ML081370198
ML081370198 | |
Person / Time | |
---|---|
Site: | Pilgrim |
Issue date: | 05/16/2008 |
From: | Annette Vietti-Cook NRC/SECY |
To: | |
SECY RAS | |
References | |
50-293-LR, CLI-08-09, RAS J-125 | |
Download: ML081370198 (7) | |
Text
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION DOCKETED 05/16/08 SERVED 05/16/08 COMMISSIONERS Dale E. Klein, Chairman Gregory B. Jaczko Peter B. Lyons Kristine L. Svinicki
)
In the Matter of )
)
ENTERGY NUCLEAR GENERATION CO. and ) Docket No. 50-293-LR ENTERGY NUCLEAR OPERATIONS, INC. )
)
Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station )
___________________________ )
CLI-08-09 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER On April 8 the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit issued a decision denying two petitions for review filed by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts challenging the dismissal of its sole contention in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings. 1 The Court also ordered a stay [of] the close of hearings in both plant license renewal proceedings for fourteen days following the date of issuance of mandate in this case in order to afford the Commonwealth an opportunity to request participant status under 10 C.F.R.
§ 2.315(c), should it desire to do so. 2 Today we address the effect of the court-ordered stay on the ongoing Pilgrim proceeding.
Under the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, the mandate must issue 7 calendar days after the time to request rehearing expires or a timely-filed rehearing petition is denied, 1
Massachusetts v. NRC, Nos. 07-1482, 07-1483 (1st Cir. Apr. 8, 2008).
2 Id., slip op. at 31-32.
whichever is later. 3 In cases where a Federal agency is a party, a request for rehearing may be requested within 45 days after entry of judgment. 4 In this case, then, the court-ordered stay will remain in effect until at least June 13, 2008 (45-day rehearing period, plus the 7-day mandate period, plus 14 days, as ordered by the First Circuit).
An Atomic Safety and Licensing Board (the Board) held an evidentiary hearing on Pilgrim Watch Contention 1, the sole admitted contention in this proceeding, on April 10, just two days after the First Circuit decision. The First Circuits stay order generated some confusion at the hearing as to what exactly the Court meant by the phrase the close of hearings. Following the hearing, Entergy filed a Request for Guidance on the First Circuits Administrative Stay. 5 On May 12 the Board issued a scheduling order that renders Entergys concerns largely moot. 6 But because the stay remains in effect, we find it appropriate to provide guidance on how to proceed in light of the stay.
Entergy argues that the Commission should interpret the Courts order as staying only the termination of the adjudication, and not the closing of the evidentiary record and receipt of proposed findings. 7 Pilgrim Watch filed a response opposing Entergys proposed interpretation. 8 Pilgrim Watch argues that [e]nding the evidentiary hearing and closing the 3
Fed. R. App. P. 41.
4 Fed. R. App. P. 40.
5 Entergys Request for Guidance on the First Circuits Administrative Stay (April 17, 2008) (Request).
6 Order (Setting Deadlines for Provisional Proposed Findings and Conclusions on Contention 1, and for Pleadings Related to Pilgrim Watchs Recent Motion Regarding CUFs)
(May 12, 2008) (unpublished).
7 Request at 3.
8 Pilgrim Watch Response to Entergys Request for Guidance on the First Circuits Administrative Stay (April 21, 2008) (Pilgrim Watch Response).
record would eviscerate the right to participate that the Court of Appeals granted the Commonwealth. 9 Entergys argument is persuasive. The First Circuit ordered the stay not out of any concerns about the evidentiary hearing on Pilgrim Watchs contention, but to afford the Commonwealth [of Massachusetts] an opportunity to request participant status under 10 C.F.R.
§ 2.315(c), should it desire to do so. 10 The Court explained that the reason Massachusetts might desire to seek participant status under section 2.315(c) was to qualify to request a suspension of [license renewal] proceedings under § 2.802(d), 11 a provision in our rules allowing rulemaking petitioners who are also parties to licensing proceedings to request a suspension of those proceedings pending the outcome of the rulemaking petition.
Massachusetts has filed a license renewal-related rulemaking petition. 12 The Court stated that it would bind the NRC to its litigation position (stated in the agencys First Circuit brief) that these procedures would be available to Massachusetts in this proceeding. 13 In other words, the Court ordered the stay so that during that period of time the Commission would not allow the adjudication to reach a point where it would no longer allow Massachusetts to seek participant status and request a suspension of the proceedings.
Massachusetts recently took advantage of this opportunity by filing a notice of its intent to 9
Pilgrim Watch Response at 2.
10 Massachusetts, slip op. at 32.
11 Id. at 31.
12 Id. at 16-18.
13 Id. at 4; see also id. at 31. A prior Commission decision (CLI-07-13, 65 NRC 211, 215 n.16 (2007)) and the Commissions court of appeals brief indicated that Massachusetts would be permitted to seek interested state status.
participate in this proceeding as an interested state. 14 Massachusetts has not yet sought a suspension of the proceedings. Even though Massachusetts has now entered the case, the court-ordered stay, by its own terms, remains in effect.
The Court may have borrowed the phrase close of hearings from 10 C.F.R. § 2.1209, which requires parties to file proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law on the contentions addressed in the hearing within thirty (30) days of the close of the hearing or at such other time as the presiding officer directs. 15 In that regulation, the close of the hearing refers to the closing of the evidentiary record. But the administrative record (and the hearing process) remains open the Boards initial decision, any petition for review thereof, and the Commissions ultimate decision on review are all docketed and included in the administrative record following the closing of the Boards evidentiary record. In this proceeding, the Commonwealth has already filed a notice of intent to participate as an interested state and may petition to suspend the proceedings under 10 C.F.R. § 2.802(d) after the Board closes the evidentiary record.
