[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 175 (Friday, September 10, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 55360-55365]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-22627]


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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

[Docket No. 030-20836, NRC-2009-0119, License No. 25-21479-01, EA-10-
100]


In the Matter of Mattingly Testing Services, Inc. Molt, MT; Order 
Revoking License (Effective Immediately)

I

    Mattingly Testing Services, Inc., (Mattingly or licensee) is the 
holder of Materials License 25-21479-01 issued by the U.S. Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission (NRC or Commission) pursuant to 10 CFR Part 34, 
last amended on May 28, 2010, to change the facility's permanent 
storage location and to name a new radiation safety officer, and due to 
expire on February 28, 2016. The license authorizes Mattingly to 
possess and use byproduct material for industrial radiography 
operations in NRC jurisdiction, and in

[[Page 55361]]

areas of exclusive Federal jurisdiction within Agreement States. The 
license currently authorizes storage at licensee facilities in Molt and 
Billings, Montana. The license further authorizes the possession of 
natural or depleted uranium, as solid metal, for shielding in 
radiography equipment. On the same date this Order (EA-10-100) is 
issued to Mattingly, the NRC is also issuing Mr. Mark Ficek, President 
of Mattingly, an Order Prohibiting Involvement in NRC-Licensed 
Activities (IA-10-028).
    Currently, both Mattingly (EA-08-271) and its president (IA-08-028) 
are subject to Confirmatory Orders issued on March 6, 2009, which 
resulted from alternative dispute resolution (ADR) mediation sessions 
conducted on February 5, 2009. Those Orders were made immediately 
effective upon issuance. The ADR mediation session and resultant 
Confirmatory Orders dispositioned nine violations, five of which were 
willful, identified during an NRC inspection and an investigation by 
the NRC's Office of Investigations. The 2008 investigation identified 
several violations: (1) A failure to provide complete and accurate 
information to the NRC; (2) a radiographer assistant performing 
radiographic operations without a dosimeter; (3) a radiographer 
assistant using a radiographic exposure device without supervision of a 
radiographer; (4) failure to secure a radiographic exposure device with 
a minimum of two independent physical controls; (5) failure to remove a 
radiographic exposure device from service after it had sustained damage 
to the locking mechanism; (6) failure to notify the NRC after discovery 
of damage to a radiography device; (7) an individual acting as a 
radiographer assistant without completing a practical examination on 
use of the radiography equipment; (8) failure to ensure that all 
personnel dosimeters were checked for proper response to radiation 
every 12 months; and, (9) failure to have a functional alarm system to 
allow the licensee to monitor, detect, assess, and respond to 
unauthorized access to radioactive material when the radioactive 
material is not under direct observation by Mattingly staff and stored 
in a portable darkroom, as required by Increased Controls Order (EA-05-
090). The NRC also found that willfulness was involved in violations 1, 
3, 5, 7, and 8, above.
    The NRC offered ADR to Mattingly and its president in order to 
disposition the violations listed above. As a result of ADR, the NRC 
issued separate confirmatory orders to Mattingly and Mr. Ficek. The 
Confirmatory Order (EA-08-271) to Mattingly required, among other 
things, that Mattingly retain an expert consultant, to be approved by 
the NRC, and that the consultant would take specific actions within 
strict deadlines. The Confirmatory Order required the Mattingly expert 
consultant to: (1) Evaluate the effectiveness of Mattingly's radiation 
safety and compliance programs by commencing an assessment of 
Mattingly's radiation safety program within 30 days of NRC's approval 
of the consultant; by reviewing Mattingly's training program and 
recommending improvements; by reviewing Mattingly's operating and 
emergency procedures and recommending improvements; by providing a 
report of the consultant's findings and recommended improvements to 
both the licensee and NRC; by performing an annual audit of Mattingly's 
radiation safety program through calendar year 2012; and by performing 
semi-annual field audits of radiography performance at temporary 
jobsites; and (2) provide training to the Mattingly staff who engage in 
licensed activities, including: a review of radiation mishaps involving 
radiography; a review of the consequences of and potential actions that 
NRC may take against an individual for deliberate violations; a review 
of NRC requirements and Mattingly's license conditions; a review of 
Mattingly's operating and emergency procedures; lessons-learned from 
the circumstances surrounding each of the violations identified by the 
NRC in its December 15, 2008, letter; reporting requirements of 10 CFR 
30.50 and 10 CFR 34.101; and, NRC's employee protection requirements in 
10 CFR 30.7. The expert consultant was approved by the NRC on April 3, 
2009 (ADAMS Accession No. ML090930661). As a result, the Order required 
Mattingly to begin the radiation safety procedure assessment and 
complete the radiation safety training for Mattingly staff by May 3, 
2009. The Confirmatory Order (EA-08-271) also required Mattingly, 
within 30 days of the date of the Order, to submit a license amendment 
incorporating updated procedures in a number of areas. The deadline for 
this requirement was April 5, 2009.

