ML12233A627

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G20120317/EDATS: OEDO-2012-0273 - 2.206 Acknowledgement Letter to T. King on St. Lucy Units 1 and 2, and Turkey Point Units 3 and 4
ML12233A627
Person / Time
Site: Saint Lucie, Turkey Point  NextEra Energy icon.png
Issue date: 08/29/2012
From: Leeds E J
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
To: King T
- No Known Affiliation
Jason Paige, NRR/DORL, 415-5888
Shared Package
ML12233A647 List:
References
G20120317, OEDO-2012-0273, TAC ME8584, TAC ME8585, TAC ME8731, TAC ME8732, EDATS: OEDO-2012-0273, 2.206
Download: ML12233A627 (77)


Text

UNITED NUCLEAR REGULATORY WASHINGTON, D.C. 20555-0001 August 29, 2012 Mr. Thomas King 7548 S Hwy 1 #144 Port Saint Lucie, FL 34952

Dear Mr. King:

Your petition dated April 23, 2012, which was e-mailed to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) senior resident inspector of St. Lucie Plant, Units 1 and 2, has been referred to me pursuant to Section 2.206, "Requests for action under this subpart," of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR 2.206) of the Commission's regulations.

You requested that the NRC take immediate action to shut down or prohibit restart of the St. Lucie Plant, Units 1 and 2 and Turkey Point Nuclear Generating, Units 3 and 4 "until a criminal investigation of the AMES Group LLC is complete and everything has been verified safe." I would like to express my appreciation for your effort in bringing these matters to the attention of the NRC. On May 22, 2012, the petition review board (PRB) evaluated your request for immediate action. On June 14, 2012, the petition manager informed you bye-mail that the PRB denied your request for immediate action because the NRC staff did not have sufficient information to support a shut down or prohibit the restart of the St. Lucie and Turkey Point plants. The NRC has not identified immediate safety concerns at the St. Lucie or Turkey POint facilities, and the NRC does not find that the continued operation of the facilities would adversely affect the health and safety of the public. The PRB held a teleconference with you on July 9, 2012, during which you were given the opportunity to supplement your original request with additional information in advance of the PRB's decision to accept or deny your petition.

The petition manager initially informed you of the PRB's recommendation to accept your petition on August 7,2012. As you are aware, the NRC Region II Office is conducting an examination of your concerns.

Although the PRB accepted your petition, it will be held in abeyance pending the outcome of Region II's examination.

Your petition will be reviewed by the Office of Enforcement and the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation after the conclusion of the NRC Region II Office evaluation.

The NRC will take appropriate action if impacts to safety-related equipment at the St. Lucie or Turkey Point facilities are identified during the NRC Region II Office review. As provided in 10 CFR 2.206, the staff will continue to monitor this issue and resolve this action as soon as possible.

I have assigned Jason Paige to be the petition manage:r for your petition.

You can reach Mr. Paige at 301-415-5888.

You may visit the NRC's website at 206/.wherethepubliCmaYObtainuPdatesonthestatusof2.206petitions.ir.C!Uding any petitions held in abeyance.

T. -2 For your information, I have enclosed a copy of the notice that is being filed with the Office of the Federal Register for publication.

I have also enclosed a copy of Management Directive 8.11, "Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions," and the associated brochure NUREG/BR-0200, "Public Petition Process," prepared by the NRC Office of Public Affairs. Sincerely, Eric J. eeds, Director Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation

Enclosures:

1. Federal Register Notice 2. Management Directive 8.11 3. NUREG/BR-0200 Licensee Listserv

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY DOCKET NOs. 50-250, 50-251, 50-335, and LICENSE NOs. DPR-31, DPR-41, DPR-67, AND FLORIDA POWER & LIGHT RECEIPT OF REQUEST FOR ACTION UNDER 10 CFR Notice is hereby given that by petition dated April 23, 2012, Mr. Thomas King (petitioner) has requested that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) take action with regard to St. Lucie Plant, Units 1 and 2, and Turkey Point Nuclear Generating, Units 3 and 4. The petitioner requested that the NRC take immediate action to shut down or prohibit restart of the St. Lucie Plant, Units 1 and 2, and Turkey Point Nuclear Generating, Units 3 and 4, "until a criminal investigation of the AMES Group LLC is complete and everything has been verified safe." The request is being treated pursuant to Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Section 2.206 of the Commission's regulations.

The request has been referred to the Director of the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation.

As provided by Section 2.206, appropriate action will be taken on this petition within a reasonable time. The petition review board (PRB) held a teleconference with the petitioner on July 9, 2012, during which the petitioner was given the opportunity to supplement the original request with additional information in advance of the PRB's decision to accept or deny the petition.

The PRB denied the petitioner's request for immediate action because the NRC staff did not have sufficient information to support a down or prohibit the restart of the St. Lucie and Turkey Point plants. The NRC Region II Office is conducting an examination of the petitioner's concerns.

The PRB accepted the petition for review but it will be held in abeyance pending the outcome of Region II's examination.

A copy of the petition is available for inspection at the Commission's Public Document Room (PDR), located at One White Flint North, Public File Area 01 F21, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, Maryland.

Publicly available documents created or received at the NRC are accessible electronically through the Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) in the NRC Library at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/adams.html.

Persons who do not have access to ADAMS or who encounter problems in accessing the documents located in ADAMS should contact the NRC PDR Reference staff by telephone at 1-800-397-4209 or 301-415-4737, or bye-mail to PDR.Resource@nrc.gov.

Dated at Rockville, Maryland, of August 2012. FOR THE NUCLE REGULATORY COMMISSION. Eric J. eds, Office of Nuclear Reactor TN: DT-00-20 To: NRC Management Directives Custodians

Subject:

Transmittal of Directive 8.11, "Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions" Purpose: Directive and Handbook 8.11 are being revised to address stakeholder feedback and to improve clarity and make the handbook easier to use. There are three major changes to the handbook: (1) the addition of an opportunity for petitioners to address the Petition Review Board after it discusses the petition; (2) the deletion of criteria for technical meetings with the petitioners; and (3) the addition of a requirement to request comments from the petitioner(s) and affected licensee(s) on the proposed director's d ecision, with associated steps to resolve, and document the resolution of, those comments.

Office of Origin

Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation Contact: Andrew J. Kugler, (301) 415-2828 or Donna Skay, (301) 415-1322 Date Approved
July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Volume: 8 Licensee Oversight Programs Directive: 8.11 Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Availability

Rules and Directives Branch Office of Administration Michael T. Lesar, (301) 415-7163

Christy Moore, (301) 415-7086 U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION DIRECTIVE TRANSMITTAL OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATION TN: DT-00-20 Significant Changes to the Management Directive 8.11 Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions The entire document has been revised to improve clarity and make it easier to use. In particular, the handbook is now written with actions in chronological order. In addition to those general changes, the following significant changes have been made:

  • Addition of an opportunity for the petitioner to address the Petition Review Board (PRB) after the PRB has developed its recommendations on the petition. This meeting or teleconference is similar to those already offered to petitioners before the PRB meets.
  • Removal of specific restrictions on the amount of time allowed for petitioners to address the PRB and also allow petitioners to be assisted by a reasonable number of representatives.
  • Deletion of the criteria for meetings between the petitioner and the staff. The staff will hold these meetings whenever the staff feels it will be beneficial to its review.
  • Addition of a process by which the staff requests and resolves comments from the petitioner and the licensee on the proposed director's decision (i.e., before it is signed). The comments and the staff's resolution become part of the director's decision.*Revision of the timeliness goal to 120 days from the date of the acknowledgment letter until the date the proposed director's decision is sent out for comment. Add a new goal of 45 days from the end of the comment period until the director's decision is signed.
  • Addition of a process flow chart and a petition manager's checklist to assist staff persons involved with petitions.

Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Directive 8.11 Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Directive 8.11 Approved: July 1, 1999 iii (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Contents Policy.................................................

1 Objectives

.............................................

1 Organizational Responsibilities and Delegations of Authority

............................

2 Executive Director for Operations (EDO)

........................

2 General Counsel (GC)

.....................................

2 Office Directors

..........................................

2 Regional Administrators

....................................

4 2.206 PRB Chairperson

....................................

4 Associate Directors - Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR)

......5 Division Directors

.........................................

5 Director, Division of Licensing Project Management (DLPM), Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR)

...................

5 Applicability

...........................................

5 Handbook..............................................

5 Definitions

.............................................

6 References

............................................

6 Approved: July 1, 1999 1 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

U. S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Volume: 8 Licensee Oversight Programs NRR Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Directive 8.11 Policy (8.11-01)It is the policy of the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission to provide members of the public with the means to request that the Commission take enforcement-related action (i.e., to modify, suspend, or revoke a license, or for other appropriate enforcement-related action, as distinguished from actions such as licensing or rulemaking). This policy is codified at Section 2.206 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR 2.206). The Commission may grant a request for action, in whole or in part, take other action that satisfies the concerns raised by the requester, or deny the request. Requests that raise health and safety and other concerns without requesting enforcement-related action will be reviewed by means other than the 10 CFR 2.206 process.Objectives (8.11-02)*To ensure the public health and safety through the prompt and thorough evaluation of any potential problem addressed by a petition filed under 10 CFR 2.206. (021)

  • To provide for appropriate participation by a petitioner in, and observation by the public of, NRC's decisionmaking activities related to a 10 CFR 2.206 petition. (022)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Directive 8.11 2 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Objectives (8.11-02) (continued)

  • To ensure effective communication with the petitioner and other stakehol ders on the status of the petition, including providing relevant documents and notification of interactions between the NRC staff and a licensee or certificate holder relevant to the petition. (023)

Organizational Responsibilities and Delegations of Authority (8.11-03)Executive Director for Operations (EDO)

(031)Receives and assigns action for all petitions filed under 10 CFR 2.206.General Counsel (GC)

(032)*Conducts legal reviews and provides advice on 10 CFR 2.206 petitions and, upon specific request from the staff in special cases or where the petition raises legal issues, reviews drafts of director's decisions. (a)

  • Provides legal advice to the Commission, EDO, office directors, and staff on other matters related to the 10 CFR 2.206 process. (b)

Office Directors (033)*Have overall responsibility for assigned petitions. Because 10 CFR 2.206 petitions request enforcement-related action, petitions are assigned to the Office of Nuclear Reactor Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Directive 8.11 Approved: July 1, 1999 3 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Organizational Responsibilities and Delegations of Authority (8.11-03) (continued)

Office Directors (033) (continued)

Regulation, the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, the Office of Enforcement, or the Office of the General Counsel.

