissioning or a decommissioning
funding plan in accordance with the criteria set forth in this
subrule.
(4) Any licensee who
submitted an application before July 1, 2003, for renewal of license shall
provide financial assurance for decommissioning in accordance with
39.4(26)"a" and "b."
(5) Waste collectors and waste processors
must provide financial assurance in an amount based on a decommissioning
funding plan as described in 39.4(26)"e." The decommissioning
funding plan must include the cost of disposal of the maximum amount (curies)
of radioactive material permitted by license, and the cost of disposal of the
maximum quantity, by volume, of radioactive material which could be present at
the licensee's facility at any time, in addition to the cost to remediate the
licensee's site to meet the license termination criteria of 641-Chapters 39 and
40.
(6) If, in surveys made under
641-subrule 40.36(1), residual radioactivity in the facility and the
environment, including the subsurface, is detected at levels that would, if
left uncorrected, prevent the site from meeting the
641-40.29 (136C) criteria for
unrestricted use, the licensee must submit a decommissioning funding plan
within one year of when the survey is completed.
d. Table of required amounts of financial
assurance for decommissioning by quantity of material.
Greater than 104but less than or
equal to 105 times the applicable quantities of
Appendix F of 641-Chapter 40 in unsealed form. (For a combination of isotopes,
if R, as defined in 39.4(26)"a," divided by
104 is greater than 1, but R divided by
105 is less than or equal to
1.)............................ 1,125,000
Greater than 103 but less than or
equal to 104 times the applicable quantities of
Appendix F of 641-Chapter 40 in unsealed form. (For a combination of isotopes,
if R, as defined in 39.4(26)"a," divided by
103 is greater than 1, but R divided by
104 is less than or equal to
1.)............................. 225,000
Greater than 1010 but less than or
equal to 1012 times the applicable quantities of
Appendix F or 641-Chapter 40 in sealed sources or plated foils. (For a
combination of isotopes, if R, as defined in 39.4(26)"a,"
divided by 1010 is greater than 1, but R divided by
1012 is less than or equal to
1.).................... 113,000
Licensees having possession limits exceeding the upper bounds
of this table must base financial assurance on a decommissioning funding
plan
e.
(1) Each decommissioning funding plan must be
submitted for review and approval and must contain:
1. A detailed cost estimate for
decommissioning, in an amount reflecting:
* The cost of an independent contractor to perform all
decommissioning activities;
* The cost of meeting the
641-40.29 (136C) criteria for
unrestricted use, provided that, if the applicant or licensee can demonstrate
its ability to meet the provisions of
641-40.30 (136C), the cost
estimate may be based on meeting the
641-40.30 (136C)
criteria;
* The volume of onsite subsurface material containing residual
radioactivity that will require remediation to meet the criteria for license
termination; and
* An adequate contingency factor;
2. Identification of and justification for
using the key assumptions contained in the decommissioning cost estimate
(DCE);
3. A description of the
method of assuring funds for decommissioning from 39.4(26)"f,
" including means for adjusting cost estimates and associated funding
levels periodically over the life of the facility;
4. A certification by the licensee that
financial assurance for decommissioning has been provided in the amount of the
cost estimate for decommissioning; and
5. A signed original of the financial
instrument obtained to satisfy the requirements of 39.4(26)"f"
(unless a previously submitted and accepted financial instrument continues to
cover the cost estimate for decommissioning).
(2) At the time of license renewal and at
intervals not to exceed three years, the decommissioning funding plan must be
resubmitted with adjustments as necessary to account for changes in costs and
the extent of contamination. If the amount of financial assurance will be
adjusted downward, this cannot be done until the updated decommissioning
funding plan is approved. The decommissioning funding plan must update the
information submitted with the original or prior approved plan, and must
specifically consider the effect of the following events on decommissioning
costs:
1. Spills of radioactive material
producing additional residual radioactivity in onsite subsurface
material;
2. Waste inventory
increasing above the amount previously estimated;
3. Waste disposal costs increasing above the
amount previously estimated;
4.
Facility modifications;
5. Changes
in authorized possession limits;
6.
Actual remediation costs that exceed the previous cost estimate;
7. Onsite disposal; and
8. Use of a settling pond.
f. The
financial instrument must include the licensee's name, license number, and the
name, address, and other contact information of the issuer, and, if a trust is
used, the trustee. When any of the foregoing information changes, the licensee
must, within 30 days, submit financial instruments reflecting such changes. The
financial instrument submitted must be a signed original or signed original
duplicate, except where a copy of the signed original is specifically
permitted. Financial assurance for decommissioning must be provided by one or
more of the following methods:
(1)
Prepayment. Prepayment is the deposit prior to the start of operation into an
account segregated from licensee assets and outside the licensee's
administrative control of cash or liquid assets such that the amount of funds
would be sufficient to pay decommissioning costs. Prepayment may be in the form
of a trust, escrow account, government fund, certificate of deposit, or deposit
of government securities.
(2) A
surety method, insurance, or other guarantee method. These methods guarantee
that decommissioning costs will be paid should the licensee default. A surety
method may be in the form of a surety bond, letter of credit, or line of
credit. A parent company guarantee of funds for decommissioning costs based on
a financial test may be used if the guarantee and test are as contained in
Appendix F of this chapter. A parent company guarantee may not be used in
combination with other financial methods to satisfy the requirements of this
subrule. For commercial corporations that issue bonds, a guarantee of funds by
the applicant or licensee for decommissioning costs based on a financial test
may be used if the guarantee and test are as contained in Appendix H of this
chapter. For commercial companies that do not issue bonds, a guarantee of funds
by the applicant or licensee for decommissioning costs may be used if the
guarantee and test are as contained in Appendix I of this chapter. For
nonprofit entities, such as colleges, universities, and nonprofit hospitals, a
guarantee of funds by the applicant or licensee may be used if the guarantee
and test are as contained in Appendix J of this chapter. A guarantee by the
applicant or licensee may not be used in combination with any other financial
methods used to satisfy the requirements of paragraph
39.4(26)
"f" or in any situation where the applicant or
licensee has a parent company holding majority control of the voting stock of
the company. Any surety method or insurance used to provide financial assurance
for decommissioning must contain the following conditions:
1. The surety method or insurance must be
open-ended or, if written for a specified term, such as five years, must be
renewed automatically unless 90 days or more prior to the renewal date, the
issuer notifies the agency, the beneficiary, and the licensee of its intention
not to renew. The surety method or insurance must also provide that the full
face amount be paid to the beneficiary automatically prior to the expiration
without proof of forfeiture if the licensee fails to provide a replacement
acceptable to the agency within 30 days after receipt of notification of
cancellation.
2. The surety method
or insurance must be payable to a trust established for decommissioning costs.
The trustee and trust must be acceptable to the agency. An acceptable trustee
includes an appropriate state or federal government agency or an entity which
has authority to act as a trustee and whose trust operations are regulated and
examined by a federal or state agency.
3. The surety method or insurance must remain
in effect until the agency has terminated the license.
(3) An external sinking fund in which
deposits are made at least annually, coupled with a surety method or insurance,
the value of which may decrease by the amount being accumulated in the sinking
fund. An external sinking fund is a fund established and maintained by setting
aside funds periodically in an account segregated from licensee assets and
outside the licensee's administrative control in which the total amount of
funds would be sufficient to pay decommissioning costs at the time termination
of operation is expected. An external sinking fund may be in the form of a
trust, escrow account, government fund, certificate of deposit, or deposit of
government securities. The surety or insurance provisions must be as stated in
39.4(26)"f"(2).
(4) In the case of federal, state, or local
government licensees, a statement of intent containing a cost estimate for
decommissioning or an amount based on the table in
39.4(26)"d," and indicating that funds for decommissioning
will be obtained when necessary.
(5) When a governmental entity assumes
custody and ownership of a site, an arrangement that is deemed acceptable by
such governmental entity.
g. Each person licensed under this chapter
shall keep records of information important to the safe and effective
decommissioning of the facility in an identified location until the license is
released for unrestricted use. Before licensed activities are transferred or
assigned to another licensee, the licensee shall transfer all records described
in this subrule to the new licensee. In this case, the new licensee will be
responsible for maintaining these records until the license is terminated. If
records of relevant information are kept for other purposes, reference to these
records and their locations may be used. Information the agency considers
important to decommissioning consists of:
(1)
Records of spills or other unusual occurrences involving the spread of
contamination in and around the facility, equipment, or site. These records may
be limited to instances when contamination remains after any cleanup procedures
or when there is reasonable likelihood that contaminants may have spread to
inaccessible areas as in the case of possible seepage into porous materials
such as concrete. These records must include any known information on
identification of involved nuclides, quantities, forms, and
concentrations.
(2) As-built
drawings and modifications of structures and equipment in restricted areas
where radioactive materials are used, stored, or both, and of locations of
possible inaccessible contamination such as buried pipes which may be subject
to contamination. If required drawings are referenced, each relevant document
need not be indexed individually. If drawings are not available, the licensee
shall substitute appropriate records of available information concerning these
areas and locations.
(3) Records
of the cost estimate performed for the decommissioning funding plan or of the
amount certified for decommissioning, and records of the funding method used
for assuring funds if either a funding plan or certification is used.
(4) Except for areas containing only sealed
sources (provided the sources have not leaked or no contamination remains after
any leak) or byproduct materials having only half-lives of less than 65 days, a
list contained in a single document and updated every two years, of the
following:
1. All areas designated as
restricted areas as defined under
641-38.2 (136C);
2. All areas outside of restricted areas that
require documentation under 641-39.4 (26)"g";(1)
3. All areas outside of restricted areas
where current and previous wastes have been buried as documented under
641-40.88 (136C); and
4. All areas outside of restricted areas
which contain material such that, if the license expired, the licensee would be
required to either decontaminate the area to unrestricted release levels or
apply for approval for disposal in accordance with
641-40.71
(136C).
(27)
Special requirements for
issuance of certain specific licenses for radioactive material.
a. to d. Reserved.
e. Use of sealed sources in
industrial radiography. In addition to the requirements set forth in 39.4(25),
a specific license for use of sealed sources in industrial radiography will be
issued if the application contains:
(1) A
schedule or description of the program for training radiographic personnel
which specifies:
1. Initial
training,
2. Periodic
training,
3. On-the-job training,
and
4. Methods to be used by the
licensee to determine the knowledge, understanding, and ability of radiographic
personnel to comply with agency rules, licensing requirements, and the
operating and emergency procedures of the applicant;
(2) Written operating and emergency
procedures, including all items listed in Appendix D of 641-Chapter
45;
(3) A description of the
internal inspection system or other management control to ensure that
radiographic personnel follow license provisions, rules of the agency, and the
applicant's operating and emergency procedures;
(4) A list of permanent radiographic
installations and descriptions of permanent storage and use locations.