In short, we do not read the First Circuits phrase the close of hearings to refer to the ministerial act of closing the evidentiary record for Pilgrim Watch Contention 1 under 10 C.F.R.
§ 2.1209, but to refer instead to the proceeding as a whole. It is not necessary for the parties or the Board to suspend their work on findings of fact and conclusions of law for Pilgrim Watch Contention 1 to protect the right of Massachusetts to participate as ordered by the Court.
Massachusettss concerns are entirely unrelated to Pilgrim Watch Contention 1. 16 If 14 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Notice of Intent to Participate as an Interested State (May 6, 2008).
15 The First Circuit did not cite to that regulation in issuing the stay.
16 Massachusetts explained to the First Circuit that it has expressed no interest in the contentions of other parties and seeks only to address the issues raised in its original contention, issues currently pending before the Commission in Massachusettss rulemaking (continued. . .)
Massachusetts petitions the Commission to suspend the proceeding, that action will not affect the evidentiary hearing record on Contention 1, the parties proposed findings and conclusions, or the Boards merits determination.
For this reason, we direct the Board to close the evidentiary record on Pilgrim Watch Contention 1, per its usual course, and proceed with its new schedule for the submission of proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. The proceeding-at-large and the administrative record remain open in accordance with the Courts stay order. Contrary to Pilgrim Watchs characterization, this will not eviscerate the right to participate that the Court of Appeals granted the Commonwealth but instead will ensure that Massachusetts may participate in precisely the manner the First Circuit sought to protect.
For the Commission
/RA/
Annette L. Vietti-Cook Secretary of the Commission Dated at Rockville, Maryland this 16th day of May, 2008.
(. . .continued) petition. See Reply Brief for Petitioner Commonwealth of Massachusetts at 13 (Nov. 8, 2007).
A copy is available on the Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS),
Accession No. ML073250351.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION In the Matter of )
)
ENTERGY NUCLEAR GENERATION CO. )
AND )
ENTERGY NUCLEAR OPERATIONS, INC. ) Docket No. 50-293-LR
)
(Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station) )
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing COMMISSION MEMORANDUM AND ORDER (CLI-08-09) have been served upon the following persons by electronic mail this date, followed by deposit of paper copies in the U.S. mail, first class, and NRC internal mail.
Office of Commission Appellate Administrative Judge Adjudication Ann Marshall Young, Chair U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Washington, DC 20555-0001 Mail Stop - T-3 F23 E-mail: ocaamail@nrc.gov U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20555-0001 E-mail: amy@nrc.gov Administrative Judge Administrative Judge Richard F. Cole Paul B. Abramson Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Mail Stop - T-3 F23 Mail Stop - T-3 F23 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20555-0001 Washington, DC 20555-0001 E-mail: rfc1@nrc.gov E-mail: pba@nrc.gov Susan L. Uttal, Esq. David R. Lewis, Esq.
David Roth, Esq. Paul A. Gaukler, Esq.
James E. Adler, Esq. Pillsbury, Winthrop, Shaw, Pittman, LLP Brian Newell, Paralegal 2300 N. Street, N.W.
Office of the General Counsel Washington, DC 20037-1128 Mail Stop - O-15 D21 E-mail: david.lewis@pillsburylaw.com U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission E-mail: paul.gaukler@pillsburylaw.com Washington, DC 20555-0001 E-mail: slu@nrc.gov E-mail: der@nrc.gov E-mail: jea1@nrc.gov E-mail: bpn1l@nrc.gov E-mail: OGCMailCenter@nrc.gov
2 Docket No. 50-293-LR COMMISSION MEMORANDUM AND ORDER (CLI-08-09)
Diane Curran, Esq. Terence A. Burke, Esq.
Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg, LLP Entergy Nuclear 1726 M Street, N.W., Suite 600 1340 Echelon Parkway Washington, DC 20036 Mail Stop M-ECH-62 E-mail: dcurran@harmoncurran.com Jackson, MS 39213 E-mail: tburke@entergy.com Matthew Brock, Assistant Attorney General Perry H. Buckberg, Project Manager James R. Milkey, Assistant Attorney General Plant Licensing Branch I-I Environmental Protection Division Division of Operating Reactor Licensing Office of the Attorney General Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation One Ashburton Place, 18th Floor U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Boston, MA 02108 Mail Stop O11-F1 E-mail: jim.milkey@state.ma.us Washington, DC 20555-001 E-mail: matthew.brock@ago.state.ma.us E-mail: phb1@nrc.gov Mary E. Lampert, Director Mark D. Sylvia, Town Manager Pilgrim Watch Town Managers Office 148 Washington Street 11 Lincoln Street Duxbury, MA 02332 Plymouth, MA 02360 E-mail: mary.lampert@comcast.net E-mail: msylvia@townhall.plymouth.ma.us Sheila Slocum Hollis, Esq. Chief Kevin M. Nord, Fire Chief & Director Duane Morris, LLP Duxbury Emergency Management Agency Town of Plymouth MA 668 Tremont Street 505 9th Street, NW, Suite 1000 Duxbury, MA 02332 Washington, DC 20004-2166 E-mail: nord@town.duxbury.ma.us E-mail: sshollis@duanemorris.com
[ Original signed by Linda Lewis ]
Office of the Secretary of the Commission Dated at Rockville, Maryland this 16th day of May 2008