Therefore, most of the actions described in this directive and the associated handbook apply only to those offices. (a)

  • Approve or deny a petitioner's request for immediate action. (b)
  • Si gn acknowledgment letters, Federal Register notices and director's decisions. (c)
  • Provide up-to-date information for the monthly status report on all assigned petitions. (d)
  • Appoint a petition review board (PRB) chairperson. (e)
  • Designate a petition manager for each petition. (f)
  • Promptly notify (1) the Office of Investigations of any allegation of wrongdoing by a licensee or certificate holder, applicant for a license or certificate, their contractors, or their vendors or (2) the Office of the Inspector General of any allegation of wrongdoing by an NRC staff person or NRC contractor, that is contained in a petition they may receive. (g)
  • Provide a draft of each director's decisions to the Office of Enforcement for review. (h)
  • Designate an office coordinator for 2.206 petitions, if applicable.(i)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Directive 8.11 4 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Organizational Responsibilities and Delegations of Authority (8.11-03) (continued)

Regional Administrators (034)*As needed, provide support and information for the preparation of an acknowledgment letter and/or a director's decision on a 2.206 petition. (a)

  • Make the petition manager aware of information that is received or that is the subject of any correspondence relating to a pending petition. (b)
  • Participate, as necessary, in meetings with the petitioner and public, in technical review of petitions and in deliberations of the PRB. (c)2.206 PRB Chairperson (035)Each office that is assigned a petition will appoint a PRB chairperson, generally a Senior Executive Service manager, who will-*Convene PRB meetings. (a)
  • Ensure appropriate review of all new petitions in a timely manner. (b)
  • Ensure appropriate documentation of PRB meetings. (c)
  • Convene periodic PRB meetings with the petition managers to discuss the status of open petitions and to provide guidance for timely resolution. (d)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Directive 8.11 Approved: July 1, 1999 5 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Organizational Responsibilities and Delegations of Authority (8.11-03) (continued)

Associate Directors Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR)

(036)Concur in each extension request from petition managers in their organization and forward the extension request to the Office of the EDO for approval.

Division Directors (037)Concur in each extension request from petition managers in their organization and forward the extension request to the Office of the EDO (Associate Director for NRR) for approval.

Director, Division of Licensing Project Management (DLPM), Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR)

(038)Appoints the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator, normally a DLPM staff person.

Applicability (8.11-04)The policy and guidance in this directive and handbook apply to all NRC employees.

Handbook (8.11-05)Handbook 8.11 details the procedures for staff review and disposition of petitions submitted under Section 2.206.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Directive 8.11 6 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Definitions (8.11-06)A 10 CFR 2.206 Petition

. A written request filed by any person that the Commission modify, suspend, or revoke a license, or take any other enforcement-related action that may be proper. The request must meet the criteria for review under 10 CFR 2.206 (see Part III of Handbook 8.11).

Licensee. Throughout the handbook, any references to a licensee shall be interpreted to include certificate holders, applicants for licenses or certificates, or other affected parties.

References (8.11-07)Code of Federal Regulations

-10 CFR 2.206, "Requests for Action Under This Subpart."

10 CFR 2.790, "Public Inspections, Exemptions, Requests for Withholding."

10 CFR 2.1205, "Request for a hearing; petition for leave to intervene."

Management Directives-

- 3.5, "Public Attendance at Certain Meetings Involving the NRC Staff."

- 8.8, "Management of Allegations."

- 12.6, "NRC Sensitive Unclassified Information Security Program."Memorandum of Understanding Between the NRC and the Department of Justice, December 12, 1988.

"Nuclear Regulatory Commission Issuances," published quarterly as NUREG-0750.

Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Parts I - V Approved: July 1, 1999 iii (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Contents Part I Introduction

.............................................

1 Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations , Section 2.206 (10 CFR 2.206) (A)

.....................................

1 General Cautions (B)

......................................

1 Part II Initial Staff Actions

......................................

3 NRC's Receipt of a Petition (A)

...............................

3 Process Summary (1)

...................................

3 Assignment of Staff Action (2)

.............................

3 Office Action (B)

.........................................

4 Petition Manager Action (C)

.................................

5 Part III Petition Review Board (PRB)

..............................

7 General (A)

.............................................

7 Schedule (1)

..........................................

7 Board Composition (2)

...................................

7 Preparation for the PRB Meeting (B)

...........................

8 Criteria for Petition Evaluation (C)

.............................

12 Criteria for Reviewing Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (1)

..........

12 Criteria for Rejecting Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (2)

...........

13 Criteria for Consolidating Petitions (3)

........................

14 PRB Meeting (D)

.........................................

14 Informing the Petitioner of the Results (E)

.......................

16 Meeting With the Petitioner (F)

...............................

16 Response to the Petitioner (G)

...............................

18 Requests That Do Not Meet the Criteria (1)

...................

18 Requests That Meet the Criteria (2)

.........................

18 Sending Documents to the Petitioner (H)

........................

19 Supplements to the Petition (I)

...............................

20 Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Parts I - V iv Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Contents (continued)

Part IV Petition Review Activities

................................

23 Reviewing the Petition (A)

...................................

23 Interoffice Coordination (1)

...............................

23 Request for Licensee Input (2)

.............................

23 Technical Review Meeting With the Petitioner (3)

................

24 Additional Petition Review Board (PRB) Meetings (4)

.............

24 Schedule (B)

............................................

25 Keeping the Petitioner Informed (C)

............................

26 Updates to Management and the Public (D)

......................

26 Part V The Director's Decision

...................................

28 Content and Format (A)

....................................

28 Final Versus Partial Director's Decisions (B)

......................

29 Granting the Petition (C)

....................................

30 Denying the Petition (D)

....................................

30 Issuing the Proposed Director's Decision for Comment (E)

...........

31 Comment Disposition (F)

...................................

31 Issuing the Director's Decision (G)

.............................

32 Administrative Issues (H)

...................................

33 Commission Actions (I)

.....................................

36 Exhibits 1 Simplified 2.206 Process Flow Chart

........................

37 2 Petition Manager Checklist

................................

39 3 Sample Closure Letter for Requests That Are Not 2.206 Petitions

...43 4 Sample Acknowledgment Letter

............................

44 5 Sample Federal Register Notice............................

46 6 Sample Director's Decision and Cover Letter

...................

48 7 Sample Federal Register Notice for Director's Decision

...........

53 8 Sample Letters Requesting Comments on the Proposed Director's Decision

...................................

56 Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part I Approved: July 1, 1999 1 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Part I Introduction Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations , Section 2.206 (10 CFR 2.206) (A)This section of the regulations has been a part of the Commission's regulatory framework since the Commission was established in 1975. Section 2.206 permits any person to file a petition to request that the Commission take enforcement-related action., i.e., to modify, suspend, or revoke a license or to take other appropriate action. (1)

Section 2.206 requires that the petition be submitted in writing and provide the grounds for taking the proposed action. The NRC staff will not treat general opposition to nuclear power or a general assertion of a safety problem, without supporting facts, as a formal petition under 10 CFR 2.206. The staff will treat general requests as allegations or routine correspondence. Petitioners are encouraged to provide a telephone number or e-mail address through which the staff may make contact. (2)

General Cautions (B)Management Directive (MD) 8.8, "Management of Allegations,"

provides NRC policy with regard to notifying the Office of Investigations (OI) and the Office of the Inspector General (OIG)of wrongdoing matters, as well as initiating, prioritizing, and terminating investigations. Each petition manager should become familiar with the current version of MD 8.11 and this handbook and follow the policy and procedures included in them when dealing with issues requiring OI or OIG investigations. (1)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part I 2 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

General Cautions (B) (continued)

Any mention outside NRC of an ongoing OI or OIG investigation, for example, as an explanation for schedule changes, requires the approval of the Director, OI, or the IG, respectively. (2)

If the petition contains information on alleged wrongdoing on the part of a licensee or certificate holder, an applicant for a license or certificate, their contractors, or their vendors, treat the petition, or the relevant part of the petition, as an allegation and promptly notify OI. If the petition contains information on alleged wrongdoing involving an NRC employee, NRC contractors, or NRC vendors, promptly notify OIG. (3)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part II Approved: July 1, 1999 3 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Part II Initial Staff Actions NRC's Receipt of a Petition (A)Process Summary (1)After NRC receives a petition, the Executive Director for Operations (EDO) assigns it to the director of the appropriate office for evaluation

and response. The original incoming petition is sent to the office and a

copy of the petition is sent to the Office of the General Counsel (OGC).

The official response is the office director's written decision addressing the issues raised in the petition. The office director can grant, partially

grant, or deny the petition. The Commission may, on its own initiative, review the director's decision within 25 days of the date of the decision, although it will not entertain a request for review of the director's decision.

Assignment of Staff Action (2)Petitions may be in the form of requests for NRC action that may or may not cite 10 CFR 2.206 and may initially be directed to staff other than the EDO. In any of these cases, the staff person who receives the document should make an initial evaluation as to whether the document meets the criteria for review under 10 CFR 2.206 provided in Part III of this handbook. Staff persons who are uncertain whether or not the document meets the criteria should consult their management or office coordinators for further guidance. If a petition meets the criteria but does not specifically cite 10 CFR 2.206, the staff will attempt to contact the petitioner by telephone to determine if he or she wants the request processed pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206. The staff may determine that a request forwarded for staff action is not a petition for enforcement-related action but, rather, a petition for rulemaking, for example. If there is any uncertainty about whether or not a Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part II 4 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

NRC's Receipt of a Petition (A) (continued)

Assignment of Staff Action (2) (continued) request is a petition under 10 CFR 2.206, it should be treated as one so that a petition review board (PRB) can make its recommendations, as described in Part III of this handbook. (a)

If the staff receives a request that it believes is a 10 CFR 2.206 pe tition, it will forward the request to the Office of the EDO (OEDO) for assignment of action. Petitions also may be forwarded to the OEDO from the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel or from a Presiding Officer in accordance with 10 CFR 2.1205(l)(2).

The EDO will assign each petition to the appropriate office for action. If the document does not cite 10 CFR 2.206 and does not meet the criteria for review under that section, the staff will respond to it under some other process (e.g., routine correspondence, allegations). (b)

Petitions that cite 10 CFR 2.206 and are addressed to the EDO will be added to the Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) by OEDO. OEDO will not declare these petitions official agency records nor will it make them publicly available.

Those steps will be carried out by the assigned office as described below. (c)

Office Action (B)Upon receipt, office management will assign the petition to a petition manager. (1)

The Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator (appointed by the Director, Division of Licensing Project Management, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR)), receives copies of all 2.206 petitions from OEDO and will add them to the 2.206 database. (2)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part II Approved: July 1, 1999 5 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Petition Manager Action (C)The petition manager will promptly review the petition and determine whether or not it contains allegations or sensitive information.

The timing of this step is particularly important for petitions that are not addressed to the EDO. Normally, these documents have been entered into ADAMS through the Document Control Desk (DCD) and are released to the public after a specified period of time. The delay allows the staff time to review the petition for allegations or other sensitive information. If the petition manager determines that a document contains allegations or other sensitive information, he or she should immediately contact the ADAMS Help Desk (301-415-1234) to prevent releasing the document to the public. (1)

Before the petition is released to the public, before the PRB meeting, and in any event within 1 week of receipt of the petition by the assigned office, the petition manager will inform the petitioner by telephone that the 2.206 petition process is a public process in which the petition and all the information in it will be made public. If the petitioner requests anonymity and that the petition not be made public, the petition manager will advise the petitioner that, because of its public nature, the 2.206 process cannot provide protection of the petitioner's identity. In these cases, the petition manager must obtain the agreement of the petitioner as to how the matter will be handled (i.e., as an allegation or not) and document the petitioner's agreement in writing, usually in the form of a memorandum to file.