Radioactive material shall not be stored at a permanent storage location or
used at a permanent use location unless such storage or use location is
specifically authorized by the license. A storage or use location is permanent
if radioactive material is stored at the location for more than 90 days and any
of the following applies to the location:
1.
Non-wireless telephone service is established by the licensee;
2. Industrial radiographic services are
advertised for or from the location;
3. Industrial radiographic operations are
conducted at other sites due to arrangements made from the
location;
(5) A
description of the organization of the industrial radiographic program,
including delegations of authority and responsibility for operation of the
radiation safety program;
(6) A
description of the program for inspection and maintenance of radiographic
exposure devices and transport and storage containers (including applicable
items in 641-subrule 45.1(8) and 641-Chapter 45, Appendix A); and
(7) If a license application includes
underwater radiography, a description of:
1.
Radiation safety procedures and radiographer responsibilities unique to the
performance of underwater radiography;
2. Radiographic equipment and radiation
safety equipment unique to underwater radiography; and
3. Methods for gas-tight encapsulation of
equipment;
(8) If a
license application includes offshore platform or lay-barge radiography, a
description of:
1. Transport procedures for
radioactive material to be used in industrial radiographic
operations;
2. Storage facilities
for radioactive material; and
3.
Methods for restricting access to radiation
areas.
(28)
Special requirements for
specific licenses of broad scope. This subrule prescribes requirements
for the issuance of specific licenses of broad scope for radioactive material
and certain rules governing holders of such licenses. Authority to transfer
possession or control by the manufacturer, processor, or producer of any
equipment, device, commodity, or other product containing byproduct material
whose subsequent possession, use, transfer, and disposal by all other persons
are exempted from regulatory requirements may be obtained only from the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, D.C. 20555.
a. The different types of broad scope
licenses are set forth below:
(1) A "Type A
specific license of broad scope" is a specific license authorizing receipt,
acquisition, ownership, possession, use and transfer of any chemical or
physical form of the radioactive material specified in the license, but not
exceeding quantities specified in the license, for any authorized purpose. The
quantities specified are usually in the multicurie range.
(2) A "Type B specific license of broad
scope" is a specific license authorizing receipt, acquisition, ownership,
possession, use and transfer of any chemical or physical form of radioactive
material specified in Appendix D of this chapter, for any authorized purpose.
The possession limit for a Type B license of broad scope, if only one
radionuclide is possessed thereunder, is the quantity specified for that
radionuclide in Appendix D, Column I. If two or more radionuclides are
possessed thereunder, the possession limit for each is determined as follows:
for each radionuclide, determine the ratio of the quantity possessed to the
applicable quantity specified in Appendix D, Column I, for that radionuclide.
The sum of the ratios for all radionuclides possessed under the license shall
not exceed unity.
(3) A "Type C
specific license of broad scope" is a specific license authorizing receipt,
acquisition, ownership, possession, use, and transfer of any chemical or
physical form of radioactive material specified in Appendix D of this chapter,
for any authorized purpose. The possession limit for a Type C license of broad
scope, if only one radionuclide is possessed thereunder, is the quantity
specified for that radionuclide in Appendix D, Column II. If two or more
radionuclides are possessed thereunder, the possession limit is determined for
each as follows: for each radionuclide, determine the ratio of the quantity
possessed to the applicable quantity specified in Appendix D, Column II, for
that radionuclide. The sum of the ratios for all radionuclides possessed under
the license shall not exceed unity.
b. An application for a Type A specific
license of broad scope will be approved if:
(1) The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25);
(2) The applicant has engaged in a reasonable
number of activities involving the use of radioactive material; and
(3) The applicant has established
administrative controls and provisions relating to organization and management,
procedures, record keeping, material control and accounting, and management
review that are necessary to ensure safe operations, including:
1. The establishment of a radiation safety
committee composed of such persons as a radiation safety officer, a
representative of management, and persons trained and experienced in the safe
use of radioactive material;
2. The
appointment of a radiation safety officer who is qualified by training and
experience in radiation protection, and who is available for advice and
assistance on radiation safety matters; and
3. The establishment of appropriate
administrative procedures to ensure:
* Control of procurement and use of radioactive
material;
* Completion of safety evaluations of proposed uses of
radioactive material which take into consideration such matters as the adequacy
of facilities and equipment, training and experience of the user, and the
operating or handling procedures; and
* Review, approval, and recording by the radiation safety
committee of safety evaluations of proposed uses prepared in accordance with
39.4(28)"b"(3)"3" prior to use of the radioactive
material.
c. An application for a Type B specific
license of broad scope will be approved if:
(1) The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25); and
(2) The applicant has established
administrative controls and provisions relating to organization and management,
procedures, record keeping, material control and accounting, and management
review that are necessary to ensure safe operations, including:
1. The appointment of a radiation safety
officer who is qualified by training and experience in radiation protection,
and who is available for advice and assistance on radiation safety matters,
and
2. The establishment of
appropriate administrative procedures to ensure:
* Control of procurement and use of radioactive
material;
* Completion of safety evaluations of proposed uses of
radioactive material which take into consideration such matters as the adequacy
of facilities and equipment, training and experience of the user, and the
operating or handling procedures; and
* Review, approval, and recording by the radiation safety
officer of safety evaluations of proposed uses prepared in accordance with
39.4(28) "c"(2)"2" prior to use of the radioactive
material.
d. An application for a Type C specific
license of broad scope will be approved if:
(1) The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25).
(2) The applicant submits a statement that
radioactive material will be used only by, or under the direct supervision of,
individuals who have received:
1. A college
degree at the bachelor level, or equivalent training and experience, in the
physical or biological sciences or in engineering; and
2. At least 40 hours of training and
experience in the safe handling of radioactive material, and in the
characteristics of ionizing radiation, units of radiation dose and quantities,
radiation detection instrumentation, and biological hazards of exposure to
radiation appropriate to the type and forms of radioactive material to be
used.
(3) The applicant
has established administrative controls and provisions relating to procurement
of radioactive material, procedures, record keeping, material control and
accounting, and management review necessary to ensure safe
operations.
e. Specific
licenses of broad scope are subject to the following conditions:
(1) Unless specifically authorized, persons
licensed pursuant to 39.4(28) shall not:
1.
Conduct tracer studies in the environment involving direct release of
radioactive material;
2. Receive,
acquire, own, possess, use, or transfer devices containing 100,000 curies (3.7
PBq) or more of radioactive material in sealed sources used for irradiation of
materials;
3. Conduct activities
for which a specific license issued by the agency under 39.4(27), 39.4(29) or
641-41.2 (136C) is required;
or
4. Add or cause the addition of
radioactive material to any food, beverage, cosmetic, drug, or other product
designed for ingestion or inhalation by, or application to, a human
being.
(2) Each Type A
specific license of broad scope issued under this chapter shall be subject to
the condition that radioactive material possessed under the license may only be
used by, or under the direct supervision of, individuals approved by the
licensee's radiation safety committee.
(3) Each Type B specific license of broad
scope issued under this chapter shall be subject to the condition that
radioactive material possessed under the license may only be used by, or under
the direct supervision of, individuals approved by the licensee's radiation
safety officer.
(4) Each Type C
specific license of broad scope issued under this chapter shall be subject to
the condition that radioactive material possessed under the license may only be
used by, or under the direct supervision of, individuals who satisfy the
requirements of 39.4(28)"d."
(29)
Special requirements for a
specific license to manufacture, assemble, repair, or distribute commodities,
products, or devices which contain radioactive material.
a. Rescinded IAB 7/29/09, effective
9/2/09.
b. Rescinded IAB 3/30/05,
effective 5/4/05.
c. Rescinded IAB
7/29/09, effective 9/2/09.
d.
Licensing the manufacture and distribution of devices to persons generally
licensed under 39.4(22)
"d."
(1) An application for a specific license to
manufacture or initially transfer devices containing radioactive material,
excluding special nuclear material, to persons generally licensed under
39.4(22)
"d" or equivalent regulations of the NRC, an agreement
state, or a licensing state will be approved if:
1. The applicant satisfies the general
requirements of 39.4(25);
2. The
applicant submits sufficient information relating to the design, manufacture,
prototype testing, quality control, labels, proposed uses, installation,
servicing, leak testing, operating and safety instructions, and potential
hazards of the device to provide reasonable assurance that:
* The device can be safely operated by persons not having
training in radiological protection,
* Under ordinary conditions of handling, storage, and use of
the device, the radioactive material contained in the device will not be
released or inadvertently removed from the device, and it is unlikely that any
person will receive in any period of one year a dose in excess of 10 percent of
the annual limits specified in
641-40.15 (136C); and
* Under accident conditions such as fire and explosion
associated with handling, storage, and use of the device, it is unlikely that
any person would receive an external radiation dose or dose commitment in
excess of the following organ doses:
Whole body; head and trunk; active blood-forming organs;
gonads; or lens of
eye............................................................. 15 rems (150
mSv)
Hands and forearms; feet and ankles; localized areas of skin
averaged over areas no larger than 1 square
centimeter................................................200 rems (2
Sv)
Other
organs........................................................... 50 rems (500
mSv)
3. Each device bears a
durable, legible, clearly visible label or labels approved by the agency, NRC,
or agreement state or licensing state, which contains in a clearly identified
and separate statement:
* Instructions and precautions necessary to ensure safe
installation, operation, and servicing of the device. Documents such as
operating and service manuals may be identified in the label and used to
provide this information;
* The requirement, or lack of requirement, for leak testing, or
for testing any "on-off' mechanism and indicator, including the maximum time
interval for such testing, and the identification of radioactive material by
isotope, quantity of radioactivity, and date of determination of the quantity;
and
* The information called for in one of the following
statements, as appropriate, in the same or substantially similar form:
The receipt, possession, use, and transfer of this device,
Model______, Serial No.______, (devices licensed prior to January 19, 1975, may
bear labels authorized by the rules in effect on January 1, 1975)(the model,
serial number, and name of the manufacturer or initial transferor may be
omitted from this label provided the information is elsewhere specified in
labeling affixed to the device) are subject to a general license or the
equivalent and the chapter of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or a state
with which the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission has entered into an agreement
for the exercise of regulatory authority. This label shall be maintained on the
device in a legible condition. Removal of this label is prohibited.
CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL
________________________________
Name of manufacturer or initial transferor
4. Each device having a separable source
housing that provides the primary shielding for the source also bears, on the
source housing, a durable label containing the device model number and serial
number, the isotope and quantity, the words "Caution-Radioactive Material," the
radiation symbol described in 641-subrule 40.60(1), and the name of the
manufacturer or initial distributor;
5. Each device meeting the criteria of
39.4(22) "d"(3)"13" bears a permanent (e.g., embossed, etched,
stamped, or engraved) label affixed to the source housing if separable, or the
device if the source housing is not separable, that includes the words,
"Caution-Radioactive Material," and, if practicable, the radiation symbol
described in 641-subrule 40.60(1); and
6. The device has been registered in the
Sealed Source and Device Registry.
(2) In the event the applicant desires that
the device be required to be tested at intervals longer than six months, either
for proper operation of the "on-off' mechanism and indicator, if any, or for
leakage of radioactive material or for both, the applicant shall include in the
application sufficient information to demonstrate that such longer interval is
justified by performance characteristics of the device or similar devices and
by design features which have a significant bearing on the probability or
consequences of leakage of radioactive material from the device or failure of
the "on-off' mechanism and indicator. In determining the acceptable interval
for the test for leakage of radioactive material, the agency will consider
information which includes, but is not limited to:
1. Primary containment or source
capsule;
2. Protection of primary
containment;
3. Method of sealing
containment;
4. Containment
construction materials;
5. Form of
contained radioactive material;
6.
Maximum temperature withstood during prototype tests;
7. Maximum pressure withstood during
prototype tests;
8. Maximum
quantity of contained radioactive material;
9. Radiotoxicity of contained radioactive
material; and
10. Operating
experience with identical devices or similarly designed and constructed
devices.
(3) In the event
the applicant desires that the general licensee under
39.4(22)"d," or under equivalent regulations of the NRC, an
agreement state, or a licensing state be authorized to install the device,
collect the sample to be analyzed by a specific licensee for leakage of
radioactive material, service the device, test the "on-off mechanism and
indicator, or remove the device from installation, the applicant shall include
in the application written instructions to be followed by the general licensee,
estimated calendar quarter doses associated with such activity or activities,
and bases for such estimates. The submitted information shall demonstrate that
performance of such activity or activities by an individual untrained in
radiological protection, in addition to other handling, storage, and use of
devices under the general license, is unlikely to cause that individual to
receive a dose in excess of 10 percent of the annual limits specified in
641-40.15 (136C).
(4) Information to be provided before
transfer.
1. If a device containing
radioactive material is to be transferred for use under the general license
contained in 39.4(22)
"d," each person that is licensed under
39.4(22)
"d" shall provide the information specified to each
person to whom a device is to be transferred. This information must be provided
before the device may be transferred. In the case of a transfer through an
intermediate person, the information must also be provided to the intended user
prior to initial transfer to the intermediate person. The required information
includes:
* A copy of the general license contained in 39.4(22), or if
39.4(22) "d"(3)"2," "3," or "4" or
39.4(22)"d"(3)"13" does not apply to the particular device,
those paragraphs may be omitted;
* A copy of 39.4(20), 39.4(52),
641-40.95 (136C), and
641-40.96(136C);
* A list of the services that can only be performed by a
specific licensee;
* Information on acceptable disposal options including
estimated costs of disposal; and
* An indication that it is the policy of the NRC and this
agency to issue high civil penalties for improper disposal.
2. If radioactive material is to be
transferred in a device for use under an equivalent general license of the NRC
or an agreement state, each person that is licensed under
39.4(29)
"d" shall provide the information specified in this
paragraph to each person to whom a device is to be transferred. In the case of
a transfer through an intermediate person, the information must also be
provided to the intended user prior to initial transfer to the intermediate
person. The required information includes:
* A copy of the NRC or agreement state's rules equivalent to
39.4(29)"d." If a copy of the NRC regulations is provided to a
prospective general licensee in lieu of the agreement state's regulations, it
shall be accompanied by a note explaining that use of the device is regulated
by the agreement state; if certain paragraphs of the regulations do not apply
to the particular device, those paragraphs may be omitted;
* A list of the services that can only be performed by a
specific licensee;
* Information on acceptable disposal options including
estimated costs of disposal; and
* The name or title, address, and telephone number of the
contact at the agreement state regulatory agency from which additional
information may be obtained.
3. An alternative approach to informing
customers may be proposed by the licensee for approval by the agency.
4. Each device that is transferred after
February 19, 2002, must meet the labeling requirements in 39.4(29)
"d."
5. If a
notification of bankruptcy has been made or the license is to be terminated,
each person licensed under 39.4(29)"d" shall provide, upon
request, to the NRC and to any appropriate agreement state, records of final
disposition.
(5) Transfer
reports and records. Each person licensed under 39.4(29)
"d" to
initially transfer devices to generally licensed persons shall comply with the
requirements of this subparagraph.
1. The
person shall report all transfers of devices to persons for use under the
general license in 39.4(29)
"d" and all receipts of devices
from persons licensed under 39.4(29)
"d" to the NRC, this
agency, or another agreement state. The report must be submitted on a quarterly
basis in a clear and legible report containing all of the data required in this
subrule. The required information for transfers to general licensees includes:
* The identity of each general licensee by name and mailing
address for the location of use; if there is no mailing address for the
location of use, an alternate address for the general licensee shall be
submitted along with information on the actual location of use;
* The name, title, and telephone number of the person
identified by the general licensee as having knowledge of and authority to take
required actions to ensure compliance with the appropriate rules and
requirements;
* The date of transfer;
* The type, model number, and serial number of the device
transferred; and
* The quantity and type of radioactive material contained in
the device.
2. If one or
more intermediate persons will temporarily possess the device at the intended
place of use before its possession by the user, the report must include the
same information for both the intended user and each intermediate person, and
clearly designate the intermediate person(s).
3. For devices received from a general
licensee, the report must include the identity of the general licensee by name
and address; the type, model number, and serial number of the device received;
the date of receipt; and, in the case of devices not initially transferred by
the reporting licensee, the name of the manufacturer or initial
transferor.
4. If the licensee
makes changes to a device possessed by a general licensee, such that the label
must be changed to update the required information, the report must identify
the general licensee, the device, and the changes to information on the device
label.
5. The report must cover
each calendar quarter, must be filed within 30 days of the end of the calendar
quarter, and must clearly indicate the period covered by the report.
6. The report must clearly identify the
specific licensee submitting the report and include the license number of the
specific licensee.
7. If no
transfers have been made to or from persons generally licensed under
39.4(29)"d" during the reporting period, the report must so
indicate.
(6) The person
shall maintain all information concerning transfers and receipts of devices
that supports the reports required by 39.4(29)"d." Records
required in 39.4(29)"d" must be maintained for three years
following the date of the recorded event.
e. Special requirements for the manufacture,
assembly, or repair of luminous safety devices for use in aircraft. An
application for a specific license to manufacture, assemble, or repair luminous
safety devices containing tritium or promethium-147 for use in aircraft, for
distribution to persons generally licensed under 39.4(22)
"e,"
will be approved if:
(1) The applicant
satisfies the general requirements specified in 39.4(25); and
(2) The applicant satisfies the requirements
of Sections 32.53, 32.54, 32.55, and 32.56 of 10 CFR Part 32, or their
equivalent.
f. An
application for a specific license to manufacture or initially transfer
calibration or reference sources containing americium-241 or radium-226 for
distribution to persons generally licensed under 39.4(22)
"g"
will be approved if:
(1) The applicant
satisfies the general requirements of 39.4(25); and
(2) The applicant satisfies the requirements
of Sections 32.57, 32.58, and 32.59 of 10 CFR Part 32, or their
equivalent.
g.
Reserved.
h. Manufacture and
distribution of radioactive material for certain in vitro clinical or
laboratory testing under general license. An application for a specific license
to manufacture or distribute radioactive material for use under the general
license of 39.4(22)
"i" will be approved if:
(1) The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25).
(2) The radioactive material is to be
prepared for distribution in prepackaged units of:
1. Carbon-14 in units not exceeding 10
microcuries (370 kBq) each.
2.
Hydrogen-3 (tritium) in units not exceeding 50 microcuries (1.85 MBq)
each.
3. Iodine-125 in units not
exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
4. Mock iodine-125 in units not exceeding
0.05 microcurie (1.85 kBq) of iodine-129 and 0.005 microcurie (185 Bq) of
americium-241 each.
5. Iodine-131
in units not exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
6. Iron-59 in units not exceeding 20
microcuries (740 kBq) each.
7.
Selenium-75 in units not exceeding 10 microcuries (370 kBq) each.
8. Cobalt-57 in units not exceeding 10
microcuries (370 kBq) each.
(3) Each prepackaged unit bears a durable,
clearly visible label:
1. Identifying the
radioactive contents as to chemical form and radionuclide, and indicating that
the amount of radioactivity does not exceed 10 microcuries (370 kBq) of
iodine-125, iodine-131, carbon-14, cobalt-57, or selenium-75; 50 microcuries
(1.85 MBq) of hydrogen-3 (tritium); 20 microcuries (740 kBq) of iron-59; or
mock iodine-125 in units not exceeding 0.05 microcurie (1.85 kBq) of iodine-129
and 0.005 microcurie (185 Bq) of americium-241 each; and
2. Displaying the radiation caution symbol
described in 641-subrule 40.60(1) and the words, "CAUTION-RADIOACTIVE
MATERIAL," and "Not for Internal or External Use in Humans or
Animals."
(4) One of the
following statements, as appropriate, or a substantially similar statement
which contains the information called for in one of the following statements,
appears on a label affixed to each prepackaged unit or appears in a leaflet or
brochure which accompanies the package:
1.
This radioactive material may be received, acquired, possessed, and used only
by physicians, veterinarians, clinical laboratories or hospitals and only for
in vitro clinical or laboratory tests not involving internal or external
administration of the material, or the radiation therefrom, to human beings or
animals. Its receipt, acquisition, possession, use, and transfer are subject to
the regulations and a general license of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission
or an agreement state.