II

    On June 30, 2009, the NRC inspected the Licensee's facility in 
Molt, Montana, after the NRC, Region IV received a police report 
stating that the County Sheriff's office had recovered, from a member 
of the public, a radiographic exposure device Mattingly had lost. The 
NRC-initiated investigations and inspections identified several 
violations of regulatory requirements, four of which involved 
deliberate misconduct by Mattingtly's president, including providing 
false information to the NRC. Since the 2009 Confirmatory Orders, the 
NRC has determined that Mattingly has violated several NRC regulations 
and orders:
    (1) Mattingly's president deliberately put Mattingly in violation 
of Confirmatory Order (EA-08-271). Specifically, the Confirmatory Order 
required Mattingly to select an independent consultant to review 
Mattingly's radiation safety program and to conduct training for 
Mattingly's staff. The NRC approved the independent consultant on April 
3, 2009, which set May 3, 2009, as the date by which the consultant was 
to commence the assessment of the Mattingly radiation safety program, 
as well as complete the specified training for Mattingly staff. 
Testimony provided by the independent consultant to the NRC 
investigator on June 30, 2009, revealed that the consultant was not 
aware of the May 3, 2009 deadline. The consultant indicated that the 
president had directed him to complete his actions by the end of 2009, 
but he did not at that time have a specific plan to do so, nor was he 
aware of the deadlines for other actions assigned to the independent 
consultant in the Confirmatory Order. Moreover, testimony provided by 
the president and the consultant to the NRC investigator revealed that 
the president did not give the consultant a copy of the Confirmatory 
Order that described the required actions and respective deadlines. The 
president knew the Confirmatory Order's requirements, but rather than 
sharing the Confirmatory Order with the consultant or another Mattingly 
official to ensure compliance, he withheld the information and allowed 
the Confirmatory Order's deadlines to pass, putting Mattingly in 
violation of the Confirmatory Order (EA-08-271). The NRC showed the 
consultant the Confirmatory Order for the first time during the NRC 
investigation. If the NRC had not interdicted at that time, then 
implementation of required improvements to the Licensee's radiation 
safety program and safety training programs would have been even 
further delayed, if completed at all. The assessment of the Mattingly 
radiation programs was not begun until May 30, 2009, and the initial 
safety training of the Mattingly staff was not completed until July 19, 
2009.
    The NRC identified several additional examples of the licensee's 
failure to adhere to the Order, including: (i) The consultant's report 
and recommendations for program improvements were provided 65 days