In cases where the staff identifies certain issues in a petition that it believes are more appropriately addressed using the allegation process, the petition manager will obtain the agreement of the petiti oner as to how these issues will be handled (i.e., as an allegation or not) and document the petitioner's agreement in writing. If all or part of the petition is treated as an allegation, this f act will be documented in the allegation acknowledgment letter (see Management Directive (MD) 8.8, "Management of Allegations"). (2)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part II 6 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Petition Manager Action (C) (continued)

If the request clearly does not meet the criteria for review as a 10 CFR 2.206 petition, the petition manager will also discuss this issue with the petitioner.

The petitioner may be able to help the petition manager better understand the basis for the petition or the petitioner may realize that a 10 CFR 2.206 petition is not the correct forum for the issues raised in the request. Finally, the petition manager will offer the petitioner an opportunity to have one or more representatives give a presentation to the PRB and cognizant supporting staff either by telephone (or videoconference, if available) or in person. This is an opportunity for the petitioner to provi de any relevant additional explanation and support for the request. This type of meeting is described in more detail in Part III of this handbook. (3)

After the initial contact with the petitioner, the petition manager will promptly advise the licensee(s) of the petition, send the appropriate licensee(s) a copy of the petition for information, and ensure that the petition and all subsequent related correspondence are made available to the public. (Note that if the petitioner wishes to have the request handled as an allegation, the request is no longer a 2.206 petition.)

Any information related to allegations or other sensitive information that make up a part of the petition will be redacted from copies sent to the licensee or made available to the public. For allegations, the petition manager should refer to MD 8.8. As discusse d in MD 8.8, allegations must be forwarded to the associated Office Allegations Coordinator expeditiously. MD 8.8 also addresses the referral of wrongdoing issues to the Office of Investigations and the Office of the Inspector General. (4)

See Exhibit 1, Simplified 2.206 Process Flow Chart, and Exhibit 2, Petition Manager Checklist, for further information on petition manager actions. (5)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 7 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Part III Petition Review Board (PRB)

General (A)Schedule (1)The assigned office holds a PRB meeting to review the 2.206 petition. The PRB meeting is normally held within 2 weeks of receipt of the petition. The PRB meeting may be held much sooner if staff decisions are required on short-term, immediate actions (e.g., a request to shut down an operating facility or prevent restart of a facility that is ready to restart). In unusual situations, it may not be possible to hold the meeting in time to address any immediate acti on requests. In these cases, the staff will decide how any immediate actions requested will be addressed and obtain appropriate management concurrence as soon as possible. If the staff plans to take an action that is contrary to an immediate action requested in the petition before issuing the acknowledgment letter (such as permitting restart of a facility when the petitioner has requested that restart not be permitted), the petition manager must promptly notify the petitioner by telephone of the pending staff action. Board Composition (2)The PRB consists of- (a)

  • A PRB chairperson (generally a Senior Executive Service manager) (i)
  • A petition manager (ii)
  • Cognizant management and staff, as necessary (iii)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part III 8 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

General (A) (continued)

Board Composition (2) (continued)

  • A representative from the Office of Investigations (OI), as needed (iv)
  • A representative from the Office of Enforcement (OE) and, for petitions assigned to the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR), the NRR Senior Enforcement Coordinator, as needed (v)

In addition, a representative from the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) will normally participate. (b)

Preparation for the PRB Meeting (B)The petition manager will provide copies of the petition to PRB and assist in scheduling the review board meeting. The petition manager also will arrange for cognizant technical staff members to attend the meeting, as necessary, and prepare a presentation for the review board. In assigning technical staff members to the petition, management will consider any potential conflict from assigning any staff person who was previously involved with the issue that gave rise to the petition. (1)

The petition manager's presentation to PRB should include- (2)

  • A recommendation as to whether or not the petition meets the criteria for review under 10 CFR 2.206 (a)
  • A discussion of the safety significance of the issues raised (b)
  • Recommendations for any immediate action (whether requested or not) (c)
  • Recommendations on whether or not assistance from OI, OE, or OGC is necessary (d)

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Preparation for the PRB Meeting (B) (continued)

  • A request for confirmation concerning referral to OI or the Office of the Inspector General (OIG), as appropriate (e)
  • The proposed schedule, including the review schedule for the affected technical branches (f)

The petition manager also will offer a meeting or teleconference between the petitioner and the PRB before the board reviews the petition. This meeting or teleconference, if held, is an opportunity for the petitioner to provide any relevant additional explanation and suppo rt for the request in advance of the PRB's evaluation. The staff will hold this type of meeting if the petitioner desires it. If a decision is required on a petitioner's request for immediate action before the petitioner's presentation can be scheduled, that decision will not be delayed. (3)

The petition manager also will invite the licensee to participate in the meeting or teleconference to ensure that it understands the concerns about its facility or activities. The PRB members may ask any questions needed to clarify the petitioner's request. The licensee may also ask questions to clarify the issues raised by the petitioner.

Any member of the public may attend (or listen in by telephone for a teleconference) as an observer. Meetings between PRB and the petitioner normally will be held at NRC headquarters in Rockville, Maryland, with provisions for participation by telephone or videoconference. This public meeting or teleconference is separate from the (closed) PRB meeting during which the PRB members develop their recommendations with respect to the petition. (4)

The petition manager will ensure that all staff persons at the meeting or teleconference are aware of the need to protect sensitive information from disclosure. Sensitive information includes safeguards or facility security information, proprietary or confidential commercial information, or information relating to an ongoing investigation of wrongdoing. (5)

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Preparation for the PRB Meeting (B) (continued)

If the petitioner chooses to address PRB by telephone, it is not considered a meeting and no public notice is necessary. The

petition manager will establish a mutually agreeable time and date and arrange to conduct the teleconference on a recorded line through the NRC Headquarters Operations Center (301-816-5100).

The tape recording from the Operations Center is converted to a printed transcript that is treated as a supplement to the petition and is sent to the petitioner and the same distribution as the original petition. The petition manager will make arrangements for transcription service by submitting an NRC Form 587 to the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel or by sending an e-mail to "Court Reporter," giving the same information as requested on the Form 587. (6)If the petitioner chooses to attend in person, the meeting will take place at NRC headquarters at a mutually agreeable time. For the meeting, the petition manager will follow the prior public notice period and other provisions of Management Directive (MD) 3.5,"Public Attendance at Certain Meetings Involving the NRC Staff."

However, time constraints associated with this type of meeting will often dictate that the 10-day public notice period described in MD 3.5 will not be met. MD 3.5 allows for less than 10 days' public notice, if necessary, with appropriate management concurrence.

The meeting should be noticed as a meeting between the NRC staff, the petitioner, and the licensee (unless the licensee chooses not to participate).

The licensee is invited to participate, as in the teleconference described above, and members of the public may attend as observers. The meeting is transcribed and the transcript is treated in the same manner as in the case of a telephone briefing. (7)

The petitioner may request that a reasonable number of associates be permitted to assist him or her in addressing PRB Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 11 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Preparation for the PRB Meeting (B) (continued) concerning the petition. The petition manager will (1) discuss this request with the petitioner, (2) determine the number of speakers, and (3) allot a reasonable amount of time for the presentation so that the staff can acquire the information needed for its review in an efficient manner. (8)

At the meeting or teleconference, the chairperson will provide a brief summary of the 2.206 process, the petition, and the purpose of the discussion that will follow. The NRC staff and the licensee will have an opportunity to ask the petitioner questions for purposes of clarification. PRB may meet in closed session before and/or after the meeting with the petitioner to conduct its normal business.

(9)Th e requirements for scheduling and holding the petitioner presentation may impact the established time goals for holding the regular PRB meeting and issuing the acknowledgment letter. Any impacts should be kept to a minimum. (10)

The petition manager will review the transcript and, where necessary, edit it to ensure it accurately reflects what was said in the meeting or teleconference. Corrections are only necessary for errors that affect the meaning of the text of the transcript. The petition manager is not expected to correct inconsequential errors. (11)

After editing, the petition manager will ensure that the transcript gets the same distribution (petitioner, licensee, publicly available, etc.) as the original petition. For meetings, this step should be accomplished by attaching the transcript to a brief meeting summary. For teleconferences, the petition manager may attach the transcript to a memorandum to file. (12)

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Criteria for Petition Evaluation (C)The staff will use the criteria discussed in this section to determine whether or not a petition should be considered under 10 CFR 2.206 and whether or not similar petitions should be consolidated.

Criteria for Reviewing Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (1)The staff will review a petition under the requirements of 10 CFR 2.206 if the request meets all of the following criteria- (a)

  • The petition contains a request for enforcement-related action such as issuing an order modifying, suspending, or revoking a license, issuing a notice of violation, with or without a proposed civil penalty, etc. (i)
  • The facts that constitute the bases for taking the particular action are specified. The petitioner must provide some element of support beyond the bare assertion. The supporting facts must be credible and sufficient to warrant further inquiry. (ii)
  • There is no NRC proceeding available in which the petitioner is or could be a party and through which the petitioner's concerns could be addressed. If there is a proceeding available, for example, if a petitioner raises an issue that he or she has raised or could raise in an ongoing licensing proceeding, the staff will inform the petitioner of the ongoing proceeding and will not treat the request under 10 CFR 2.206. (iii)

An exception to the first two criteria is any petition to intervene and request for hearing in a licensing proceeding that is referred to the 10 CFR 2.206 process in accordance with 10 CFR 2.1205(l)(2).

These referrals may be made when the petition does not satisfy the legal requirements for a hearing or intervention and the Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel or the Presiding Officer Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 13 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Criteria for Petition Evaluation (C) (continued)

Criteria for Reviewing Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (1)(continued) determines that referral to the 10 CFR 2.206 process is appropriate.

For these referrals, the substantive issues in the request for a hearing or intervention will be read as an implicit request for enforcement-related action, thus satisfying the criteria for treatment under the 10 CFR 2.206 review process. (b)

Criteria for Rejecting Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (2)The staff will not review a petition under 10 CFR 2.206, whether specifically cited or not, under the following circumstances-

  • The incoming correspondence does not ask for an enforcement-related action or fails to provide sufficient facts to support the petition but simply alleges wrongdoing, violations of NRC regulations, or existence of safety concerns. The request cannot be simply a general statement of opposition to nuclear power or a general assertion without supporting facts (e.g., the quality assurance at the facility is inadequate). These assertions will be treated as routine correspondence or as allegations that will be referred for appropriate action in accordance with MD 8.8, "Management of Allegations." (a)
  • The petitioner raises issues that have already been the subject of NRC staff review and evaluation either on that facility, other similar facilities, or on a generic basis, for which a resolution has been achieved, the issues have been resolved, and the resolution is applicable to the facility in question. This would include requests to reconsider or reopen a previous enforce ment action (including a decision not to initiate an enforcement action) or a director's decision. These requests will not be treated as a 2.206 petition unless they present significant new information. (b)

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Criteria for Petition Evaluation (C) (continued)

Criteria for Rejecting Petitions Under 10 CFR 2.206 (2)(continued)

  • The request is to deny a license application or amendment. This type of request should initially be addressed in the context of the relevant licensing action, not under 10 CFR 2.206. (c)
  • The request addresses deficiencies within existing NRC rules.