_________________________
Name of manufacturer
2. Rescinded IAB 3/30/05, effective
5/4/05.
(5) The label
affixed to the unit, or the leaflet or brochure which accompanies the package,
contains adequate information as to the precautions to be observed in handling
and storing such radioactive material. In the case of the mock iodine-125
reference or calibration source, the information accompanying the source must
also contain directions to the licensee regarding the waste disposal
requirements set out in 641-subrule 40.70(1).
i. An application for a specific license to
manufacture or initially transfer ice detection devices containing strontium-90
to persons generally licensed under 39.4(22)"j" will be
approved if the applicant satisfies the general requirements of 39.4(25) and
the requirements of Sections 32.61 and 32.62 of 10 CFR Part 32, or their
equivalent.
j. Manufacture,
preparation, or transfer for commercial distribution of radioactive drugs
containing byproduct material for medical use under
641-41.2 (136C).
(1) An application for a specific license to
manufacture, prepare, or transfer for commercial distribution radioactive drugs
containing byproduct material for use by persons authorized pursuant to
641-41.2 (136C) will be approved
if:
1. The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in subrule 39.4(25);
2. The applicant submits evidence that the
applicant is at least one of the following:
* Registered with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
as the owner or operator of a drug establishment that engages in the
manufacture, preparation, propagation, compounding, or processing of a drug
under 21 CFR 207.20(a);
* Registered or licensed with a state agency as a drug
manufacturer;
* Licensed by the Iowa board of pharmacy as a nuclear
pharmacy;
* Operating as a nuclear pharmacy within a federal medical
institution; or
* A positron emission tomography (PET) drug production facility
registered or licensed with a state agency;
3. The applicant submits information on the
radionuclide: the chemical and physical form; the maximum activity per vial,
syringe, generator, or other container of the radioactive drug; the shielding
provided by the packaging to show it is appropriate for the safe handling and
storage of the radioactive drugs by medical use licensees; and
4. The applicant commits to the following
labeling requirements:
* A label is affixed to each transport radiation shield,
whether it is constructed of lead, glass, plastic, or other material, of a
radioactive drug to be transferred for commercial distribution. The label must
include the radiation symbol and the words "CAUTION, RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL" or
"DANGER, RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL"; the name of the radioactive drug or its
abbreviation; and the quantity of radioactivity at a specified date and time.
For radioactive drugs with a half-life greater than 100 days, the time may be
omitted.
* A label is affixed to each syringe, vial, or other container
used to hold a radioactive drug to be transferred for commercial distribution.
The label must include the radiation symbol and the words "CAUTION, RADIOACTIVE
MATERIAL" or "DANGER, RADIOACTIVE MATERIAL" and an identifier that ensures that
the syringe, vial, or other container can be correlated with the information on
the transport radiation shield label.
(2) A licensee as described by
39.4(29)
"j"(1)"2":
1. May
prepare radioactive drugs for medical use, as defined in
641-38.2 (136C), provided that
the radioactive drug is prepared by either an authorized nuclear pharmacist, as
specified in 39.4(29)"j"(2)"2" and
39.4(29)"j"(2)"3" or an individual under the supervision of an
authorized nuclear pharmacist as specified in 641-paragraph
41.2(11)"c."
2.
May allow a pharmacist to work as an authorized nuclear pharmacist if:
* This individual qualifies as an authorized nuclear pharmacist
as defined in 641-subrule 41.2(2),
* This individual meets the requirements specified in
641-subrules 41.2(77) and 41.2(78) and the licensee has received an approved
license amendment identifying this individual as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist, or
* This individual is designated as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist in accordance with
39.4(29)"j"(2)"3."
3. May designate a pharmacist (as defined in
641-subrule 41.2(2)) as an authorized nuclear pharmacist if the individual was
a nuclear pharmacist preparing only radioactive drugs containing
accelerator-produced radioactive material and the individual practiced at a
pharmacy at a government agency or federally recognized Indian tribe before
November 30, 2007, or at all other pharmacies before August 8, 2009, or an
earlier date as noticed by the NRC.
4. Shall permit the actions authorized in
39.4(29) "j"(2)"1" and "2" that are permitted in spite of more
restrictive language in license conditions.
5. Shall provide to the agency a copy of each
individual's:
* Certification by a specialty board whose certification
process has been recognized by the NRC or an agreement state as specified in
641-paragraph 41.2(78)"a"; or
* NRC or agreement state license; or
* NRC master materials licensee permit; or
* Permit issued by a licensee or NRC master materials permittee
of broad scope or authorization from a commercial nuclear pharmacy authorized
to list its own authorized nuclear pharmacist; or
* Documentation that only accelerator-produced radioactive
materials were used in the practice of nuclear pharmacy at a government agency
or federally recognized Indian tribe before November 30, 2007, or at all other
locations of use before August 8,2009, or an earlier date as noticed by the
NRC; and
* State pharmacy licensure or registration, no later than 30
days after the date that the licensee allows, pursuant to
39.4(29)"j"(2)"2," first and third bulleted paragraphs, the
individual to work as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist.
(3) A
licensee shall satisfy the labeling requirements in
39.4(29)"j."
(4) A
licensee shall possess and use instrumentation to measure the radioactivity of
radioactive drugs. The licensee shall have procedures for use of the
instrumentation. The licensee shall measure, by direct measurement or by
combination of measurements and calculations, the amount of radioactivity in
dosages of alpha-, beta-, or photon-emitting radioactive drugs prior to
transfer for commercial distribution. In addition, the licensee shall:
1. Perform tests before initial use,
periodically, and following repair, on each instrument for accuracy, linearity,
and geometry dependence, as appropriate for the use of the instrument, and make
adjustments when necessary; and
2.
Check each instrument for constancy and proper operation at the beginning of
each day of use.
(5)
Nothing in this subrule relieves the licensee from complying with applicable
FDA, other federal, and state requirements governing radioactive
drugs.
k. Manufacture and
distribution of generators or reagent kits for preparation of
radiopharmaceuticals containing radioactive material. Although the agency does
not regulate the manufacture and distribution of reagent kits that do not
contain radioactive material, it does regulate the use of such reagent kits for
the preparation of radiopharmaceuticals containing radioactive material as part
of its licensing and regulation of the users of radioactive material. Any
manufacturer of reagent kits that do not contain radioactive material who
desires to have their reagent kits approved by the agency for use by persons
licensed pursuant to 641-subrule 41.2(33) may submit the pertinent information
specified in 39.4(29)
"k." An application for a specific
license to manufacture and distribute generators or reagent kits containing
radioactive material for preparation of radiopharmaceuticals by persons
licensed pursuant to this chapter for the uses listed in 641-subrule 41.2(33)
will be approved if:
(1) The applicant
satisfies the general requirements specified in 39.4(25);
(2) The applicant submits evidence that:
1. The generator or reagent kit is to be
manufactured, labeled and packaged in accordance with the Federal Food, Drug
and Cosmetic Act or the Public Health Service Act, such as a new drug
application (NDA) approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), or a
"Notice of Claimed Investigational Exemption for a New Drug" (IND) that has
been accepted by the FDA, or
2.
The manufacture and distribution of the generator or reagent kit are not
subject to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act and the Public Health
Service Act;
(3) The
applicant submits information on the radionuclide, chemical and physical form,
packaging including maximum activity per package, and shielding provided by the
packaging of the radioactive material contained in the generator or reagent
kit;
(4) The label affixed to the
generator or reagent kit contains information on the radionuclide, quantity,
and date of assay; and
(5) The
label affixed to the generator or reagent kit, or the leaflet or brochure which
accompanies the generator or reagent kit, contains:
1. Adequate information, from a radiation
safety standpoint, on the procedures to be followed and the equipment and
shielding to be used in eluting the generator or processing radioactive
material with the reagent kit, and
2. A statement that this generator or reagent
kit, as appropriate, is approved for use by persons licensed by the agency
pursuant to 641-subrule 41.2(33) or under equivalent licenses of the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an agreement state, or a licensing state. The
labels, leaflets, or brochures required by 39.4(29)"k" are in
addition to the labeling required by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and
they may be separate from or, with the approval of the FDA, may be combined
with the labeling required by the FDA.
l. Manufacture and distribution of sources or
devices containing radioactive material for medical use.
(1) An application for a specific license to
manufacture and distribute sources and devices containing radioactive material
to persons licensed pursuant to
641-41.2 (136C) for use as a
calibration, transmission, or reference source or for the uses listed in
641-subrules 41.2(41), 41.2(43), 41.2(49), and 41.2(88) will be approved if:
1. The applicant satisfies the general
requirements in 39.4(25);
2. The
applicant submits sufficient information regarding each type of source or
device pertinent to an evaluation of its radiation safety, including:
* The radioactive material contained, its chemical and physical
form, and amount,
* Details of design and construction of the source or
device,
* Procedures for, and results of, prototype tests to
demonstrate that the source or device will maintain its integrity under
stresses likely to be encountered in normal use and accidents,
* For devices containing radioactive material, the radiation
profile of a prototype device,
* Details of quality control procedures to ensure that
production sources and devices meet the standards of the design and prototype
tests,
* Procedures and standards for calibrating sources and
devices,
* Legend and methods for labeling sources and devices as to
their radioactive content, and
* Instructions for handling and storing the source or device
from the radiation safety standpoint. These instructions are to be included on
a durable label attached to the source or device or attached to a permanent
storage container for the source or device, provided that instructions which
are too lengthy for such label may be summarized on the label and printed in
detail on a brochure which is referenced on the label;
3. The label affixed to the source or device,
or to the permanent storage container for the source or device, contains
information on the radionuclide, quantity, and date of assay, and a statement
that the NRC, agreement state, or this agency has approved distribution of the
source or device to persons licensed to use byproduct material identified in
641-41.2 (136C) and 641-subrules
41.2(41) and 41.2(43), as appropriate, and to persons who hold an equivalent
license issued by the NRC or an agreement state; and
4. The source or device has been registered
in the Sealed Source and Device Registry.
(2) In the event the applicant desires that
the source or device be required to be tested for leakage of radioactive
material at intervals longer than six months, the applicant shall include in
the application sufficient information to demonstrate that such longer interval
is justified by performance characteristics of the source or device or similar
sources or devices and by design features that have a significant bearing on
the probability or consequences of leakage of radioactive material from the
source.
