ML20094J914

From kanterella
Revision as of 23:35, 2 May 2020 by StriderTol (talk | contribs) (StriderTol Bot insert)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Petition for Review.* Submits That Commission Review of Board Decision Appropriate Under 10CFR2.786. W/Certificate of Svc & Svc List
ML20094J914
Person / Time
Site: Perry FirstEnergy icon.png
Issue date: 11/07/1995
From: Gaulker P
CLEVELAND ELECTRIC ILLUMINATING CO., SHAW, PITTMAN, POTTS & TROWBRIDGE
To:
NRC COMMISSION (OCM)
References
CON-#495-17275 90-605-02-OLA, 90-605-2-OLA, OLA-3, NUDOCS 9511160105
Download: ML20094J914 (12)


Text

- - - - . - . .. . - - . - . . - . - --. -.._-.--. . . . - . . . . . .

  • 6 h375 .

P 00CKETED USNRC November 7,1995  !

-% NOV -7 Pl2 :09 i UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF SECRETARY DOCKETING & SERVICE BRANCH  ;

Before The Commission i

i In the Matter of ) Docket No. 50-440-OLA-3

) .

THE CLEVELAND ELECTRIC ) License Amendment .

ILLUMINATING COMPANY, et al. ) (Material Withdrawal Schedule) ,

) i (Perry Nudear Power Plant, ) ASLBP No. 90-605-02-OLA .

Unit No.1) ) ,

PETITION FOR REVIEW q Pursuant to 10 C.F.R. $ 2.786, The Cleveland Electric illuminating Company, l e_t al (" Licensees") respectfully request the Nudear Regulatory Commission ("Com .

mission" or "NRC") to review the decision of the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board

(" Board") , LBP-95-17, issued on October 4,1995 with respect to the Perry Nudear Power Plant (" Perry"). In granting the summary disposition 7 tion of Ohio Citizens  :

for Responsible Energy, Inc. and Susan L. Hiatt ("Intervenors"), and denying Licen- l f

sees' cross-motion for summary disposition, the Board erroneously conduded that the NRC must treat any future change to the reactor vessel material specimen withdrawal schedule "as a license amendment and provide notice and an opportunity for a hearing in accordance with section 189a of the Atomic Energy Act." LBP-95-17 at 23. This i

legal determination is incorrect and will have far reaching effects. It will transform the numerous routine requests for NRC approvals filed by licensees pursuant to NRC 9511160105 951107 PDR ADOCK 05000440 0 PDR M, ,03

- _-. . - .- . . .- . . . -~~ -

t regulations into the equivalent of license amendments requiring notice and opportu-nity for hearing under the Atomic Energy Act.

I.

SUMMARY

OF DECISION AND STATEMENT OF ISSUF3 RAISED The major issue raised by the Board's decision is whether every licensee action for which the Commission's regulations mandate prior NRC approval constitutes a material licensing action requiring a license amendment for which notice and opportu- l nity for hearing must be provided under section 189a of the Atomic Energy Act (the "Act"). Licensees had requested an operating license amendment in accordance with l Generic Letter 91-01 to remove from the Technical Specifications the schedule for l withdrawing reactor vessel material surveillance specimens.E Intervenors contended j that the proposed amendment violated section 189a of the Act by depriving members i

)

of the public of their right to notice and opportunity for a hearing on any changes to the withdrawal schedule.E According to Inte venors, NRC regulations require ap- ,

proval of changes to the withdrawal schedule, making such changes materiallicensing actions requiring a license amendment.E The Board essentially adopted Intervenors' arguments and also concluded, at least implicitly, that any changes to the withdrawal schedule were to be treated as license amendments, regardless of materiality.E I E Under the proposed amendment, the withdrawal schedule would be included in the Updated Safety L PY-CEl/NRR-1313L from Michael Analysis Report instead of the Technical Specifications. SS etter D. Lyster, Centerior Energy, to U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, March 15,1991.

E See Petitioners' Supplemental Petition for Leave to Intervene, November 12,1993.

E See Petitioners' Motion for Summary Disposition, February 7,1994.

E Licensees had argued that even if section 189a guarantees a right to a hearing as to NRC approvals not requiring a license amendment which are material to the NRC's licensing decision, the with- ,

drawal schedule of reactor vessel material specimens was not material to any licensing decision of the NRC. See Licensees' Cross Motion for Summary Disposition and Answer to Ohio Citizens for Re- j sponsible Energy, Inc. and Susan L. Hiatt Mot:on for Summary Disposition, March 21,1994.

