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LYNCH, Circuit Judge.        The Commonwealth of Massachusetts wishes  to  ensure  that    the    United    States  Nuclear  Regulatory Commission    ("NRC" or the      "Commission")      will take  account of the Commonwealth's safety concerns about treatment of spent fuel rods before the NRC decides whether to renew the operating licenses of two  nuclear    energy    plants:      the    Pilgrim  plant  in  Plymouth, Massachusetts, *and the Vermont Yankee plant              in Vernon,  Vermont, which  is  within  ten  miles    of  the    Massachusetts  border. The licenses were originally issued in 1972 and will expire in 2012; the re-licensing proceedings have been initiated and are ongoing.
LYNCH, Circuit Judge.        The Commonwealth of Massachusetts wishes  to  ensure  that    the    United    States  Nuclear  Regulatory Commission    ("NRC" or the      "Commission")      will take  account of the Commonwealth's safety concerns about treatment of spent fuel rods before the NRC decides whether to renew the operating licenses of two  nuclear    energy    plants:      the    Pilgrim  plant  in  Plymouth, Massachusetts, *and the Vermont Yankee plant              in Vernon,  Vermont, which  is  within  ten  miles    of  the    Massachusetts  border. The licenses were originally issued in 1972 and will expire in 2012; the re-licensing proceedings have been initiated and are ongoing.
The Commonwealth says        that old assumptions      about  safe storage of spent fuel rods        --  on which the NRC has relied since at least the early 1970s      --  no longer hold.        The Commonwealth claims that more    recent  studies    and changed circumstances        indicate an increased risk that the plants' method of storing spent fuel rods will  lead to an environmental catastrophe.                It  also  raises  its concern that the plants' method of storing spent fuel leaves the plants vulnerable to terrorist attack.
The Commonwealth says        that old assumptions      about  safe storage of spent fuel rods        --  on which the NRC has relied since at least the early 1970s      --  no longer hold.        The Commonwealth claims that more    recent  studies    and changed circumstances        indicate an increased risk that the plants' method of storing spent fuel rods will  lead to an environmental catastrophe.                It  also  raises  its concern that the plants' method of storing spent fuel leaves the plants vulnerable to terrorist attack.
Both  sides  agree      that    the  safety  issues  raised are deserving of careful consideration.            Both sides also agree that the Commonwealth is by law permitted to raise its various concerns by some path and to obtain judicial review of any NRC decision that adversely    affects  its    interests      in  this  matter. The  question presented here is whether the Commonwealth has, from the regulatory
Both  sides  agree      that    the  safety  issues  raised are deserving of careful consideration.            Both sides also agree that the Commonwealth is by law permitted to raise its various concerns by some path and to obtain judicial review of any NRC decision that adversely    affects  its    interests      in  this  matter. The  question presented here is whether the Commonwealth has, from the regulatory maze,    chosen    the correct      path    for  doing    so.      The  Commonwealth insists    it  has chosen the appropriate path,                indeed,    the only one available to it.          In short,    the Commonwealth argues that it                must be allowed to participate directly in the re-licensing proceedings as a party in order to get its            safety-based contentions heard.                  In the alternative,      the Commonwealth argues that the NRC must ensure that it    resolves    a  separate    rulemaking *petition,            initiated      by  the Commonwealth        and    based    on  the      same    concerns      about    spent    fuel storage,    before the Commission issues any renewal licenses so that the results of the rulemaking will apply to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee re-licensing proceedings.
 
maze,    chosen    the correct      path    for  doing    so.      The  Commonwealth insists    it  has chosen the appropriate path,                indeed,    the only one available to it.          In short,    the Commonwealth argues that it                must be allowed to participate directly in the re-licensing proceedings as a party in order to get its            safety-based contentions heard.                  In the alternative,      the Commonwealth argues that the NRC must ensure that it    resolves    a  separate    rulemaking *petition,            initiated      by  the Commonwealth        and    based    on  the      same    concerns      about    spent    fuel storage,    before the Commission issues any renewal licenses so that the results of the rulemaking will apply to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee re-licensing proceedings.
The NRC says the Commonwealth has chosen the wrong path, indeed,      one precluded by its          regulations.          The agency also        says that      another      option    is    available,      is    the    proper    path    to  be followed,        and    will    adequately        protect      the  state's      interests.
The NRC says the Commonwealth has chosen the wrong path, indeed,      one precluded by its          regulations.          The agency also        says that      another      option    is    available,      is    the    proper    path    to  be followed,        and    will    adequately        protect      the  state's      interests.
According to the NRC,          the Commonwealth must abandon its                  attempt to attain      formal      "party"    status    in    the    licensing      proceedings      and instead seek to participate in              those proceedings as an "interested governmental        entity."      The  Commonwealth        may,    in    that  capacity, petition the agency to delay issuance of the renewal licenses until the Commonwealth's request for a rulemaking is                        resolved.        Indeed, the NRC has committed itself              in    this case to an interpretation of its    regulations in      such a way as to provide this alternative path,
According to the NRC,          the Commonwealth must abandon its                  attempt to attain      formal      "party"    status    in    the    licensing      proceedings      and instead seek to participate in              those proceedings as an "interested governmental        entity."      The  Commonwealth        may,    in    that  capacity, petition the agency to delay issuance of the renewal licenses until the Commonwealth's request for a rulemaking is                        resolved.        Indeed, the NRC has committed itself              in    this case to an interpretation of its    regulations in      such a way as to provide this alternative path, complete w.ith opportunities      for eventual      judicial review,        to the Commonwealth.
 
complete w.ith opportunities      for eventual      judicial review,        to the Commonwealth.
We hold as    a matter    of law that      the    Commonwealth    has chosen the wrong path in      seeking to raise the safety issues as a party in  the licensing proceedings and deny its            petition.      We also bind the NRC to its    litigation position,        described in more detail below. This  leaves  the  Commonwealth      free  to    follow the      NRC's preferred path if    it  so chooses.      To the extent the Commonwealth seeks an order from this court interfering with the NRC's ongoing re-licensing proceedings by imposing decision-making timetables on the  agency,  we issue    a very brief stay but otherwise decline                  to issue such relief.
We hold as    a matter    of law that      the    Commonwealth    has chosen the wrong path in      seeking to raise the safety issues as a party in  the licensing proceedings and deny its            petition.      We also bind the NRC to its    litigation position,        described in more detail below. This  leaves  the  Commonwealth      free  to    follow the      NRC's preferred path if    it  so chooses.      To the extent the Commonwealth seeks an order from this court interfering with the NRC's ongoing re-licensing proceedings by imposing decision-making timetables on the  agency,  we issue    a very brief stay but otherwise decline                  to issue such relief.
_                        __0 Regulatory Background A description      of  the    regulatory    scheme      governing    the process  for renewing licenses to operate nuclear power plants is helpful to understand this case.            The Atomic    Energy Act      ("AEA")
_                        __0 Regulatory Background A description      of  the    regulatory    scheme      governing    the process  for renewing licenses to operate nuclear power plants is helpful to understand this case.            The Atomic    Energy Act      ("AEA")
contains    the  statutory    basis    for    issuing    and      renewing    such licenses. See 42 U.S.C.    §§ 2133,    2134(b). The AEA empowers the NRC to make licensing decisions.            Id.  §§ 2133,    2134(b). The AEA provides for initial    operating licenses valid for up to forty years and specifies that licenses "may be renewed."              Id.    § 2133(c) .'    The 1    Sections  2133 and 2134(b) originally provided separate bases for issuing atomic energy licenses.            Unlike § 2133, § 2134(b) does not explicitly impose a forty-year limit or provide ,for
contains    the  statutory    basis    for    issuing    and      renewing    such licenses. See 42 U.S.C.    §§ 2133,    2134(b). The AEA empowers the NRC to make licensing decisions.            Id.  §§ 2133,    2134(b). The AEA provides for initial    operating licenses valid for up to forty years and specifies that licenses "may be renewed."              Id.    § 2133(c) .'    The 1    Sections  2133 and 2134(b) originally provided separate bases for issuing atomic energy licenses.            Unlike § 2133, § 2134(b) does not explicitly impose a forty-year limit or provide ,for (O AEA says nothing more about requirements for re-licensing,                        instead delegating to the NRC authority to determine applicable rules and regulations.      Id.  §§ 2133,      2134(b).
 
(O AEA says nothing more about requirements for re-licensing,                        instead delegating to the NRC authority to determine applicable rules and regulations.      Id.  §§ 2133,      2134(b).
The  NRC has      codified two distinct          sets  of regulations containing    requirements        for  license      renewal    applications.        The first  set  of  regulations        focuses      on  technical    issues    such  as equipment aging.        See,    e.g.,  10 C.F.R.      § 54.4  (defining scope of renewal requirements        in    10 C.F.R.      Part 54).      Those provisions are not at issue here.
The  NRC has      codified two distinct          sets  of regulations containing    requirements        for  license      renewal    applications.        The first  set  of  regulations        focuses      on  technical    issues    such  as equipment aging.        See,    e.g.,  10 C.F.R.      § 54.4  (defining scope of renewal requirements        in    10 C.F.R.      Part 54).      Those provisions are not at issue here.
The  NRC  promulgated          the  other    set  of    regulations, codified at 10 C.F.R.          Part 51,    primarily to fulfill          the agency's obligations under the National Environmental                    Policy Act    ("NEPA").
The  NRC  promulgated          the  other    set  of    regulations, codified at 10 C.F.R.          Part 51,    primarily to fulfill          the agency's obligations under the National Environmental                    Policy Act    ("NEPA").
O  See 10 C.F.R. § 51.10 (explaining purpose of Part 51 regulations).
O  See 10 C.F.R. § 51.10 (explaining purpose of Part 51 regulations).
NEPA    requires    federal      agencies      to  document    the    environmental impacts    and  possible      alternatives        to    proposed    "major    Federal actions      significantly        affecting        the    quality    of  the    human environment."        42 U.S.C. -§ 4332(C).            In  doing so,    NEPA fulfills dual purposes.        First,    it  "places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental                      impact of a license renewal.        However, the agency has treated licenses issued under either provision as subject to the same terms limiting the initial    license to no more than forty years and providing for renewal following expiration of the initial                    license. See Nuclear Power Plant License Renewal, 55 Fed. Reg. 29,043, 29,050 (proposed July 17, 1990); see also 10 C.F.R. § 50.51.                  Agency regulations now explicitly subject licenses for plants issued under both provisions to the same requirements for renewal.                  See 10 C.F.R. § 54.1.
NEPA    requires    federal      agencies      to  document    the    environmental impacts    and  possible      alternatives        to    proposed    "major    Federal actions      significantly        affecting        the    quality    of  the    human environment."        42 U.S.C. -§ 4332(C).            In  doing so,    NEPA fulfills dual purposes.        First,    it  "places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental                      impact of a license renewal.        However, the agency has treated licenses issued under either provision as subject to the same terms limiting the initial    license to no more than forty years and providing for renewal following expiration of the initial                    license. See Nuclear Power Plant License Renewal, 55 Fed. Reg. 29,043, 29,050 (proposed July 17, 1990); see also 10 C.F.R. § 50.51.                  Agency regulations now explicitly subject licenses for plants issued under both provisions to the same requirements for renewal.                  See 10 C.F.R. § 54.1.
proposed      action."            Balt. Gas    & Elec. Co. v. Nat'l    Res. Def.  (7 Council,    Inc.,      462 U.S.      87,  97  (1983)    (quoting Vt.      Yankee Nuclear Power Corp.      v. Nat'l Res.        Def. Council,    Inc.,    435 U.S. 519,  553 (1978))    (internal quotation marks omitted).                    "Second,    it  ensures that    the    agency      will      inform    the  public    that    it  has    indeed considered environmental                concerns in    its  decisionmaking process."
proposed      action."            Balt. Gas    & Elec. Co. v. Nat'l    Res. Def.  (7 Council,    Inc.,      462 U.S.      87,  97  (1983)    (quoting Vt.      Yankee Nuclear Power Corp.      v. Nat'l Res.        Def. Council,    Inc.,    435 U.S. 519,  553 (1978))    (internal quotation marks omitted).                    "Second,    it  ensures that    the    agency      will      inform    the  public    that    it  has    indeed considered environmental                concerns in    its  decisionmaking process."
Id.  (citing Weinberger              v. Catholic    Action    of    Haw. Peace    Educ.
Id.  (citing Weinberger              v. Catholic    Action    of    Haw. Peace    Educ.
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Issuance        or renewal      of a license      to operate a nuclear power    plant      is    a      "major    Federal      action"      triggering      NEPA's requirement      that      the    agency    produce    an  Environmental        Impact Statement      ("EIS")    for such proceedings.            10 C.F.R.      § 51.20.
Issuance        or renewal      of a license      to operate a nuclear power    plant      is    a      "major    Federal      action"      triggering      NEPA's requirement      that      the    agency    produce    an  Environmental        Impact Statement      ("EIS")    for such proceedings.            10 C.F.R.      § 51.20.
Producing an EIS containing adequate discussion of all the environmental issues relevant to licensing the operation of a nuclear power plant poses a significant                    task for the NRC.          In  an effort to streamline the license renewal process,                        the NRC in      1996 conducted a study to determine which NEPA-related issues could be addressed generically              (that is,    applying to all      plants)    and which need  to  be  determined          on  a plant-by-plant        basis.      The    agency characterizes        the    first    group    of issues      as  Category 1, and the second as      Category        2,  issues.        See generally Office        of Nuclear Regulatory Research,            U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n,              NUREG-1437,    1 Generic    Environmental            Impact    Statement    for    License    Renewal    of Nuclear Plants        (1996).
Producing an EIS containing adequate discussion of all the environmental issues relevant to licensing the operation of a nuclear power plant poses a significant                    task for the NRC.          In  an effort to streamline the license renewal process,                        the NRC in      1996 conducted a study to determine which NEPA-related issues could be addressed generically              (that is,    applying to all      plants)    and which need  to  be  determined          on  a plant-by-plant        basis.      The    agency characterizes        the    first    group    of issues      as  Category 1, and the second as      Category        2,  issues.        See generally Office        of Nuclear Regulatory Research,            U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n,              NUREG-1437,    1 Generic    Environmental            Impact    Statement    for    License    Renewal    of Nuclear Plants        (1996).
()              Category 1 issues are common to all                nuclear power plants, or to a sub-class of plants.          As such,        the NRC does not analyze generic    Category    1  issues    afresh      with        each    individual    plant operating    license application.          Instead,      the agency conducted an extensive survey and generated findings,              contained within a Generic Environmental      Impact  Statement      ("GEIS"),        that    answer  Category    1 issues as to all nuclear power plants.                See id.      at 1-3 to 1-6. The GEIS findings have since been codified through a rulemaking.                        See Environmental      Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses,    61 *Fed. Reg. 28,467    (June    5,    1996)      [hereinafter    Final Rule];  see also 10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,    subpt.      A,    app. B (listing "NEPA issues for license renewal of nuclear power plants" and assigning them to either Category 1 or 2).            Category 2 issues,          by contrast, are those non-generic issues that require                    site-specific      analysis for each individual licensing proceeding.                  10 C.F.R. pt. 51,      subpt.
()              Category 1 issues are common to all                nuclear power plants, or to a sub-class of plants.          As such,        the NRC does not analyze generic    Category    1  issues    afresh      with        each    individual    plant operating    license application.          Instead,      the agency conducted an extensive survey and generated findings,              contained within a Generic Environmental      Impact  Statement      ("GEIS"),        that    answer  Category    1 issues as to all nuclear power plants.                See id.      at 1-3 to 1-6. The GEIS findings have since been codified through a rulemaking.                        See Environmental      Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses,    61 *Fed. Reg. 28,467    (June    5,    1996)      [hereinafter    Final Rule];  see also 10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,    subpt.      A,    app. B (listing "NEPA issues for license renewal of nuclear power plants" and assigning them to either Category 1 or 2).            Category 2 issues,          by contrast, are those non-generic issues that require                    site-specific      analysis for each individual licensing proceeding.                  10 C.F.R. pt. 51,      subpt.
A, app. B,  n.2.
A, app. B,  n.2.
These categories    affect      how the NRC handles the NEPA-mandated EIS requirements.        The process of creating the EIS for an operating licensing      (or re-licensing)        proceeding begins with the applicant,    although    producing    the    EIS    is    ultimately    the  NRC's responsibility.      Under the regulations,          each applicant must submit to the agency an environmental report that includes plant-specific analysis    of all  Category 2    issues.        Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (ii).      The regulations    generally    relieve    applicants          of  having  to  discuss
These categories    affect      how the NRC handles the NEPA-mandated EIS requirements.        The process of creating the EIS for an operating licensing      (or re-licensing)        proceeding begins with the applicant,    although    producing    the    EIS    is    ultimately    the  NRC's responsibility.      Under the regulations,          each applicant must submit to the agency an environmental report that includes plant-specific analysis    of all  Category 2    issues.        Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (ii).      The regulations    generally    relieve    applicants          of  having  to  discuss Category 1 issues,        instead allowing applicants to rest on the GEIS findings.      Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (i).
 
