ML043570019

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Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League'S Motion to Amend Protective Order
ML043570019
Person / Time
Site: Catawba  Duke Energy icon.png
Issue date: 12/15/2004
From: Curran D
Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League, Harmon, Curran, Harmon, Curran, Spielberg & Eisenberg, LLP
To:
Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel
Byrdsong A T
References
50-413-OLA, 50-414-OLA, ASLBP 03-815-03-OLA, RAS 9020
Download: ML043570019 (7)


Text

I-0 December 15, 2004 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION BEFORE THE ATOMIC SAFETY AND LICENSING BOARD DOCKETED USNRC December 21, 2004 (10:41am)

In the Matter of Docket No's. 50-413-OLA, OFFICE OF SECRETARY DUKE ENERGY CORPORATION 50-414-OLA RULEMAKINGS AND ADJUDICATIONS STAFF (Catawba Nuclear Station, Units 1 and 2)

BLUE RIDGE ENVIRONMENTAL DEFENSE LEAGUE'S MOTION TO AMEND PROTECTIVE ORDER Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League ("BREDL") hereby moves to further amend the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board's Protective Order Governing Duke Energy Corporation's September 15, 2003, Security Plan Submittal (December 15, 2003),

as amended. BREDL seeks an additional amendment to the Protective Order for the sole purpose of allowing BREDL to store exhibits to pre-filed testimony under appropriate protective measures in BREDL's counsel's office between December 17, 2004, and February 4, 2004. This change to the Protective Order is necessary to allow BREDL a sufficient opportunity to review exhibits in preparation for the hearing on January 10-14, 2005, and to prepare proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.

Factual Background Under the standing Protective Order in this case, BREDL's attorney and expert may only obtain access to Duke Energy Corporation's Security Plan Submittal and related discovery documents at the offices of Winston & Strawn or the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission ("NRC" or "Commission") Staff. In a recent telephone conference with the ASLB, undersigned counsel for BREDL expressed the wish to be

/e/mf late 5- S CT v _o 41 '5 CYAR6

able to keep any exhibits to the parties' testimony at her office, under appropriate protective measures, so that she and BREDL's expert, Dr. Edwin S. Lyman, could more effectively prepare cross-examination questions and rebuttal testimony for the upcoming hearing. The parties agreed to discuss the matter and see if they could come to an agreement.

On or about December 9 2004, counsel for the Staff, Antonio Fernandez, called BREDL's counsel to inform her that in order to be allowed to store the requested safeguards documents at her office, she would have to undergo a two-hour inspection of her office by a member of the NRC Staff. Although counsel for BREDL was concerned that such an inspection would take valuable time away from work with Dr. Lyman on his prefiled testimony, she reasoned that it was very important to be able to participate in the hearing as effectively as possible by getting the NRC Staff's approval to store safeguards exhibits at her office. Therefore, she agreed to an inspection between 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.

on December 13, 2004.

Bernard Stapleton, a member of the NRC Staff, came to undersigned counsel's office at 8 a.m. on December 13 and spent a full hour and a half inspecting her filing cabinet and lock, safeguards documents, safeguards document log, computer, and printer.

At the end of the inspection, he stated that undersigned counsel's measures for protecting safeguards documents were adequate, and that he would tell his superiors that there was no reason to deny her permission to have the requested exhibits in her office. He said he expected to have his report finished by noon, and that he expected she would hear from the Staff by the end of the day.

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Although counsel for BREDL left several telephone messages with the Staff on h1 Monday December 13'h and Tuesday December 14th, counsel for the Staff did not contact undersigned counsel for BREDL until late in the afternoon on December 14. In that conversation, Susan Uttal informed undersigned counsel that the Staff was unwilling to agree to allow her to have any safeguards exhibits in her office. The sole reason Ms.

Uttal gave was that the Protective Order required that the safeguards documents be kept at the offices of Winston & Strawn or the NRC Staff. She did not explain why the result of Mr. Stapleton's inspection apparently had been overruled or ignored.

Argument Throughout this proceeding, BREDL has followed the requirement of the Protective Order that all safeguards documents other than pleadings must be reviewed at the offices of Duke or NRC Staff counsel. The process has been cumbersome. Not only must BREDL's counsel and expert travel to Duke's and the Staff's offices to examine documents; but they must either prepare pleadings in Duke's and the Staff's offices, without benefit of all of the reference documents that are kept at their offices; or they must laboriously copy information or commit it to memory so that they can use it when they return to BREDL's counsel's office.