2

_ . ~ . . _ . _ . _ _ . _ _. _ _ . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ._ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _ _

. 6 4

I l

i t

The Board's decision also erroneously rejected the NRC Staff's interpretation j of 10 C.F.R. Pan 50, Appendix H,5 II.B.3. That provision states:  ;

, i A proposed withdrawal schedule must be submitted with a technical justification as specified in 5 50.4. The pro- +

posed schedule must be approved prior to  ;

implementation.

The NRC Staff interprets this provision to require Staff approval for changes to the '!

withdrawal schedule only where the changed schedule deviates imm the ASTM E 185 standard explicitly incorporated into Apnendix H,5 II.B by $ II.B.1.E .

4 The Board rejected the NRC Staff's interpretation, finding the regulation to be  ;

unambiguous and holding that it required the NRC to " approve all proposed sched-ules prior to implementation." LBP-95-17 at 21 (emphasis in original). Notwithstand- i ing the fact that the regulation makes no mention of changes to withdrawal schedules, the Beard reasoned that, "[b]ecause Appendix H,5 II.B.3 currently requires that a pro-posed withdrawal schedule be approved by the agency prior to implementation, any such requested change is a request for a material licensing action that triggers  !

section 189a hearing rights." LBP-95-17 at 23 (citations omitted). The Board thus con-i cluded that the NRC must " treat any future proposed withdrawal schedule as a license 1

amendment and provide notice and opportunity for a hearing in accordance with sec-  !

i tion 189a of the Atomic Energy Act." Id. )

II. STATEMENT WHY THE BOARD'S ORDER IS ERRONEOUS The Board's decision is erroneous. First, it transforms licensee actions requir-ing prior NRC regulatory approval into the equivalent of license amendments for ESE NRC Staff Response to Intervenors' Motion for Summary Disposition, March 7,1994. The Staff filed an affidavit tracing the history of Appendix H in suppon of its interpretation.

3

_ ~ _ - _ _ _ . . . _ . _ .__ __. _ _.._.. _._ _ _ _ . - . _ . _ _ _ _ _ _ _

i which notice and opportunity for hearing must be afforded under section 189a of the ,

I Act. No suppon can be found in the law or the NRC regulatiors for this far reaching conclusion. Second, the Board's decision eliminates materiality as a prerequisite for i section 189a hearing rights contrary to well established precedent that section 189a re- i i

quires a hearing only for issues that are material to NRC licensing decisions. Third, l the Board's decision is erroneous because it rejects the Staff's reasonable interpretation j of Appendix H,5 II.B.3. l A. The OnierIs Erroneous Because It Turns Licensee Actions Requiring Prior NRC ApprovalInto License Amendments The Board's decision, that the NRC's approval of a change to a withdrawal I i

schedule under Appendix H,5 II.B.3 requires notice and opportunity for hearing, rests on a fundamentally flawed assumption. It presumes that alllicensee actions re-quiring NRC regulatory approval trigger the right to a headng under section 189a.  ;

This assumption is wrong. The language of section 189a was carefully crafted "to guarantee headngs dghts in cenain classes of agency action, but not in others." San Luis Obispo Mothen For Peace v. NRC,751 F.2d 1287,1313 (D.C. Cir.1984), va- l cated in pan and rehearing granted in pan,760 F.2d 1320 (D.C. Cir.1985) (en banc) t t

(emphasis in original). "If a particular form of Commission action does not fall j within one of the . . . categories set fonh in [section 189a], no hearing need be granted f by the Commission." San Luis Obispo, 751 F.2d at 1314; accord Kelley v. Selin,42 .

F.3d 1501,1515 (6th Cir.), cen. denied,115 S. Ct. 2611 (1995); Commonwealth of l

Massachusetts v. NRC, 878 F.2d 1516,1521 (1st Cir.1989).

i The categories of licensing actions for which section 189a grants a right to a hearing are "the granting, suspending, revoking, or amending of any license or 4

i

4 i i i )

, f t

" l construction permit."E The approval of a change to the withdrawal schedule for reac-tor vessel surveillance specimens does not fall within any of these categories. It is no  ;

different than numerous other approvals that the NRC requires as part of its continu- ~

- - ing regulatory ovenight to assure that the activities authorized under NRC licenses .  ;

continue to be conducted with no undue risk to the public health and safety.E None l 1

of these provisions contemplate license amendments. j

)