Category 1 issues,        instead allowing applicants to rest on the GEIS findings.      Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (i).
The      regulation      does  require    an    applicant's    report  to include    "any      new    and    significant      information        regarding    the environmental impacts of license renewal of which the applicant is aware."  Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (iv).        The NRC concedes that this applies even to "new        and significant        information"      concerning    Category    1 issues.
The      regulation      does  require    an    applicant's    report  to include    "any      new    and    significant      information        regarding    the environmental impacts of license renewal of which the applicant is aware."  Id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (iv).        The NRC concedes that this applies even to "new        and significant        information"      concerning    Category    1 issues.
NRC staff then draw upon the                applicant's environmental report to produce a draft supplemental EIS ("SEIS")                    for the license renewal. See id.      § 51.95(c).        This plant-specific        SEIS addresses Category 2 issues and complements the GEIS,                    which covers Category 1 issues.      Id.    § 51.71(d).      When the GEIS and SEIS are combined,              (
NRC staff then draw upon the                applicant's environmental report to produce a draft supplemental EIS ("SEIS")                    for the license renewal. See id.      § 51.95(c).        This plant-specific        SEIS addresses Category 2 issues and complements the GEIS,                    which covers Category 1 issues.      Id.    § 51.71(d).      When the GEIS and SEIS are combined,              (
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§ 51.95(c) (3)      (referencing id.      § 51.91).
§ 51.95(c) (3)      (referencing id.      § 51.91).
Because      Category    1 issues    have    already been      addressed globally by      10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,  subpt. A,    app. B,  they. cannot be litigated    in    individual      adjudications,        such as    license    renewal proceedings      for individual plants.            See id.    § 2.335;    Fla. Power &
Because      Category    1 issues    have    already been      addressed globally by      10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,  subpt. A,    app. B,  they. cannot be litigated    in    individual      adjudications,        such as    license    renewal proceedings      for individual plants.            See id.    § 2.335;    Fla. Power &
(1  Light Co.  (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant),            54 N.R.C. 3,  12, 20-23  (2001). Instead, the agency has established other means for challenging    GEIS  findings    regarding      Category    1    issues    when necessary,    whether by the agency's        own initiative      or by petition from an outside entity.        This divergent treatment of generic and site-specific issues is    reasonable and consistent with the purpose of promoting efficiency in        handling license renewal decisions.
(1  Light Co.  (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant),            54 N.R.C. 3,  12, 20-23  (2001). Instead, the agency has established other means for challenging    GEIS  findings    regarding      Category    1    issues    when necessary,    whether by the agency's        own initiative      or by petition from an outside entity.        This divergent treatment of generic and site-specific issues is    reasonable and consistent with the purpose of promoting efficiency in        handling license renewal decisions.
There are several methods of review of Category 1 issues.
There are several methods of review of Category 1 issues.
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id.
id.
Third,  the NRC staff may request that a rule be suspended with respect    to a particular      plant  if  comments  to a draft        SEIS reveal site-specific information indicating that the rule would be inapplicable to that particular plant.            id.
Third,  the NRC staff may request that a rule be suspended with respect    to a particular      plant  if  comments  to a draft        SEIS reveal site-specific information indicating that the rule would be inapplicable to that particular plant.            id.
Fourth,    "[a]  party to an adjudicatory          proceeding"      may petition for a waiver of an NRC rule or regulation with respect to
Fourth,    "[a]  party to an adjudicatory          proceeding"      may petition for a waiver of an NRC rule or regulation with respect to that proceeding.        10 C.F.R. § 2.335(b).          "The  sole    ground  for petition of waiver or exception is          that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that  the  application    of  the  rule  or  regulation  .  . would not serve the purposes for which        [it] was adopted."      Id.
 
that proceeding.        10 C.F.R. § 2.335(b).          "The  sole    ground  for petition of waiver or exception is          that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that  the  application    of  the  rule  or  regulation  .  . would not serve the purposes for which        [it] was adopted."      Id.
Finally, any member of the public may petition the agency for  a rulemaking proceeding        aimed at    altering  the GEIS    and its accompanying rule.      Final Rule,    supra,  61 Fed. Reg. at 28,470.
Finally, any member of the public may petition the agency for  a rulemaking proceeding        aimed at    altering  the GEIS    and its accompanying rule.      Final Rule,    supra,  61 Fed. Reg. at 28,470.
TI.
TI.
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Entergy's environmental reports did not contain in-depth discussion 2      We use "Entergy" to refer to three entities:                Entergy Nuclear Generation Company holds the Pilgrim plant possession and use license; Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee LLC holds the Vermont Yankee plant possession and use license; and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. holds the operating licenses for both facilities.
Entergy's environmental reports did not contain in-depth discussion 2      We use "Entergy" to refer to three entities:                Entergy Nuclear Generation Company holds the Pilgrim plant possession and use license; Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee LLC holds the Vermont Yankee plant possession and use license; and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. holds the operating licenses for both facilities.
3      The Commission is currently scheduled to issue a decision on the Plymouth application by July 27, 2008 and the Vermont Yankee application by November 2008.
3      The Commission is currently scheduled to issue a decision on the Plymouth application by July 27, 2008 and the Vermont Yankee application by November 2008.
of any Category            1 issues      and represented        that  "Entergy has    not identified        any  new    and    significant        information    concerning    the impacts addressed by these                [GEIS]    findings."
of any Category            1 issues      and represented        that  "Entergy has    not identified        any  new    and    significant        information    concerning    the impacts addressed by these                [GEIS]    findings."
On  May    26,    2006,      the    Commonwealth    of  Massachusetts submitted parallel hearing requests                      in  each of the two plant re-licensing proceedings.                Each request included only one contention that the Commonwealth proposed to introduce into the proceedings:
On  May    26,    2006,      the    Commonwealth    of  Massachusetts submitted parallel hearing requests                      in  each of the two plant re-licensing proceedings.                Each request included only one contention that the Commonwealth proposed to introduce into the proceedings:
that Entergy's environmental reports for each plant did not satisfy NEPA "because          [they do]      not address the environmental              impacts of severe spent fuel pool accidents."
that Entergy's environmental reports for each plant did not satisfy NEPA "because          [they do]      not address the environmental              impacts of severe spent fuel pool accidents."
The storage of spent fuel on site at nuclear power plants is    a Category 1 issue for operating license renewal purposes.                        4  10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,      subpt. A,  app. B. That subject is      normally exempt from      discussion      in  a  license      renewal    applicant's    environmental report,      id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (i),        but may be raised elsewhere.            The Commonwealth          contends      that    it    'may raise    the  issue    in  the  re-licensing proceeding and that Entergy's report violated NEPA and 10 C.F.R.      § 51.53(c) (3) (iv)        because      it  failed to    address    "new  and 4        The regulation adopts the GEIS findings that "[t]he expected increase in the volume of spent fuel from an additional 20 years of operation can be safely accommodated on site with small environmental effects through dry or pool storage at all plants if a permanent repository or monitored retrievable storage is not available."          10 C.*F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B.                    As such, the license renewal regulations classify the environmental impacts of on-site spent fuel storage as "small," i.e.,                        "not detectable or so minor that they will neither destabilize nor noticeably alter      any important attribute of the resource."                    Id. at n.3.
The storage of spent fuel on site at nuclear power plants is    a Category 1 issue for operating license renewal purposes.                        4  10 C.F.R.      pt. 51,      subpt. A,  app. B. That subject is      normally exempt from      discussion      in  a  license      renewal    applicant's    environmental report,      id.    § 51.53(c) (3) (i),        but may be raised elsewhere.            The Commonwealth          contends      that    it    'may raise    the  issue    in  the  re-licensing proceeding and that Entergy's report violated NEPA and 10 C.F.R.      § 51.53(c) (3) (iv)        because      it  failed to    address    "new  and 4        The regulation adopts the GEIS findings that "[t]he expected increase in the volume of spent fuel from an additional 20 years of operation can be safely accommodated on site with small environmental effects through dry or pool storage at all plants if a permanent repository or monitored retrievable storage is not available."          10 C.*F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B.                    As such, the license renewal regulations classify the environmental impacts of on-site spent fuel storage as "small," i.e.,                        "not detectable or so minor that they will neither destabilize nor noticeably alter      any important attribute of the resource."                    Id. at n.3.
significant information" regarding the risks of on-site spent fuel                  (J storage.
significant information" regarding the risks of on-site spent fuel                  (J storage.
Spent  fuel    rods  are  a  radioactive      waste    product  of nuclear power plants.        When the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants were originally licensed in      1972,  it  was common practice to arrange spent fuel rods in    low-density racks in water-filled storage pools located at the plant that produced the waste.                At the time,    there was a national policy of eventually disposing of spent fuel through reprocessing. Long-term storage in        a central geologic repository posed another option for removing spent fuel from reactor sites.
Spent  fuel    rods  are  a  radioactive      waste    product  of nuclear power plants.        When the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants were originally licensed in      1972,  it  was common practice to arrange spent fuel rods in    low-density racks in water-filled storage pools located at the plant that produced the waste.                At the time,    there was a national policy of eventually disposing of spent fuel through reprocessing. Long-term storage in        a central geologic repository posed another option for removing spent fuel from reactor sites.
However,  the reprocessing strategy was abandoned in              the mid-1970s, and although  the  federal    government    has been planning to accept spent fuel at a proposed repository at Yucca Mountain,              Nevada,  that option will not be available until at least 2015,                if  at all. As a result,  spent fuel has accumulated at on-site storage facilities, and power    plant  operators      have  replaced    low-density      racks  with high-density    racks  in  storage pools      in  order  to accommodate    the mounting volume of spent fuel rods.          According to the Commonwealth, use  of  high-density    racks  restricts      the  flow  of  cooling  fluid around spent fuel rods and raises the risk of fire under a number of scenarios.
However,  the reprocessing strategy was abandoned in              the mid-1970s, and although  the  federal    government    has been planning to accept spent fuel at a proposed repository at Yucca Mountain,              Nevada,  that option will not be available until at least 2015,                if  at all. As a result,  spent fuel has accumulated at on-site storage facilities, and power    plant  operators      have  replaced    low-density      racks  with high-density    racks  in  storage pools      in  order  to accommodate    the mounting volume of spent fuel rods.          According to the Commonwealth, use  of  high-density    racks  restricts      the  flow  of  cooling  fluid around spent fuel rods and raises the risk of fire under a number of scenarios.
The    Commonwealth      contended        in    the    re-licensing proceedings    that  new    and  significant      information      about  on-site spent  fuel storage    at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants was
The    Commonwealth      contended        in    the    re-licensing proceedings    that  new    and  significant      information      about  on-site spent  fuel storage    at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants was demonstrated by the switch to high-density storage racks, recent scientific studies regarding the dangers of high-density storage pool  fires,  and  the  increased  likelihood    of  terrorist  attack following September 11, 2001. According to the Commonwealth,
 
demonstrated by the switch to high-density storage racks, recent scientific studies regarding the dangers of high-density storage pool  fires,  and  the  increased  likelihood    of  terrorist  attack following September 11, 2001. According to the Commonwealth,
[slignificant    new  information now        firmly establishes that (a) if the water level in a fuel storage pool drops to the point where the tops of the fuel assemblies are uncovered, the fuel will burn, '(b)      the 'fuel will burn regardless of its age,        (c) the fire will propagate to other assemblies in the pool, and
[slignificant    new  information now        firmly establishes that (a) if the water level in a fuel storage pool drops to the point where the tops of the fuel assemblies are uncovered, the fuel will burn, '(b)      the 'fuel will burn regardless of its age,        (c) the fire will propagate to other assemblies in the pool, and
([d]) the fire may be catastrophic.
([d]) the fire may be catastrophic.
A spent fuel pool fire would be catastrophic in large part because
A spent fuel pool fire would be catastrophic in large part because
"[a]  large,  atmospheric  release  of  radioactive  material  would occur."I The Commonwealth appended four      reports to    its hearing requests in support of its pool fire contention.          The first two resulted from studies commissioned by the Commonwealth to assess the risks of and alternatives to on-site, high-density pool storage at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.        The first of these was written by Dr. Gordon R. Thompson of the Institute for Resource and Security Studies in Cambridge, Massachusetts.        The Thompson report surveyed analyses by NRC      staff and    others  and  found that  they recognized that "a loss of water from      . . . high-density, closed-form storage racks would, over a range of scenarios, lead to self-ignition" of a fire "that could propagate across the pool."          The report assessed the probability of a high-density storage pool fire occurring at either Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee as at least one per
"[a]  large,  atmospheric  release  of  radioactive  material  would occur."I The Commonwealth appended four      reports to    its hearing requests in support of its pool fire contention.          The first two resulted from studies commissioned by the Commonwealth to assess the risks of and alternatives to on-site, high-density pool storage at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.        The first of these was written by Dr. Gordon R. Thompson of the Institute for Resource and Security Studies in Cambridge, Massachusetts.        The Thompson report surveyed analyses by NRC      staff and    others  and  found that  they recognized that "a loss of water from      . . . high-density, closed-form storage racks would, over a range of scenarios, lead to self-ignition" of a fire "that could propagate across the pool."          The report assessed the probability of a high-density storage pool fire occurring at either Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee as at least one per 10,000 years.      Dr. Thompson recommended replacing the high-density storage  racks    at  both    facilities          with  low-density,    open-frame racks. This course would,          according to Dr.        Thompson,  "return the plant[s] to [their] original design configuration" and "achieve the largest risk reduction[]          during plant operation within a license extension period."        Dr. Thompson also surmised that re-equipping the plants with the recommended                  racks would cost less than        $110 million for each plant.
 
10,000 years.      Dr. Thompson recommended replacing the high-density storage  racks    at  both    facilities          with  low-density,    open-frame racks. This course would,          according to Dr.        Thompson,  "return the plant[s] to [their] original design configuration" and "achieve the largest risk reduction[]          during plant operation within a license extension period."        Dr. Thompson also surmised that re-equipping the plants with the recommended                  racks would cost less than        $110 million for each plant.
The  second study        commissioned by the Commonwealth              was authored by Dr.      Jan  Beyea,      a nuclear physicist        affiliated    with Consulting in    the Public Interest,              and focused on the consequences of  a  hypothetical      pool    fire      at  the  Pilgrim  or  Vermont    Yankee plants. Under a scenario in which ten percent of the radioactive material in    storage at the plants was released into the atmosphere due to a pool fire,      Dr. Beyea estimated economic costs of $105-171 billion for Pilgrim,        and $87-165 billion for Vermont Yankee.                  If one hundred percent of the radioactive material were released                          in such a fire,    the costs would rise to $342-488 billion at Pilgrim and $364-518 billion at Vermont Yankee.                    Dr. Beyea estimated that a one hundred percent          release      of radioactive      material at either plant  could result      in    up to 8,000          cases of latent      cancer. Dr.
The  second study        commissioned by the Commonwealth              was authored by Dr.      Jan  Beyea,      a nuclear physicist        affiliated    with Consulting in    the Public Interest,              and focused on the consequences of  a  hypothetical      pool    fire      at  the  Pilgrim  or  Vermont    Yankee plants. Under a scenario in which ten percent of the radioactive material in    storage at the plants was released into the atmosphere due to a pool fire,      Dr. Beyea estimated economic costs of $105-171 billion for Pilgrim,        and $87-165 billion for Vermont Yankee.                  If one hundred percent of the radioactive material were released                          in such a fire,    the costs would rise to $342-488 billion at Pilgrim and $364-518 billion at Vermont Yankee.                    Dr. Beyea estimated that a one hundred percent          release      of radioactive      material at either plant  could result      in    up to 8,000          cases of latent      cancer. Dr.
Beyea's  report    further      concluded          that  the  results    of  recent epidemiologic studies could significantly inflate his estimates of the economic and health costs of a pool fire.
Beyea's  report    further      concluded          that  the  results    of  recent epidemiologic studies could significantly inflate his estimates of the economic and health costs of a pool fire.
The third report submitted by the Commonwealth with its hearing requests was authored by NRC staff to assess the risk of spent fuel pool accidents at decommissioned nuclear power plants.
The third report submitted by the Commonwealth with its hearing requests was authored by NRC staff to assess the risk of spent fuel pool accidents at decommissioned nuclear power plants.
Published      publicly    in  early  2001,    the  report    acknowledged    the possibility that even a partial loss of cooling fluid in                    a storage pool could result in a fire.          The report also observed that because "fuel assembly geometry and rack configuration are plant specific,"
Published      publicly    in  early  2001,    the  report    acknowledged    the possibility that even a partial loss of cooling fluid in                    a storage pool could result in a fire.          The report also observed that because "fuel assembly geometry and rack configuration are plant specific,"
the possibility        of pool fires    "cannot be precluded on a generic basis."        However,  the report also concluded that "even though the consequences        from a zirconium fire could be serious,"            the risk of such fires        at decommissioning plants "is          low and well within the Commission's safety goals."
the possibility        of pool fires    "cannot be precluded on a generic basis."        However,  the report also concluded that "even though the consequences        from a zirconium fire could be serious,"            the risk of such fires        at decommissioning plants "is          low and well within the Commission's safety goals."
Finally, the Commonwealth submitted a report produced,            at the request        of Congress,    by the National Academy of Sciences            to examine the potential consequences              of a terrorist      attack on spent fuel storage facilities          sited at nuclear power plants.          The report concluded        that  while    all  plants    should have      on-site    pools  for storage of spent fuel,          there is  some risk that a terrorist          attack could partially or fully drain such a pool,                leading to a fire and the    release of radioactive        material.      The  report also      concluded that      ",[t]he  potential    vulnerabilities      of  spent    fuel  pools  to terrorist      attacks are plant-design specific.            Therefore,    specific vulnerabilities          can    be  understood      only    by  examining    the characteristics        of spent fuel storage at each plant."
Finally, the Commonwealth submitted a report produced,            at the request        of Congress,    by the National Academy of Sciences            to examine the potential consequences              of a terrorist      attack on spent fuel storage facilities          sited at nuclear power plants.          The report concluded        that  while    all  plants    should have      on-site    pools  for storage of spent fuel,          there is  some risk that a terrorist          attack could partially or fully drain such a pool,                leading to a fire and the    release of radioactive        material.      The  report also      concluded that      ",[t]he  potential    vulnerabilities      of  spent    fuel  pools  to terrorist      attacks are plant-design specific.            Therefore,    specific vulnerabilities          can    be  understood      only    by  examining    the characteristics        of spent fuel storage at each plant."
The NRC convened two Atomic Safety and Licensing Boards                (7
The NRC convened two Atomic Safety and Licensing Boards                (7
("ASLB"  or  "Board")    to  assess  whether    the  various    contentions submitted by the Commonwealth and other entities were admissible in the  Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee          license renewal proceedings.          On June 22,    2006,  Entergy and the NRC staff filed oppositions to the Commonwealth's      hearing    requests,    arguing    the  Commonwealth    had chosen the wrong path to raise its          contentions. They asserted the Commonwealth      had  impermissibly      challenged    a  generic  Category    1 issue without requesting a waiver of the agency's rule within the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings.              They also argued that the information submitted by the Commonwealth did not constitute "new and    significant"      information    within    the  meaning  of  10  C.F.R.
("ASLB"  or  "Board")    to  assess  whether    the  various    contentions submitted by the Commonwealth and other entities were admissible in the  Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee          license renewal proceedings.          On June 22,    2006,  Entergy and the NRC staff filed oppositions to the Commonwealth's      hearing    requests,    arguing    the  Commonwealth    had chosen the wrong path to raise its          contentions. They asserted the Commonwealth      had  impermissibly      challenged    a  generic  Category    1 issue without requesting a waiver of the agency's rule within the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings.              They also argued that the information submitted by the Commonwealth did not constitute "new and    significant"      information    within    the  meaning  of  10  C.F.R.
51.53(c) (3) (iv).        During    oral    arguments    at    pre-hearing    (I conferences in      front of the ASLBs,      the Commonwealth staked out its position that the waiver provision was unavailable in any event; it could not seek waiver        in  the individual proceedings        because  its contention regarding pool fires was not specific to either of the two plants,    but was a safety issue common to all plants.
51.53(c) (3) (iv).        During    oral    arguments    at    pre-hearing    (I conferences in      front of the ASLBs,      the Commonwealth staked out its position that the waiver provision was unavailable in any event; it could not seek waiver        in  the individual proceedings        because  its contention regarding pool fires was not specific to either of the two plants,    but was a safety issue common to all plants.
The Commonwealth also informed the ASLBs of its            intention to file    a rulemaking petition aimed at modifying the GEIS findings about    on-site    spent fuel    storage.      The parties    agree that    this rulemaking path is        and always has been open to the Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth also informed the ASLBs of its            intention to file    a rulemaking petition aimed at modifying the GEIS findings about    on-site    spent fuel    storage.      The parties    agree that    this rulemaking path is        and always has been open to the Commonwealth.
On August 25,    2006,  following oral arguments in front of the    Pilgrim and Vermont        Yankee  ASLBs,    the  Commonwealth    filed    a
On August 25,    2006,  following oral arguments in front of the    Pilgrim and Vermont        Yankee  ASLBs,    the  Commonwealth    filed    a petition for rulemaking with the NRC based on the same pool fire contention    raised    in      its  hearing    requests    in the  individual licensing proceedings.'            The petition requested that the NRC (a) consider new and significant information showing that the NRC's characterization of the environmental impacts of spent fuel storage as insignificant in the 1996 [GEIS] is incorrect, (b) revoke the regulations which codify that incorrect conclusion and excuse consideration of    spent        fuel    storage      impacts    in  NEPA decision-making documents, (c) issue a generic determination that the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel are significant,          and    (d)    order that any NRC licensing decision that approves high-density pool storage of spent fuel at a nuclear power plant    .  .    . must  be    accompanied    by an  [EIS]
 