This type of request should be addressed as a petition for rulemaking. (d)

Criteria for Consolidating Petitions (3)Generally, all requests submitted by different individuals will be treated and evaluated separately. When two or more petitions request action against the same licensee, specify essentially the same bases, provide adequate supporting information, and are submitted at about the same time, PRB will consider the benefits of consolidating the petitions against the potential of diluting the importance of any petition and recommend whether or not consolidatio n is appropriate. The assigned office director will determine whether or not to consolidate the petitions.

PRB Meeting (D)PRB ensures that an appropriate petition review process is followed. The purposes of the PRB process are to- (1)

  • Dete rmine whether or not the petitioner's request meets the criteria for review as a 10 CFR 2.206 petition (see Part III(C) of this handbook) (a)
  • Determine whether or not the petitioner should be offered or informed of an alternative process (e.g., consideration of issues as allegations, consideration of issues in a pending license proceeding, or rulemaking) (b)

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PRB Meeting (D) (continued)

  • Determine whether there is a need for any immediate actions (whether requested or not) (c)
  • Establish a schedule for responding to the petitioner so that a commitment is made by management and the technical review staff to respond to the petition in a timely manner (see Part IV of this handbook for guidance regarding schedules) (d)
  • Address the possibility of issuing a partial director's decision (e)
  • Determine whether or not the petition should be consolidated with another petition (f)
  • Determine whether or not referral to OI or OIG is appropriate (g)
  • D etermine whether or not there is a need for OGC to participate in the review (h)
  • Determine whether or not the licensee should be requested to respond to the petition (i)
  • Determine whether or not the petition is sufficiently complex that additional review board meetings should be scheduled to ensure that suitable progress is being made (j)

Th e PRB meeting is a closed meeting, separate from any meeting with the petitioner and the licensee, during which the PRB me mbers develop their recommendations with respect to the petition. At the meeting, the petition manager briefs PRB on the petitioner's request(s), any background information, the need for an independent technical review, and a proposed plan for resolution, including target completion dates. The petition Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

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PRB Meeting (D) (continued) manager, with the assistance of the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator, ensures appropriate documentation of all PRB recommendations in the summary of the PRB meeting. (2)

The OGC representative provides legal review and advice on 10 CFR 2.206 petitions. OGC may be assigned as the responsible office for the review, if appropriate. (3)

Informing the Petitioner of the Results (E)After PRB meets, and before issuing the acknowledgment letter, the petition manager will ensure that appropriate levels of management (as determined by the assigned office) are informed of the board's recommendations and that they concur. The petition manager will then inform the petitioner by telephone as to whether or not the petition meets the criteria for review under 10 CFR 2.206, of the disposition of any requests for immediate action, of how the review will proceed, and that an acknowledgment letter is forthcoming. If the staff plans to take an action that is contrary to an immediate action requested in the petition before issuing the acknowledgment letter, the petition manager must notify the petitioner promptly by telephone of the pending staff action. An example of a contrary action would be if NRC permitted restart of a facility when the petitioner had requested that restart not be permitted.

The petitioner will not be advised of any wrongdoing investigation being conducted by OI or OIG.

Meeting With the Petitioner (F)After informing the petitioner of the pertinent PRB recommendations, the petition manager will offer the petitioner an opportunity to comment on the recommendations. This opportunity will be in the form of a meeting or teleconference between the petitioner and the PRB. If the petitioner accepts this offer, the Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 17 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Meeting With the Petitioner (F) (continued) petition manager will establish a mutually agreeable date for the meeting or teleconference with the petitioner. The petition manager also will invite the licensee to participate and will coordinate the schedules and dates with the licensee. The meeting or teleconference should be scheduled so as not to adversely affect the established petition review schedule. (1)

This meeting or teleconference, if held, is an opportunity for the petitioner to provide any relevant additional explanation and support for the request in light of PRB's recommendations. The PRB members may ask questions to clarify the petitioner's request. If staff decisions on any of the petitioner's immediate action requests are required before the petitioner's presentation can be scheduled, those decisions will not be delayed. The format of the meeting or teleconference, application of MD 3.5, transcription, etc., and the requirements to edit and distribute the transcript are the same as for a meeting or teleconference held prior to the PRB's review of the petition. (2)

After this discussion, PRB will consider the need to modify any of its recommendations. The final recommendations will be included in the acknowledgment letter. The acknowledgment letter will address any comments the petitioner made concerning the initial PRB recommendations and the staff's response. The petitioner will be notified promptly of staff decisions on any immediate action requests. If the petitioner presents significant new information to the staff, PRB may determine that this new information constitutes a new petition that will be treated separately from the initial petition. (3)

The requirements for scheduling and holding the petitioner presentation may impact the established time goals for issuing the acknowledgment letter. These impacts should be kept to a minimum. (4)

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Response to the Petitioner (G)After PRB finalizes its recommendations, the petition manager prepares a written response to the petitioner.

Requests That Do Not Meet the Criteria (1)If PRB, with office-level management concurrence, determines that the petition does not meet the criteria for review as a 10 CFR 2.206 petition, the petition manager then prepares a letter that (1) explains why the request is not being reviewed under 10 CFR 2.206; (2) responds, to the extent possible at that time, to the issues in the petitioner's request; and (3) explains what further actions, if any, the staff intends to take in response to the request (e.g., treat it as an allegation or routine correspondence). See Exhibit 3 for an example. (a)

The petition manager will attach the original petition and any enclosure(s) to the Reading File copy of the letter. (b)

Requests That Meet the Criteria (2)If the PRB finds that the petition meets the criteria for review as a 10 CFR 2.206 petition, the petition manager prepares an acknowledgm ent letter and associated Federal Register notice (see Exhibits 4 and 5). The letter should acknowledge the petitioner's efforts in bringing issues to the staff's attention. If the petition contains a request for immediate action by the NRC, such as a request for immediate suspension of facility operation until final action is taken on the request, the acknowledgment letter must explain the staff's response to the immediate action requested and the basis for that response. (a)

The petition manager ensures that a copy of this management directive and of the pamphlet "Public Petition Process," prepared by the Office of Public Affairs, are included with the acknowledgment letter. The acknowledgment letter also should Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 19 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Response to the Petitioner (G) (continued)

Requests That Meet the Criteria (2) (continued) include the name and telephone number of the petition manager, identify the technical staff organizational units that will participate in the review, and provide the planned schedule for the staff's review.

A copy of the acknowledgment letter must be sent to the appropriate licensee and the docket service list(s). (b)

The petition manager will attach the original 2.206 petition and any enclosure(s) to the Reading File copy of the acknowledgment letter. (c)

In rare cases the staff may be prepared to respond to the merits of the petition immediately. In this case, the staff can combine the functions of the acknowledgment letter and the director's decision into one document. A similar approach would be taken in combining the associated Federal Register notices. (d)

Sending Documents to the Petitioner (H)If the PRB determines that the request is a 2.206 petition, then the petition manager will- (1)

  • Add the petitioner to the service list(s) for the topic (if one exists). Add the petitioner to the headquarters and regional service lists for the licensee(s) that is(are) the subject of the petition. (a)
  • Request the licensee to send copies of any future correspondence related to the petition to the petitioner, with due regard for proprietary, safeguards, and other sensitive information. (b)
  • To the extent that the petition manager is aware of these documents, ensure that the petitioner is placed on distribution Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

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Sending Documents to the Petitioner (H) (continued) for other NRC correspondence relating to the issues raised in the petition, including relevant generic letters or bulletins that are issued during the pendency of the NRC's consideration of the petition. This does not include NRC correspondence or documentation related to an OI or OIG investigation, which will not be released outside NRC without the approval of the Director, OI, or the IG, respectively. (c)

Thes e three actions will remain in effect until 90 days after the director's decision is issued if the petitioner desires it. (2)

Supplements to the Petition (I) A petitioner will sometimes submit a supplement to his or her petition. The petition manager will review the supplement promptly and determine whether or not it contains allegations or sensitive information.

If the supplement appears to contain information of this nature, the petition manager must obtain the agreement of the petitioner as to how these issues will be handled (i.e., as an allegation or not) and document the petitioner's agreement in writing, usually in the form of a memorandum to file. If all or part of the supplement is treated as an allegation, this fact will be documented in the allegation acknowledgment letter (see MD 8.8,"Management of Allegations").

See Part II(C) of this handbook for more detailed information. (1)

The petition manager will also ensure the supplement receives the same distribution as the petition and will forward a copy of the supplement to the PRB members. The PRB members will review the supplement and determine whether they need to meet formally to discuss it and, if so, whether or not to offer the petitioner an opportunity to discuss the supplement with the PRB members before the board reviews the supplement (see Part III(B) of this handbook). In deciding whether a formal PRB meeting is needed, the PRB members will consider the safety significance and Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part III Approved: July 1, 1999 21 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Supplements to the Petition (I) (continued) complexity of the information in the supplement. Clarifications of previous information will generally not require a new PRB meeting.

If a new PRB meeting is not convened, the petition manager will include the supplement in the ongoing petition review and no further action is necessary. (2)

If a new PRB meeting is convened, the PRB members will determine whether or not-(3)

  • There is a need for any immediate actions (whether requested or not) (a)
  • The supplement should be consolidated with the existing petition (b)*To issue a partial director's decision (c)
  • Referral to OI or OIG is appropriate (d)
  • To revise the review schedule for the petition based on the supplement (see Part IV of this handbook for guidance regarding schedules) (e)
  • To send an acknowledgment letter for the supplement. (An acknowledgment letter should be sent if the supplement provides significant new information, causes the staff to reconsider a previous determination, or requires a schedule change beyond the original 120-day goal. See Part III(G) of this handbook for information on acknowledgment letters.) (f)
  • To offer the petitioner a meeting or teleconference with PRB to discuss its recommendations with respect to the supplement.(See Part III(F) of this handbook for information on this type of meeting or teleconference.) (g)

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Supplements to the Petition (I) (continued)

If the staff determines that the schedule for the petition must be extended beyond the original 120-day goal as a result of the supplement, the assigned office should send an acknowledgment letter to the petitioner, reset the 120-day clock to the date of the new acknowledgment letter, and inform the Office of the Executive Director for Operations (OEDO). (4)

If PRB determines that the supplement will be treated as a new petition (i.e., not consolidated with the existing petition), the assigned office must contact OEDO and obtain a new tracking number in the Work Item Tracking System. (5)

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Part IV Petition Review Activities Reviewing the Petition (A)Interoffice Coordination (1)The petition manager coordinates all information required for the petition review. The petition manager also advises his or her management of the need for review and advice from the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) regarding a petition in special cases.

When appropriate, an Associate Director in the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, a Division Director in the Office of Nuclear Material Safety and Safeguards, or the Director of the Office of Enforcement requests OGC involvement through the OGC special counsel assigned to 2.206 matters. (a)

All information related to a wrongdoing investigation by the Office of Investigations (OI) or the Office of the Inspector General (OIG), or even the fact that an investigation is being conducted, will recei ve limited distribution within NRC and will not be released outside NRC without the approval of the Director, OI, or the IG, respectively (see Management Directive (MD) 8.8). Within NRC, access to this information is limited to those having a need-to-know.

