ML20154E949

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Comment Opposing Rule Change Proposed by SECY-88-109 to Eliminate Requirement for Prompt Alert & Notification for General Public Prior to Low Power Operation at Nuclear Plants.Change Illegal,Unwise & Unacceptable
ML20154E949
Person / Time
Site: Seabrook  NextEra Energy icon.png
Issue date: 05/12/1988
From: Backus R
BACKUS, MEYER & SOLOMON, SEACOAST ANTI-POLLUTION LEAGUE
To: Chilk S
NRC OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY (SECY)
References
CON-#288-6321 OL, NUDOCS 8805230038
Download: ML20154E949 (3)


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MIC H A E L E IPAvC C C J sRANCM ggg May 12, 1988 '

Samuel J. Chilk Secretary of the Commission U . S . NRC Washington, DC 20555 RE: In the Matter of: Public Service C?mpany of New Hampshire, et al (Seabrook Station, Units 1 and 2)

Docket Nos. 50-443-OL and 50-444-OL

Dear Mr. Chilk:

The rule change proposed by SECY 88-109, and dated April 20, 1988, which proposes to eliminate the requirement for prompt alert and notification for the general public prior to low power operation at nuclear plants, is illegal, unwise and unacceptable.

The rule change is obviously the second Commission attempt to facilitate the licensing of particular plants currently under ad j udic a tion . The first rule change, having to do with utility plans, had application to only two f acilities in the entire nation, Seabrook and Shoreham. The presently proposed rule change is clearly intended to benefit only one plant, Seabrook.

The Commission must at some point accept that if its applicants cannot meet the Commission's emergency planning requirements, they should not get a license. So far, it seems to be the Commission's policy that if its applicants cannot meet the emergency planning requirements, those requirements will be changed. This is not a proper basis for nuclear licensing.

Th6 Commission's course of conduct in adopting the prior rule change, 44 Fed. Reg. 4207 8, and in proposing the current rule change, which has applicability to only one nuclear plant, will be to destroy whatever remaining vestiges of public credibility this agency may have.

Iba rule _ change is illegal.

The rule change is a blatant attempt to decide a matter now under adjudication in a specific case through rulemaking. The gs$lik E G

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  • Samuel J. Chilk, Chairman Page 2 May 12, 1988 rulemaking amounts to a Commission reversal of ALAB 883, in which the NRC 's Appeal Board held that under current regulations, no low power operation at Seabrook could be permitted without a compliant alert and notification system in place. Indeed, the Commission itself has now issued an order extending its time to i consider review of ALAB 883, in light of the proposed rule change.

j Nothing could more clearly illustrate the f act that this rule l

change is nothing more than an attempt to decide an issue through a rule change, rather than through on-going litigation, now pending before the Commissioners themselves.

By the expedient of choosing to decide the issue through rulemaking, rather than adjudication, the Commission is abrogating that prohibition upon ex parte contact set forth at 10 CFR 2.780, depriving the parties of the adjudicatory rights they were intended to have under the Administrative Procedure Act and the Atomic Energy Act.

The Commissioners, as the Chairman himself has recognized, act in a quasi judicial capacity in determining licensing individuals in particular cases. There is absolutely no legal basis for the commissioners to step out of this quasi judicial capacity in order to consider this rule change, which has applicability to only one plant, particularly when that plant is under adjudication, and that adjudication is pending before the Commissioners themselves.

Iba_ruim_cLange_is_ unwise.

SECY 88-109 provides absolutely no basir for believing that the rule change is necessary. The only suggested rationale is the statement that the policy issues deserve a broader range of comment than merely available from the parties to the Seabrook litigation. This rationale could be generally applied to any issue in litigation at any nuclear plant, and provides no basis for removing from litigation issues which should be dealt with through litigation. It is also absurd in that it is only at Seabrook that the rule will have any staff effect.

The present rule has been in effect since 1982, and the Commission cites no new safety research or agency experience which would justify changing the prior rule. It is perfectly obvious that the only purpose of the change for the rule is to facilitate the licensing of Seabrook, which is not a proper basis for rulemaking.

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Samuel J. Chilk, Chairman Page 3 May 12,1988 Lacking a proper basis, the rule change is arbitrary and capricious, as well as violating the Commission's ex parte rules,

the Administrative Act, Procedure Act, and the Atomic Energy Act.

Respectfully submitted,

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. Backus Attorney for Seacoast Anti-Pollution League RAB jsr l

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