petition for rulemaking with the NRC based on the same pool fire contention    raised    in      its  hearing    requests    in the  individual licensing proceedings.'            The petition requested that the NRC (a) consider new and significant information showing that the NRC's characterization of the environmental impacts of spent fuel storage as insignificant in the 1996 [GEIS] is incorrect, (b) revoke the regulations which codify that incorrect conclusion and excuse consideration of    spent        fuel    storage      impacts    in  NEPA decision-making documents, (c) issue a generic determination that the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel are significant,          and    (d)    order that any NRC licensing decision that approves high-density pool storage of spent fuel at a nuclear power plant    .  .    . must  be    accompanied    by an  [EIS]
that addresses (i)            the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel at that nuclear plant and (ii)              a reasonable array of alternatives for avoiding or mitigating those impacts.
that addresses (i)            the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel at that nuclear plant and (ii)              a reasonable array of alternatives for avoiding or mitigating those impacts.
The petition also urged the NRC to "withhold any decision to renew the operating licenses for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee nuclear power plants until the requested rulemaking has been completed" and suspend    consideration        of  the  Commonwealth's      contentions  in the individual      proceedings.            In    support    of  its  petition,  the Commonwealth appended the same four reports described above.                      To date,  there has been no decision on the rulemaking petition,                  and 5    The State of California has submitted a petition for rulemaking      raising        similar      concerns;    the NRC    is  currently considering both petitions.              See State of California; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 72 Fed. Reg. 27,068 (proposed May 14, 2007); Mass. Attorney Gen.; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 71 Fed. Reg. 64,169 (proposed Nov. 1, 2006).
The petition also urged the NRC to "withhold any decision to renew the operating licenses for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee nuclear power plants until the requested rulemaking has been completed" and suspend    consideration        of  the  Commonwealth's      contentions  in the individual      proceedings.            In    support    of  its  petition,  the Commonwealth appended the same four reports described above.                      To date,  there has been no decision on the rulemaking petition,                  and 5    The State of California has submitted a petition for rulemaking      raising        similar      concerns;    the NRC    is  currently considering both petitions.              See State of California; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 72 Fed. Reg. 27,068 (proposed May 14, 2007); Mass. Attorney Gen.; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 71 Fed. Reg. 64,169 (proposed Nov. 1, 2006).
the issue before us does not involve that petition, but rather the Commonwealth's      hearing      requests      in    the    individual      plant    re-licensing proceedings.
the issue before us does not involve that petition, but rather the Commonwealth's      hearing      requests      in    the    individual      plant    re-licensing proceedings.
The  Vermont      Yankee    ASLB    issued    its    decision    on  the hearing requests in      that proceeding on September 22,                2006. Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee,    LLC    (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)              (Vt.
The  Vermont      Yankee    ASLB    issued    its    decision    on  the hearing requests in      that proceeding on September 22,                2006. Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee,    LLC    (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)              (Vt.
Yankee I),    64 N.R.C. 131    (2006). As an initial        matter,    the ASLB granted standing to the Commonwealth.                Id. at 145.      The Board went on to reject the Commonwealth's contention,                ruling that even if      the Commonwealth's        contention        presented        "new      and    significant information" about pool fires,            "as a matter of law the contention is  not admissible because the Commission has already decided,                          in Turkey Point,    that licensing boards cannot admit an environmental contention regarding a Category 1 issue."                    Id. at 155.      The Board stated the agency's position that under 10 C.F.R.                    § 51.53(c) (3),      a licensing applicant such as Entergy must provide analysis of new and  significant      information        regarding      a    NEPA    issue,    whether Category 1 or 2,      in  its    environmental report.            Id. Further,  the Board observed that        "if  the information        that    the  [Commonwealth]
Yankee I),    64 N.R.C. 131    (2006). As an initial        matter,    the ASLB granted standing to the Commonwealth.                Id. at 145.      The Board went on to reject the Commonwealth's contention,                ruling that even if      the Commonwealth's        contention        presented        "new      and    significant information" about pool fires,            "as a matter of law the contention is  not admissible because the Commission has already decided,                          in Turkey Point,    that licensing boards cannot admit an environmental contention regarding a Category 1 issue."                    Id. at 155.      The Board stated the agency's position that under 10 C.F.R.                    § 51.53(c) (3),      a licensing applicant such as Entergy must provide analysis of new and  significant      information        regarding      a    NEPA    issue,    whether Category 1 or 2,      in  its    environmental report.            Id. Further,  the Board observed that        "if  the information        that    the  [Commonwealth]
presents is    indeed new and significant,            the Staff's SEIS needs to address it."      Id. at 156.
presents is    indeed new and significant,            the Staff's SEIS needs to address it."      Id. at 156.
The  Board's      ruling    did    not purport        to    foreclose    any challenge by the Commonwealth to the agency's rule on on-site spent fuel storage.      Again citing Turkey            Point,    the Board pointed out
The  Board's      ruling    did    not purport        to    foreclose    any challenge by the Commonwealth to the agency's rule on on-site spent fuel storage.      Again citing Turkey            Point,    the Board pointed out that  the  Commonwealth    "has    several      options,    including    filing  a petition for rulemaking, providing the information to the NRC Staff (which can then seek Commission approval to suspend the application of    the  rules    or  delay    the    license      renewal    proceeding),    or petitioning the Commission to waive the application of the rule."
 
that  the  Commonwealth    "has    several      options,    including    filing  a petition for rulemaking, providing the information to the NRC Staff (which can then seek Commission approval to suspend the application of    the  rules    or  delay    the    license      renewal    proceeding),    or petitioning the Commission to waive the application of the rule."
Id. at    159.      The  Board      concluded        its    discussion    of  the Commonwealth's      contention      by    noting    the    Commonwealth's    pending rulemaking petition.        "Thus we see,"          the Board stated,        "that the
Id. at    159.      The  Board      concluded        its    discussion    of  the Commonwealth's      contention      by    noting    the    Commonwealth's    pending rulemaking petition.        "Thus we see,"          the Board stated,        "that the
[Commonwealth] has already begun to pursue the alternative remedies specified in      Turkey Point."        Id. at 161.
[Commonwealth] has already begun to pursue the alternative remedies specified in      Turkey Point."        Id. at 161.
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The    Commission    affirmed      the    Pilgrim    and    Vermont    Yankee    ASLB decisions    on January 22,      2007.      Enterqy Nuclear Vt.        Yankee,  LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)              (Vt. Yankee    II),  65 N.R.C. 13 (2007) . The NRC agreed with the ASLBs that the Commonwealth "Chose the appropriate way to challenge                the GEIS when        [it]  filed  [its]
The    Commission    affirmed      the    Pilgrim    and    Vermont    Yankee    ASLB decisions    on January 22,      2007.      Enterqy Nuclear Vt.        Yankee,  LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)              (Vt. Yankee    II),  65 N.R.C. 13 (2007) . The NRC agreed with the ASLBs that the Commonwealth "Chose the appropriate way to challenge                the GEIS when        [it]  filed  [its]
rulemaking petition."          Id. at 20.      The Commission explained that
rulemaking petition."          Id. at 20.      The Commission explained that
"[i]t  makes more sense for the NRC to study whether,                  as a technical matter,  the agency should modify its            requirements relating to spent
"[i]t  makes more sense for the NRC to study whether,                  as a technical matter,  the agency should modify its            requirements relating to spent fuel storage for all            plants across the board than to litigate                    in particular adjudications whether generic findings in                            the GEIS are impeached    by  .    .    . claims  of  new  information."          Id. at  20-21.
 
fuel storage for all            plants across the board than to litigate                    in particular adjudications whether generic findings in                            the GEIS are impeached    by  .    .    . claims  of  new  information."          Id. at  20-21.
Otherwise,    plant-by-plant          litigation of Category 1 issues                "would defeat the purpose of resolving generic issues in                        a GEIS."      Id. at 21.
Otherwise,    plant-by-plant          litigation of Category 1 issues                "would defeat the purpose of resolving generic issues in                        a GEIS."      Id. at 21.
The Commission's decision also described how the pending rulemaking could affect              the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings.        The Commission          rejected the Commonwealth's              request that it  suspend the licensing proceedings.                    It  would be "premature" to delay a final decision on licensing,                  the Commission reasoned, where "final decisions in              those proceedings          are not expected for another year or more"              and "involve many issues unrelated to the
The Commission's decision also described how the pending rulemaking could affect              the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings.        The Commission          rejected the Commonwealth's              request that it  suspend the licensing proceedings.                    It  would be "premature" to delay a final decision on licensing,                  the Commission reasoned, where "final decisions in              those proceedings          are not expected for another year or more"              and "involve many issues unrelated to the
[Commonwealth's]        rulemaking petition."          Id.      at 22 n.37.      However, "depending    on    the      timing    and  outcome"    of      the  rulemaking,        the Commission recognized the possibility that NRC staff could request that the Commission              suspend the generic      rule and include plant-specific analysis of pool storage in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee SEISs. Id. at      22.      We  are    told  that    to    date,    that    has    not happened.
[Commonwealth's]        rulemaking petition."          Id.      at 22 n.37.      However, "depending    on    the      timing    and  outcome"    of      the  rulemaking,        the Commission recognized the possibility that NRC staff could request that the Commission              suspend the generic      rule and include plant-specific analysis of pool storage in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee SEISs. Id. at      22.      We  are    told  that    to    date,    that    has    not happened.
The      Commission        also    outlined    a    route  by    which    the Commonwealth    itself        could  influence    the timing of the            licensing decisions:
The      Commission        also    outlined    a    route  by    which    the Commonwealth    itself        could  influence    the timing of the            licensing decisions:
NRC regulations provide that a petitioner who has filed a petition for rulemaking "may
NRC regulations provide that a petitioner who has filed a petition for rulemaking "may request the Commission to suspend all                  or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking."                    10 C.F.R.
 
request the Commission to suspend all                  or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking."                    10 C.F.R.
             § 2.802 (d) . An interested        governmental entity participating under 10            C.F.R.  § 2.315    could also make this request.
             § 2.802 (d) . An interested        governmental entity participating under 10            C.F.R.  § 2.315    could also make this request.
Id. at 22 n.37. Because alternatives were available,                  "admitting the [Commonwealth's]      contention for an adjudicatory hearing is                not necessary    to  ensure  that    the    claim      receives    a  full    and  fair airing."    Id. at 22.
Id. at 22 n.37. Because alternatives were available,                  "admitting the [Commonwealth's]      contention for an adjudicatory hearing is                not necessary    to  ensure  that    the    claim      receives    a  full    and  fair airing."    Id. at 22.
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The    Commission    denied      the  motion    on    March    15,  2007.
The    Commission    denied      the  motion    on    March    15,  2007.
Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee,    LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)
Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee,    LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)
(Vt. Yankee III),  65 N.R.C. 211    (2007).      The Commission found that the  motion    failed    to  demonstrate          "compelling      circumstances"
(Vt. Yankee III),  65 N.R.C. 211    (2007).      The Commission found that the  motion    failed    to  demonstrate          "compelling      circumstances" justifying reconsideration.              Id. at 214. The Commission clarified          (J that    its    previous        decision    constituted      a  final      decision    with regards to the NRC's rejection of the Commonwealth's contentions in the  licensing proceedings.              The Commission      also pointed out that the  Commonwealth,          after    the    NRC's    decision      of  the  rulemaking petition,      could      eventually      also    obtain  judicial      review    of  that decision.      Id. at 214 & n.13.        Finally,  the Commission made clear that the Commonwealth "could seek [interested governmental entity]
 