Regarding a 2.206 petition, the assigned office director, or his designee, maintains copies of any documents required and ensures that no copies of documents related to an OI or OIG investigation are placed in the docket file or the Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) without the approval of the Director, OI, or the IG, respectively. (b)

Request for Licensee Input (2) If appropriate, the petition manager will request the licensee to provide a voluntary response to the NRC on the issues specified Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

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Reviewing the Petition (A) (continued)

Request for Licensee Input (2) (continued) in the petition, usually within 30 days. This staff request will usually be made in writing. The petition manager will advise the licensee that the NRC will make the licensee's response publicly available and remind the licensee to provide a copy of the response to the petitioner. The licensee may voluntarily submit information relative to the petition, even if the NRC staff has not requested any such information. (a)

Unless necessary for NRC's proper evaluation of the petition, the licensee should avoid using proprietary or personal privacy information that requires protection from public disclosure.

If such information is necessary to respond to the petition completely, the petition manager ensures the information is protected in accordance with 10 CFR 2.790. (b)

Technical Review Meeting With the Petitioner (3)A technical review meeting with the petitioner will be held whenever the staff believes that such a meeting (whether requested by the petitioner, the licensee, or the staff) would be beneficial to the staff's review of the petition. Meeting guidance is provided in MD 3.5. The petition manager will ensure that the meeting does not compromise the protection of sensitive information. A meeting will not be held simply because the petitioner claims to have additional information and will not present it in any other forum.

Additional Petition Review Board (PRB) Meetings (4)Additional PRB meetings may be scheduled for complex issues.

Additional meetings also may be appropriate if the petition manager finds that significant changes must be made to the original plan for the resolution of the petition.

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Schedule (B)The first goal is to issue the proposed director's decision for comment within 120 days after issuing the acknowledgment letter.

The proposed director's decision for uncomplicated petitions should be issued in less than 120 days. The second goal is to issue the director's decision within 45 days of the end of the comment period for the proposed director's decision. The actual schedule should be shorter if the number and complexity of the comments allow. The Office of the Executive Director for Operations (OEDO) tracks the first target date, and any change of the date requires approval by the EDO. The petition manager monitors the progress of any OI investigation and related enforcement actions. Enforcement actions that are prerequisites to a director's decision should be expedited and completed in time to meet the 120-day goal. Investigations by OI and OIG associated with petitions should be expedited to the extent practicable. However, the goal of issuing the proposed director's decision for comment within 120 days after issuing the acknowledgment letter applies only to petitions whose review schedules are within the staff's control. If issues in a petition are the subject of an investigation by OI or OIG, or a referral to the Department of Justice (DOJ), or if NRC decides to await a Department of Labor decision, the clock for the 120-day goal is stopped for the portion of the petition awaiting disposition by those organizations.

The clock will start again when the staff receives the results of the investigation. If the staff can respond to some portions of the petition without the results of the investigation, then a proposed partial director's decision should be issued for comment within the original 120 days. When the staff receives the results of the investigation, it will promptly develop and issue a proposed final director's decision for comment. See Part V of this handbook for a discussion of partial director's decisions. (1)

If the proposed director's decision cannot be issued in 120 days for other reasons (e.g., very complex issues), the appropriate level of mana gement in the assigned office determines the need for an extension of the schedule and requests the extension from the Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

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Schedule (B) (continued)

EDO. In addition, the petition manager will contact the petitioner promptly to explain the reason(s) for the delay and will maintain a record of the contact. (2)

After the comment period closes on a proposed director's decision, the assigned office will review the comments received and provide the schedule to issue the director's decision to the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator for inclusion in the next status report. (3)

Keeping the Petitioner Informed (C)The petition manager ensures that the petitioner is notified at least every 60 days of the status of the petition, or more frequently if a significant action occurs. If a significant action will be reported in the monthly status report prepared by the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator, the petition manager will inform the petitioner before the status report is issued. The petition manager makes the status reports to the petitioner by telephone. The petition manager should speak directly to the petitioner if reasonably possible. The petition manager keeps up-to-date on the status of the petition so that reasonable detail can be provided with the status reports.

However, the status report to the petitioner will not indicate-

  • An ongoing OI or OIG investigation, unless approved by the Director, OI, or the IG (1)
  • The referral of the matter to DOJ (2)
  • Enforcement action under consideration (3)

Updates to Management and the Public (D)On a monthly basis, the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator will contact all petition managers reminding them to prepare a status Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part IV Approved: July 1, 1999 27 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Updates to Management and the Public (D) (continued) report regarding 2.206 petitions in their offices. The petition managers should e-mail the status report for each open petition, with the exception of sensitive information as described below, to "Petition."

The Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator combines all the status reports, including staff performance metrics for petitions processed under 10 CFR 2.206 for the current year, in a monthly report to the EDO from the Associate Director, Project Licensing and Technical Analysis. The Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator also ensures the document is added to ADAMS and made publicly available and e-mails a copy to "NRCWEB" for placement on the NRC's Web site. (1)

If the status of the petition includes sensitive information that may need to be protected from disclosure, the petition manager will so indicate in the e-mail and in the status report itself. Sensitive information includes safeguards or facility security information, proprietary or confidential commercial information, information relating to an ongoing investigation of wrongdoing or enforcement actions under development, or information about referral of matters to the DOJ and should be handled in accordance with MD 12.6,"NRC Sensitive Unclassified Information Security Program." The Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator will protect this information from disclosur e by placing the affected status report(s) in a separate enclosure to the status report, clearly marking the status report to the EDO, and redacting the sensitive information from the version of the report that is made public. (2)

The NRC's Web site provides the up-to-date status of pending 2.206 petitions, director's decisions issued, and other related infor mation. The NRC external Web site (http://www.nrc.gov

) is accessible via the World Wide Web, and documents related to petitions may be found on the "Public Involvement" page under the section on Petitions. Director's decisions are also published in NRC Issuances (NUREG-0750). (3)

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Part V The Director's Decision Content and Format (A)The petition manager prepares the proposed director's decision on the petition and the associated Federal Register notice for the office director's consideration, including coordination with the appropriate staff supporting the review. See Exhibits 6 and 7 for a sample director's decision with cover letter and the associated Federal Register notice, respectively. The petition manager will also prepare letters to the petitioner and the licensee that will enclose the proposed director's decision and request comments on it (see Exhibit 8). These letters will be routed with the director's decision for concurrence. (1)

The director's decision will clearly describe the issues raised by the petitioner, provide a discussion of the safety significance of the issues, and clearly explain the staff's disposition for each issue. The petition manager will bear in mind the broader audience (i.e., the public) when preparing the explanation of technical issues. Refer to the NRC Plain Language Action Plan, available on the internal Web site, for further guidance. In addition, the petition manager will ensure that any documents referenced in the decision are available to the public. If a partial director's decision was issued previously, the final director's decision will refer to, but does not have to repeat the content of, the partial director's decision.

After management's review, the petition manager incorporates any proposed revisions in the decision. (2)

If appropriate, the decision and the transmittal letter for the director's decision or partial director's decision should acknowledge that the petitioner identified valid issues and should specify the corrective actions that have been or will be taken to Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part V Approved: July 1, 1999 29 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Content and Format (A) (continued) address these issues, notwithstanding that some or all of the petitioner's specific requests for action have not been granted. (3)

If the Office of Investigations (OI) has completed its investigation of a potential wrongdoing issue and the matter has been referred to the Department of Justice (DOJ), the petition manager will contact OI and the Office of Enforcement (OE) to coordinate N RC's actions. For petitions assigned to the Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR), the petition manager also will contact the NRR Senior Enforcement Coordinator. The staff may need to withhold action on the petition in keeping with the Memorandum of Understanding with DOJ. (4)

If the results of a wrongdoing investigation by OI in relation to the petition are available, the staff will consider these results in c ompleting the action on the petition. OI must concur in the accuracy and characterization of the OI findings and conclusions that are used in the decision. (5)

The petition manager will obtain OE's review of the director's decision for potential enforcement implications. For petitions assigned to NRR, the petition manager also will provide a copy of the director's decision to the NRR Senior Enforcement Coordinator. (6)

Final Versus Partial Director's Decisions (B)The staff will consider preparing a partial director's decision when some of the issues associated with the 2.206 petition are resolved in advance of other issues and if significant schedule delays are anticipated before resolution of the entire petition. (1)

The format, content, and method of processing a partial director's decision are the same as that of a director's decision (as described above) and an accompanying Federal Register notice Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part V 30 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Final Versus Partial Director's Decisions (B) (continued)\

would still be prepared (see Exhibit 7). However, the partial director's decision should clearly indicate those portions of the petition that remain open, explain the reasons for the delay to the extent practical, and provide the staff's schedule for the final director's decision. If all of the issues in the petition can be resolved together, then the director's decision will address all of the issues.

(2)Granting the Petition (C)Once the staff has determined that the petition will be granted, in whole or in part, the petition manager will prepare a "Director's Decision Under 10 CFR 2.206" for the office director's signature.

The decision will explain the bases upon which the petition has been granted and identify the actions that NRC staff has taken or will take to grant all or that portion of the petition. The decision also sh ould describe any actions the licensee took voluntarily that address aspects of the petition. The Commission may grant a request for enforcement-related action, in whole or in part, and also may take other action to satisfy the concerns raised by the petition.

A petition is characterized as being granted in part when the NRC grants only some of the actions requested and/or takes actions other than those requested to address the underlying problem. If the petition is granted in full, the director's decision will explain the bases for granting the petition and state that the Commission's action resulting from the director's decision is outlined in the Commission's order or other appropriate communication. If the petition is granted in part, the director's decision will clearly indicate the portions of the petition that are being denied and the staff's bases for the denial.

Denying the Petition (D)Once the staff has determined that the petition will be denied, the petition manager will prepare a "Director's Decision Under Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part V Approved: July 1, 1999 31 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Denying the Petition (D) (continued) 10 CFR 2.206" for the office director's signature. The decision will explain the bases for the denial and discuss all matters raised by the petitioner in support of the request.