(3) In determining the
acceptable interval for test of leakage of radioactive material, the agency
will consider information that includes, but is not limited to:
1. Primary containment or source
capsule,
2. Protection of primary
containment,
3. Method of sealing
containment,
4. Containment
construction materials,
5. Form of
contained radioactive material,
6.
Maximum temperature withstood during prototype tests,
7. Maximum pressure withstood during
prototype tests,
8. Maximum
quantity of contained radioactive material,
9. Radiotoxicity of contained radioactive
material, and
10. Operating
experience with identical sources or devices or similarly designed and
constructed sources or devices.
m. Requirements for license to manufacture
and distribute industrial products containing depleted uranium for mass-volume
applications.
(1) An application for a
specific license to manufacture industrial products and devices containing
depleted uranium for use pursuant to 39.4(21)"J" or equivalent regulations of
the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state will be approved
if:
1. The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25);
2. The applicant submits sufficient
information relating to the design, manufacture, prototype testing, quality
control procedures, labeling or marking, proposed uses, and potential hazards
of the industrial product or device to provide reasonable assurance that
possession, use, or transfer of the depleted uranium in the product or device
is not likely to cause any individual to receive in any period of one calendar
quarter a radiation dose in excess of 10 percent of the limits specified in
641-40.15 (136C) of these rules;
and
3. The applicant submits
sufficient information regarding the industrial product or device and the
presence of depleted uranium for a mass-volume application in the product or
device to provide reasonable assurance that unique benefits will accrue to the
public because of the usefulness of the product or device.
(2) In the case of an industrial product or
device whose unique benefits are questionable, the agency will approve an
application for a specific license under 39.4(29)"m" only if
the product or device is found to combine a high degree of utility and low
probability of uncontrolled disposal and dispersal of significant quantities of
depleted uranium into the environment.
(3) The agency may deny any application for a
specific license under 39.4(29)"m" if the end use(s) of the
industrial product or device cannot be reasonably foreseen.
(4) Each person licensed pursuant to
39.4(29)
"m"(1) shall:
1.
Maintain the level of quality control required by the license in the
manufacture of the industrial product or device, and in the installation of the
depleted uranium into the product or device;
2. Label or mark each unit to:
* Identify the manufacturer of the product or device and the
number of the license under which the product or device was manufactured, the
fact that the product or device contains depleted uranium, and the quantity of
depleted uranium in each product or device; and
* State that the receipt, possession, use, and transfer of the
product or device are subject to a general license or the equivalent and the
regulations of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement
state;
3. Ensure that the
depleted uranium before being installed in each product or device has been
impressed with the following legend clearly legible through any plating or
other covering: "Depleted Uranium"
4. Furnish a copy of the general license
contained in 39.4(21)"d" and a copy of the agency form used to
register the device to each person to whom the person transfers depleted
uranium in a product or device for use pursuant to the general license
contained in 39.4(21) "d" or furnish a copy of the general
license contained in the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's or agreement
state's regulation equivalent to 39.4(21)"d" and a copy of the
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's or agreement state's certificate, or
alternatively, furnish a copy of the general license contained in
39.4(21)"d" and a copy of the agency form used to register to
each person to whom the person transfers depleted uranium in a product or
device for use pursuant to the general license of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or an agreement state, with a note explaining that use of the
product or device is regulated by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an
agreement state under requirements substantially the same as those in
39.4(21)"d";
5.
Report to the agency all transfers of industrial products or devices to persons
for use under the general license in 39.4(21)"d." Such report
shall identify each general licensee by name and address, an individual by name
and position who may constitute a point of contact between the agency and the
general licensee, the type and model number of device transferred, and the
quantity of depleted uranium contained in the product or device. The report
shall be submitted within 30 days after the end of each calendar quarter in
which such a product or device is transferred to the generally licensed person.
If no transfers have been made to persons generally licensed under
39.4(21)"d" during the reporting period, the report shall so
indicate;
6. Report to the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission all transfers of industrial products or devices
to persons for use under the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission general license
in Section 40.25 of 10 CFR Part 40; and shall report to the responsible state
agency all transfers of devices manufactured and distributed pursuant to
39.4(29)"m" for use under a general license in that state's
regulations equivalent to 39.4(21)"d." Such report shall
identify each general licensee by name and address, an individual by name and
position who may constitute a point of contact between the agency and the
general licensee, the type and model number of the device transferred, and the
quantity of depleted uranium contained in the product or device. The report
shall be submitted within 30 days after the end of each calendar quarter in
which such product or device is transferred to the generally licensed person.
If no transfers have been made to U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission licensees
during the reporting period, this information shall be reported to the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission. If no transfers have been made to general
licensees within a particular agreement state during the reporting period, this
information shall be reported to the responsible agreement state agency upon
the request of that agency; and
7.
Keep records showing the name, address, and point of contact for each general
licensee to whom the person transfers depleted uranium in industrial products
or devices for use pursuant to the general license provided in
39.4(21)"d" or equivalent regulations of the U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission or an agreement state. The records shall be maintained
for a period of two years and shall show the date of each transfer, the
quantity of depleted uranium in each product or device transferred, and
compliance with the report requirements of 641-Chapters 39 and
40.
n.
Rescinded IAB 7/29/09, effective 9/2/09.
o. Acceptance sampling procedures under
certain specific licenses. A random sample shall be taken from each inspection
lot of devices licensed under 39.4(29) for which testing is required and meet
the requirements pursuant to 10 CFR 32.110.
(31)
Issuance of specific
licenses.
a. Upon a determination
that an application meets the requirements of the Iowa Code and the rules of
the agency, the agency will issue a specific license authorizing the proposed
activity in such form and containing such conditions and limitations as it
deems appropriate or necessary.
b.
The agency may incorporate in any license at the time of issuance, or
thereafter by appropriate rule, regulation, or order, such additional
requirements and conditions with respect to the licensee's receipt, possession,
use, and transfer of radioactive material subject to this chapter as it deems
appropriate or necessary in order to:
(1)
Minimize danger to public health and safety or property;
(2) Require such reports and the keeping of
such records, and to provide for such inspections of activities under the
license as may be appropriate or necessary; and
(3) Prevent loss or theft of material subject
to this chapter.
c.
Specific license for industrial radiography. An application for a specific
license for the use of licensed material in industrial radiography will be
approved if the applicant meets the following requirements:
(1) The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25).
(2) The applicant submits an adequate program
for training radiographers and radiographers' assistants that meets the
requirements of 641-subrule 45.1(10).
(3) The applicant submits procedures for
verifying and documenting the certification status of radiographers and for
ensuring that the certification of individuals acting as radiographers remains
valid.
(4) The applicant submits
written operating and emergency procedures as described in 641-subrule
45.2(4).
(5) The applicant submits
a description of a program for inspections of the job performance of each
radiographer and radiographer's assistant at intervals not to exceed six months
as described in 641-subrule 45.1(11).
(6) The applicant submits a description of
the applicant's overall organizational structure as it applies to the radiation
responsibilities in industrial radiography, including specified delegation of
authority and responsibility.
(7)
The applicant identifies and lists the qualifications of the individual(s)
designated as the RSO (641-paragraph 45.1(10)"d") and
potential designees responsible for ensuring that the licensee's radiation
safety program is implemented in accordance with approved procedures.
(8) If an applicant intends to perform leak
testing of sealed sources or exposure devices containing depleted uranium (DU)
shielding, the applicant must describe the procedures for performing and the
qualifications of the person(s) authorized to do the leak testing. If the
applicant intends to analyze its own wipe samples, the application must include
a description of the procedures to be followed. The description must include
the instruments to be used, methods of performing the analysis, and pertinent
experience of the person who will analyze the wipe samples.
(9) If the applicant intends to perform
"in-house" calibrations of survey instruments, the applicant must describe the
methods to be used and the relevant experience of the person(s) who will
perform the calibrations. All calibrations must be performed according to the
procedures described and at the intervals prescribed in 641-subrule
45.1(5).
(10) The applicant
identifies and describes the location(s) of all field stations and permanent
radiographic installations.
(11)
The applicant identifies the locations where all records required by
641-Chapters 38, 39, 40, and 45 will be located.
d. Specific licenses for well logging. The
agency will approve an application for a specific license for the use of
licensed material in well logging if the applicant meets the following
requirements:
(1) The applicant shall satisfy
the general requirements specified in 39.4(25) and all other requirements in
641-Chapter 39, as appropriate, and any special requirements contained in
39.4(31)"d."
(2)
The applicant shall develop a program for training logging supervisors and
logging assistants and submit to the agency a description of this program which
specifies the following:
1. Initial
training;
2. On-the-job
training;
3. Annual safety reviews
provided by the licensee;
4. The
means the applicant will use to demonstrate the logging supervisor's knowledge
and understanding of and ability to comply with the agency's regulations and
licensing requirements and the applicant's operating and emergency procedures;
and
5. The means the applicant will
use to demonstrate the logging assistant's knowledge and understanding of and
ability to comply with the applicant's operating and emergency
procedures.
(3) The
applicant shall submit to the agency written operating and emergency procedures
as described in 641-subrule 45.6(16) or an outline or summary of the procedures
that includes the important radiation safety aspects of the
procedures.
(4) The applicant shall
establish and submit to the agency its program for annual inspections of the
job performance of each logging supervisor to ensure that the agency's
regulations and license requirements and the applicant's operating and
emergency procedures are followed. Inspection records must be retained for
three years after each annual internal inspection.
(5) The applicant shall submit a description
of its overall organizational structure as the organizational structure applies
to the radiation safety responsibilities in well logging, including specified
delegations of authority and responsibility.
(6) If an applicant wants to perform leak
testing of sealed sources, the applicant shall identify the manufacturers and
the model numbers of the leak test kits to be used. If the applicant wants to
analyze its own wipe samples, the applicant shall establish procedures to be
followed and submit a description of these procedures to the agency. The
description must include the instruments to be used, methods of performing the
analysis, and pertinent experience of the person who will analyze the wipe
samples.