The cases cited above refute the Board's ruling that such NRC approvals auto- )

matically trigger section 189a hearing requirements. Closely on point is the Sixth Cir-cuit's recent Kelley decision. Petitionen in that case argued that the NRC's granting of an exemption to the vendor of the spent fuel storage casks to be installed at the  !

i Palisades facility and NRC's " approval of amendments to Palisades' security and l

E Section 189a provides for notice and opportunity for hearing with respect to "any proceeding for the )

granting, suspending, revoking, or amending of any license or construction permit, or application to transfer control, and any proceeding for the issuance or modification of rules and regulations dealing  !

with the activities of licensees, and in any proceeding fcr the payment of compensation, an award or ]

royalties . . . " 42 U.S.C. $ 2239(a). [

{

ESee, e g.,10 C.F.R. $ 50.46 (a)(3)(ii) (use of approved integrated scheduling system for showing com-  !

pliance with $ 50.46); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.48(c)(5) (compliance with fire protection requirements); 10 C.F.R.  !

$ 50.54(a)(3) (changes to quality assurance programs that reduce commitments); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.55(f)(3)

'(for construction permit holders, changes to quality assurance programs that reduce commitments); 10  :

C.F.R. $ 50.54(i-1) (decrease in scope of an operator requalification program); 10 C.F.R. $

50.54(q)(changes to emergency plans which decrease plan effectiveness); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.54(w)(4)0i) ,

(post-accident cleanup plan); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.54(bb) (spent fuel management and funding plan); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.55a(f)(4)0v) (use of subsequent editions and addenda of ASME Code for inservice testing of j pumps and valves); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.55a(g)(4)0v) (use of subsequent editions and addenda of ASME Code ]

for inservice inspection of pumps and valves); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.61(b)(6)A(7) (reactor operation beyond i pressurized thermal shock screening criterion); 10 C.F.R. $ 50.82(d) (updated detailed decommission- j ing plan prior to start of major dismantlement activities); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. G,5 Ill.B (test meth- l ods for supplemental fracture toughness tests); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. G, $ IV. A.1 (reactor vessel ..

beltline material Charpy upper-shelf energy of less than 50 ft-lb); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. G $ V.D (thermal annealing); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. G, $ V.E (programs for satisfying requirements of App. l G, $$ V.C. & D) 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. H, $ II.C Ontegrated reactor surveillance programs); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App.J $ lil.A.6 (test schedule for Type A integrated leakage rate test); 10 C.F.R. Part 50, App. K, $ I.C.S.c (ECCS evaluation models). i 5 i 1

a- .m- . , , ,-,--,,m- ., . - v- - -- , , - - - -- r

1 emergency plans" triggered section 189a's right to a hearing. 42 F.3d at 1514. The -l Sixth Circuit rejected the petitionen' arguments: l f

There is n_o licensing decision being made here. . . . The i decisions to which petitionen refer as site-specific do not grant Consumen the right to operate Palisades in any j 1

greater capacity than the plant had previously been al-lowed to operate, and the NRC did not exempt Consum-ers from operating under any specific safety requirements ,

f or change the rules applicable to Consumers to such an extent that it no longer followed otherwise applicable l NRC rules and regulations.

I 42 F.3d at 1515 (emphasis added). The Sixth Circuit stated further that "the grant of an exemption from a generic requirement does not constitute an amendment to the re-actor's license that would trigger hearing rights." 42 F.3d at 1517; accord Common-wealth of Massachusetts, 878 F.2d at 1521; Duke Power Co. v. NRC,770 F.2d 386,- l 1

389 (4th Cir.1985). Similarly, the Kelly decision held that NRC's approval of the re-  ;

vised security and emergency plans for Palisades "[did] not require public participa- .I tion." 42 F.3d at 1517.E

)

Here too, the NRC's approval of a change to the withdrawal schedule will not grant Licensees, in the words of the Kelley decision, "the right to operate [ Perry] in any greater capacity than the plant had previously been allowed to operate." Nor will it " exempt [ Licensees] from operating under any specific safety requirements or change the rules applicable to [ Perry] to such an extent that it no longer follow [s]

ESee also San Luis Obispo, where the court held that lifting of a license suspension did not fall within -

any of the categories set out in section 189a requiring notice and opportunity for hearing. Similarly, in Commonwealth of Massachusetts, the court held that the NRC's decision authorizing restart of a plant that had been shut down did not constitute a license amendment and did not trigger notice and opportunity for hearing under section 189a.