Issuing the Proposed Director's Decision for Comment (E)Aft er the assigned office director has concurred in the proposed director's decision, the petition manager will issue the letters to the petitioner and the licensee enclosing the proposed director's decision and requesting comments on it. The letters, with the enclosure, will be made available to the public through the Agencywide Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS). (1)

The intent of this step is to give the petitioner and the licensee an opportunity to identify errors in the decision. The letters will request a response within a set period of time, nominally 2 weeks. The amount of time allowed for the response may be adjusted depe nding on circumstances. For example, for very complex technical issues it may be appropriate to allow more time for the p etitioner and licensee to develop their comments. The letters, including the proposed director's decision, should be transmitted to the recipients electronically or by fax, if possible. (2)

Comment Disposition (F)After the comment period closes on the proposed director's decisio n, the assigned office will review the comments received and provide the schedule to issue the director's decision to the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator for inclusion in the next status report. The petition manager will then evaluate any comments received on the proposed decision, obtaining the assistance of the technical staff, as appropriate. Although the staff requested Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part V 32 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Comment Disposition (F) (continued) comments from only the petitioner and the licensee, comments from other sources (e.g., other members of the public) may be received. These additional comments should be addressed in the same manner as the comments from the petitioner and licensee. A copy of the comments received and the associated staff responses will be included in the director's decision. An attachment to the decision will generally be used for this purpose. (1)

If no comments are received on the proposed decision, the petition ma nager will include in the director's decision a reference to the letters that requested comments and a statement that no comments were received. (2)

If the comments from the petitioner include new information, the petition review board will be reconvened to determine whether to treat the new information as part of the current petition or as a new petition. (3)

Issuing the Director's Decision (G)A decision under 10 CFR 2.206 consists of a letter to the petitioner, the director's decision, and the Federal Register notice. The pe tition manager will obtain a director's decision number (i.e., DD-YY-XX) from the Office of the Secretary (SECY). A director's decision number is assigned to each director's decision in numerical sequence. This number is included on the letter to the petitioner, the director's decision, and the Federal Register notice. Note that the director's decision itself is not published in the Federal Register;only the notice of its availability, containing a summary of the substance of the decision, is published (see Exhibits 6 and 7). (1)

The petition manager will prepare a letter to transmit the director's decision to the petitioner and will also prepare the associated Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part V Approved: July 1, 1999 33 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Issuing the Director's Decision (G) (continued)

Federal Register notice. If the staff's response to the petition involves issuing an order, the petition manager will prepare a letter to transmit the order to the licensee. The petition manager also will include a copy of the order in the letter to the petitioner. When the director's decision has been signed, the petition manager will promptly send a copy of the decision, electronically or by fax if possible, to the petitioner. Copies of the director's decision and Federal Register notice that are sent to the licensee and individuals on the service list(s) are dispatched simultaneously with the petitioner's copy. Before dispatching the director's decision (or partial decision), the petition manager will inform the petitioner of the imminent issuance of the decision and the substance of the decision. The petition manager will also ask the petitioner whether he or she wishes to continue receiving documents related to the petition. (2)

The assigned office director will sign the cover letter, the director's decision, and the Feder al Register notice. After the notice is signed, the staff forwards it to the Rules and Directives Branch, Office of Administration (ADM/DAS/RDB), for transmittal to the Office of the Federal Register for publication. The staff shall NOT include a copy of the director's decision in the package that is sent to RDB. RDB only forwards the Fe deral Register notice to be published. (3)

Administrative Issues (H)The administrative staff of the assigned office will review the 10 CFR 2.206 package before it is dispatched and determine appropriate distribution. The administrative staff also will immediately (same day) hand -carry the listed material to the following offices (in the case of the petitioner, promptly dispatch the copies.)- (1)

  • Rulemakings and Adjudications staff, SECY (a)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part V 34 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Administrative Issues (H) (continued)

  • Five copies of the director's decision (i)
  • Two courtesy copies of the entire decision package including the distribution and service lists (ii)
  • Two copies of the incoming petition and any supplement(s) (iii)
  • Petitioner (b)
  • Signed original letter (i)
  • Signed director's decision (ii)
  • A copy of the Federal Register notice (iii)
  • Chief, Rules and Directives Branch (c)
  • Original signed Federal Register notice only (do not include the director's decision) (i)
  • Five paper copies of the notice (ii)
  • A disk with a WordPerfect file that contains the F ederal Register notice (iii)

The staff must fulfill these requirements promptly because the Commission has 25 calendar days from the date of the decision to determine whether or not the director's decision should be reviewed. (2)

The staff will use the following guidelines when distributing copies internally and externally- (3)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Part V Approved: July 1, 1999 35 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Administrative Issues (H) (continued)

  • When action on a 2.206 petition is completed, the petition manager will ensure that all publicly releasable documentation is available to the public in ADAMS. (a)
  • The assigned office will determine the appropriate individuals and offices to include on the distribution list. (b)

The administrative staff of the assigned office will complete the following actions within 2 working days of issuance of the director's decision: (4)

  • Provide one paper copy of the director's decision to the special counsel in the Office of the General Counsel assigned to 2.206 matters. (a)
  • E-mail the final version of the director's decision to the NRC Issuances (NRCI) Project Officer, Publishing Services Branch (PSB), Office of the Chief Information Officer (OCIO).

If other information (opinions, partial information (such as errata), or footnotes) is included in the e-mail, clearly identify the director's decision number at the beginning of each file to avoid administrative delays and improve the technical production schedule for proofreading, editing, and composing the documents.

In addition, send two paper copies of the signed director's decision to the NRCI Project Officer. (b)

  • E-mail a signed, dated, and numbered copy of the director's decision to "NRCWEB" for posting on the NRC's Web site. (c)

The petition manager will prepare headnotes, which are a summary of the petition, consisting of no more than a few paragraphs describing what the petition requested and how the director's decision resolved or closed out the petition. The petition manager will e-mail the headnotes to the NRCI Project Officer, PSB, OCIO, for monthly publication in the NRC Issuances, Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Part V 36 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Administrative Issues (H) (continued)

NUREG-0750.

The headnotes should reach PSB before the 5th day of the month following the issuance of the director's decision. (5)

Finally, 90 days after issuance of the director's decision, the petition manager will remove the petitioner's name from distribution and/or the service list(s) and inform the licensee that it may also stop sending documents associated with the petition to the petitioner. (6)

Commission Actions (I)SECY will inform the Commission of the availability of the director's decision. The Commission, at its discretion, may determine to review the director's decision within 25 days of the date of the decision and may direct the staff to take some other action than that in the director's decision. If the Commission does not act on the director's decision within 25 days (unless the Commission extends the review time), the director's decision becomes the final agency action and SECY sends a letter to the petitioner informing the petitioner that the Commission has taken no further action on the petition.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 37 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 1 Simplified 2.206 Process Flow Chart Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 38 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 1 Simplified 2.206 Process Flow Chart (continued)

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 39 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 2 Petition Manager Checklist 9 Review the petition for allegations and sensitive material. If sensitive, prevent releasing the document to the public. Also determine whether or not any

immediate actions requested require expedited staff response.

9 Contact the petitioner and discuss the public nature of the process. Offer a pre-PRB meeting or telecon to the petitioner.

9 Send a copy of the incoming petition to the licensee and Document Control Desk (Public), with redactions as appropriate.

9 If a pre-PRB meeting or telecon is held, notice it (meeting only) and arrange for it to be recorded and transcribed (meeting or telecon). Arrange the meeting and the

PRB meeting which will follow it.

9 Prepare a PRB presentation. Include the following information:

-Does the request meet the criteria for review under 2.206?

-What are the issues and their significance?

-Is there a need for immediate action (whether requested or not)?

-Is there a need for OE, OI, OIG, or OGC involvement?

-What is your recommended approach to the response?

-What schedule is proposed?

9 Hold the pre-PRB meeting or telecon.

9 Address the PRB at its meeting.

9 Ensure assigned office management agrees with the PRB recommendations.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 40 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 2 (continued) 9 Inform the petitioner of the PRB recommendations. Offer a post-PRB meeting.

9 If a post-PRB meeting or telecon is held, notice it (meeting only) and arrange for it to be recorded and transcribed. Arrange the meeting and the PRB meeting which will follow it 9 Hold the post-PRB meeting or telecon.

9 Address the PRB at its meeting.

9 Prepare a meeting summary for the pre- and post-PRB meetings, if held. This step is not required for a telecon.

9 Ensure the transcripts of the pre- and post-PRB meetings or telecons, if held, are added to ADAMS and made publicly available. For meetings, this step can be

done using the meeting summary.

9 Ensure assigned office management agrees with the PRB final recommendations.

9 If the assigned office's management agrees with the PRB that the request is not a 2.206 petition, send a letter to the petitioner, treat any open issues under the

appropriate process (e.g., rulemaking). Stop here.

9 If the assigned office's management agrees with the PRB that the request is a 2.206 petition, continue with this checklist.

9 Add petitioner to appropriate service list(s).

9 Issue acknowledgment letter and associated Federal Register notice.9 If licensee input is needed, send a written request.

9 If further petitioner input is needed, arrange for a technical review meeting.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 41 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 2 (continued) 9 Make periodic status updates to the petitioner.

9 Prepare the director's decision, addressing:

-Each of the petitioners' issues

-The safety significance of each issue

-The staff's evaluation of each issue and actions taken 9 Ensure all referenced documents are added to ADAMS and made publicly available.

9 Send the proposed director's decision to the petitioner and licensee for comment.

9 After the comment period closes, give the schedule for the director's decision to the Agency 2.206 Petition Coordinator for inclusion in the next status report.

9 Include comments received and their resolution in the director's decision.

9 Prepare the Federal Register notice for the director's decision.

9 As soon as the director's decision is signed:

-Inform the petitioner of the substance of the decision and that issuance is imminent.-Hand-carry two full copies of the package (including the incoming(s) and distribution and service lists) and five additional copies to the Rulemakings and Adjudication Staff in SECY

-Hand-carry the original signed Federal Register notice (ONLY), five copies of the notice, and a disk with the notice on it, to the Rules and Directives Branch.

Do NOT include the director's decision in this package.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 42 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 2 (continued)

-Immediately dispatch the signed original letter and decision and a copy of the Federal Register notice to the petitioner.

9 Within 2 working days of issuing the Director's decision:

-Provide a copy of the director's decision to the OGC special counsel assigned to 2.206 matters.

-E-mail and send two paper copies of the director's decision to the NRC Issuances Project Officer in OCIO.

-E-mail a signed, dated, and numbered copy of the director's decision to "NRCWEB."-E-mail headnotes on the petition to the NRC Issuances Project Officer in OCIO.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 43 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 3 Sample Closure Letter for Requests That Are Not 2.206 Petitions

[Petitioner's Name]

[Petitioner's Address]

Dear Mr. :

Your petition dated

[insert date]

and addressed to the

[insert addressee]

has been referred to the Office of [insert] pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations. You request

[state petitioner's requests]. As the basis for your request, you state that

[insert basis for request]

.[You met with our petition review board (PRB) on

[insert date]

to discuss your petition. The results of that discussion have been considered in the PRB's determination regarding your request for immediate action and whether or not the

petition meets the criteria for consideration under 10 CFR 2.206].

OR [Our petition review board has reviewed your submittal]. The staff has concluded that your submittal does not meet the criteria for consideration under 10 CFR 2.206 because

[explain our basis, addressing all aspects of the submittal and making reference to the appropriate criteria in this MD]

.[Provide the staff's response, if available, to the issues raised]. AND/OR[Explain what further actions, if any, the staff intends to take in response to the request (e.g., treat it as an allegation or routine correspondence)]

.Thank you for bringing these issues to the attention of the NRC.

Sincerely,[Insert Division Director's Name]

Office of [insert Office Name]

Docket Nos. [ ]

cc: [Licensee (w/copy of incoming 2.206 request) & Service List]

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 44 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 4 Sample Acknowledgment Letter

[Petitioner's Name]

[Petitioner's Address]

Dear Mr. :

Your petition dated

[insert date]

and addressed to the

[insert addressee]

has been referred to me pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations. You request [state petitioner's requests]. As the basis for your request, you state that

[insert basis for request]. I would like to express my sincere appreciation for your effort in bringing these matters to the attention of the NRC.

[You met with our Petition Review Board (PRB) on

[insert date]

to discuss your petition. The results of that discussion have been considered in the PRB's determination regarding

[your request for immediate action and in establishing]

the schedule for the review of your petition]. Your request to

[insert request for immediate action]

at [insert facility name]

is [granted or denied]

because [staff to provide explanation]

.As provided by Section 2.206, we will take action on your request within a reasonable time. I have assigned

[first and last name of petition manager]

to be the petition manager for your petition. Mr.