(32)
Specific terms and conditions of licenses.
a. Each license issued pursuant to this
chapter shall be subject to all the provisions of the Iowa Code, now or
hereafter in effect, and to all rules, regulations, and orders of the
agency.
b. No license issued or
granted under this chapter and no right to possess or utilize radioactive
material granted by any license issued pursuant to this chapter shall be
transferred, assigned, or in any manner disposed of, either voluntarily or
involuntarily, directly or indirectly, through transfer of control of any
license to any person unless the agency shall, after securing full information,
find that the transfer is in accordance with the provisions of the Iowa Code,
now or hereafter in effect, and to all valid rules, regulations, and orders of
the agency, and shall give its consent in writing. An application for transfer
of license must include:
(1) The identity and
technical and financial qualifications of the proposed transferee;
and
(2) The financial assurance for
decommissioning information required by 39.4(26).
c. Each person licensed by the agency
pursuant to this chapter shall confine use and possession of the material
licensed to the locations and purposes authorized in the license.
d. Each licensee shall notify the agency in
writing when the licensee decides to permanently discontinue all activities
involving materials authorized under the license.
e. Each licensee preparing technetium-99m
radiopharmaceuticals from molybdenum-99/technetium-99m generators or
rubidium-82 from strontium-82/rubidium-82 generators shall test the generator
eluates for molybdenum-99 breakthrough or strontium-82 and strontium-85
contamination, respectively, in accordance with 641-subrule 41.2(34). The
licensee shall record the results of each test and retain each record for three
years after the record is made. The licensee shall report the results of any
test that exceeds the permissible concentration listed in 641-paragraph
41.2(34)"a" at the time of generator elution, in accordance
with 641-paragraph 41.2(34)"e."
f. Each general licensee that is required to
register by 39.4(21) or 39.4(22) and each specific licensee shall notify the
agency in writing immediately following the filing of a voluntary or
involuntary petition for bankruptcy under any Chapter of Title 11 (Bankruptcy)
of the United States Code by or against:
(1)
The licensee;
(2) An entity (as
that term is defined in
11
U.S.C. 101(15)) controlling
the licensee or listing the license or licensee as property of the estate;
or
(3) An affiliate (as that term
is defined in
11
U.S.C. 101(2)) of the
licensee.
The notification specified in 39.4(32)"f"
shall indicate the bankruptcy court in which the petition for bankruptcy was
filed and the date of the filing of the petition.
g.
(1)
Authorization under 39.4(29)"h" to produce positron emission
tomography (PET) radioactive drugs for noncommercial transfer to medical use
licensees in the licensee's consortium does not relieve the licensee from
complying with applicable FDA, other federal, and state requirements governing
radioactive drugs.
(2) Each
licensee authorized under 39.4(29)
"h" to produce PET
radioactive drugs for noncommercial transfer to medical use licensees in the
licensee's consortium shall:
1. Satisfy the
labeling requirements in 39.4(29)"j"(1)"4" for each PET
radioactive drug transport radiation shield and each syringe, vial, or other
container used to hold a PET radioactive drug intended for noncommercial
distribution to members of the licensee's consortium.
2. Possess and use instrumentation to measure
the radioactivity of the PET radioactive drugs intended for noncommercial
distribution to members of the licensee's consortium and meet the procedural,
radioactivity measurement, instrument test, instrument check, and instrument
adjustment requirements in 39.4(29)"j"(3).
(3) A licensee that is a pharmacy
authorized under 39.4(24)
"h" to produce PET radioactive drugs
for noncommercial transfer to medical use licensees in the pharmacy's
consortium shall require that any individual who prepares PET radioactive drugs
shall be:
1. An authorized nuclear pharmacist
who meets the requirements in 39.4(29)"j"(2)"2," or
2. An individual under the supervision of an
authorized nuclear pharmacist as specified in 641-subrule
41.2(11).
(4) A pharmacy
authorized under 39.4(29)"j" to produce PET radioactive drugs
for noncommercial transfer to medical use licensees in the pharmacy's
consortium that allows an individual to work as an authorized nuclear
pharmacist shall meet the requirements in
39.4(29)"j"(2)"5."
(33)
Expiration and termination of
licenses and decommissioning of sites and separate buildings or outdoor
areas.
a. Each specific license
expires at the end of the day on the expiration date stated in the license
unless the licensee has filed an application for renewal under 39.4(33) not
less than 30 days before the expiration date stated in the existing license. If
an application for renewal has been filed at least 30 days before the
expiration date stated in the existing license, the existing license expires at
the end of the day on which the agency makes a final determination to deny the
renewal application or, if the determination states an expiration date, the
expiration date stated in the determination.
b. Each specific license revoked by the
agency expires at the end of the day on the date of the agency's final
determination to revoke the license, or on the expiration date stated in the
determination, or as otherwise provided by agency order.
c. Each specific license continues in effect,
beyond the expiration date if necessary, with respect to possession of
byproduct material until the agency notifies the licensee in writing that the
license is terminated. During this time, the licensee shall:
(1) Limit actions involving byproduct
material to those related to decommissioning; and
(2) Continue to control entry to restricted
areas until they are suitable for release in accordance with state of Iowa
requirements.
d. Within
60 days of the occurrence of any of the following, each licensee shall provide
notification to the agency in writing of such occurrence, and either begin
decommissioning its site, or any separate building or outdoor area that
contains residual radioactivity so that the building or outdoor area is
suitable for release in accordance with the state of Iowa requirements, or
submit within 12 months of notification a decommissioning plan, if required by
39.4(33)
"j" begin decommissioning upon approval of that plan
if:
(1) The license has expired pursuant to
39.4(33)"a" or"b";
(2) The licensee has decided to permanently
cease principal activities, as defined in
641-38.2 (136C) at the entire
site or in any separate building or outdoor area that contains residual
radioactivity such that the building or outdoor area is unsuitable for release
in accordance with state of Iowa requirements;
(3) No principal activities under the license
have been conducted for a period of 24 months; or
(4) No principal activities have been
conducted for a period of 24 months in any separate building or outdoor area
suitable for release in accordance with State of Iowa
requirements.
e.
Coincident with the notification required by 39.4(33)
"d," the
licensee shall maintain in effect all decommissioning financial assurances
established by the licensee pursuant to subrule 39.4(26) in conjunction with a
license issuance or renewal or as required by this subrule. The amount of the
financial assurance must be increased, or may be decreased, as appropriate, to
cover the detailed cost estimate for decommissioning established pursuant to
paragraph 39.4(33)
"g."
(1)
Any licensee who has not provided financial assurance to cover the detailed
cost estimate submitted with the decommissioning plan shall do so when this
rule becomes effective on July 9, 1997.
(2) Following approval of the decommissioning
plan, a licensee may reduce the amount of the financial assurance as
decommissioning proceeds and radiological contamination is reduced at the site
with the approval of the agency.
f. The agency may grant a request to extend
the time periods established in 39.4(33)"d" if the agency
determines that this request is not detrimental to the public health and safety
and is otherwise in the public interest. The request must be submitted no later
than 30 days before notification pursuant to 39.4(33)"d." The
schedule for decommissioning set forth in 39.4(33)"d" of this
subrule may not commence until the agency has made a determination on the
request.
g. A decommissioning plan
must be submitted if required by license conditions or if the procedures and
activities necessary to carry out decommissioning of the site or separate
building or outdoor area have not been previously approved by the agency and
these procedures could increase the potential health and safety impacts to
workers or to the public.
(1) Procedures
having potential health and safety impacts include, but are not limited to:
1. Procedures that would involve techniques
not applied routinely during cleanup or maintenance operations;
2. Workers that would be entering areas not
normally occupied where surface contamination and radiation levels are
significantly higher than routinely encountered during operation;
3. Procedures that could result in
significantly greater airborne concentrations of radioactive material than are
present during operation;
4.
Procedures could result in significantly greater releases of radioactive
material to the environment than those associated with operation.
(2) The agency may approve an
alternate schedule for submittal of a decommissioning plan required pursuant to
39.4(33)"d" of this subrule if the agency determines that the
alternate schedule is necessary to the effective conduct of decommissioning
operations and presents no undue risk from radiation to the public health and
safety and is otherwise in the public interest.
(3) Procedures such as those listed in
39.4(33)"g" with potential health and safety impacts may not
be carried out prior to approval of the decommissioning plan.
(4) The proposed decommissioning plan for the
site or separate building or outdoor area must include:
1. A description of the conditions of the
site or separate building or outdoor area sufficient to evaluate the
acceptability of the plan;
2. A
description of planned decommissioning activities;
3. A description of the methods used to
ensure protection of workers and the environment against radiation hazards
during decommissioning;
4. A
description of the planned final radiation survey; and
5. An updated detailed cost estimate for
decommissioning, and a plan for ensuring the availability of adequate funds for
completion of decommissioning.
6. A
description of the physical security plan and material control and accounting
plan provisions in place during decommissioning.
7. For decommissioning plans calling for
completion of decommissioning later than 24 months after plan approval, the
plan shall include justification for the delay based on the criteria in
paragraph"i" of this subrule.
(5) The proposed decommissioning plan will be
approved by the agency if the information therein demonstrates that the
decommissioning will be completed as soon as practicable and that the health
and safety of workers and the public will be adequately protected.
h. Except as provided in
39.4(33)"i," licensees shall complete decommissioning of the
site or separate building or outdoor area as soon as practicable but no later
than 24 months following the initiation of decommissioning. When the
decommissioning involves the entire site, the licensee shall request license
termination as soon as practicable but no later than 24 months following the
initiation of decommissioning.
i.
The agency may approve a request for an alternative schedule for completion of
decommissioning of the site or separate building or outdoor area, and license
termination if appropriate, if the agency determines that the alternative is
warranted by consideration of the following:
(1) It is technically feasible to complete
decommissioning within the allotted 24-month period;
(2) Sufficient waste disposal capacity is
available to allow completion of decommissioning within the allotted 24-month
period;
(3) A significant volume
reduction exposure to workers can be achieved by allowing short-lived
radionuclides to decay;
(4) A
significant reduction in radiation exposure to workers can be achieved by
allowing short-lived radionuclides to decay; and
(5) Other site-specific factors which the
agency may consider appropriate on a case-by-case basis, such as the regulatory
requirements of other government agencies, lawsuits, groundwater treatment
activities, monitored natural groundwater restoration, actions that could
result in more environmental harm than a deferred cleanup, and other factors
beyond the controls of the licensee.
j. As the final step in decommissioning, the
licensee shall:
(1) Certify the disposition
of all licensed material, including accumulated wastes, by submitting a
completed IDPH Form 588-2793 or equivalent information; and
(2) Conduct a radiation survey of the
premises where the licensed activities were carried out and submit a report of
the results of this survey unless the licensee demonstrates in some other
manner that the premises are suitable for release in accordance with the
criteria for decommissioning in
641-40.28 (136C) through
641-40.31 (136C). The licensee
shall, as appropriate:
1. Report levels of
gamma radiation in units of millisieverts (microroentgen) per hour at one meter
from surfaces, and report the level of radioactivity, including alpha and beta,
in units of disintegrations per minute or microcuries (megabecquerels) per 100
square centimeters (removable and fixed) for surfaces, microcuries
(megabecquerels) per liter for water, and becquerels (picocuries) per gram for
solids such as soils or concrete; and
2. Specify the survey instrument(s) used and
certify that each instrument is properly calibrated and
tested.
k.