[[Page 55362]]

after the consultant completed the required reviews, contrary to the 
specified requirement of 30 days; (ii) the consultant failed to provide 
a copy of his calendar year 2009 annual audit results to the NRC, as 
specified; (iii) the consultant conducted the initial field audit of 
radiography at temporary jobsites on August 29, 2009, almost 3 months 
after the May 3, 2009 deadline; and, (iv) the licensee submitted an 
amendment request on June 30, 2009 instead of May 3, 2009, as required.
    (2) From May 13, 2006, through September 9, 2009, Mattingly, as a 
result of its president's deliberate inaction, failed to establish and 
maintain a prearranged plan with the local law enforcement agency to 
respond to any attempt to gain unauthorized access to radioactive 
materials, as required by Increased Controls Order (EA-05-090). 
Specifically, Increased Controls Order, Attachment B, Section IC-2(b), 
requires that the licensee shall have a prearranged plan with a local 
law enforcement agency for assistance in response to an actual or 
attempted theft, sabotage, or diversion of such radioactive material or 
of the devices, which is consistent in scope and timing with a 
realistic potential vulnerability of the sources containing such 
radioactive material. During an NRC inspection of the Mattingly 
facility in March 2007, the president informed the NRC inspector that 
he had established a prearranged plan with the Laurel Police 
Department, when in fact he had not established a prearranged plan with 
the Laurel Police Department, and in any event, Mattingly's facility 
was not located in the Laurel Police Department's jurisdiction. Upon 
further investigation the NRC determined that Mattingly's facility was 
in the Yellowstone County Sheriff's jurisdiction, and Mattingly had not 
established a prearranged plan with the Yellowstone County Sheriff's 
Office. The president's false statement to the NRC inspector--which 
made clear that the president was aware of the requirement, but had not 
implemented it--caused the NRC to find that the failure to meet the 
Increased Controls Order, Appendix B, Section IC-2(b), was deliberate.
    (3) On March 6, 2007, Mattingly's president deliberately provided 
false information to an NRC inspector by stating that he had 
established a prearranged plan with the local law enforcement agency in 
accordance with Increased Controls Order (EA-05-090), violating 10 CFR 
30.10(a)(2), and putting Mattingly in violation of 10 CFR 30.9, 
``Completeness and Accuracy of Information.'' As described above, the 
president stated to an NRC inspector that the prearranged plan had been 
established with the Laurel Police Department in Laurel, Montana. The 
NRC determined that neither the president nor any Mattingly official 
had contacted the Laurel Police Department to establish a prearranged 
response plan. The NRC also determined during its 2009 investigation 
that the Laurel Police Department had no jurisdiction for the Mattingly 
facility in Molt, Montana. Further, testimony by a representative of 
the appropriate local law enforcement agency (Yellowstone County 
Sheriff's Office) revealed that no prearranged plan had been 
established with them, or had been sought by the president or any other 
Mattingly officials. The president's false statement to the NRC 
inspector was a significant contributor to the duration of the 
Increased Controls Order violation since Mattingly did not implement 
the local law enforcement plan until September 9, 2009, more than 2 
years after the NRC inspector initially questioned the Licensee's 
actions to establish the prearranged plan, and only after an NRC 
investigation revealed the violation.
    (4) On October 22, 2009, while under oath, Mattingly's president 
deliberately provided false testimony to the NRC investigator, again 
violating 10 CFR 30.10(a)(2) and putting Mattingly in violation of 10 