[last name of petition manager]

can be reached at

[301-415-extension of petition manager]. Your petition is being reviewed by

[organizational units]

within the Office of

[name of appropriate Office]. [If necessary, add

I have referred to the NRC Office of the Inspector General (OIG) those allegations of NRC wrongdoing contained in your petition]. I have enclosed for your information a copy of the notice that is being filed with the Office of the Federal

Register for publication. I have also enclosed for your information a copy of

Management Directive 8.11 "Review Process for 10 CFR Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 45 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 4 (continued) 2.206 Petitions," and the associated brochure NUREG/BR-0200, "Public Petition Process," prepared by the NRC Office of Public Affairs.

Sincerely,[Office Director]

Enclosures:

Federal Register Notice Management Directive 8.11 NUREG/BR-0200 cc: [Licensee (w/copy of incoming 2.206 request) & Service List]

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 46 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 5[7590-01-P]

Sample Federal Register Notice U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Docket No(s).

License No(s).

[Name of Licensee]

RECEIPT OF REQUEST FOR ACTION UNDER 10 CFR 2.206 Notice is hereby given that by petition dated [insert date], [insert petitioner's name] (petitioner) has requested that the NRC take action with regard to [insert facility or licensee name]. The petitioner requests [state petitioner's requests].

As the basis for this request, the petitioner states that

[state petitioner's basis for request]

.The request is being treated pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations. The request has been referred to the Director of the Office of

[insert action office]. As provided by Section 2.206, appropriate action will be taken on this petition within a reasonable time. [The petitioner met with the

[insert action office]

petition review board on

[insert date]

to discuss the petition. The results of that discussion were considered in the board's determination regarding

[the petitioner's request for immediate action and in establishing]

the schedule for the review of Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 47 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 5 (continued)- 2 -the petition].

[If necessary, add]

By letter dated _________ , the Director (granted or denied) petitioner's request for

[insert request for immediate action]

at [insert facility/licensee name]. A copy of the petition is available in ADAMS for inspection at the Commission's Public Document Room, located at One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, Maryland, and from the ADAMS Public Library

component on the NRC's Web site, http://www.nrc.gov (the Public Electronic Reading Room).

FOR THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

[Office Director]

Dated at Rockville, Maryland this ____ day of _________, 200X.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 48 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 6 Sample Director's Decision and Cover Letter

[Insert petitioner's name & address]

Dear [insert petitioner's name]

This letter responds to the petition you filed with

[EDO or other addressee of petition] pursuant to Section 2.206 of Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR 2.206) on

[date of petition]

as supplemented on

[dates of any supplements]. In your petition you requested that the NRC

[list requested actions]

.On [date of acknowledgment letter]

the NRC staff acknowledged receiving your petition and stated pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 that your petition was being referred to me for action and that it would be acted upon within a reasonable time. You were

also told that

[staff response to any request for immediate action]

.[You met with the petition review board on

[date(s) of the pre- and/or post-PRB meeting(s)]

to clarify the bases for your petition. The transcript(s) of this/these meeting(s) was/were treated as (a) supplement(s) to the petition and are available in ADAMS for inspection at the Commission's Public Document Room, located at One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, Maryland, and from the ADAMS Public Library component on the NRC's Web site, http://www.nrc.gov (the Public Electronic Reading Room)].

[By letter dated

[insert date], the NRC staff requested

[name of licensee]

to provide information related to the petition.

[Name of licensee]

responded on

[insert date] and the information provided was considered by the staff in its evaluation of the petition].

In your petition you stated that

[summarize the issues raised]. [Briefly summarize the safety significance of the issues and the staff's response]

.[The NRC issued a Partial Director's Decision (DD-YY-XX) dated

[insert] which[explain what aspects of the petition were addressed]. [Explain which issues remained to be addressed in this director's decision and briefly explain the reason for the delay on these issues]

].

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 49 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 6 (continued)

The staff sent a copy of the proposed director's decision to you and to

[licensee(s)]

for comment on

[date]. [You responded with comments on

[date] and the licensee responded on

[date]. The comments and the staff's response to them are included in the director's decision]. OR The staff did not receive any comments on the proposed director's decision].

[Summarize the issues addressed in this director's decision and the staff's response].A copy of the Director's Decision (DD-YY-XX) will be filed with the Secretary of the Commission for the Commission to review in accordance with 10 CFR 2.206(c). As provided for by this regulation, the decision will constitute the final action of the Commission 25 days after the date of the decision unless the Commission, on its own motion, institutes a review of the decision within that time.

[The documents cited in the enclosed decision are available in ADAMS for inspection at the Commission's Public Document Room, located at One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, Maryland, and from the ADAMS Public Library component on the NRC's Web site, http://www.nrc.gov (the Public Electronic Reading Room) (cite any exceptions involving proprietary or other protected information)]

.I have also enclosed a copy of the notice of "Issuance of the Director's Decision Under 10 CFR 2.206" that has been filed with the Office of the Federal Register for publication.

[If appropriate, acknowledge the efforts of the petitioner in bringing the issues to the attention of the NRC]. Please feel free to contact

[petition manager name and number]

to discuss any questions related to this petition.

Sincerely,[Insert Office Director's Name]

Docket Nos. [ ]

Enclosures:

Director's Decision YY-XX Federal Register Notice Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 50 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

DD-YY-XX UNITED STATES OF AMERICA NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF [INSERT]

[Office Director Name], Director In the Matter of

)Docket No(s). [Insert]

))[LICENSEE NAME]

)License No(s). [Insert]

))([Plant or facility name(s)]

))(10 CFR 2.206)

DIRECTOR'S DECISION UNDER 10 CFR 2.206 I. Introduction By letter dated

[insert date], as supplemented on

[dates of supplements]

,[petitioner names and, if applicable, represented organizations]

filed a Petition pursuant to Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations , Section 2.206. The petitioner(s) requested that the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) take the following actions:

[list requests]. The bases for the requests were

[describe]

.In a letter dated

[insert], the NRC informed the Petitioners that their request for

[list immediate actions requested]

was approved/denied and that the issues in the Petition were being referred to the Office of

[insert] for appropriate action.

[The Petitioner(s) met with the (assigned office abbreviation) petition review board on [date(s) of the pre- and/or post-PRB meeting(s)]

to clarify the bases for the Petition. The transcript(s) of this/these meeting(s) was/were treated as (a) supplement(s) to the petition and are available in ADAMS for inspection at the

Commission's Public Document Room, located at One White Flint North, 11555

Rockville Pike (first floor), Rockville, Maryland, and from the ADAMS Public Library

component on the NRC's Web site, http://www.nrc.gov (the Public Electronic Reading Room)].

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 51 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

[By letter dated

[insert date], the NRC staff requested

[name of licensee]

to provide information related to the petition.

[Name of licensee]

responded on

[insert date] and the information provided was considered by the staff in its evaluation of the petition].

[The NRC issued a Partial Director's Decision (DD-YY-XX) dated

[insert] which[explain what aspects of the petition were addressed]. [Explain which issues remained to be addressed in this director's decision and briefly explain the reason for the delay on these issues]

].The NRC sent a copy of the proposed director's decision to the Petitioner and to

[licensee(s)]

for comment on

[date]. [The Petitioner responded with comments on

[date] and the licensee(s) responded on

[date]. The comments and the NRC staff's response to them are included in the director's decision]. OR [The staff did not receive any comments on the proposed director's decision].

II. Discussion

[Discuss the issues raised, the significance of the issues (or lack thereof), and the staff's response with supporting bases. Acknowledge any validated issues, even if the staff or the licensee decided to take corrective actions other than

those requested by the petitioner. Clearly explain all actions taken by the staff

or the licensee to address the issues, even if these actions were under way or

completed before the petition was received. This discussion must clearly

present the staff response to all of the valid issues so that it is clear that they have been addressed]

.III. Conclusion

[Summarize the staff's conclusions with respect to the issues raised and how they have been, or will be, addressed]

.As provided in 10 CFR 2.206(c), a copy of this Director's Decision will be filed with the Secretary of the Commission for the Commission to review. As provided for by

this regulation, the decision will constitute the final action of the Commission 25 days after the date of the decision unless the Commission, on its own motion, institutes a review of the decision within that time.

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 52 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this

[insert date]

day of [insert month, year]

.[Office director's name], Director Office of

[insert]

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 53 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 7[7590-01-P]

Sample Federal Register Notice for Director's Decision U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Docket No(s).

License No(s).

[Name of Licensee]

NOTICE OF ISSUANCE OF DIRECTOR'S DECISION UNDER 10 CFR 2.206 Notice is hereby given that the Director, [name of office], has issued a director's decision with regard to a petition dated

[insert date], filed by

[insert petitioner's name], hereinafter referred to as the "petitioner." [

The petition was supplemented on [insert date, include transcripts from meeting(s) with the PRB]]. The petition concerns the operation of the

[insert facility or licensee name]

.The petition requested that

[insert facility or licensee name]

should be

[insert request for enforcement-related action]. [If necessary, add]

The petitioner also requested that a public meeting be held to discuss this matter in the Washington, DC, area.

As the basis for the

[insert date]

request, the petitioner raised concerns stemming from [

insert petitioner's supporting basis for the request]. The [insert Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 54 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 7 (continued) petitioner's name]

considers such operation to be potentially unsafe and to be in violation of Federal regulations. In the petition, a number of references to

[insert references]

were cited that the petitioner believes prohibit operation of the facility with [insert the cause for the requested enforcement-related action]

.The petition of

[insert date]

raises concerns originating from

[insert summary information on more bases/rationale/discussion and supporting facts used in the disposition of the petition and the development of the director's

decision].[On [insert date], the petitioner

[and the licensee]

met with the staff's petition review board]. [On

[insert date of public meeting], the NRC conducted a meeting regarding

[insert facility or licensee name]. The(se) meeting(s) gave the petitioner and the licensee an opportunity to provide additional information and to clarify issues raised in the petition].

The NRC sent a copy of the proposed Director's Decision to the Petitioner and to [licensee(s)]

for comment on

[date]. [The Petitioner responded with comments on

[date] and the licensee(s) responded on

[date]. The comments and the NRC staff's response to them are included in the Director's Decision]. OR [The staff did not receive any comments on the proposed Director's Decision].

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 55 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 7 (continued)

The Director of the Office of

[name of office]

has determined that the request(s), to require

[insert facility or licensee name]

to be [insert request for enforcement-related action], be [granted/denied]. The reasons for this decision are explained in the director's decision pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 [

Insert DD No.]

, the complete text of which is available in ADAMS for inspection at the Commission's Public Document Room, located at One White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike (first

floor), Rockville, Maryland, and via the NRC's Web site (http://www.nrc.gov) on the World Wide Web, under the "Public Involvement" icon.

[Briefly summarize the staff's findings and conclusions].

A copy of the director's decision will be filed with the Secretary of the Commission for the Commission's review in accordance with 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations. As provided for by this regulation, the director's decision

will constitute the final action of the Commission 25 days after the date of the

decision, unless the Commission, on its own motion, institutes a review of the

director's decision in that time.

Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this

[insert date]

day of [insert month, year]

.FOR THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION Original Signed By

[Insert Office Director's Name]

Office of

[insert Office Name]

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions

Handbook 8.11 Exhibits 56 Approved: July 1, 1999 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 8 Sample Letters Requesting Comments on the Proposed Director's Decision (Note: For clarity, separate letters will need to be sent to the petitioner and the licensee. This sample provides guidance for both letters.)

[Insert petitioner's address]

Dear [Insert petitioner's name]

Your petition dated

[insert date]

and addressed to the

[insert addressee]

has been reviewed by the NRC staff pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations. The staff's proposed director's decision on the petition is enclosed. I

request that you provide comments to me on any portions of the decision that you

believe involve errors or any issues in the petition that you believe have not been fully addressed. The staff is making a similar request of the licensee. The staff will then review any comments provided by you and the licensee and consider them in the final

version of the director's decision with no further opportunity to comment.

Please provide your comments by

[insert date, nominally 2 weeks from the date of this letter]

.Sincerely,[Signed by Division Director]

Docket Nos. [ ]

cc w/o encl:

[Service List]

Volume 8, Licensee Oversight Programs Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions Handbook 8.11 Exhibits Approved: July 1, 1999 57 (Revised: October 25, 2000)

Exhibit 8 (continued)

[Insert licensee's address]

Dear [Insert licensee's name]

By letter dated

[insert date], [insert name of petitioner]

submitted a petition pursuant to 10 CFR 2.206 of the Commission's regulations with respect to

[insert name(s) of affected facilities]. The petition has been reviewed by the NRC staff and the staff's proposed director's decision on the petition is enclosed. I request that you provide comments to me on any portions of the decision that you believe involve

errors or any issues in the petition that you believe have not been fully addressed.

The staff is making a similar request of the petitioner. The staff will then review any comments provided by you and the petitioner and consider them in the final version of

the director's decision with no further opportunity to comment.

Please provide your comments by

[insert date, nominally 2 weeks from the date of this letter]

.Sincerely,[Signed by Division Director]

Docket Nos. [ ]

cc w/encl:

[Service List]

NRC: Public Petition Process (NUREG/BR-0200, Rev. 5) Page 1 of: \

C,A1VlIhHini

"""',, Home> NRC Library> Document Collections>

NUREG,Series Publications>

Brochures Prepared by the Staff> NUREGiBR-0200, Rev, Public Petition Process (NUREG/BR-D2DD, Rev. 5) On this page:

  • Publication Information
  • Introduction Publication Information Date Published:

February 2003 Office of Public Affairs U S, Nuclear Regulatory Commission Washington, DC 20555-0001 Introduction The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) was established in 1975 to protect public health and safety in the civilian use of nuclear power and materials in the United States, As part of its responsibilities, NRC assesses all potential health and safety issues related to licensed activities and encourages members of the public to bring safety issues to its attention, Section 2206 of Title 10 ofthe Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR 2,206) describes the petition primary mechanism for the public to request enforcement action by NRC in a public process* This process penn its anyone to petition NRC to take enforcement action related to NRC licensees or licensed activities, Depending on the results of its evaluation, NRC ,ould modify, suspend, or revoke an NRC-issued license or take any other appropriate enforcement action to resolve a problem, Requests that raIse health and safety issues without requesting enforcement action are reviewed by means other than the 2.206 process, In its effort to improve public confidence, the NRC periodically reassesses the 2,206 petition process to enhance its effectiveness, timeliness and credibility As part of these reassessments, the NRC seeks feedback from petitioners and other stakeholders through public meetings and workshops, surveys and Federal Register notices, as well as from its own staff experience, Specific improvements to the 2,206 process resulting from these initiatives include' Offering petitioners two opportunities to discuss the petition with the NRC's petition review board (PRB). The first is to allow the petitioner to provide elaboration and clarification of the petition before the PRE meets to discuss the petition, The second opportunity comes after the PRB has discussed the merits of the petition and allows the petitioner to comment on the PRB's recommendation' regarding acceptance of the petition and any requests for immediate action,

  • Offering an opportunity for a staff-petitioner-Iicensee meeting to discuss the details of the issue during the COurse of the review, Providing better, more frequent communications between the staff and petitioner throughout the process, Providing copies of all pertinent petition-related correspondence and other documents to the petitioners Providing a copy of the proposed director's decision on the petition, both to the petitioner and the affected licensee for comments, and considering such comments before issuing the decision in final fonn, The Petition Process The 2.206 process provides a simple, effective mechanism for anyone to request enforcement action and obtain NRC's prompt, thorough, and objective evaluation of underlying safety issues, It IS separall and distinct from the processes for rulemaking and licensing, although they too allow the public to raise safety concerns to NRC Under the 2206 process, the petitioner submits a request in writing to NRC's Executive Director for Operations, identifying the affected licensee or licensed activity, the requested enforcement action to be taken, and the facts the petitioner believes provide sufficient grounds for NRC to take enforcement action, Unsupported assertions of "safety problems," general opposition to nuclear power, or identification of safety issues without seeking enforcement action are not considered sufficient grounds for consideration as a 2,206 petition After receiving a request, NRC determines whether the request qualifies as a 2,206 petition, Ifthe request is accepted for review as a 2,206 petition, the NRC sends an acknowledgment letter to the petitioner and a copy to the appropriate licensee and publishes a notice in the Federal Register.

If the request is not accepted, NRC notifies the petitioner of its decision and indicates that the petitioner's underlying safety concerns will be considered outside the 2,206 process On the basis of an evaluation of the petition, the appropnate office director issues a decision and, if warranted, NRC takes appropriate enforcement action, Throughout the evaluation process. NRC sends copies of all pertinent correspondence to the petitioner and the affected licensee NRC places all related correspondence in its Public Document Room (PDR) in Rockville, Maryland, and in the agency document control system, However, the agency withholds information that would compromise an investigation or ongoing enforcement action relating to issues in the petition, The NRC also sends the petitioner other information such as pertinent generic leiters and bulletins, The NRC notifies the petitioner of the petilion's status every 60 days, or more frequently if a significant action occurs, Monthly updates on all pending 2.206 petitions are available on NRC's Web site at httpi!www.nrc.gov/reading-nnidoc-collections/petitions-2-206Iindex.htmland in the PDR. Petition Technical Review Meeting A petition technical review meeting serves not only as a source of potentially valuable information for NRC to evaluate a 2,206 petition, but also affords the petitioner substantive involvement in the review and deCision-making process through direct dIscussions with NRC and tbe licensee, Such a meeting will be held whenever the staff believes that it would be beneficial to the review of the petition, Note that the meeting can be offered at any time during NRC's review ofa petition and is open to public observation, Director's Decision The NRC's official response to a 2,206 petition is a written decision by the director of the appropriate office that addresses the concerns raised in the petition, The agency's goal is to issue a proposed deCIsion for comment within 120 days from the date of the acknowledgment letter. However, additional time may be needed to conduct an investigation, complete an inspection, or analyze particularly complex technical issues, If the goal is not met, the NRC staff will promptly inform the petitioner of a schedule change, The director's deciSIOn mcludes the professional staff's evaluation of all pertinent information from the petition, correspondence with the petitioner and the licensee, information from any meeting, results ofany investigation or inspection, and any other documents related to petition issues, Followmg resolution of any comments received on the proposed decision, the director's decision is provided to the petitioner and the licensee and is posted to NRC's Web site and made available in the PDR A notice of availability is published in the Fedew! Register, Dlfcctor's decisions may be issued as follows

  • A deciSion granting a petition, in full, explams the basis for the deCISion and grants the action requested in the petition (e,g" NRC issuing an order to modify, suspend, or revoke a license), A decision denying a petition, in full, provides the reason for the denial and discusses all matters raised in the petition A decision granting a petition, In part, in cases where the NRC decides not to grant the actIon requested, but takes other appropriate enforcement action or directs the licensee to take certain actions that address the identi fied safety concerns http://www.nrc.gov/reading-nn/doc-collections/nuregslbrochures Ibr02001 9/4/201:

NRC: Public Petition Process (NUREG/BR-0200, Rev. 5) Page 2 of:

  • A partial director's decIsion may be issued by the NRC in cases where some of the issues associated with the petition can be completed promptly but significant schedule delays are anticipated before resolution oflhe entire petition.

A final director's decision is issued at the conclusion ofthe effort. The Commission will not entertain requests for review of a director's decision.

However, on its own, it may review a decision within 25 calendar days. NRC Management Directive 8.11, "Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions," contains more detailed information on citizen petitions.

For a free copy of the directive, write to the Superintendent of Documents, US. Government Printing Office, P.O. Box 37082, Washington, DC 200 13-7082 or call 202-512-1800.

Electronic Access Those parts of the monthly status report on 2.206 petitions that are not of a sensitive nature, as well as recently issued director's decisions, and Management Directive 8.11, are placed on the NRC's Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/doc-collections/petitions-2-206/index.htmland in the agency's Public Document Room Other Processes for Public Involvement In addition to the 2.206 petition process, NRC has several other ways that permit the public to express concerns on matters related to the NRC's regulatory activities .

  • The NRC's allegation process affords individuals who raise safety concerns a degree of protection of their identity Under the provisions of ) 0 CFR 2.802, NRC provides an opportunity for the public to petition the agency for a rulemaking.

The NRC's licensing process offers members of the public, who are specifically affected by a licensing action, an opportunity to formally participate in licensing proceedings.

This process applies not only to the initial licensing actions but also to license amendments and other activities such as decommissioning and license renewals.

For major regulatory actions involving preparation of environmental impact statements, NRC offers separate opportunities for public participation in its environmental proceedings.

The public can attend a number of meetings including open Commission and staff meetmgs, periodic media briefings by Regional Administrators, and special meetings held near affected facilities to inform local communities and respond to their questions.

More information on these activities can be found in NRC's pamphlet, "Public Involvement in the Nuclear Regulatory Process," NUREG/BR-0215.

'The NRC also has an allegation process in which individuals who raise potential safety concerns for NRC review are afforded a degree of protection of their identity.

Other processes for public involvement are listed at the end of this pamphlet.

Office of Public 1I. S. Nuclear Regulatory Washington, DC Telepbone 301-415-8200 NUREG/BR-0200, Rev. February Availability Notice l'uKe I,us/ RevlewedUpdllled Thursday, March 29, 2012 http://www.nrc_gov/reading-rmldoc-collections/nuregslbrochure slbr02001 9/4/201:

T. -2 You may visit the NRC's website at http://www.nrc.qov/readinq-rm/doc-collections/petitions-22061, where the public may obtain updates on the status of 2.206 petitions, including any petitions held in abeyance.

For your information, I have enclosed a copy of the notice that is being filed with the Office of the Federal Register for publication.

I have also enclosed a copy of Management Directive 8.11, "Review Process for 10 CFR 2.206 Petitions," and the associated brochure NUREG/BR-0200, "Public Petition Process," prepared by the NRC Office of Public Affairs. Sincerely, IRAJ Eric J. Leeds, Director Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation

Enclosures:

1. Federal Register Notice 2. Management Directive 8.11 3. NUREG/BR-0200 Licensee Listserv DISTRIBUTION: (G20120317/0EDO-2012-0273)

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