Specific licenses, including expired licenses, will be terminated by written
notice to the licensee when the agency determines that:
(1) Byproduct material has been properly
disposed;
(2) Reasonable effort has
been made to eliminate residual radioactive contamination, if present;
and
(3) A radiation survey has been
performed which demonstrates that the premises are suitable for release or
other information submitted by the licensee is sufficient to demonstrate that
the premises are suitable for release in accordance with the criteria for
decommissioning in 641-40.28 (136C) through
641-40.31(136C).
(4) Records
required by 39.4(52)"e " and 39.4(52)"g" have
been received.
l. Prior
to license termination, each licensee authorized to possess radioactive
material with a half-life greater than 120 days, in an unsealed form, shall
forward the following records to the agency:
(1) Disposal of licensed material (including
burials authorized before January 28, 1981), made under
641-40.71 (136C) through
641-40.74 (136C); and
(2) Records required by 641-paragraph
40.82(2)"d."
m. If licensed activities are transferred or
assigned in accordance with 39.4(32)
"b," each licensee
authorized to possess radioactive material with a half-life greater than 120
days, in an unsealed form, shall transfer the following records to the new
licensee and the new licensee will be responsible for maintaining these records
until the license is terminated:
(1) Records
of disposal of licensed material (including burials authorized before January
28,1981), made under 641- 40.71(136C) through
641-40.74 (136C); and
(2) Records required by 641-paragraph
40.82(2)"d."
n. Prior to license termination, each
licensee shall forward the records required by 39.4(26)"g" to
the agency.
(34)
Renewal of licenses.
a.
Applications for renewal of specific licenses shall be filed in accordance with
39.4(24) and include the fees required in 641-subrule 38.8(2).
b. In any case in which a licensee, not less
than 30 days prior to expiration of an existing license, has filed an
application in proper form for renewal or for a new license authorizing the
same activities, such existing license shall not expire until final action by
the agency.
(35)
Amendment of licenses at request of licensee. Applications for
amendment of a license shall be filed in accordance with 39.4(24), include the
fees required in 641-subrule 38.8(2), and shall specify the respects in which
the licensee desires the license to be amended and the grounds for such
amendment.
(36)
Agency
action on applications to renew or amend. In considering an
application by a licensee to renew or amend the license, the agency will apply
the criteria set forth in 39.4(25), 39.4(27), 39.4(28), and 39.4(29) and in
641-Chapters 38, 40, 41, 42, 43, 44 and 45, as applicable.
(37)
Persons possessing a license for
source, byproduct, or special nuclear material in quantities not sufficient to
form a critical mass on effective date of these rules. Any person who,
on the effective date of these rules, possesses a general or specific license
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for source, byproduct, or
special nuclear material in quantities not sufficient to form a critical mass,
shall be deemed to possess a like license issued under this chapter and the
Iowa Code, such license to expire either 90 days after receipt from the agency
of a notice of expiration of such license, or on the date or expiration
specified in the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission license, whichever is
earlier.
(38)
Persons
possessing naturally occurring and accelerator-produced radioactive material on
effective date of these rules. Any person who, on the effective date
of these rules, possesses NARM for which a specific license is required by the
Iowa Code or this chapter shall be deemed to possess such a license issued
under the Iowa Code and this chapter. Such license shall expire 90 days after
the effective date of these rules; provided, however, that if within the 90
days the person possessing such material files an application in proper form
for a license, such existing license shall not expire until the application has
been finally determined by the agency.
(39)
Requirements for license to
initially transfer source material for use under a general license. An
application for a specific license to initially transfer source material for
use under 39.4(21), or equivalent regulations of an agreement state or the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, will be approved if:
a. The applicant satisfies the general
requirements specified in 39.4(25); and
b. The applicant submits adequate information
on, and the agency approves the methods to be used for, quality control,
labeling, and providing safety instructions to recipients.
(40)
Conditions of licenses to
initially transfer source material for use under general license: quality
control, labeling, safety instructions, and records and reports.
a. Each person licensed under 39.4(39) shall
label the immediate container of each quantity of source material with the type
of source material and quantity of material and the words "radioactive
material."
b. Each person licensed
under 39.4(39) shall ensure that the quantities and concentrations of source
material are as labeled and indicated in any transfer records.
c. Each person licensed under 39.4(39) shall
provide the information specified in this paragraph to each person to whom
source material is transferred for use under 39.4(21) or equivalent provisions
in agreement state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulations. This
information must be transferred before the source material is transferred for
the first time in each calendar year to the particular recipient. The required
information includes:
(1) A copy of 39.4(21)
and 39.4(41) or relevant equivalent regulations of the agreement state or
Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
(2)
Appropriate radiation safety precautions and instructions relating to handling,
use, storage, and disposal of the material.
d. Each person licensed under 39.4(39) shall
report transfers as follows:
(1) File a
report with the Iowa Department of Public Health, 321 East 12th Street, Des
Moines, Iowa 50319. The report shall include the following information:
1. The name, address, and license number of
the person who transferred the source material;
2. For each general licensee under 39.4(21)
or equivalent agreement state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission provisions to
whom greater than 50 grams (0.11 lb) of source material has been transferred in
a single calendar quarter, the name and address of the general licensee to whom
source material is distributed; a responsible agent, by name or position, or
both, and telephone number, of the general licensee to whom the material was
sent; and the type, physical form, and quantity of source material transferred;
and
3. The total quantity of each
type and physical form of source material transferred in the reporting period
to all such generally licensed recipients.
(2) File a report with each responsible
agreement state agency or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission that identifies all
persons, operating under provisions equivalent to 39.4(21), to whom greater
than 50 grams (0.11 lb) of source material has been transferred within a single
calendar quarter. The report shall include the following information specific
to those transfers made to the agreement state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission
jurisdiction:
1. The name, address, and
license number of the person who transferred the source material; and
2. The name and address of the general
licensee to whom source material was distributed; a responsible agent, by name
or position, or both, and telephone number, of the general licensee to whom the
material was sent; and the type, physical form, and quantity of source material
transferred; and
3. The total
quantity of each type and physical form of source material transferred in the
reporting period to all such generally licensed recipients within the agreement
state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission jurisdiction.
(3) Submit each report by January 31 of each
year covering all transfers for the previous calendar year. If no transfers
were made to persons generally licensed under 39.4(21) or equivalent agreement
state or Nuclear Regulatory Commission provisions during the current period, a
report shall be submitted to the agency indicating so. If no transfers have
been made to general licensees in a particular agreement state or Nuclear
Regulatory Commission jurisdiction during the reporting period, this
information shall be reported to the responsible agreement state agency or
Nuclear Regulatory Commission upon request.
e. Each person licensed under 39.4(39) shall
maintain all information that supports the reports required by these rules
concerning each transfer to a general licensee for a period of one year after
the event is included in a report to the agency, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or to an agreement state agency.
(41)
Transfer of material.
a. No licensee shall transfer radioactive
material except as authorized pursuant to 39.4(41).
b. Except as otherwise provided in the
license and subject to the provisions of 39.4(41)
"c"
and
"d," any licensee may transfer radioactive material:
(1) To the agency (a licensee may transfer
material to the agency only after receiving prior approval from the
agency);
(2) To the U.S. Department
of Energy;
(3) To any person exempt
from these rules to the extent permitted under such exemption;
(4) To any person authorized to receive such
material under terms of a general license or its equivalent, or a specific
license or equivalent licensing document, issued by the agency, the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, any agreement state or any licensing state, or
to any person otherwise authorized to receive such material by the federal
government or any agency thereof, the agency, an agreement state, or a
licensing state; or
(5) As
otherwise authorized by the agency in writing.
c. Before transferring radioactive material
to a specific licensee of the agency, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
an agreement state or a licensing state, or to a general licensee who is
required to register with the agency, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
an agreement state or a licensing state prior to receipt of the radioactive
material, the licensee transferring the material shall verify that the
transferee's license authorizes the receipt of the type, form, and quantity of
radioactive material to be transferred.
d. Any of the following methods for the
verification required by 39.4(41)
"c" is acceptable:
(1) The transferor may possess and read a
current copy of the transferee's specific license or registration
certificate.
(2) The transferor may
possess a written certification by the transferee that the transferee is
authorized by license or registration certificate to receive the type, form,
and quantity of radioactive material to be transferred, specifying the license
or registration certificate number, issuing agency, and expiration
date.
(3) For emergency shipments,
the transferor may accept oral certification by the transferee that the
transferee is authorized by license or registration certificate to receive the
type, form, and quantity of radioactive material to be transferred, specifying
the license or registration certificate number, issuing agency, and expiration
date, provided that the oral certification is confirmed in writing within ten
days.
(4) The transferor may obtain
other information compiled by a reporting service from official records of the
agency, the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an agreement state, or a
licensing state regarding the identity of licensees and the scope and
expiration dates of licenses and registration.
(5) When none of the methods of verification
described in 39.4(41)"d"(1) through (4) are readily available
or when a transferor desires to verify that information received by one of such
methods is correct or up to date, the transferor may obtain and record
confirmation from the agency, the U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, an
agreement state, or a licensing state that the transferee is licensed to
receive the radioactive material.
e. Shipment and transport of radioactive
material shall be in accordance with the provisions of
641-39.5
(136C).
(51)
Modification and revocation of licenses.
a. The terms and conditions of all licenses
shall be subject to amendment, revision, or modification or the license may be
suspended or revoked by reason of amendments to the Iowa Code, or by reason of
rules, regulations, and orders issued by the agency.
b. Any license may be revoked, suspended, or
modified, in whole or in part, for any material false statement in the
application or any statement of fact required under provisions of the Iowa
Code, or because of conditions revealed by such application or statement of
fact or any report, record, or inspection or other means which would warrant
the agency to refuse to grant a license on an original application, or for
violation of, or failure to observe any of the terms and conditions of the Iowa
Code, or of the license, or of any rule, regulation, or order of the
agency.
c. Except in cases of
willfulness or those in which the public health, interest or safety requires
otherwise, no license shall be modified, suspended, or revoked unless, prior to
the institution of proceedings therefor, facts or conduct which may warrant
such action shall have been called to the attention of the licensee in writing
and the licensee shall have been accorded an opportunity to demonstrate or
achieve compliance with all lawful requirements.