CFR 30.9, ``Completeness and Accuracy of Information.'' The president 
claimed that two witnesses could confirm that he had conversations 
during a lunch engagement with the Laurel Police Chief regarding the 
required local law enforcement agency prearranged plan. Testimony 
provided by witnesses to the lunch engagement, including the Laurel 
Police Chief, refuted the president's statements. Further, in addition 
to testimony that the Laurel Police Chief recalled no discussion of a 
response plan, and that he knew that the Laurel Police Department had 
no jurisdiction to respond to the Mattingly facility, the Laurel Police 
Chief offered evidence that the lunch engagement at issue took place on 
July 13, 2003, some 28 months before the Increased Controls Order was 
issued to Mattingly. Therefore, the NRC found that the president 
deliberately provided false testimony while under oath when he 
attempted to cite a lunch engagement with the Laurel Police Chief in 
2003 to demonstrate to the NRC that Mattingly was in compliance with 
the Increased Controls Order.
    (5) On July 4, 16, and August 29-30, 2009, Mattingly failed to 
implement the Increased Controls Order (EA-05-090), Appendix B, Section 
IC-2(c), requirement to have a dependable means to transmit information 
between and among, the various components used to detect and identify 
an unauthorized intrusion, to inform the assessor, and to summon the 
appropriate responder at all times. Specifically, on the dates noted, a 
radiographic exposure device was left in one of Mattingly's trucks at a 
radiographer's residence, while the radiographer left the premises in 
another vehicle. Mattingly directed the radiographer to drive the truck 
between the temporary job site and his residence and depended on the 
radiographer to respond appropriately to any intrusion. While he was 
away from his residence, however, there was no dependable means in 
place to comply with Increased Controls Order (EA-05-090), Appendix B, 
Section IC-2(c).
    While this violation involved different circumstances, the 
inability to assess and respond to unauthorized access to the 
radioactive materials while stored in the transport vehicle, is similar 
to one of the violations resolved through the 2009 ADR mediation 
session.
    (6) On June 22, 2009, Mattingly staff failed to properly secure a 
radiographic exposure device for transport, contrary to 10 CFR 20.1802, 
10 CFR 34.35(d), and 10 CFR 71.5. Specifically, Mattingly's RSO placed 
a radiographic exposure device on the back of the Mattingly truck, but 
failed to physically secure the device with proper blocking and bracing 
to prevent loss during transport. The device was left on the tailgate 
of the vehicle with no means of security.
    As a result of the failure to properly secure the radiographic 
exposure device for transport, the device fell off the vehicle on a 
public road in Molt, Montana, between the licensee's facility and a job 
site, and was lost in the public domain. The device was found by a 
member of the public who picked the device up, placed it in his truck, 
drove to a neighbor's house, and then contacted a local deputy sheriff 
. While this violation involved a different security requirement, the 
failure to physically secure the radiographic exposure device is 
similar to one of the violations resolved during the 2009 ADR mediation 
session.
    (7) On June 22, 2009, Mattingly's president willfully caused 
Mattingly to violate the immediate reporting requirement for lost 
radioactive materials, 10 CFR 20.2201, for the lost device described in 
violation (6). Specifically, after the device was returned to Mattingly 
by the local police, the licensee president and the RSO discussed the 
reporting aspects of the event. The president sent the RSO to a job 
site and said that he, the president, would research the reporting

