ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October
24, 1985
IN
THE
MATTER OF:
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
)
R82-2
SUBTITLE
I:
ATOMIC RADIATION
)
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
)
PART
1000:
RADIATION HAZARDS
Resolution
in Response
to JCAR Objection.
RESOLUTION AND ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J.D. Dumelle):
This matter
comes before
the Board upon
a letter dated
September 19,
1985,
to the Board from the Joint Committee on
Administrative Rules
(JCAR)
informing the Board that JCAR has
objected
to this rulemaking.
This Resolution and Order
constitutes
the Board’s formal refusal
to modify
the rules
in
response
to that objection pursuant
to Section 7.07 of the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
A notice of
refusal
to
modify will
be timely
filed with the Secretary
of State
for
publication
in the Illinois Register.
JCAR’s September
19,
1985,
letter
reads,
in pertinent part,
as follows:
The Joint Committee objects
to
Section 1000.403 of
the
pollution Control Board’s rules entitled “Radiation
Hazards”;
35
111. Adm. Code 1000, because
the Board has
failed
to include within the referenced section the
proper standards, pursuant
to Section 4.02 of the
Illinois Administrative Procedure Act, by which it will
exercise its discretionary power.
Section 1000.403 states that ~‘operations
covered by
this subpart shall
be conducted
in such
a manner
as
to
provide reasonable assurance that” doses do not exceed
a
specified level
and that the total quantity of
radioactive material entering the environment
is kept to
a certain minimum.
Section 4.02 of
the Illinois Administrative Procedure
Act
(IAPA)
(Ill,
Rev.
Stat.
1983,
ch,
127,
par.
1004.02)
provides that REach rule which implements a
discretionary power
to be exercised
by an agency shall
include
the
standards by which
the agency shall exercise
the power.
Such
standards shall
be
stated as precisely
66~211
—2—
and clearly
as practicable
under
the conditions,
to
inform fully
those persons affected,”
**
*
It would appear that the Board
could incorporate much
more of what determines that a “reasonable assurance”
has been provided, specifically, the
information
obtained from the USNRC.
The Board should
be able to
inform operators of
what
they
will have
to do to meet
their
obl:L~tion
to
operate
in
such
a
way
as
to
provide
a “reaso
b~
assurance~
that
radiation
levels are kept
down.
*
*
*
Therefore~the
Joint:. Cormittee objects
to Section
1000.403
of
the
Pollution
Control Board’s rules entitled
“Radiation Hazards”;
35
il1~Adm. Code 1000,
because the
Board has failed
to include within
the
referenced
section
the proper standards, pursuant
to Section 4.02
of
the Illinois Administrative Procedure Act,
by which
it will exercise
its discretionary power.
JCAR believes,
based on discussion with DNS,
that DNS
(and
the Board, presumably)
will determine whether
“reasonable
assurance”
has been provided by analyzing certain information
provided by the operator “with
the help
of a manual developed by
the
tJSNRC
United
States Nuclear Regulatory Commission
.“
The
Board was,
therefore,
asked
“to include
in the rule
the
standards,
including
the
manual,
arid the process used
to
determine whether
that
assurance
is
reasonable.”
The Board cannot mod~tythe rule as requested by JCAR
this
late
in
the proceeding.
The “manual”
is not in the record,
nor
does
the Board have
a copy of
it.
It has not been the subject
of
hearings,
nor does the Board have any reason to believe
that it
contains “standards”
or
a
“process” which would aid the regulated
community in attaIning
or maintaining compliance with the adopted
rules,
Furthermore., under Section 6.02 of the APA,
the Board has
the authority to incorporate by reference “regulations or rules
of
an agency of the United States,”
Therefore,
the Board could
have simply incorporated these rules by reference,
thereby
avoiding any
controversy
over
their wording.
Yet, because
the
Board decided
to fully set forth
those rules
to give better
notice to
the regulated community of what
the requirements are,
JCAR has objected
to
them.
In
a subsequent rulemaking the Board
can,
and has, considered
modification
of
rules
to meet JCAR’s
objections, but the record
in this case demonstrates that the
regulated community has been subject
to the same rule on the
federal
level for
several years,
understands
it and
Is
in
compliance
with. Lt~ The Board,
therefore, sees no reason
to go
through such
a ~:ocedure when
it appears that little
or nothing
—3-.
would be gained,
and
thus refuses to modify the rule based on
,7CAR’s
objection.
Finally, the Board notes that in JCAR’s September
:19, 1985,
letter, JCAR indicates that the Board has agreed to delete the
phrase ‘conducted by or for such persons’ from Section
l000.501(a)(b) which has been renumbered as Section 1000.501(f)
and reads as follows:
All persons subject to this Part shall submit to the
Department, with respect to any material or facility
permitted or licensed by the NRC or for which an NRC
permit or license is sought:
f)
All data,
records, and reports submitted to the NRC
in connection with determining or predicting
radiation levels in air
in unrestricted areas or
the
type
or amount of radioactive materials emitted
into air conducted by or for such persons.
If the Board were to delete the recommended language, the set of
documents which would be required to be sent to DNS would be
enlarged to include records, data
and
reports which were
conducted by or for persons other than the person submitting
the
material to the NRC,
thus imposing a larger
and
more burdensome
obligation on the regulated community.
Furthermore, the Board
finds the lInguage to be sufficiently understandable in that
‘such persons’ refers to ‘persons subject to this Part’
in the
first paragraph of the section.
Thus, while JC&R finds this
wording confusing,
the Board finds it to be clear and finds
JCAR’s recommended change to be a substantive alteration of the
rule.
The Board will, therefore,
not make that change.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Board Member
3.
Theodore Meyer dissented.
I, Dorothy H. Gunn, Cle~rkof the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Resolution and Order was
adopted on the
oI.?C
day of
_________________,
1985, by a vote
of
L—/
orothy M.
Gunn,
lerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
86-213