(52)
Records.
a. Each person who receives source or
byproduct material pursuant to a license issued pursuant to these rules shall
keep records showing the receipt, transfer, and disposal of the source or
byproduct material as follows:
(1) The
licensee shall retain each record of receipt of the source or byproduct
material as long as the material is possessed and for three years following
transfer or disposition of the source or byproduct material.
(2) The licensee who transferred the material
shall retain each record of transfer of the source or byproduct material until
the agency terminates each license that authorizes the activity that is subject
to the record-keeping requirement.
(3) The licensee who disposed of the material
shall retain each record of disposal of the source or byproduct material until
the agency terminates each license that authorizes disposal of the
material.
b. The licensee
shall retain each record that is required by these rules or by license
condition for the period specified by the appropriate rule or license
condition; the record must be retained until the agency terminates each license
that authorizes the activity that is subject to the record-keeping
requirements.
c. Records which must
be maintained may be the original or a reproduced copy or microfilm if such
reproduced copy or microfilm is duly authenticated by authorized personnel and
the microfilm is capable of producing a clear and legible copy after storage
for the period specified by agency regulations. The record may also be stored
in electronic media with the capability for producing legible, accurate, and
complete records during the required retention period. Records such as letters,
drawings and specifications must include all pertinent information such as
stamps, initials, and signatures. The licensee shall maintain adequate
safeguards against tampering with and loss of records.
d. If there is a conflict between the
agency's rules or other written agency approval or authorization pertaining to
the retention period for the same type of record, the retention period
specified in these rules for such records shall apply unless the agency has
granted a specific exemption from the record retention requirements specified
in agency rules.
e. Prior to
license termination, each licensee authorized to possess radioactive material
with a half-life greater than 120 days, in an unsealed form, shall forward the
following records to the agency:
(1) Records
of disposal of licensed material made under
641-40.71 (136C) (including
burials authorized before January 28, 1981) to
641-40.74 (136C); and
(2) Records required by 641-paragraph
40.82(2)"d."
f. If licensed activities are transferred or
assigned, each licensee authorized to possess radioactive material, with a
half-life greater than 120 days, in an unsealed form, shall transfer the
following records to the new licensee and the new licensee will be responsible
for maintaining these records until the license is terminated:
(1) Records of disposal of licensed material
made under 40.71(136C) (including burials authorized before January 28, 1981)
to 641-40.74 (136C); and
(2) Records required by 641-paragraph
40.82(2)"d."
g. Prior to license termination, each
licensee shall forward the records required by subrule 39.4(26) to the
agency.
(90)
Reciprocal recognition of licenses.
a. Licenses of byproduct, source, and special
nuclear material in quantities not sufficient to form a critical mass.
(1) Subject to 641-Chapter 39, any person who
holds a specific license from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an
agreement state, and issued by the agency having jurisdiction where the
licensee maintains an office for directing the licensed activity and at which
radiation safety records are normally maintained, is hereby granted a general
license to conduct the activities authorized in such licensing document within
this state for a period not in excess of 180 days in a one-year period. The
one-year period starts on the day the licensee's reciprocity fee, as specified
in 641-subrule 38.8(8), is received by the agency and ends exactly 365 days
later. Licensees are responsible for ensuring they do not exceed the 180-day
limit within the one-year period and must apply for renewal 30 days prior to
the expiration date of the one-year reciprocal recognition period. Out-of-state
persons wishing to operate in the state in excess of 180 calendar days must
obtain an Iowa radioactive materials license.
(2) The licensing document referenced in
39.4(90)"a"(1) shall not limit the activity authorized by such
document to specified installations or locations.
(3) The out-of-state licensee shall notify
the agency in writing at least three working days prior to engaging in
activities in the state. Such notification shall indicate the location, period,
and type of proposed possession and use within the state, and shall be
accompanied by a copy of the pertinent licensing document initially. If, for a
specific case, the three-day period would impose an undue hardship on the
out-of-state licensee, the licensee may, upon application to the agency, obtain
permission to proceed sooner. The agency may waive the requirement for filing
additional written notifications during the remainder of the one-year
reciprocity period following the receipt of the initial notification from a
person engaging in activities under the general license provided by
39.4(90)"a."
(4)
The out-of-state licensee shall comply with all applicable rules of the agency
and with all the terms and conditions of the licensing document, except any
such terms and conditions which may be inconsistent with applicable rules of
the agency.
(5) The out-of-state
licensee shall supply other information as the agency may request.
(6) The out-of-state licensee shall not
transfer or dispose of radioactive material possessed or used under the general
license provided by 39.4(90)"a" except by transfer to a person
specifically licensed by the agency, another agreement state or the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission to receive such material.
(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of
39.4(90)
"a"(1), any person who holds a specific license issued
by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state authorizing the
holder to manufacture, transfer, install, or service a device described in
39.4(22)
"d"(1) within areas subject to the jurisdiction of the
licensing body is hereby granted a general license to install, transfer,
demonstrate, or service such a device in this state provided that:
1. Such person shall file a report with the
agency within 30 days after the end of each calendar quarter in which any
device is transferred to or installed in this state. Each such report shall
identify each general licensee to whom such device is transferred by name and
address, the type of device transferred, and the quantity and type of
radioactive material contained in the device;
2. The device has been manufactured, labeled,
installed, and serviced in accordance with applicable provisions of the
specific license issued to such person by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or an agreement state;
3. Such person shall ensure that any labels
required to be affixed to the device under regulations of the authority which
licensed manufacture of the device bear a statement that "Removal of this label
is prohibited"; and
4. The holder
of the specific license shall furnish to each general licensee to whom the
holder transfers such device or on whose premises the holder installs such
device a copy of the general license contained in 39.4(22)"d"
or in equivalent regulations of the agency having jurisdiction over the
manufacture and distribution of the device.
(8) The agency may withdraw, limit, or
qualify its acceptance of any specific license or equivalent licensing document
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state, or any
product distributed pursuant to such licensing document, upon determining that
such action is necessary in order to prevent undue hazard to public health and
safety or property.
(9) The agency
may revoke or suspend an out-of-state radiographer's ID card issued by the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a licensing state, or another agreement state in
accordance with the provisions of 641-
45.1(10)"h."
b. Licenses of naturally occurring or
accelerator-produced radioactive material.
(1) Subject to 641-Chapter 39, any person who
holds a specific license from the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an
agreement state, and issued by the agency having jurisdiction where the
licensee maintains an office for directing the licensed activity and at which
radiation safety records are normally maintained, is hereby granted a general
license to conduct the activities authorized in such licensing document within
this state for a period not in excess of 180 days in a one-year period. The
one-year period starts on the day the licensee's reciprocity fee, as specified
in 641-subrule 38.8(8), is received by the agency and ends exactly 365 days
later. Licensees are responsible for ensuring they do not exceed the 180-day
limit within the one-year period and must apply for renewal 30 days prior to
the expiration date of the one-year reciprocal recognition period. Out-of-state
persons wishing to operate in the state in excess of 180 calendar days must
obtain an Iowa radioactive materials license, which requires that the person
have a permanent office in Iowa where records are maintained pertaining to
licensed activities and where material can be stored, and must have at least
one full-time employee and a telephone.
(2) The licensing document referenced in
39.4(90)"a"(1) shall not limit the activity authorized by such
document to specified installations or locations.
(3) The out-of-state licensee shall notify
the agency in writing at least three days prior to engaging in activities in
the state. Such notification shall indicate the location, period, and type of
proposed possession and use within the state, and shall be accompanied by a
copy of the pertinent licensing document initially. If, for a specific case,
the three-day period would impose an undue hardship on the out-of-state
licensee, the licensee may, upon application to the agency, obtain permission
to proceed sooner. The agency may waive the requirement for filing additional
written notifications during the remainder of the one-year reciprocity period
following the receipt of the initial notification from a person engaging in
activities under the general license provided by
39.4(90)"b."
(4)
The out-of-state licensee shall comply with all applicable rules of the agency
and with all the terms and conditions of the licensing document, except any
such terms and conditions which may be inconsistent with applicable rules of
the agency.
(5) The out-of-state
licensee shall supply other information as the agency may request.
(6) The out-of-state licensee shall not
transfer or dispose of radioactive material possessed or used under the general
license provided by 39.4(90)
"b" except by transfer to a
person:
1. Specifically licensed by the
agency, another agreement state or the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to
receive such material, or
2. Exempt
from the requirements for a license for such material under
39.4(3)"a."
(7) Notwithstanding the provisions of
39.4(90)
"b"(1), any person who holds a specific license issued
by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state authorizing the
holder to manufacture, transfer, install, or service a device described in
39.4(22)
"d"(1) within areas subject to the jurisdiction of the
licensing body is hereby granted a general license to install, transfer,
demonstrate, or service such a device in this state provided that:
1. Such person shall file a report with the
agency within 30 days after the end of each calendar quarter in which any
device is transferred to or installed in this state. Each such report shall
identify each general licensee to whom such device is transferred by name and
address, the type of device transferred, and the quantity and type of
radioactive material contained in the device;
2. The device has been manufactured, labeled,
installed, and serviced in accordance with applicable provisions of the
specific license issued to such person by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or an agreement state;
3. Such person shall ensure that any labels
required to be affixed to the device under regulations of the authority which
licensed manufacture of the device bear a statement that "Removal of this label
is prohibited"; and
4. The holder
of the specific license shall furnish to each general licensee to whom the
holder transfers such device or on whose premises the holder installs such
device a copy of the general license contained in 39.4(22)"d"
or in equivalent regulations of the agency having jurisdiction over the
manufacture and distribution of the device.
(8) The agency may withdraw, limit, or
qualify its acceptance of any specific license or equivalent licensing document
issued by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission or an agreement state, or any
product distributed pursuant to such licensing document, upon determining that
such action is necessary in order to prevent undue hazard to public health and
safety or property.
(9) The agency
may revoke or suspend an out-of-state radiographer's ID card issued by the U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, a licensing state, or another agreement state in
accordance with the provisions of 641-
45.1(10)"h."