6

otherwise applicable NRC rules and regulations." Therefore, the NRC's approval should not trigger section 189a hearing rights.

The cases cited by the Board and Intervenors are not to the contrary. Union of Concerned Scientists v. NRC, 735 F.2d 1437 (D.C. Cir.1984), cert. denied sub nom. Arkansas Power & Light Co. v. Union of Concerned Scientists,469 U.S.1132 (1985) involved a licensing proceeding explicitly within the scope of section 189a. The issue there was whether questions concerning emergency evacuations were material to the Commission's licensing decision so that they had to be heard in a hearing already required under section 189a.E In Citizens Awareness Network v. NRC,59 F.3d 284 (1st Cir.199.8), the coun concluded that the NRC's approval of the licensee's "compo-  !

nent removal project" had "substantially enlarged the [ licensee's] authority" to engage in activities far beyond those previously authorized under its license. 59 F.3d at 294.

The coun did not lay down the broad rule of law promoted by the Board that NRC approvals which are part of its continuing regulatory oversight require notice and op-portunity for hearing under section 189a. Such a rule of law is refuted by Kelley and other cases (San Luis Obispo, Commonwealth of Massachusetts and Duke Power) holding that such regulatory approvals by the NRC do not constitute amendments to 1 a reactor's license that would trigger headng rights'"

Se_e San Luis Obispo Mothers for Peace v. NRC,789 F.2d 26,30 (D.C. Cir.) (en banc), cert. denied 479 U.S. 923 (1986) (" Union of Concerned Scientists holds only that the Commission cannot exclude from a section 189(a) hearing issues that its rules or regulations require it to consider in its licensing decisions.")

EThe intervenors also cite Sholly v. NRC,651 F.2d 780,791 (D.C. Cir.1980), vacated and remanded, j 459 U.S.1194 (1983). However, the Supreme Court's vacating the Sholly decision " deprives [it] of precedential effect." County of Los Angeles v. Davis,440 U.S. 625,634 n. 6 (1979); see also Citizens Association For Sound Energy v. NRC,821 F.2d 725,728 (D.C. Cir.1987) ("The Sholly decision is no longer of precedential value.")

7

___ _ . _ . ~ _ _ . - .. _._ _ _ .. _ _ _._ _ _ .. _ .. _ - _ _ __ . _ _ . . _ _ _ . . . _.

B. The Order Is Erroneous Because It Eliminates Materiality As A Requirement For A Hearing Under Section 189a Section 189a has been interpreted to require notice and opportunity for hearing only with respect to issues that are material to NRC licensing decisions. See, eg, Un-ion of Concerned Scientists,735 F.2d at 1443. The Board's order would, however, re-quire notice and opportunity for hearing on all NRC approvals of changes to withdrawal schedules for reactor vessel material surveillance specimens, regardless of their materiality.

i The Board's Order would require NRC to provide notice and opportunity for >

hearing with respect to schedule changes even if those changes comply with the ASTM E 185 standards incorporated into Appendix H,5 II.B.1, or are otherwise not  ;

material to the public health and safety. The regulatory history of Appendix H dem- j onstrates, however, that withdrawal schedules conforming with ASTM E 185 stan-dards satisfy NRC safety requirements and are therefore not material to any licensing j decision.W C. The Board's Order Is Erroneous Because It Rejects The Staff's -

Reasonable Interpretation Of Appendix H, S II.B.3 ,

i Based on the history of Appendix H, the Staffinterprets Appendix H, $ II.B.3 to apply only to schedules not in conformance with the ASTM E 185 standards incor-porated by reference in Appendix H,5 II.B.1.W The Board rejected the Staff's inter-pretation and held that "all proposed schedules" require the NRC's approval.

LBP-95-17 at 21 (emphasis added). In its decision, the Board argues that S II.B.3 is WSn NRC Staff Response to Intervenors' Motion for Summary Disposition, supra at 17-23.

WSee NRC Staff Response to Intervenors' Motion for Summary Disposition, supra at 17-27, and the supporting affidavit of Barry J. Elliot, Jack R. Strosnider and Christopher I. Grimes.