justifying reconsideration.              Id. at 214. The Commission clarified          (J that    its    previous        decision    constituted      a  final      decision    with regards to the NRC's rejection of the Commonwealth's contentions in the  licensing proceedings.              The Commission      also pointed out that the  Commonwealth,          after    the    NRC's    decision      of  the  rulemaking petition,      could      eventually      also    obtain  judicial      review    of  that decision.      Id. at 214 & n.13.        Finally,  the Commission made clear that the Commonwealth "could seek [interested governmental entity]
status even now,"          a maneuver that would allow the Commonwealth to request    a  stay      of    the  licensing      proceedings      under    10  C.F.R.
status even now,"          a maneuver that would allow the Commonwealth to request    a  stay      of    the  licensing      proceedings      under    10  C.F.R.
  § 2.802(d).        Id. at 214-15 & n.16.
  § 2.802(d).        Id. at 214-15 & n.16.
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U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n,          582 F.2d 77,  82    (1st Cir. 1978)).
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n,          582 F.2d 77,  82    (1st Cir. 1978)).
This principle is        applicable in the context of licensing decisions, where    statutory      directives    are  scant  and  the    AEA    explicitly delegates      broad authority to the agency          to promulgate        rules  and regulations.        See,  e.g.,  42 U.S.C.    §§ 2133,  2134(b).
This principle is        applicable in the context of licensing decisions, where    statutory      directives    are  scant  and  the    AEA    explicitly delegates      broad authority to the agency          to promulgate        rules  and regulations.        See,  e.g.,  42 U.S.C.    §§ 2133,  2134(b).
This        court    must    also    be  mindful    of  the    substantial  Q) deference required when an agency adopts reasonable interpretations of  regulations          of  its    own      creation.        Fed. Express    Corp. v.
This        court    must    also    be  mindful    of  the    substantial  Q) deference required when an agency adopts reasonable interpretations of  regulations          of  its    own      creation.        Fed. Express    Corp. v.
Holowecki,      128 S.      Ct. 1147,    1155 (2008); Auer v. Robbins,          519 U.S.
Holowecki,      128 S.      Ct. 1147,    1155 (2008); Auer v. Robbins,          519 U.S.
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The Commission's              decision      to deny party      status to the Commonwealth        in    the    Pilgrim. and Vermont          Yankee  license    renewal proceedings      is    reasonable        in    context,    and consistent with agency rules. As the Commonwealth has conceded,                    the pool fire contention it  raised    in    its    hearing      requests does        not apply solely to the Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee plants and instead challenges a Category 1 GEIS finding.
The Commission's              decision      to deny party      status to the Commonwealth        in    the    Pilgrim. and Vermont          Yankee  license    renewal proceedings      is    reasonable        in    context,    and consistent with agency rules. As the Commonwealth has conceded,                    the pool fire contention it  raised    in    its    hearing      requests does        not apply solely to the Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee plants and instead challenges a Category 1 GEIS finding.
Where        environmental          impacts    of an NRC    action    are  not plant-specific,            the    Supreme        Court    has  endorsed    "[t]he    generic method    .  .  .  [as]    clearly      an appropriate method of conducting the hard look required by NEPA."                      Balt. Gas & Elec. Co.,    462 U.S. at 101    (citing Vt.          Yankee,      435 U.S.      at 535 n.13).      "Administrative efficiency      and      consistency        of    decision  are  both  furthered    by a generic determination of these effects without needlessrepetition of the litigation in              individual proceedings,            which are subject to review by the Commission in                  any event."        Id.
Where        environmental          impacts    of an NRC    action    are  not plant-specific,            the    Supreme        Court    has  endorsed    "[t]he    generic method    .  .  .  [as]    clearly      an appropriate method of conducting the hard look required by NEPA."                      Balt. Gas & Elec. Co.,    462 U.S. at 101    (citing Vt.          Yankee,      435 U.S.      at 535 n.13).      "Administrative efficiency      and      consistency        of    decision  are  both  furthered    by a generic determination of these effects without needlessrepetition of the litigation in              individual proceedings,            which are subject to review by the Commission in                  any event."        Id.
The NRC's procedural rules are clear:              generic Category 1 issues cannot be litigated            in  individual licensing adjudications without a waiver.          10 C.F.R.    § 2.335;    see also Dominion Nuclear Conn.,    Inc.  (Millstone Nuclear Power Station),            54 N.R.C. 349,  364 (2001);  Turkey Point,      54 N.R.C.      at 12;  Duke Energy Corp.      (Oconee Nuclear Station),        49 N.R.C.      328,  343 (1999). If  the Commonwealth or any citizen wishes to attack the agency's rule on such an issue, it  must petition for a generic rulemaking.              Turkey Point,    54 N.R.C.
The NRC's procedural rules are clear:              generic Category 1 issues cannot be litigated            in  individual licensing adjudications without a waiver.          10 C.F.R.    § 2.335;    see also Dominion Nuclear Conn.,    Inc.  (Millstone Nuclear Power Station),            54 N.R.C. 349,  364 (2001);  Turkey Point,      54 N.R.C.      at 12;  Duke Energy Corp.      (Oconee Nuclear Station),        49 N.R.C.      328,  343 (1999). If  the Commonwealth or any citizen wishes to attack the agency's rule on such an issue, it  must petition for a generic rulemaking.              Turkey Point,    54 N.R.C.
at 12.
at 12.
NEPA does impose a requirement that the NRC consider any new  and  significant      information      regarding  environmental      impacts before    renewing      a  nuclear      power    plant's    operating    license.
NEPA does impose a requirement that the NRC consider any new  and  significant      information      regarding  environmental      impacts before    renewing      a  nuclear      power    plant's    operating    license.
However,    "NEPA does not require agencies            to adopt any particular internal    decisionmaking      structure."      Balt. Gas  & Elec. Co.,  462 U.S. at 100. Here,    the NRC procedures anticipate a situation, such as  that  alleged    here    by  the  Commonwealth,    in    which  a  generic finding adopted by agency rule may have become obsolete.                      In  such a  situation,    the regulations provide            channels    through which    the agency's expert staff may receive new and significant information, namely from a license renewal applicant's environmental report or from public comments on a draft SEIS,                and the NRC staff may seek modification of a generic Category 1 finding.
However,    "NEPA does not require agencies            to adopt any particular internal    decisionmaking      structure."      Balt. Gas  & Elec. Co.,  462 U.S. at 100. Here,    the NRC procedures anticipate a situation, such as  that  alleged    here    by  the  Commonwealth,    in    which  a  generic finding adopted by agency rule may have become obsolete.                      In  such a  situation,    the regulations provide            channels    through which    the agency's expert staff may receive new and significant information, namely from a license renewal applicant's environmental report or from public comments on a draft SEIS,                and the NRC staff may seek modification of a generic Category 1 finding.
The Commonwealth has already chosen the available option of a rulemaking petition.          But the rulemaking petition may not move
The Commonwealth has already chosen the available option of a rulemaking petition.          But the rulemaking petition may not move quickly enough to address the Commonwealth's safety concerns before the Commission renders re-licensing decisions regarding the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.
 
quickly enough to address the Commonwealth's safety concerns before the Commission renders re-licensing decisions regarding the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.
The Commonwealth argues that the NRC acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it        channeled    the Commonwealth's          pool    fire concerns into a generic rulemaking without any assurances that the result of the rulemaking would apply to the individual                    licensing proceedings for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.                    Central to the Commonwealth's      argument    is    its  assumption      that    "[u]nder      the NRC's present process,      the Commonwealth does not even have a right to  request  the  agency    to  exercise      its      discretion    to  stay    the individual proceedings so that the results of the rulemaking may be applied to Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee."                Pet'r Br. 35.                  0)
The Commonwealth argues that the NRC acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it        channeled    the Commonwealth's          pool    fire concerns into a generic rulemaking without any assurances that the result of the rulemaking would apply to the individual                    licensing proceedings for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.                    Central to the Commonwealth's      argument    is    its  assumption      that    "[u]nder      the NRC's present process,      the Commonwealth does not even have a right to  request  the  agency    to  exercise      its      discretion    to  stay    the individual proceedings so that the results of the rulemaking may be applied to Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee."                Pet'r Br. 35.                  0)
The  Commonwealth's        concern      is    apparently    based    on    a misreading of the NRC's position.              Both in      its  decisions      in  the administrative    proceedings      and    before      this  court,    the  NRC    has outlined at least one path by which the.Commonwealth may establish a connection between the rulemaking and the licensing proceedings.
The  Commonwealth's        concern      is    apparently    based    on    a misreading of the NRC's position.              Both in      its  decisions      in  the administrative    proceedings      and    before      this  court,    the  NRC    has outlined at least one path by which the.Commonwealth may establish a connection between the rulemaking and the licensing proceedings.
That path consists      of two    stages.      First,      the  Commonwealth may participate  in  the licensing proceedings            not as a party with its own contentions,    but as an interested governmental body under 10 C.F.R.  § 2.315(c). 6  Second,    in    the rulemaking      proceedings,        the 6    That regulation states that the officer presiding over a licensing proceeding
That path consists      of two    stages.      First,      the  Commonwealth may participate  in  the licensing proceedings            not as a party with its own contentions,    but as an interested governmental body under 10 C.F.R.  § 2.315(c). 6  Second,    in    the rulemaking      proceedings,        the 6    That regulation states that the officer presiding over a licensing proceeding Commonwealth may invoke 10 C.F.R.        § 2.802(d),      which provides that a rulemaking petitioner "may request the Commission to suspend ail or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking."                  This stay procedure would,    the agency argues,      allow the Commonwealth ah opportunity to influence the order and timing of the agency's final decisions in  the rulemaking and licensing proceedings.                But, since the Commonwealth has as yet done neither of those things,                  there is no final order and those issues are premature.
 
Commonwealth may invoke 10 C.F.R.        § 2.802(d),      which provides that a rulemaking petitioner "may request the Commission to suspend ail or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking."                  This stay procedure would,    the agency argues,      allow the Commonwealth ah opportunity to influence the order and timing of the agency's final decisions in  the rulemaking and licensing proceedings.                But, since the Commonwealth has as yet done neither of those things,                  there is no final order and those issues are premature.
will    afford    an    interested      State,        local governmental    body                  and      affected, Federally-recognized Indian Tribe, which has not been admitted as a party under [10 C.F.R.]
will    afford    an    interested      State,        local governmental    body                  and      affected, Federally-recognized Indian Tribe, which has not been admitted as a party under [10 C.F.R.]
           §    2.309,    a    reasonable      opportunity.          to participate in a hearing.          Each State [and]
           §    2.309,    a    reasonable      opportunity.          to participate in a hearing.          Each State [and]
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10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c). The regulation echoes a provision of the AEA that requires the NRC to "afford reasonable opportunity" for state representatives to pirticipate in licensing proceedings.                  42 U.S.C.
10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c). The regulation echoes a provision of the AEA that requires the NRC to "afford reasonable opportunity" for state representatives to pirticipate in licensing proceedings.                  42 U.S.C.
§ 2021(1).
§ 2021(1).
The Commonwealth asserts the agency is changing positions before  this  court    regarding    the availability        of the  § 2.802(d) mechanism.      Again,  we think this is        based on a misunderstanding.
The Commonwealth asserts the agency is changing positions before  this  court    regarding    the availability        of the  § 2.802(d) mechanism.      Again,  we think this is        based on a misunderstanding.
The  Commonwealth      quotes  a passage      from the NRC's      denial  of the motion    for    reconsideration:        "[U]nder    NRC    regulations,    the
The  Commonwealth      quotes  a passage      from the NRC's      denial  of the motion    for    reconsideration:        "[U]nder    NRC    regulations,    the
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Energy Servs., L.P.          (Nat'l Enrichment Facility),            60 N.R.C. 619, 626-27 (2004).      The Commonwealth could thus not participate under
Energy Servs., L.P.          (Nat'l Enrichment Facility),            60 N.R.C. 619, 626-27 (2004).      The Commonwealth could thus not participate under
§ 2.315(c) until the NRC disposed of the Commonwealth's hearing requests.      Because the NRC has refused the Commonwealth party status in a decision that is "final" as to those hearing requests, and we deny the Commonwealth's petition, the path has been cleared for the Commonwealth to seek interested governmental entity status, if it so chooses.        See Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214-15 & n.16.
§ 2.315(c) until the NRC disposed of the Commonwealth's hearing requests.      Because the NRC has refused the Commonwealth party status in a decision that is "final" as to those hearing requests, and we deny the Commonwealth's petition, the path has been cleared for the Commonwealth to seek interested governmental entity status, if it so chooses.        See Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214-15 & n.16.
interested      governmental      entity    status      "even  now."    Id. at  215
interested      governmental      entity    status      "even  now."    Id. at  215
: n. 16.8 The Commonwealth seizes upon a textual mismatch                  in  the regulations to argue that an "interested State" participating in                        a licensing proceeding under § 2.315(c)                is  distinct from a "party,"
: n. 16.8 The Commonwealth seizes upon a textual mismatch                  in  the regulations to argue that an "interested State" participating in                        a licensing proceeding under § 2.315(c)                is  distinct from a "party,"
and therefore could not invoke the § 2.802(d) procedure.                        Compare 10  C.F.R.    § 2.315(c)      (making participant          status  available    to a governmental body "which has not been admitted as a party")                          with id.    §    2.802(d)    (allowing    petitioner      in  pending    rulemaking      to request        suspension    of  a  licensing      proceeding      "to  which    the petitioner is        a party").
and therefore could not invoke the § 2.802(d) procedure.                        Compare 10  C.F.R.    § 2.315(c)      (making participant          status  available    to a governmental body "which has not been admitted as a party")                          with id.    §    2.802(d)    (allowing    petitioner      in  pending    rulemaking      to request        suspension    of  a  licensing      proceeding      "to  which    the petitioner is        a party").
While  we  recognize    what    may    be  tension    between    the wording      of  these    two    regulations,        we    decline    to  adopt    the Commonwealth's preclusive reading of the term "party" in                        the face of a contrary and reasonable. reading by the agency.                        Dispositive here    is  the  agency's    own  reasonable      reading      of the  term,    which treats      an interested      governmental      entity    as the equivalent of a "party" for purposes of § 2          .802 (d)  .  "Party" can both be defined in one context as a term of art,              e.g.,    as one who has demonstrated standing and whose          contention has been admitted for hearing in                  a 8      The NRC has represented to this court that even though the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings have continued since the Commission's decision dated March 15, 2007, the Commonwealth may still    attain interested governmental entity status and avail itself of the § 2.802(d) stay procedure.                We consider the NRC to be bound by this representation.
While  we  recognize    what    may    be  tension    between    the wording      of  these    two    regulations,        we    decline    to  adopt    the Commonwealth's preclusive reading of the term "party" in                        the face of a contrary and reasonable. reading by the agency.                        Dispositive here    is  the  agency's    own  reasonable      reading      of the  term,    which treats      an interested      governmental      entity    as the equivalent of a "party" for purposes of § 2          .802 (d)  .  "Party" can both be defined in one context as a term of art,              e.g.,    as one who has demonstrated standing and whose          contention has been admitted for hearing in                  a 8      The NRC has represented to this court that even though the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings have continued since the Commission's decision dated March 15, 2007, the Commonwealth may still    attain interested governmental entity status and avail itself of the § 2.802(d) stay procedure.                We consider the NRC to be bound by this representation.
licensing adjudication,          see 10 C.F.R.        § 2.309(a),    and deployed in its  more general sense of one who participates                  in  a proceeding or transaction,      see Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1648 (1993)  (defining "party" to include one who "takes part with others in  an action or affair" or an individual                "involved in    the case at hand").        The    NRC    has  not    defined      the    term    "party"    uniformly throughout its        regulations.      See,    e.g.,    10 C.F.R. § 2.4 (containing regulatory      "Definitions," but not including one for "party").                    We must    pay  deference      to  this    agency's      interpretation      of  its  own regulations.        Auer,    519 U.S. at 461.
licensing adjudication,          see 10 C.F.R.        § 2.309(a),    and deployed in its  more general sense of one who participates                  in  a proceeding or transaction,      see Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1648 (1993)  (defining "party" to include one who "takes part with others in  an action or affair" or an individual                "involved in    the case at hand").        The    NRC    has  not    defined      the    term    "party"    uniformly throughout its        regulations.      See,    e.g.,    10 C.F.R. § 2.4 (containing regulatory      "Definitions," but not including one for "party").                    We must    pay  deference      to  this    agency's      interpretation      of  its  own regulations.        Auer,    519 U.S. at 461.
The Commonwealth charges that the NRC has adopted this interpretation for the first            time before this court "[i]n an effort to avoid judicial review."              Pet'r Supplemental Reply Br.            5. This is    not  a mere    litigation      position.        The    Commission    explicitly stated in    its  January 22,      2007 affirmance of the ASLB rulings that an interested governmental entity participating under § 2.315(c) could request        a suspension under § 2.802(d)..                Vt. Yankee II,    65 N.R.C. at 22 n.37.      We thus take the NRC's proffered reading of how
The Commonwealth charges that the NRC has adopted this interpretation for the first            time before this court "[i]n an effort to avoid judicial review."              Pet'r Supplemental Reply Br.            5. This is    not  a mere    litigation      position.        The    Commission    explicitly stated in    its  January 22,      2007 affirmance of the ASLB rulings that an interested governmental entity participating under § 2.315(c) could request        a suspension under § 2.802(d)..                Vt. Yankee II,    65 N.R.C. at 22 n.37.      We thus take the NRC's proffered reading of how
§    2.315(c)    and  §  2.802(d)    interact      to  be    consistent    with  the agency's practice generally,            as well as its        litigation position in this court.
§    2.315(c)    and  §  2.802(d)    interact      to  be    consistent    with  the agency's practice generally,            as well as its        litigation position in this court.
In sum,    the NRC acted reasonably when it              invoked a well-established agency rule to reject the Commonwealth's                        requests    to participate as a party in            individual      re-licensing proceedings          to
In sum,    the NRC acted reasonably when it              invoked a well-established agency rule to reject the Commonwealth's                        requests    to participate as a party in            individual      re-licensing proceedings          to raise generic safety concerns and required that the Commonwealth present its concerns in a rulemaking petition.                The agency is also within the bounds of its authority to interpret its regulations to afford    the    Commonwealth      an  opportunity      to  participate    in  the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings under § 2.315(c) and thereby qualify to reqjuest a suspension of those proceedings under § 2.802 (d).      We note, however, that these conclusions rely on our    deference      to    the  agency's    interpretations      of  its    own regulations.      By staking its position regarding procedural avenues available      to  - the  Commonwealth      in  this    case,  both  in    its administrative decisions and in            its  representations before      this court, the'agency has,          in our view, bound itself to honor those interpretations.        See New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749-51 (2001) . Further,      if  the agency were      to act    contrary to    these representations in this matter, a reviewing court would most likely consider such actions to *be arbitrary and capricious.
 