Given the compressed time frame of the upcoming hearing, BREDL is concerned that BREDL's counsel and expert will not be able to do an adequate job of preparing cross-examination questions, rebuttal testimony and proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law if their access to exhibits is restricted to the offices of Duke and NRC Staff counsel. Therefore, BREDL requests leave to store exhibits in a locked file cabinet at the offices of counsel for BREDL, under the requirements of the Protective Order, 3

WI V between December 17, 2004 (the due date for direct pre-filed testimony), and February 4, 2005 (the due date for reply findings of fact). As Mr. Stapleton concluded, BREDL has provided all measures necessary for the adequate protection of the documents during this limited time period, including adequate security at the entrances to counsel's building and office, regulation-required file cabinet and lock, appropriate computer equipment, and a log of safeguards documents.

BREDL also requests that in entertaining any opposition to this motion that may be filed by the NRC Staff, the ASLB take into account Mr. Stapleton's conclusion, as the Staff's own security expert, that BREDL's counsel has provided adequate measures for the safe storage of safeguards documents.

Finally, BREDL requests that the ASLB find the Staff acted in bad faith by misleading undersigned counsel into believing that Staff would not oppose counsel's request to store safeguards documents at her office if Mr. Stapleton found that she met Staff requirements for safe storage of the documents. BREDL's counsel would never have devoted her limited time to such an inspection had she known that the NRC Staff had no intention of honoring Mr. Stapleton's conclusion. BREDL should not be required to bear the financial costs of the Staff's misleading behavior. Instead, the ASLB should sanction the Staff by ordering it to compensate BREDL for the time undersigned counsel spent preparing for Mr. Stapleton's inspection, undergoing the inspection, and preparing this motion.

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Respectfully submitted, Diane Curran Harmon, Curran, Spielberg, & Eisenberg, L.L.P.

1726 M Street N.W., Suite 600 Washington, D.C. 20036 202/328-3500 e-mail: Dcurrangharmoncurran.com December 15, 2004 5

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that on December 15, 2004, copies of (a) Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League's Motion for Leave to Reply to NRC Staff's Response to Need-to-Know Appeal, (b) Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League's Reply to NRC Staff s Response to Need-to-Know Appeal, and (c) Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League's Motion to Amend Protective Order were served on the following by e-mail and/or first-class mail, as indicated below.

Ann Marshall Young, Chair Susan L. Uttal, Esq.

Administrative Judge Antonio Fernandez, Esq.

Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Shana Zipkin, Esq.

U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of the General Counsel Mail Stop: T-3F23 Mail Stop 15 D21 Washington, D.C. 20555 U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission E-mail: AMY@nrc.gov Washington, D.C. 20555-0001 E-mail: slu@nrc.gov axf2@nrc.gov, Anthony J. Baratta mjb5@nrc . gov Administrative Judge Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Mary Olson U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Southeast Office, Nuclear Information and Mail Stop: T-3F23 Resource Service Washington, D.C. 20555 P.O Box 7586 E-mail: AJB5@nrc.gov Asheville, NC 28802 E-mail: nirs . se@rindspring. corn Office of Commission Appellate Adjudication U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Timika Shafeek-Horton, Esq.

Mail Stop: 0-16CI Lisa F. Vaughn, Esq.

Washington, D.C. 20555 Legal Dept. (EC-07H)

Duke Energy Corporation Thomas S. Elleman 526 South Church Street (ECI IX)

Administrative Judge Charlotte, NC 28201-1006 Atomic Safety and Licensing Board E-mail: lfVaughn@duke-energy. corn 4760 East Country Villa Drive Tucson, AZ 85718 Janet Marsh Zeller, Executive Director E-mail: elleman@eos.ncsu.edu Blue Ridge Environmental Defense League P.O. Box 88 Glendale Springs, NC 28629 E-mail: BREDL@skvbest . com

2 David A. Repka, Esq.

Anne W. Cottingham, Esq.

Mark J. Wetterhahn, Esq.

Winston & Strawn, LLP 1400 L Street, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20005-3502 E-mail: drepka(winston. corn acotting@winston. corn mwetterhahn@winston.corn Office of the Secretary (original and two copies)

ATTN: Docketing and Service U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Mail Stop: 0-16C1 Washington, D.C. 20555 E-mail: HEARINGDOCKET@nrc . gov Diane Curran