8

clear and unambiguous on its face and that the Staff disreganis its plain meaning. Id.

at 15-18. However, the regulation is not so clear and unambiguous as the Board claims. It provides only that "[t]he proposed schedule must be approved prior to im-plementation ." It does not specify whether it is only the initial schedule that must be approved or whether changes to that schedule must also receive pnor approval. While the Board criticizes the Staff for "the unwarranted insenion" of the word " initial" into the regulation (id. at 17), the Board itself without warrant inserts the word "all" in or-der to find no ambiguity in the provision. Id. at 21. The Staff's interpretation of Ap-pendix H,5 II.B.3 is a reasonable one based on that regulation's history and purpose, and the Commission should adopt it.

III. STATEMENT WHY THE COMMISSION SHOULD REVIEW THE BOARD'S ORDER The Commission should review the Board's mling because the Board's legal conclusion is a "depanure from" and " contrary to established law." 10 C.F.R. $

2.786(b)(4)(ii). The Boani erroneously concludes that NRC's approval of withdrawal schedules changes under 10 C.F.R. Pan 50, Appendix H,5 II.B.3 constitutes a mate-riallicensing action which must be treated as if it were a license amendment. The Board's decision would require the NRC to treat approvals required as pan of its con-tinuing regulatory oversight as if they were license amendments subject to the proce-dural requirements of section 189a. This result is contrary to well established case law and Commission practice. Also contrary to established case law, the Board's decision eliminates materiality as a prerequisite for section 189a licensing hearings.

Finally, the Commission should review the Board's decision because the deci-sion raises " substantial and imponant question [s)" of law and policy. 10 C.F.R. S 9

l

2.786(b)(4)(iii). In addition to Appendix H,5 II.B.3, the NRC's regulations contain many other provisions requiring NRC approval of licensee actions which are not oth- i erwise subject to notice and opportunity for hearing under section 189a. See note 7, supra. The Board's rationale would emboss upon such regulatorily established Staff approvals the procedural trappings of license amendments. Generic application of the Board's ruling would have a significant impact on the both the NRC Staff and NRC licensees. It would greatly burden the NRC's regulatory ovenight with new proce- j dural requirements with no concomitant benefit to the public health and safety.

The Licensees therefore respectfully submit that the Commission's review of the Board's decision is appropriate under 10 C.F.R. $ 2.786.

Respectfully submitted, Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge 2300 N Street, N.W. l Washington, D.C. 20037 I

Jay E. Silberg'  !

Paul A. Gaukler Counsel for Licensees  ;

Dated: November 7,1995 23126S.01/ DOODC1 1

10

DOCKETED USHRC November 7,1995

'95 NOV -7 Pl2 :09 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF SECRETARY 00CKEflHG & SERVICE Before The Commission -

AM In the Matter of - ) Docket No. 50-440-OLA-3

)

THE CLEVELAND ELECTRIC ) License Amendment ILLUMINATING COMPANY, et al. ) ' (Material' Withdrawal Schedule)

)

(Peny Nuclear Power Plant, ) ASLBP No. 90-605-02-OLA Unit No.1) )

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I hereby certify that copies of the foregoing Petition for Review were sent by Federal Express on November 6,1995 to the panies listed on the attached Service List-(and identified by an *) and by first class mail, postage prepaid, to the remaining per-sons on the Service List.

Shaw, Pittman, Potts & Trowbridge >

2300 N Street, N.W.

Washington, D.C. 20037 GM Paul A.Gaukler Counsel for Licensees Dated: November 7,1995 I

I

.i r

November 7,1995 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA  ;

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION l

Before The Commission ]

In the Matter of ) Docket No. 50-440-OLA-3

) l THE CLEVELAND ELECTRIC -) License Amendment . ,

ILLUMINATING COMPANY, et al. ) (Material Withdrawal Schedule) l

) l (Perry Nudear Power Plant, ) ASLBP No. 90-605-02-OLA f Unit No.1) ) J SERVICE LIST Secretary

  • Dr. Richard F. Cole l ' U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Attention: Chief, Docketing and Service U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission l Section Washington, D.C. 20555 Washington, D.C. 20555 I

Shenvin E. Turk, Esq.* Dr. Charles N. Kelber Office of the General Counsel Atomic Safety and Licensing Board U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission l

Washington, D.C. 20555 Washington, D.C. 20555 Thomas S. Moore, Esq. John F. Cordes,Jr.*

l Chairman Acting Director i

Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Office of Commission Appellate U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission Adjudication Washington, D.C. 20555 U.S. Nudear Regulatory Commission Washington, D.C. 20555 Ms. Susan Hiatt* j 8275 Munson Road j Mentor, Ohio 44060 4

1

-_- - - -