Timing      is  a  factor  in  this    case. Section  2 .315 (c) affords    interested        states  an  opportunity      to  participate    in licensing hearings, but the agency has not stayed the Pilgrim and Vermont  Yankee proceedings pending            the  outcome  of  this  court's decision,    and    the  hearing    schedule      in  at  least  the  Pilgrim proceedings may be coming rapidly to a close.                  We therefore stay the close of hearings in both plant license renewal proceedings for fourteen days from the date of issuance of mandate in                  this case 9 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.
raise generic safety concerns and required that the Commonwealth present its concerns in a rulemaking petition.                The agency is also within the bounds of its authority to interpret its regulations to afford    the    Commonwealth      an  opportunity      to  participate    in  the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings under § 2.315(c) and thereby qualify to reqjuest a suspension of those proceedings under § 2.802 (d).      We note, however, that these conclusions rely on our    deference      to    the  agency's    interpretations      of  its    own regulations.      By staking its position regarding procedural avenues available      to  - the  Commonwealth      in  this    case,  both  in    its administrative decisions and in            its  representations before      this court, the'agency has,          in our view, bound itself to honor those interpretations.        See New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749-51 (2001) . Further,      if  the agency were      to act    contrary to    these representations in this matter, a reviewing court would most likely consider such actions to *be arbitrary and capricious.
Timing      is  a  factor  in  this    case. Section  2 .315 (c) affords    interested        states  an  opportunity      to  participate    in licensing hearings, but the agency has not stayed the Pilgrim and Vermont  Yankee proceedings pending            the  outcome  of  this  court's decision,    and    the  hearing    schedule      in  at  least  the  Pilgrim proceedings may be coming rapidly to a close.                  We therefore stay the close of hearings in both plant license renewal proceedings for
 
fourteen days from the date of issuance of mandate in                  this case 9 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.
What  remains    is  the    Commonwealth's      objection      that accepting    the NRC's    recommended procedural          vehicle    subjects    the Commonwealth's      rights    under    NEPA    to    "the    NRC's    unfettered discretion      to  grant    or    withhold"      a  stay    of  the    licensing proceedings.      Pet'r Br. 36. Again,    although NEPA does impose an obligation    on the NRC    to consider      environmental      impacts    of the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal before issuing a final decision,    the statute does not mandate how the agency must fulfill that obligation.        See 42 U.S.C.      § 4332; Balt.      Gas & Elec. Co.,  462 U.S. at 100-01; Vt. Yankee,    435 U.S. at 548. Beyond "the statutory minima"    imposed    by  NEPA,    Vt. Yankee,    435  U.S. at    548,  the implementing procedures are committed to the agency's judgment.                      In theory,    what    fetters  the    agency's    decision-making      process    and ensures ultimate compliance with NEPA is              judicial review.        The NRC does not take the position that the Commonwealth is                not entitled to judicial    review in    the  future.      We turn next to the question of 9      Action by this court was held in abeyance from December 6, 2007 to February 14, 2008 in order to afford the parties an opportunity to settle.            A settlement was not reached, but the Commonwealth's opportunity to avail itself              of the NRC's procedural mechanisms to participate in              the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings should not be prejudiced by the delay in securing a decision from this court.
What  remains    is  the    Commonwealth's      objection      that accepting    the NRC's    recommended procedural          vehicle    subjects    the Commonwealth's      rights    under    NEPA    to    "the    NRC's    unfettered discretion      to  grant    or    withhold"      a  stay    of  the    licensing proceedings.      Pet'r Br. 36. Again,    although NEPA does impose an obligation    on the NRC    to consider      environmental      impacts    of the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal before issuing a final decision,    the statute does not mandate how the agency must fulfill that obligation.        See 42 U.S.C.      § 4332; Balt.      Gas & Elec. Co.,  462 U.S. at 100-01; Vt. Yankee,    435 U.S. at 548. Beyond "the statutory minima"    imposed    by  NEPA,    Vt. Yankee,    435  U.S. at    548,  the implementing procedures are committed to the agency's judgment.                      In theory,    what    fetters  the    agency's    decision-making      process    and ensures ultimate compliance with NEPA is              judicial review.        The NRC does not take the position that the Commonwealth is                not entitled to judicial    review in    the  future.      We turn next to the question of 9      Action by this court was held in abeyance from December 6, 2007 to February 14, 2008 in order to afford the parties an opportunity to settle.            A settlement was not reached, but the Commonwealth's opportunity to avail itself              of the NRC's procedural mechanisms to participate in              the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings should not be prejudiced by the delay in securing a decision from this court.
whether a meaningful opportunity to seek judicial review would be available    to  the  Commonwealth    should    it  pursue  the  procedural course advanced by the agency.
whether a meaningful opportunity to seek judicial review would be available    to  the  Commonwealth    should    it  pursue  the  procedural course advanced by the agency.
B.          Availability of Judicial Review The NRC and Entergy point out two routes by which                the Commonwealth    can obtain judicial        review of the agency's      ultimate treatment    of its    concerns  involving    spent fuel pool      fires. The first    is direct review of the results of the now-pending ru~lemaking petition; the second is        review of a hypothetical Commission denial of a § 2.802(d)      stay request,  should the Commonwealth pursue that route. 10 The question of the availability of judicial review upon the occurrence      of contingent hypothetical events is          not before us and we do not give advisory opinions.            It    suffices to say that the Commonwealth's argument is        not proven that this proceeding must not be dismissed because it      is  the Commonwealth's one and only path for review of the agency's ultimate'resolution                of the Commonwealth's pool fire concerns.        We doubt the Commonwealth will wish to push 10    The NRC also suggests that in the event that the agency issues the Pilgrim and/or Vermont Yankee renewal licenses before concluding the pending rulemaking, the Commonwealth could petition this court for a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 to compel a final decision from the agency.                Because more conventional avenues to judicial review exist, we do not consider here whether and under what circumstances this "extraordinary remedy" would be available to the Commonwealth.          Telecomms. Research & Action Ctr.
B.          Availability of Judicial Review The NRC and Entergy point out two routes by which                the Commonwealth    can obtain judicial        review of the agency's      ultimate treatment    of its    concerns  involving    spent fuel pool      fires. The first    is direct review of the results of the now-pending ru~lemaking petition; the second is        review of a hypothetical Commission denial of a § 2.802(d)      stay request,  should the Commonwealth pursue that route. 10 The question of the availability of judicial review upon the occurrence      of contingent hypothetical events is          not before us and we do not give advisory opinions.            It    suffices to say that the Commonwealth's argument is        not proven that this proceeding must not be dismissed because it      is  the Commonwealth's one and only path for review of the agency's ultimate'resolution                of the Commonwealth's pool fire concerns.        We doubt the Commonwealth will wish to push 10    The NRC also suggests that in the event that the agency issues the Pilgrim and/or Vermont Yankee renewal licenses before concluding the pending rulemaking, the Commonwealth could petition this court for a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 to compel a final decision from the agency.                Because more conventional avenues to judicial review exist, we do not consider here whether and under what circumstances this "extraordinary remedy" would be available to the Commonwealth.          Telecomms. Research & Action Ctr.
: v. FCC, 750 F.2d 70, 78 (1984); accord In re City of Fall River, 470 F.3d 30, 32 (1st Cir. 2006).
: v. FCC, 750 F.2d 70, 78 (1984); accord In re City of Fall River, 470 F.3d 30, 32 (1st Cir. 2006).
this argument          in  the    future,  and we see no reason why it            cannot
this argument          in  the    future,  and we see no reason why it            cannot
,change      its    position.        We do offer a few comments to explain our conclusion.
,change      its    position.        We do offer a few comments to explain our conclusion.
Line 240: Line 193:
This court applies a functional test to determine whether one is    a "party aggrieved" for Hobbs Act purposes.                    That test asks whether the would-be petitioner "directly and actually participated in  the administrative proceedings."                Clark & Reid Co.,        804 F.2d at
This court applies a functional test to determine whether one is    a "party aggrieved" for Hobbs Act purposes.                    That test asks whether the would-be petitioner "directly and actually participated in  the administrative proceedings."                Clark & Reid Co.,        804 F.2d at
: 5. Because        "we  do  not  equate    the  regulatory      definition      of    a
: 5. Because        "we  do  not  equate    the  regulatory      definition      of    a
  'party'      in  an    [agency]    proceeding    with the      participatory      party status required for judicial review,"                id. at 6,  it matters not here
  'party'      in  an    [agency]    proceeding    with the      participatory      party status required for judicial review,"                id. at 6,  it matters not here whether NRC regulations label the Commonwealth as a "party" or an "interested governmental entity."
 
whether NRC regulations label the Commonwealth as a "party" or an "interested governmental entity."
C.            Commonwealth's    NEPA and APA Claims The Commonwealth makes a claim for immediate injunctive relief    from claimed statutory violations by the NRC."              The NRC and Entergy are correct that the Commonwealth's claims that the agency violated the NEPA and the APA by failing to consider'the pool fire contention,        regardless of the path followed,        is  not reviewable at this time.
C.            Commonwealth's    NEPA and APA Claims The Commonwealth makes a claim for immediate injunctive relief    from claimed statutory violations by the NRC."              The NRC and Entergy are correct that the Commonwealth's claims that the agency violated the NEPA and the APA by failing to consider'the pool fire contention,        regardless of the path followed,        is  not reviewable at this time.
The    Commonwealth's    claim    that  the    agency    committed statutory violations'by rejecting its            hearing request fails because it    does  not meet 'the      basic prerequisite      that    a petitioner    for judicial review of an agency action first              exhaust administrative remedies.        P.R. Assoc. of PhVsical Med.      & Rehab.,    Inc. v. United States,            F.3d    ,  2008  WL  787972,  at *2    (1st  Cir. Mar. 26, 2008)    (citing Myers v.      Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp.,        303 U.S. 41, 11      Specifically,    the Commonwealth requests that this court direct the agency to withhold any final decision in the individual license renewal proceedings for Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee unless and until the Commission considers and rules upon the Commonwealth's new and significant information in accordance with NEPA and the AEA and any further rulings by the Court, and the Commission applies those considerations and rulings to the individual Pilgrim      and    Vermont    Yankee    relicensing proceedings.
The    Commonwealth's    claim    that  the    agency    committed statutory violations'by rejecting its            hearing request fails because it    does  not meet 'the      basic prerequisite      that    a petitioner    for judicial review of an agency action first              exhaust administrative remedies.        P.R. Assoc. of PhVsical Med.      & Rehab.,    Inc. v. United States,            F.3d    ,  2008  WL  787972,  at *2    (1st  Cir. Mar. 26, 2008)    (citing Myers v.      Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp.,        303 U.S. 41, 11      Specifically,    the Commonwealth requests that this court direct the agency to withhold any final decision in the individual license renewal proceedings for Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee unless and until the Commission considers and rules upon the Commonwealth's new and significant information in accordance with NEPA and the AEA and any further rulings by the Court, and the Commission applies those considerations and rulings to the individual Pilgrim      and    Vermont    Yankee    relicensing proceedings.
Pet'r Br.      43.
Pet'r Br.      43.
50-51    (1938));      see  also  33  Wright        & Koch,          Federal  Practice      &  j)
50-51    (1938));      see  also  33  Wright        & Koch,          Federal  Practice      &  j)
Procedure:        Judicial    Review      §    8398,        at      397    (2006).        The administrative        exhaustion    requirement          gives agencies        "a  fair and full    opportunity"        to    adjudicate        claims        presented      to  them    by requiring that litigants use "all steps that the agency holds out, and do[]      so properly    (so that the agency addresses                    the issues on the    merits)    ."    Woodford    v. N__go,    126      S. Ct. 2378,  2385    (2006)
Procedure:        Judicial    Review      §    8398,        at      397    (2006).        The administrative        exhaustion    requirement          gives agencies        "a  fair and full    opportunity"        to    adjudicate        claims        presented      to  them    by requiring that litigants use "all steps that the agency holds out, and do[]      so properly    (so that the agency addresses                    the issues on the    merits)    ."    Woodford    v. N__go,    126      S. Ct. 2378,  2385    (2006)
(quoting Pozo v.        McCaughtry,    286 F.3d 1022,                1024  (7th Cir. 2002))
(quoting Pozo v.        McCaughtry,    286 F.3d 1022,                1024  (7th Cir. 2002))
(internal quotation mark omitted).                    Otherwise,          court review might interrupt the administrative process,                  impinge on the discretionary authority granted to the agency by the legislature,                              and squander judicial resources where continued administrative proceedings might resolve      the dispute in      the petitioner's              favor.      McKart v.      United  (j States,      395 U.S. 185,  193-95  (1969)..          Those concerns are involved here.
(internal quotation mark omitted).                    Otherwise,          court review might interrupt the administrative process,                  impinge on the discretionary authority granted to the agency by the legislature,                              and squander judicial resources where continued administrative proceedings might resolve      the dispute in      the petitioner's              favor.      McKart v.      United  (j States,      395 U.S. 185,  193-95  (1969)..          Those concerns are involved here.
The Commonwealth argues          that when the NRC dismissed it from the license renewal proceedings                    without addressing the NEPA claims,    the NRC "conclusively established the Commonwealth's rights and  .  .  . eliminate[d]    the Commonwealth's              right    to challenge      the agency's      compliance    with NEPA    .    .  .  ."      Pet'r    Reply Br. 6. The availability of interested            state status under § 2.315(c)                    and the request      for    suspension    mechanism      in    § 2.802(d)          undermine      that position.        There has not      yet been such              a conclusive        order.      We cannot at this point in          the administrative proceedings predict how
The Commonwealth argues          that when the NRC dismissed it from the license renewal proceedings                    without addressing the NEPA claims,    the NRC "conclusively established the Commonwealth's rights and  .  .  . eliminate[d]    the Commonwealth's              right    to challenge      the agency's      compliance    with NEPA    .    .  .  ."      Pet'r    Reply Br. 6. The availability of interested            state status under § 2.315(c)                    and the request      for    suspension    mechanism      in    § 2.802(d)          undermine      that position.        There has not      yet been such              a conclusive        order.      We cannot at this point in          the administrative proceedings predict how the agency would respond on the merits to a § 2.802(d) request from the  Commonwealth,    let    alone    evaluate    the    agency's      ultimate compliance with NEPA should the Commonwealth follow that procedure.
 
the agency would respond on the merits to a § 2.802(d) request from the  Commonwealth,    let    alone    evaluate    the    agency's      ultimate compliance with NEPA should the Commonwealth follow that procedure.
The Commonwealth argues separately that the NRC violated NEPA  and acted  arbitrarily      and capriciously      when  it  refused  to ensure  that  the  results    of  the  rulemaking    would    apply    to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings.                This argument merely repackages the Commonwealth's claims regarding its                dismissal from the licensing proceedings        and recasts    them in  the context of its  rulemaking petition.      We cannot review the NRC's treatment of that petition,    however,  because the agency has not issued a final order regarding the rulemaking petition.
The Commonwealth argues separately that the NRC violated NEPA  and acted  arbitrarily      and capriciously      when  it  refused  to ensure  that  the  results    of  the  rulemaking    would    apply    to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings.                This argument merely repackages the Commonwealth's claims regarding its                dismissal from the licensing proceedings        and recasts    them in  the context of its  rulemaking petition.      We cannot review the NRC's treatment of that petition,    however,  because the agency has not issued a final order regarding the rulemaking petition.
The  NRC  decision    which    the  Commonwealth      attempts  to construe as a "final" refusal to tie the results of the rulemaking back into the individual proceedings          was no such thing;        it  was a "final order" only insofar as it        affirmed the agency's dismissal of the    Commonwealth's      hearing      requests      in    the      re-licensing proceedings. See Vt. Yankee III,      65 N.R.C. at 214.      Further,  by their express language,    the Commission's decisions did not purport to rule  out  a possible    future order      suspending    the    Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings.        The Commission merely observed that it would be "premature to consider" such action at a time when there were other, unrelated issues involved in the licensing proceedings that would require significant time to resolve.              Vt. Yankee II,  65
The  NRC  decision    which    the  Commonwealth      attempts  to construe as a "final" refusal to tie the results of the rulemaking back into the individual proceedings          was no such thing;        it  was a "final order" only insofar as it        affirmed the agency's dismissal of the    Commonwealth's      hearing      requests      in    the      re-licensing proceedings. See Vt. Yankee III,      65 N.R.C. at 214.      Further,  by their express language,    the Commission's decisions did not purport to rule  out  a possible    future order      suspending    the    Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings.        The Commission merely observed that it would be "premature to consider" such action at a time when there were other, unrelated issues involved in the licensing proceedings that would require significant time to resolve.              Vt. Yankee II,  65 N.R.C. at  22  n.37. The  NRC's  statements  about  the  rulemaking y) within its  decisions to dismiss the Commonwealth's hearing requests are  "merely tentative"    and do not determine      any legal rights  or consequences. See Bennett,  520 U.S. at.177-78.
 
N.R.C. at  22  n.37. The  NRC's  statements  about  the  rulemaking y) within its  decisions to dismiss the Commonwealth's hearing requests are  "merely tentative"    and do not determine      any legal rights  or consequences. See Bennett,  520 U.S. at.177-78.
The petitions for review are denied.        No costs are awarded.
The petitions for review are denied.        No costs are awarded.
,q UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of                      )
,q UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of                      )
                                                   )
                                                   )

Latest revision as of 03:13, 13 March 2020

Commonwealth of Massachusetts' Notice of Intent to Participate as an Interested State
ML081350190
Person / Time
Site: Vermont Yankee File:NorthStar Vermont Yankee icon.png
Issue date: 05/06/2008
From: Curran D, Milkey J
Harmon, Curran, Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg, LLP, State of MA, Office of the Attorney General
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
SECY RAS
References
06-849-03-LR, 50-271-LR, RAS M-58
Download: ML081350190 (44)


Text

Pi-AS H-5g DOCKETED USNRC May 6, 2008 (1:13pm)

OFFICE OF SECRETARY May 6, 2008 RULEMAKINGS AND ADJUDIC) ATIONS STAFF UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of )

)

Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, Inc. )

Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. ) Docket No. 50-271 (Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station) ))

COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS' NOTICE OF INTENT TO PARTICIPATE AS AN INTERESTED STATE Pursuant to 10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c), the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, through its Attorney General, hereby notifies the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board ("ASLB")

that it intends to participate as an interested state in this proceeding. The Commonwealth seeks to participate in the proceeding for the purpose of protecting its right under the Atomic Energy Act and the National Environmental Policy Act to ensure that the issues raised in the Commonwealth's single contention in this case will be resolved before the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ("NRC") issues any renewed operating license to the applicant, Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. ("Entergy"). See Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. NRC, Nos. 07-1482 and 07-1483 (consolidated), __ F.3d _ (April 8, 2008) (copy attached). To that end, the Commonwealth reserves the right, at some future point in this proceeding, to file motions to the Commission pursuant to 10 C.F.R. § 2.802 and/or 10 C.F.R. § 2.342, to suspend or stay the proceeding or any final decision issued in the proceeding, pending adequate resolution of the Commonwealth's rulemaking petition regarding the issues raised in the Commonwealth's Contention.

The Commonwealth is not requesting a stay at this time because it anticipates that such a request may be rendered unnecessary by the Commission's ruling on the rulemaking petition prior to issuing its decision on the relicensing. In this regard, we note that although the Court upheld the Commission's decision to examine the concerns raised by the Commonwealth in the generic proceeding instead of the plant specific licensing proceedings, it reaffirmed the principle that "NEPA does impose an obligation on the NRC to consider environmental impacts of the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal before making a final decision." Slip opinion at 30 (emphasis added).

Respectfully submitted,

,,  ?-. /Thk 7 9 James R. Milkey Assistant Attorney General, Chief Environmental Protection Division Office of the Attorney General One Ashburton Place Boston, MA 02108 617/727-2200

,im.milkeygstate.nma.us Diane Curran Harmon, Curran, Spielberg, & Eisenberg, L.L.P.

1726 M Street N.W., Suite 600 Washington, D.C. 20036 202/328-3500 FAX 202/328-6918 dcurran(2harmoncurran.com May 6, 2008 2

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit Nos. 07-1482, 07-1483 COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS, Petitioner, V.

UNITED STATES; UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION, Respondents, ENTERGY NUCLEAR OPERATIONS, INC.; ENTERGY NUCLEAR VERMONT YANKEE LLC; ENTERGY NUCLEAR GENERATION COMPANY, Intervenors.

ON PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF ORDERS OF THE U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Before Torruella, Circuit Judge, Stahl, Senior Circuit Judge, and Lynch, Circuit Judge.

Matthew Brock, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Martha Coakley, Attorney General, Diane Curran, and Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg, L.L.P. were on brief for petitioner.

Steven C. Hamrick, Attorney, with whom Karen D. Cyr, General Counsel, John F. Cordes, Jr., Solicitor, E. Leo Slaggie, Deputy Solicitor, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Ronald J. Tenpas, Acting Assistant Attorney General, and Lane M. McFadden, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, were on brief for respondents.

David R. Lewis with whom Paul A. Gaukler and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP were on brief for intervenors.

April 8, 2008

LYNCH, Circuit Judge. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts wishes to ensure that the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission ("NRC" or the "Commission") will take account of the Commonwealth's safety concerns about treatment of spent fuel rods before the NRC decides whether to renew the operating licenses of two nuclear energy plants: the Pilgrim plant in Plymouth, Massachusetts, *and the Vermont Yankee plant in Vernon, Vermont, which is within ten miles of the Massachusetts border. The licenses were originally issued in 1972 and will expire in 2012; the re-licensing proceedings have been initiated and are ongoing.

The Commonwealth says that old assumptions about safe storage of spent fuel rods -- on which the NRC has relied since at least the early 1970s -- no longer hold. The Commonwealth claims that more recent studies and changed circumstances indicate an increased risk that the plants' method of storing spent fuel rods will lead to an environmental catastrophe. It also raises its concern that the plants' method of storing spent fuel leaves the plants vulnerable to terrorist attack.

Both sides agree that the safety issues raised are deserving of careful consideration. Both sides also agree that the Commonwealth is by law permitted to raise its various concerns by some path and to obtain judicial review of any NRC decision that adversely affects its interests in this matter. The question presented here is whether the Commonwealth has, from the regulatory maze, chosen the correct path for doing so. The Commonwealth insists it has chosen the appropriate path, indeed, the only one available to it. In short, the Commonwealth argues that it must be allowed to participate directly in the re-licensing proceedings as a party in order to get its safety-based contentions heard. In the alternative, the Commonwealth argues that the NRC must ensure that it resolves a separate rulemaking *petition, initiated by the Commonwealth and based on the same concerns about spent fuel storage, before the Commission issues any renewal licenses so that the results of the rulemaking will apply to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee re-licensing proceedings.

The NRC says the Commonwealth has chosen the wrong path, indeed, one precluded by its regulations. The agency also says that another option is available, is the proper path to be followed, and will adequately protect the state's interests.

According to the NRC, the Commonwealth must abandon its attempt to attain formal "party" status in the licensing proceedings and instead seek to participate in those proceedings as an "interested governmental entity." The Commonwealth may, in that capacity, petition the agency to delay issuance of the renewal licenses until the Commonwealth's request for a rulemaking is resolved. Indeed, the NRC has committed itself in this case to an interpretation of its regulations in such a way as to provide this alternative path, complete w.ith opportunities for eventual judicial review, to the Commonwealth.

We hold as a matter of law that the Commonwealth has chosen the wrong path in seeking to raise the safety issues as a party in the licensing proceedings and deny its petition. We also bind the NRC to its litigation position, described in more detail below. This leaves the Commonwealth free to follow the NRC's preferred path if it so chooses. To the extent the Commonwealth seeks an order from this court interfering with the NRC's ongoing re-licensing proceedings by imposing decision-making timetables on the agency, we issue a very brief stay but otherwise decline to issue such relief.

_ __0 Regulatory Background A description of the regulatory scheme governing the process for renewing licenses to operate nuclear power plants is helpful to understand this case. The Atomic Energy Act ("AEA")

contains the statutory basis for issuing and renewing such licenses. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 2133, 2134(b). The AEA empowers the NRC to make licensing decisions. Id. §§ 2133, 2134(b). The AEA provides for initial operating licenses valid for up to forty years and specifies that licenses "may be renewed." Id. § 2133(c) .' The 1 Sections 2133 and 2134(b) originally provided separate bases for issuing atomic energy licenses. Unlike § 2133, § 2134(b) does not explicitly impose a forty-year limit or provide ,for (O AEA says nothing more about requirements for re-licensing, instead delegating to the NRC authority to determine applicable rules and regulations. Id. §§ 2133, 2134(b).

The NRC has codified two distinct sets of regulations containing requirements for license renewal applications. The first set of regulations focuses on technical issues such as equipment aging. See, e.g., 10 C.F.R. § 54.4 (defining scope of renewal requirements in 10 C.F.R. Part 54). Those provisions are not at issue here.

The NRC promulgated the other set of regulations, codified at 10 C.F.R. Part 51, primarily to fulfill the agency's obligations under the National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA").

O See 10 C.F.R. § 51.10 (explaining purpose of Part 51 regulations).

NEPA requires federal agencies to document the environmental impacts and possible alternatives to proposed "major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment." 42 U.S.C. -§ 4332(C). In doing so, NEPA fulfills dual purposes. First, it "places upon an agency the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental impact of a license renewal. However, the agency has treated licenses issued under either provision as subject to the same terms limiting the initial license to no more than forty years and providing for renewal following expiration of the initial license. See Nuclear Power Plant License Renewal, 55 Fed. Reg. 29,043, 29,050 (proposed July 17, 1990); see also 10 C.F.R. § 50.51. Agency regulations now explicitly subject licenses for plants issued under both provisions to the same requirements for renewal. See 10 C.F.R. § 54.1.

proposed action." Balt. Gas & Elec. Co. v. Nat'l Res. Def. (7 Council, Inc., 462 U.S. 87, 97 (1983) (quoting Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Nat'l Res. Def. Council, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 553 (1978)) (internal quotation marks omitted). "Second, it ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its decisionmaking process."

Id. (citing Weinberger v. Catholic Action of Haw. Peace Educ.

Project, 454 U.S. 139, 143 (1981)).

Issuance or renewal of a license to operate a nuclear power plant is a "major Federal action" triggering NEPA's requirement that the agency produce an Environmental Impact Statement ("EIS") for such proceedings. 10 C.F.R. § 51.20.

Producing an EIS containing adequate discussion of all the environmental issues relevant to licensing the operation of a nuclear power plant poses a significant task for the NRC. In an effort to streamline the license renewal process, the NRC in 1996 conducted a study to determine which NEPA-related issues could be addressed generically (that is, applying to all plants) and which need to be determined on a plant-by-plant basis. The agency characterizes the first group of issues as Category 1, and the second as Category 2, issues. See generally Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, NUREG-1437, 1 Generic Environmental Impact Statement for License Renewal of Nuclear Plants (1996).

() Category 1 issues are common to all nuclear power plants, or to a sub-class of plants. As such, the NRC does not analyze generic Category 1 issues afresh with each individual plant operating license application. Instead, the agency conducted an extensive survey and generated findings, contained within a Generic Environmental Impact Statement ("GEIS"), that answer Category 1 issues as to all nuclear power plants. See id. at 1-3 to 1-6. The GEIS findings have since been codified through a rulemaking. See Environmental Review for Renewal of Nuclear Power Plant Operating Licenses, 61 *Fed. Reg. 28,467 (June 5, 1996) [hereinafter Final Rule]; see also 10 C.F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B (listing "NEPA issues for license renewal of nuclear power plants" and assigning them to either Category 1 or 2). Category 2 issues, by contrast, are those non-generic issues that require site-specific analysis for each individual licensing proceeding. 10 C.F.R. pt. 51, subpt.

A, app. B, n.2.

These categories affect how the NRC handles the NEPA-mandated EIS requirements. The process of creating the EIS for an operating licensing (or re-licensing) proceeding begins with the applicant, although producing the EIS is ultimately the NRC's responsibility. Under the regulations, each applicant must submit to the agency an environmental report that includes plant-specific analysis of all Category 2 issues. Id. § 51.53(c) (3) (ii). The regulations generally relieve applicants of having to discuss Category 1 issues, instead allowing applicants to rest on the GEIS findings. Id. § 51.53(c) (3) (i).

The regulation does require an applicant's report to include "any new and significant information regarding the environmental impacts of license renewal of which the applicant is aware." Id. § 51.53(c) (3) (iv). The NRC concedes that this applies even to "new and significant information" concerning Category 1 issues.

NRC staff then draw upon the applicant's environmental report to produce a draft supplemental EIS ("SEIS") for the license renewal. See id. § 51.95(c). This plant-specific SEIS addresses Category 2 issues and complements the GEIS, which covers Category 1 issues. Id. § 51.71(d). When the GEIS and SEIS are combined, (

they cover all issues that NEPA requires be addressed in an. EIS for a nuclear power plant license renewal proceeding.

Once the agency has prepared a draft SEIS,, it must be made available for comment both to the public and to other federal, state, and local agencies. Id. §§ 51.73, 51.74. After receiving.

comments, the NRC must then prepare, a final SEIS. Id.

§ 51.95(c) (3) (referencing id. § 51.91).

Because Category 1 issues have already been addressed globally by 10 C.F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B, they. cannot be litigated in individual adjudications, such as license renewal proceedings for individual plants. See id. § 2.335; Fla. Power &

(1 Light Co. (Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Plant), 54 N.R.C. 3, 12, 20-23 (2001). Instead, the agency has established other means for challenging GEIS findings regarding Category 1 issues when necessary, whether by the agency's own initiative or by petition from an outside entity. This divergent treatment of generic and site-specific issues is reasonable and consistent with the purpose of promoting efficiency in handling license renewal decisions.

There are several methods of review of Category 1 issues.

First, the agency must review the GEIS findings every ten years.

See Final Rule, supra, 61 Fed. Reg. at 28,468. Second, the NRC staff may make a request to the Commission that a rule be suspended on a generic basis or that a particular adjudication be delayed 9 until the GETS and accompanying rule are amended. Id. at 28,470.

This would be an appropriate course of action should public comments on a draft SEIS (or information submitted by a license renewal applicant) alert the agency to "new and significant information" calling into' question the validity of a GEIS finding.

id.

Third, the NRC staff may request that a rule be suspended with respect to a particular plant if comments to a draft SEIS reveal site-specific information indicating that the rule would be inapplicable to that particular plant. id.

Fourth, "[a] party to an adjudicatory proceeding" may petition for a waiver of an NRC rule or regulation with respect to that proceeding. 10 C.F.R. § 2.335(b). "The sole ground for petition of waiver or exception is that special circumstances with respect to the subject matter of the particular proceeding are such that the application of the rule or regulation . . would not serve the purposes for which [it] was adopted." Id.

Finally, any member of the public may petition the agency for a rulemaking proceeding aimed at altering the GEIS and its accompanying rule. Final Rule, supra, 61 Fed. Reg. at 28,470.

TI.

Administrative Proceedings Entergy, 2 intervenor to these petitions, obtained operating licenses for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants in 1972. Those licenses will expire in 2012, but they may be renewed for an additional twenty-year period, which would last until 2032.

On January 25, 2006, Entergy submitted applications to begin the license renewal process.3 Both the Pilgrim and the Vermont Yankee applications included an environmental report specific to the respective plant.

Entergy's environmental reports did not contain in-depth discussion 2 We use "Entergy" to refer to three entities: Entergy Nuclear Generation Company holds the Pilgrim plant possession and use license; Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee LLC holds the Vermont Yankee plant possession and use license; and Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. holds the operating licenses for both facilities.

3 The Commission is currently scheduled to issue a decision on the Plymouth application by July 27, 2008 and the Vermont Yankee application by November 2008.

of any Category 1 issues and represented that "Entergy has not identified any new and significant information concerning the impacts addressed by these [GEIS] findings."

On May 26, 2006, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts submitted parallel hearing requests in each of the two plant re-licensing proceedings. Each request included only one contention that the Commonwealth proposed to introduce into the proceedings:

that Entergy's environmental reports for each plant did not satisfy NEPA "because [they do] not address the environmental impacts of severe spent fuel pool accidents."

The storage of spent fuel on site at nuclear power plants is a Category 1 issue for operating license renewal purposes. 4 10 C.F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B. That subject is normally exempt from discussion in a license renewal applicant's environmental report, id. § 51.53(c) (3) (i), but may be raised elsewhere. The Commonwealth contends that it 'may raise the issue in the re-licensing proceeding and that Entergy's report violated NEPA and 10 C.F.R. § 51.53(c) (3) (iv) because it failed to address "new and 4 The regulation adopts the GEIS findings that "[t]he expected increase in the volume of spent fuel from an additional 20 years of operation can be safely accommodated on site with small environmental effects through dry or pool storage at all plants if a permanent repository or monitored retrievable storage is not available." 10 C.*F.R. pt. 51, subpt. A, app. B. As such, the license renewal regulations classify the environmental impacts of on-site spent fuel storage as "small," i.e., "not detectable or so minor that they will neither destabilize nor noticeably alter any important attribute of the resource." Id. at n.3.

significant information" regarding the risks of on-site spent fuel (J storage.

Spent fuel rods are a radioactive waste product of nuclear power plants. When the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants were originally licensed in 1972, it was common practice to arrange spent fuel rods in low-density racks in water-filled storage pools located at the plant that produced the waste. At the time, there was a national policy of eventually disposing of spent fuel through reprocessing. Long-term storage in a central geologic repository posed another option for removing spent fuel from reactor sites.

However, the reprocessing strategy was abandoned in the mid-1970s, and although the federal government has been planning to accept spent fuel at a proposed repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada, that option will not be available until at least 2015, if at all. As a result, spent fuel has accumulated at on-site storage facilities, and power plant operators have replaced low-density racks with high-density racks in storage pools in order to accommodate the mounting volume of spent fuel rods. According to the Commonwealth, use of high-density racks restricts the flow of cooling fluid around spent fuel rods and raises the risk of fire under a number of scenarios.

The Commonwealth contended in the re-licensing proceedings that new and significant information about on-site spent fuel storage at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants was demonstrated by the switch to high-density storage racks, recent scientific studies regarding the dangers of high-density storage pool fires, and the increased likelihood of terrorist attack following September 11, 2001. According to the Commonwealth,

[slignificant new information now firmly establishes that (a) if the water level in a fuel storage pool drops to the point where the tops of the fuel assemblies are uncovered, the fuel will burn, '(b) the 'fuel will burn regardless of its age, (c) the fire will propagate to other assemblies in the pool, and

([d]) the fire may be catastrophic.

A spent fuel pool fire would be catastrophic in large part because

"[a] large, atmospheric release of radioactive material would occur."I The Commonwealth appended four reports to its hearing requests in support of its pool fire contention. The first two resulted from studies commissioned by the Commonwealth to assess the risks of and alternatives to on-site, high-density pool storage at the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants. The first of these was written by Dr. Gordon R. Thompson of the Institute for Resource and Security Studies in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The Thompson report surveyed analyses by NRC staff and others and found that they recognized that "a loss of water from . . . high-density, closed-form storage racks would, over a range of scenarios, lead to self-ignition" of a fire "that could propagate across the pool." The report assessed the probability of a high-density storage pool fire occurring at either Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee as at least one per 10,000 years. Dr. Thompson recommended replacing the high-density storage racks at both facilities with low-density, open-frame racks. This course would, according to Dr. Thompson, "return the plant[s] to [their] original design configuration" and "achieve the largest risk reduction[] during plant operation within a license extension period." Dr. Thompson also surmised that re-equipping the plants with the recommended racks would cost less than $110 million for each plant.

The second study commissioned by the Commonwealth was authored by Dr. Jan Beyea, a nuclear physicist affiliated with Consulting in the Public Interest, and focused on the consequences of a hypothetical pool fire at the Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee plants. Under a scenario in which ten percent of the radioactive material in storage at the plants was released into the atmosphere due to a pool fire, Dr. Beyea estimated economic costs of $105-171 billion for Pilgrim, and $87-165 billion for Vermont Yankee. If one hundred percent of the radioactive material were released in such a fire, the costs would rise to $342-488 billion at Pilgrim and $364-518 billion at Vermont Yankee. Dr. Beyea estimated that a one hundred percent release of radioactive material at either plant could result in up to 8,000 cases of latent cancer. Dr.

Beyea's report further concluded that the results of recent epidemiologic studies could significantly inflate his estimates of the economic and health costs of a pool fire.

The third report submitted by the Commonwealth with its hearing requests was authored by NRC staff to assess the risk of spent fuel pool accidents at decommissioned nuclear power plants.

Published publicly in early 2001, the report acknowledged the possibility that even a partial loss of cooling fluid in a storage pool could result in a fire. The report also observed that because "fuel assembly geometry and rack configuration are plant specific,"

the possibility of pool fires "cannot be precluded on a generic basis." However, the report also concluded that "even though the consequences from a zirconium fire could be serious," the risk of such fires at decommissioning plants "is low and well within the Commission's safety goals."

Finally, the Commonwealth submitted a report produced, at the request of Congress, by the National Academy of Sciences to examine the potential consequences of a terrorist attack on spent fuel storage facilities sited at nuclear power plants. The report concluded that while all plants should have on-site pools for storage of spent fuel, there is some risk that a terrorist attack could partially or fully drain such a pool, leading to a fire and the release of radioactive material. The report also concluded that ",[t]he potential vulnerabilities of spent fuel pools to terrorist attacks are plant-design specific. Therefore, specific vulnerabilities can be understood only by examining the characteristics of spent fuel storage at each plant."

The NRC convened two Atomic Safety and Licensing Boards (7

("ASLB" or "Board") to assess whether the various contentions submitted by the Commonwealth and other entities were admissible in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings. On June 22, 2006, Entergy and the NRC staff filed oppositions to the Commonwealth's hearing requests, arguing the Commonwealth had chosen the wrong path to raise its contentions. They asserted the Commonwealth had impermissibly challenged a generic Category 1 issue without requesting a waiver of the agency's rule within the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings. They also argued that the information submitted by the Commonwealth did not constitute "new and significant" information within the meaning of 10 C.F.R.

51.53(c) (3) (iv). During oral arguments at pre-hearing (I conferences in front of the ASLBs, the Commonwealth staked out its position that the waiver provision was unavailable in any event; it could not seek waiver in the individual proceedings because its contention regarding pool fires was not specific to either of the two plants, but was a safety issue common to all plants.

The Commonwealth also informed the ASLBs of its intention to file a rulemaking petition aimed at modifying the GEIS findings about on-site spent fuel storage. The parties agree that this rulemaking path is and always has been open to the Commonwealth.

On August 25, 2006, following oral arguments in front of the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee ASLBs, the Commonwealth filed a petition for rulemaking with the NRC based on the same pool fire contention raised in its hearing requests in the individual licensing proceedings.' The petition requested that the NRC (a) consider new and significant information showing that the NRC's characterization of the environmental impacts of spent fuel storage as insignificant in the 1996 [GEIS] is incorrect, (b) revoke the regulations which codify that incorrect conclusion and excuse consideration of spent fuel storage impacts in NEPA decision-making documents, (c) issue a generic determination that the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel are significant, and (d) order that any NRC licensing decision that approves high-density pool storage of spent fuel at a nuclear power plant . . . must be accompanied by an [EIS]

that addresses (i) the environmental impacts of high-density pool storage of spent fuel at that nuclear plant and (ii) a reasonable array of alternatives for avoiding or mitigating those impacts.

The petition also urged the NRC to "withhold any decision to renew the operating licenses for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee nuclear power plants until the requested rulemaking has been completed" and suspend consideration of the Commonwealth's contentions in the individual proceedings. In support of its petition, the Commonwealth appended the same four reports described above. To date, there has been no decision on the rulemaking petition, and 5 The State of California has submitted a petition for rulemaking raising similar concerns; the NRC is currently considering both petitions. See State of California; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 72 Fed. Reg. 27,068 (proposed May 14, 2007); Mass. Attorney Gen.; Receipt of Petition for Rulemaking, 71 Fed. Reg. 64,169 (proposed Nov. 1, 2006).

the issue before us does not involve that petition, but rather the Commonwealth's hearing requests in the individual plant re-licensing proceedings.

The Vermont Yankee ASLB issued its decision on the hearing requests in that proceeding on September 22, 2006. Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee, LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station) (Vt.

Yankee I), 64 N.R.C. 131 (2006). As an initial matter, the ASLB granted standing to the Commonwealth. Id. at 145. The Board went on to reject the Commonwealth's contention, ruling that even if the Commonwealth's contention presented "new and significant information" about pool fires, "as a matter of law the contention is not admissible because the Commission has already decided, in Turkey Point, that licensing boards cannot admit an environmental contention regarding a Category 1 issue." Id. at 155. The Board stated the agency's position that under 10 C.F.R. § 51.53(c) (3), a licensing applicant such as Entergy must provide analysis of new and significant information regarding a NEPA issue, whether Category 1 or 2, in its environmental report. Id. Further, the Board observed that "if the information that the [Commonwealth]

presents is indeed new and significant, the Staff's SEIS needs to address it." Id. at 156.

The Board's ruling did not purport to foreclose any challenge by the Commonwealth to the agency's rule on on-site spent fuel storage. Again citing Turkey Point, the Board pointed out that the Commonwealth "has several options, including filing a petition for rulemaking, providing the information to the NRC Staff (which can then seek Commission approval to suspend the application of the rules or delay the license renewal proceeding), or petitioning the Commission to waive the application of the rule."

Id. at 159. The Board concluded its discussion of the Commonwealth's contention by noting the Commonwealth's pending rulemaking petition. "Thus we see," the Board stated, "that the

[Commonwealth] has already begun to pursue the alternative remedies specified in Turkey Point." Id. at 161.

On October 16., 2006, the Pilgrim ASLB issued a ruling rejecting the Commonwealth's pool fire contention on substantially the same grounds as'had the Vermont Yankee ASLB. Entergy Nuclear Generation Co. (Pilgrim Nuclear Power Station), 64 N.R.C. 257, 294-300 (2006).

The Commonwealth appealed the ASLB decisions to the NRC.

The Commission affirmed the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee ASLB decisions on January 22, 2007. Enterqy Nuclear Vt. Yankee, LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station) (Vt. Yankee II), 65 N.R.C. 13 (2007) . The NRC agreed with the ASLBs that the Commonwealth "Chose the appropriate way to challenge the GEIS when [it] filed [its]

rulemaking petition." Id. at 20. The Commission explained that

"[i]t makes more sense for the NRC to study whether, as a technical matter, the agency should modify its requirements relating to spent fuel storage for all plants across the board than to litigate in particular adjudications whether generic findings in the GEIS are impeached by . . . claims of new information." Id. at 20-21.

Otherwise, plant-by-plant litigation of Category 1 issues "would defeat the purpose of resolving generic issues in a GEIS." Id. at 21.

The Commission's decision also described how the pending rulemaking could affect the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings. The Commission rejected the Commonwealth's request that it suspend the licensing proceedings. It would be "premature" to delay a final decision on licensing, the Commission reasoned, where "final decisions in those proceedings are not expected for another year or more" and "involve many issues unrelated to the

[Commonwealth's] rulemaking petition." Id. at 22 n.37. However, "depending on the timing and outcome" of the rulemaking, the Commission recognized the possibility that NRC staff could request that the Commission suspend the generic rule and include plant-specific analysis of pool storage in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee SEISs. Id. at 22. We are told that to date, that has not happened.

The Commission also outlined a route by which the Commonwealth itself could influence the timing of the licensing decisions:

NRC regulations provide that a petitioner who has filed a petition for rulemaking "may request the Commission to suspend all or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking." 10 C.F.R.

§ 2.802 (d) . An interested governmental entity participating under 10 C.F.R. § 2.315 could also make this request.

Id. at 22 n.37. Because alternatives were available, "admitting the [Commonwealth's] contention for an adjudicatory hearing is not necessary to ensure that the claim receives a full and fair airing." Id. at 22.

The Commonwealth filed a motion for reconsideration and clarification on February 1, 2007. The Commonwealth requested that the Commission establish that: (a) [Vt. Yankee II] is not a final decision with respect to the

[Commonwealth's] rights of participation in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings, (b) the Commission will treat the

[Commonwealth] as a party if the

[Commonwealth] later decides to seek to suspend the license renewal decisions for [the plants] under 10 C.F.R. § 2.802, and (c) as a party, the [Commonwealth] would be permitted to seek judicial review of any decision by the NRC that fails to make timely application of the results of the proceeding on the

[Commonwealth's] petition for rulemaking to the individual license renewal decisions for Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee.

The Commission denied the motion on March 15, 2007.

Entergy Nuclear Vt. Yankee, LLC (Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Station)

(Vt. Yankee III), 65 N.R.C. 211 (2007). The Commission found that the motion failed to demonstrate "compelling circumstances" justifying reconsideration. Id. at 214. The Commission clarified (J that its previous decision constituted a final decision with regards to the NRC's rejection of the Commonwealth's contentions in the licensing proceedings. The Commission also pointed out that the Commonwealth, after the NRC's decision of the rulemaking petition, could eventually also obtain judicial review of that decision. Id. at 214 & n.13. Finally, the Commission made clear that the Commonwealth "could seek [interested governmental entity]

status even now," a maneuver that would allow the Commonwealth to request a stay of the licensing proceedings under 10 C.F.R.

§ 2.802(d). Id. at 214-15 & n.16.

The Commonwealth petitioned this-court for review of the Commission's decisions. Q III.

The Commonwealth's principal argument in these petitions is that by refusing to take into account its alleged new and significant information regarding pool fires in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings, whether by admitting the Commonwealth as a party to the licensing proceedings or by promising to apply the results of the rulemaking to those proceedings, the NRC violated NEPA and the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA").

The NRC and Entergy respond that the Commonwealth's NEPA and APA claims are not properly before this court. Both of these

. Q

parties assert that the agency's ruling in Vt. Yankee II that it had not suspended the licensing proceedings is not yet ripe for judicial review because there has been no final agency action on either the rulemaking petition or the license renewal applications.

Entergy further argues that we may not review the NEPA and APA claims because the Commonwealth failed to exhaust available administrative remedies.

A. NRC Decisions The Administrative Procedure Act authorizes this court to displace the Commission's decisions only to the extent that they are "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." 5 U.S.C. § 706(2) (A); Massachusetts

v. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 878 F.2d 1516, 1522 (1st Cir.

1989). This general posture of deference toward agency decision-making is particularly marked with regards to NRC actions because

"[t]he [AEA] is hallmarked by the amount of discretion granted the Commission in working to achieve the statute's ends."

Massachusetts, 878 F.2d at 1523 (quoting Pub. Serv. Co. of N.H. v.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 582 F.2d 77, 82 (1st Cir. 1978)).

This principle is applicable in the context of licensing decisions, where statutory directives are scant and the AEA explicitly delegates broad authority to the agency to promulgate rules and regulations. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §§ 2133, 2134(b).

This court must also be mindful of the substantial Q) deference required when an agency adopts reasonable interpretations of regulations of its own creation. Fed. Express Corp. v.

Holowecki, 128 S. Ct. 1147, 1155 (2008); Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S.

452, 461 (1997). We must accept the agency's position unless it is "plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulation." Auer, 519 U.S. at 461 (quoting Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council, 490 U.S. 332, 359 (1989)) (internal quotation marks omitted).

The Commission's decision to deny party status to the Commonwealth in the Pilgrim. and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings is reasonable in context, and consistent with agency rules. As the Commonwealth has conceded, the pool fire contention it raised in its hearing requests does not apply solely to the Pilgrim or Vermont Yankee plants and instead challenges a Category 1 GEIS finding.

Where environmental impacts of an NRC action are not plant-specific, the Supreme Court has endorsed "[t]he generic method . . . [as] clearly an appropriate method of conducting the hard look required by NEPA." Balt. Gas & Elec. Co., 462 U.S. at 101 (citing Vt. Yankee, 435 U.S. at 535 n.13). "Administrative efficiency and consistency of decision are both furthered by a generic determination of these effects without needlessrepetition of the litigation in individual proceedings, which are subject to review by the Commission in any event." Id.

The NRC's procedural rules are clear: generic Category 1 issues cannot be litigated in individual licensing adjudications without a waiver. 10 C.F.R. § 2.335; see also Dominion Nuclear Conn., Inc. (Millstone Nuclear Power Station), 54 N.R.C. 349, 364 (2001); Turkey Point, 54 N.R.C. at 12; Duke Energy Corp. (Oconee Nuclear Station), 49 N.R.C. 328, 343 (1999). If the Commonwealth or any citizen wishes to attack the agency's rule on such an issue, it must petition for a generic rulemaking. Turkey Point, 54 N.R.C.

at 12.

NEPA does impose a requirement that the NRC consider any new and significant information regarding environmental impacts before renewing a nuclear power plant's operating license.

However, "NEPA does not require agencies to adopt any particular internal decisionmaking structure." Balt. Gas & Elec. Co., 462 U.S. at 100. Here, the NRC procedures anticipate a situation, such as that alleged here by the Commonwealth, in which a generic finding adopted by agency rule may have become obsolete. In such a situation, the regulations provide channels through which the agency's expert staff may receive new and significant information, namely from a license renewal applicant's environmental report or from public comments on a draft SEIS, and the NRC staff may seek modification of a generic Category 1 finding.

The Commonwealth has already chosen the available option of a rulemaking petition. But the rulemaking petition may not move quickly enough to address the Commonwealth's safety concerns before the Commission renders re-licensing decisions regarding the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants.

The Commonwealth argues that the NRC acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it channeled the Commonwealth's pool fire concerns into a generic rulemaking without any assurances that the result of the rulemaking would apply to the individual licensing proceedings for the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee plants. Central to the Commonwealth's argument is its assumption that "[u]nder the NRC's present process, the Commonwealth does not even have a right to request the agency to exercise its discretion to stay the individual proceedings so that the results of the rulemaking may be applied to Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee." Pet'r Br. 35. 0)

The Commonwealth's concern is apparently based on a misreading of the NRC's position. Both in its decisions in the administrative proceedings and before this court, the NRC has outlined at least one path by which the.Commonwealth may establish a connection between the rulemaking and the licensing proceedings.

That path consists of two stages. First, the Commonwealth may participate in the licensing proceedings not as a party with its own contentions, but as an interested governmental body under 10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c). 6 Second, in the rulemaking proceedings, the 6 That regulation states that the officer presiding over a licensing proceeding Commonwealth may invoke 10 C.F.R. § 2.802(d), which provides that a rulemaking petitioner "may request the Commission to suspend ail or any part of any licensing proceeding to which the petitioner is a party pending disposition of the petition for rulemaking." This stay procedure would, the agency argues, allow the Commonwealth ah opportunity to influence the order and timing of the agency's final decisions in the rulemaking and licensing proceedings. But, since the Commonwealth has as yet done neither of those things, there is no final order and those issues are premature.

will afford an interested State, local governmental body and affected, Federally-recognized Indian Tribe, which has not been admitted as a party under [10 C.F.R.]

§ 2.309, a reasonable opportunity. to participate in a hearing. Each State [and]

local governmental body . . shall, in its.

request to participate in a hearing, each designate a single representative for the hearing. The representative shall be permitted to introduce evidence, interrogate witnesses where cross-examination by the parties is permitted, advise the Commission without requiring the representative to take a position with respect to the issue, file proposed findings in those proceedings where findings are permitted, and petition for review by. the Commission under § 2.341 with respect to the admitted contentions. The representative shall identify those contentions on which it will participate in advance of any hearing held.

10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c). The regulation echoes a provision of the AEA that requires the NRC to "afford reasonable opportunity" for state representatives to pirticipate in licensing proceedings. 42 U.S.C.

§ 2021(1).

The Commonwealth asserts the agency is changing positions before this court regarding the availability of the § 2.802(d) mechanism. Again, we think this is based on a misunderstanding.

The Commonwealth quotes a passage from the NRC's denial of the motion for reconsideration: "[U]nder NRC regulations, the

[Commonwealth] currently has no right to request that the final decisions in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal proceedings be, stayed until the rulemaking is resolved." Pet'r Br.

36 (quoting Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214) (internal quotation marks omitted). The Commission's decision goes on to explain, however, that the Commonwealth could not "currently" request a stay under § 2.802(d) because at the time of the NRC's decision, the Commonwealth had neither been admitted as a "party" to the licensing proceedings nor asserted interested governmental entity status under § 2.315.7 Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214-15. The Commission further represented that the Commonwealth could attain 7 Agency procedure precludes a state from participating in a single proceeding as both a party with an admitted contention and an interested governmental entity. 10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c); La.

Energy Servs., L.P. (Nat'l Enrichment Facility), 60 N.R.C. 619, 626-27 (2004). The Commonwealth could thus not participate under

§ 2.315(c) until the NRC disposed of the Commonwealth's hearing requests. Because the NRC has refused the Commonwealth party status in a decision that is "final" as to those hearing requests, and we deny the Commonwealth's petition, the path has been cleared for the Commonwealth to seek interested governmental entity status, if it so chooses. See Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214-15 & n.16.

interested governmental entity status "even now." Id. at 215

n. 16.8 The Commonwealth seizes upon a textual mismatch in the regulations to argue that an "interested State" participating in a licensing proceeding under § 2.315(c) is distinct from a "party,"

and therefore could not invoke the § 2.802(d) procedure. Compare 10 C.F.R. § 2.315(c) (making participant status available to a governmental body "which has not been admitted as a party") with id. § 2.802(d) (allowing petitioner in pending rulemaking to request suspension of a licensing proceeding "to which the petitioner is a party").

While we recognize what may be tension between the wording of these two regulations, we decline to adopt the Commonwealth's preclusive reading of the term "party" in the face of a contrary and reasonable. reading by the agency. Dispositive here is the agency's own reasonable reading of the term, which treats an interested governmental entity as the equivalent of a "party" for purposes of § 2 .802 (d) . "Party" can both be defined in one context as a term of art, e.g., as one who has demonstrated standing and whose contention has been admitted for hearing in a 8 The NRC has represented to this court that even though the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings have continued since the Commission's decision dated March 15, 2007, the Commonwealth may still attain interested governmental entity status and avail itself of the § 2.802(d) stay procedure. We consider the NRC to be bound by this representation.

licensing adjudication, see 10 C.F.R. § 2.309(a), and deployed in its more general sense of one who participates in a proceeding or transaction, see Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1648 (1993) (defining "party" to include one who "takes part with others in an action or affair" or an individual "involved in the case at hand"). The NRC has not defined the term "party" uniformly throughout its regulations. See, e.g., 10 C.F.R. § 2.4 (containing regulatory "Definitions," but not including one for "party"). We must pay deference to this agency's interpretation of its own regulations. Auer, 519 U.S. at 461.

The Commonwealth charges that the NRC has adopted this interpretation for the first time before this court "[i]n an effort to avoid judicial review." Pet'r Supplemental Reply Br. 5. This is not a mere litigation position. The Commission explicitly stated in its January 22, 2007 affirmance of the ASLB rulings that an interested governmental entity participating under § 2.315(c) could request a suspension under § 2.802(d).. Vt. Yankee II, 65 N.R.C. at 22 n.37. We thus take the NRC's proffered reading of how

§ 2.315(c) and § 2.802(d) interact to be consistent with the agency's practice generally, as well as its litigation position in this court.

In sum, the NRC acted reasonably when it invoked a well-established agency rule to reject the Commonwealth's requests to participate as a party in individual re-licensing proceedings to raise generic safety concerns and required that the Commonwealth present its concerns in a rulemaking petition. The agency is also within the bounds of its authority to interpret its regulations to afford the Commonwealth an opportunity to participate in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings under § 2.315(c) and thereby qualify to reqjuest a suspension of those proceedings under § 2.802 (d). We note, however, that these conclusions rely on our deference to the agency's interpretations of its own regulations. By staking its position regarding procedural avenues available to - the Commonwealth in this case, both in its administrative decisions and in its representations before this court, the'agency has, in our view, bound itself to honor those interpretations. See New Hampshire v. Maine, 532 U.S. 742, 749-51 (2001) . Further, if the agency were to act contrary to these representations in this matter, a reviewing court would most likely consider such actions to *be arbitrary and capricious.

Timing is a factor in this case. Section 2 .315 (c) affords interested states an opportunity to participate in licensing hearings, but the agency has not stayed the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings pending the outcome of this court's decision, and the hearing schedule in at least the Pilgrim proceedings may be coming rapidly to a close. We therefore stay the close of hearings in both plant license renewal proceedings for fourteen days from the date of issuance of mandate in this case 9 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.

What remains is the Commonwealth's objection that accepting the NRC's recommended procedural vehicle subjects the Commonwealth's rights under NEPA to "the NRC's unfettered discretion to grant or withhold" a stay of the licensing proceedings. Pet'r Br. 36. Again, although NEPA does impose an obligation on the NRC to consider environmental impacts of the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee license renewal before issuing a final decision, the statute does not mandate how the agency must fulfill that obligation. See 42 U.S.C. § 4332; Balt. Gas & Elec. Co., 462 U.S. at 100-01; Vt. Yankee, 435 U.S. at 548. Beyond "the statutory minima" imposed by NEPA, Vt. Yankee, 435 U.S. at 548, the implementing procedures are committed to the agency's judgment. In theory, what fetters the agency's decision-making process and ensures ultimate compliance with NEPA is judicial review. The NRC does not take the position that the Commonwealth is not entitled to judicial review in the future. We turn next to the question of 9 Action by this court was held in abeyance from December 6, 2007 to February 14, 2008 in order to afford the parties an opportunity to settle. A settlement was not reached, but the Commonwealth's opportunity to avail itself of the NRC's procedural mechanisms to participate in the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings should not be prejudiced by the delay in securing a decision from this court.

whether a meaningful opportunity to seek judicial review would be available to the Commonwealth should it pursue the procedural course advanced by the agency.

B. Availability of Judicial Review The NRC and Entergy point out two routes by which the Commonwealth can obtain judicial review of the agency's ultimate treatment of its concerns involving spent fuel pool fires. The first is direct review of the results of the now-pending ru~lemaking petition; the second is review of a hypothetical Commission denial of a § 2.802(d) stay request, should the Commonwealth pursue that route. 10 The question of the availability of judicial review upon the occurrence of contingent hypothetical events is not before us and we do not give advisory opinions. It suffices to say that the Commonwealth's argument is not proven that this proceeding must not be dismissed because it is the Commonwealth's one and only path for review of the agency's ultimate'resolution of the Commonwealth's pool fire concerns. We doubt the Commonwealth will wish to push 10 The NRC also suggests that in the event that the agency issues the Pilgrim and/or Vermont Yankee renewal licenses before concluding the pending rulemaking, the Commonwealth could petition this court for a writ of mandamus under 28 U.S.C. § 1651 to compel a final decision from the agency. Because more conventional avenues to judicial review exist, we do not consider here whether and under what circumstances this "extraordinary remedy" would be available to the Commonwealth. Telecomms. Research & Action Ctr.

v. FCC, 750 F.2d 70, 78 (1984); accord In re City of Fall River, 470 F.3d 30, 32 (1st Cir. 2006).

this argument in the future, and we see no reason why it cannot

,change its position. We do offer a few comments to explain our conclusion.

The Hobbs Act provides the jurisdictional basis for federal court review of NRC actions. See 28 U.S.C. §§ 2342(4),

2344. Section 2344 provides that "[a]ny party aggrieved by the final order may, within 60 days after its entry, file a petition to review the order in the court of appeals wherein venue lies." Id.

§ 2344. The statute embodies two threshold requirements for a court to assert jurisdiction to review an NRC action. A petitioner must first qualify as a "party aggrieved" under the statute in order to have standing to appeal. Clark & Reid Co. v. United States, 804 F.2d 3, 5 (1st Cir. 1986). There must also be a "final order" for the court to review. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2342(2), 2344; see generally Bennett v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154, 177-78 (1997);

Massachusetts, 878 F.2d at 1519-20.

This court applies a functional test to determine whether one is a "party aggrieved" for Hobbs Act purposes. That test asks whether the would-be petitioner "directly and actually participated in the administrative proceedings." Clark & Reid Co., 804 F.2d at

5. Because "we do not equate the regulatory definition of a

'party' in an [agency] proceeding with the participatory party status required for judicial review," id. at 6, it matters not here whether NRC regulations label the Commonwealth as a "party" or an "interested governmental entity."

C. Commonwealth's NEPA and APA Claims The Commonwealth makes a claim for immediate injunctive relief from claimed statutory violations by the NRC." The NRC and Entergy are correct that the Commonwealth's claims that the agency violated the NEPA and the APA by failing to consider'the pool fire contention, regardless of the path followed, is not reviewable at this time.

The Commonwealth's claim that the agency committed statutory violations'by rejecting its hearing request fails because it does not meet 'the basic prerequisite that a petitioner for judicial review of an agency action first exhaust administrative remedies. P.R. Assoc. of PhVsical Med. & Rehab., Inc. v. United States, F.3d , 2008 WL 787972, at *2 (1st Cir. Mar. 26, 2008) (citing Myers v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp., 303 U.S. 41, 11 Specifically, the Commonwealth requests that this court direct the agency to withhold any final decision in the individual license renewal proceedings for Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee unless and until the Commission considers and rules upon the Commonwealth's new and significant information in accordance with NEPA and the AEA and any further rulings by the Court, and the Commission applies those considerations and rulings to the individual Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee relicensing proceedings.

Pet'r Br. 43.

50-51 (1938)); see also 33 Wright & Koch, Federal Practice & j)

Procedure: Judicial Review § 8398, at 397 (2006). The administrative exhaustion requirement gives agencies "a fair and full opportunity" to adjudicate claims presented to them by requiring that litigants use "all steps that the agency holds out, and do[] so properly (so that the agency addresses the issues on the merits) ." Woodford v. N__go, 126 S. Ct. 2378, 2385 (2006)

(quoting Pozo v. McCaughtry, 286 F.3d 1022, 1024 (7th Cir. 2002))

(internal quotation mark omitted). Otherwise, court review might interrupt the administrative process, impinge on the discretionary authority granted to the agency by the legislature, and squander judicial resources where continued administrative proceedings might resolve the dispute in the petitioner's favor. McKart v. United (j States, 395 U.S. 185, 193-95 (1969).. Those concerns are involved here.

The Commonwealth argues that when the NRC dismissed it from the license renewal proceedings without addressing the NEPA claims, the NRC "conclusively established the Commonwealth's rights and . . . eliminate[d] the Commonwealth's right to challenge the agency's compliance with NEPA . . . ." Pet'r Reply Br. 6. The availability of interested state status under § 2.315(c) and the request for suspension mechanism in § 2.802(d) undermine that position. There has not yet been such a conclusive order. We cannot at this point in the administrative proceedings predict how the agency would respond on the merits to a § 2.802(d) request from the Commonwealth, let alone evaluate the agency's ultimate compliance with NEPA should the Commonwealth follow that procedure.

The Commonwealth argues separately that the NRC violated NEPA and acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it refused to ensure that the results of the rulemaking would apply to the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee licensing proceedings. This argument merely repackages the Commonwealth's claims regarding its dismissal from the licensing proceedings and recasts them in the context of its rulemaking petition. We cannot review the NRC's treatment of that petition, however, because the agency has not issued a final order regarding the rulemaking petition.

The NRC decision which the Commonwealth attempts to construe as a "final" refusal to tie the results of the rulemaking back into the individual proceedings was no such thing; it was a "final order" only insofar as it affirmed the agency's dismissal of the Commonwealth's hearing requests in the re-licensing proceedings. See Vt. Yankee III, 65 N.R.C. at 214. Further, by their express language, the Commission's decisions did not purport to rule out a possible future order suspending the Pilgrim and Vermont Yankee proceedings. The Commission merely observed that it would be "premature to consider" such action at a time when there were other, unrelated issues involved in the licensing proceedings that would require significant time to resolve. Vt. Yankee II, 65 N.R.C. at 22 n.37. The NRC's statements about the rulemaking y) within its decisions to dismiss the Commonwealth's hearing requests are "merely tentative" and do not determine any legal rights or consequences. See Bennett, 520 U.S. at.177-78.

The petitions for review are denied. No costs are awarded.

,q UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of )

)

Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, Inc. )

Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. ) Docket No. 50-271

)

(Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station) )

NOTICE OF APPEARANCE BY DIANE CURRAN Pursuant to 10 C.F.R. § 2.314(b), Diane Curran hereby enters an appearance in this proceeding as duly authorized legal counsel for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Undersigned counsel is a member in good standing of the bars of the District of Columbia; the State of Maryland; the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia; and the U.S. Courts of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, First Circuit, Third Circuit, Ninth Circuit, Tenth Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court.

Respectfully submitted, Dia Curan Harmon, Curran, Spielberg, & Eisenberg, L.L.P.

1726 M Street N.W., Suite 600 Washington, D.C. 20036 202/328-3500 FAX 202/328-6918 dcurraniiharmoncurran.com May 6, 2008

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD In the Matter of )

)

Entergy Nuclear Vermont Yankee, Inc. )

Entergy Nuclear Operations, Inc. ) Docket No. 50-271

)

(Vermont Yankee Nuclear Power Station) )

NOTICE OF APPEARANCE BY JAMES R. MILKEY Pursuant to 10 C.F.R. § 2.314(b), James R. Milkey hereby enters an appearance in this proceeding as duly authorized legal counsel for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Undersigned counsel is a member in good standing of the bars of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts, U.S. Courts of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and First Circuit, and the U.S.

Supreme Court.

Respectfully submitted, James R. Milkey Assistant Attorney General, Chief Environmental Protection Division Office of the Attorney General One Ashburton Place, 1 8 th Floor Boston, MA 02108 (617) 727-2200, ext. 2439 FAX (617) 727-9665 iim.milkevaJ.state.ma.us May 6, 2008

I CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE: VERMONT YANKEE LICENSE RENEWAL PROCEEDING I certify that on May 6, 2008, copies of the foregoing Commonwealth of Massachusetts' Notice of Intent to Participate as an Interested State, Notice of Appearance by James R. Milkey, and Notice of Appearance by Diane Curran were served by electronic mail and/or first-class mail on the following:

Office of the Secretary Alex S. Karlin, Chair Attn: Rulemaking and Adjudications Staff Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Mail Stop: O-16C1 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20555-0001 Washington, DC 20555-0001 Also by E-mail: ask2@nrc.gov Also by E-mail: hearingdocket@nrc.gov William H. Reed Sarah Hofmann, Esq.

Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Director of Public Advocacy 1819 Edgewood Lane Department of Public Service Charlottesville, VA 22902 112 State Street - Drawer 20 Also by E-mail to: Montpelier, VT 05620-2601 whrcvill e(Thembarqmail.com Also-by E-mail: sarah.hofmanngstate.vt.us Also by E-mail: elleman_,eos.ncsu.edu Lloyd B. Subin, Esq.

David E. Roth, Esq.

Office of Commission Appellate Mary C. Baty, Esq.

Adjudication Mail Stop 0-15 D21 Mail Stop: O-16C1 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555-0001 Washington, DC 20555-0001 Also by E-mail: LBS3@nrc.gov; Also by E-mail: OCAAmait(gnrc.gov mcbl @nrc.gov; david.roth(inrc.gov Richard E. Wardwell Ronald A. Shems, Esq.

Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Karen Tyler, Esq.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Shems Dunkiel Kassel & Saunders, PLLC Washington, DC 20555-0001 91 College Street Also by E-mail: rew@nrc.gov Burlington, VT 05401 Also by E-mail: rshemsasdkslaw.com Ktyler(ksdkslaw.com

2 Callie B. Newton, Chair Dan MacArthur, Director Gail MacArthur Town of Marlboro Town of Marlboro Selectboard Emergency Management P.O. Box 518 P.O. Box 30 Marlboro, VT 05344 Marlboro, VT 05344 Also by E-mail: cbnewton(2sover.net Also by E-mail: dmacarthur@igc.org marcialynngev .net David R. Lewis, Esq.

Marcia Carpentier, Esq. Matias F. Travieso-Diaz Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP Mail Stop: T-3F23 2300 N Street, NW U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20037-1128 Washington, DC 20555-0001 Also by E-mail:

Also by E-mail: mxc7@a nrc.gov; david.lewis@pillsburylaw.com matias.travieso-diaz(,pillsbu-ylaw.com Anthony Z. Roisman, Esq.

National Legal Scholars Law Firm Peter C. L. Roth, Esq.

84 East Thetford Rd. Senior Assistant Attorney General Lyme, NH 03768 Environmental Protection Bureau Also by E-mail: New Hampshire Dept. of Justice aroismana.nationallegalscholars.com 33 Capitol Street Concord, N H 03301 Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel Also by e-mail to:

Mail Stop: T-3 F23 Peter.rothgdoj .nh.gov U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20555-0001 Raymond Shadis P.O. box 98 James R. Milkey, Esq. Edgecomb, ME 04556 Assistant Attorney General, Chief Also by e-mail:

Environmental Protection Division Shadis@prexar.com Office of the Massachusetts Atty Gen.

One Ashburton Place, 18th Floor Boston, MA 02108 Also by E-mail: jim.milkey@state.ma.us Diane Curran