[[Page 55363]]

requirements for the lost device. The president stated to NRC 
investigators that he believed there was either a 24-hour or 30-day 
reporting requirement, but he did not research the requirement within 
24 hours to determine the appropriate reporting requirement. If he had 
performed the research, then he would have known that Mattingly needed 
to report the lost device to the NRC as soon as it was lost.
    The next day, June 23, 2009, the Yellowstone County Sheriff's 
Office provided the NRC's Region IV office with the police report of 
the lost device, which was how the NRC became aware of the loss. The 
Region IV staff was unsuccessful in its attempt to contact Mattingly's 
RSO on the afternoon of June 23, 2009, and left a message for him to 
contact Region IV. Mattingly's RSO returned the telephone call after 
work hours on June 23 and left a message. Region IV staff members spoke 
with Mattingly's RSO on the morning of June 24, 2009, and informed the 
RSO that the loss of the device should have been immediately reported 
on June 22, 2009. Subsequently, the licensee made the lost device event 
report to the NRC Operations Center on June 24, 2009. While this event 
involves a different reporting requirement, the failure to notify the 
NRC of the loss of radioactive material is similar to the reporting 
requirement violation dispositioned during the 2009 ADR mediation 
session.

III

    Mattingly has violated NRC requirements, including deliberate and 
willful violations by the Mattingly president and owner who also 
provided material false information to an NRC inspector and 
investigators. These violations jeopardized its workers and the public 
health and safety, and the security of the radioactive materials that 
the licensee possesses, and represent a significant regulatory concern. 
The deliberate violations also demonstrate that Mattingly's president 
and owner is unwilling to comply with the Commission's requirements to 
protect the public health and safety and provide for the security of 
the radioactive materials in Mattingly's possession. These deliberate 
violations resulted in the NRC issuing an individual order to the 
president prohibiting his involvement in NRC-licensed activities for a 
period of 7 years.
    The numerous failures to implement the requirements of Confirmatory 
Order (EA-08-271) as specified herein are of concern, since those 
actions were meant to timely correct a number of safety violations 
identified at Mattingly. The repetitive nature of several of these 
violations reveals the ineffectiveness of the corrective actions 
Mattingly committed to implement. The NRC must have reasonable 
assurance that its licensees will operate safely and comply with NRC 
requirements. The deliberate nature of the violations, including the 
material false statements made by the president, demonstrate that the 
NRC's past enforcement action was inadequate to ensure that Mattingly 
would comply with NRC requirements, and that Mattingly is unwilling to 
comply with NRC requirements.
    Consequently, I lack reasonable assurance that Mattingly will 
provide for the safe use and security of the radioactive materials in 
its possession or that the public health and safety is adequately 
protected by continuing activities under the existing license. If, at 
the time the license was issued, the NRC had known of the licensee's 
inability or unwillingness to control licensed activities in accordance 
with the NRC's requirements, or the questionable integrity of the 
licensee's president, the license would not have been issued. 
Therefore, I have determined that permitting this licensee to conduct 
activities under License 25-21479-01 would be contrary to the public 
health and safety and that this license should be revoked. Mattingly's 
license authorizes possession of radioactive materials that are 
considered high-risk, the loss of control of which, whether inadvertent 
or through a deliberate act, has a potential to result in significant 
adverse health impacts and could reasonably constitute a threat to the 
public health and safety. Also, because of the risk to the public 
health and safety and the deliberate and willful violations, I have 
determined, pursuant to 10 CFR 2.202(a)(5), that the public health and 
safety requires an immediate suspension of radiographic operations, 
that the radioactive material in the licensee's possession must be 
returned to the manufacturer or transferred to another entity 
authorized to possess the material, and that the licensee shall only 
provide for the safe, secure storage of the materials and other 
activities necessary to support safe transfer of said materials pending 
license revocation.

IV

    Accordingly, pursuant to Sections 81, 161b, 161i, 161o, 182 and 186 
of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, and the Commission's 
regulations in 10 CFR 2.202 and 10 CFR Parts 30 and 34, it is hereby 
ordered, effective immediately, that license 25-21479-01 is modified as 
follows:
    1. All radiographic operations authorized by License 25-21479-01 
involving the use of licensed material are hereby suspended pending 
further action described below, including use of License 25-21479-01 to 
conduct radiographic operations under reciprocity in any Agreement 
State. All other requirements of the license remain in effect including 
the actions required by Confirmatory Order (EA-08-271) and other orders 
issued to the licensee, including the Increased Controls Order (EA-05-
090), as long as the licensee is in possession of NRC-licensed 
material.
    2. The licensee shall provide to Mr. Art Howell, Director, Division 
of Nuclear Materials Safety, NRC Region IV, Arlington, Texas by the 
close of business on the date of this Order, a detailed inventory 
identifying the manufacturer, model, and serial number of each 
radiographic exposure device, including the source activity for each 
device, and the current location of each device.
    3. All NRC-licensed material in the licensee's possession shall be 
placed in secure storage at the licensee's Billings, Montana facility 
as soon as practicable, but no later than 48 hours after Mattingly's 
receipt of this Order.
    4. The licensee shall remove from its possession all NRC-licensed 
material acquired or possessed under the authority of License 25-21479-
01 within 30 days of the date of this Order, either by transferring the 
material to the manufacturer or to another entity authorized to possess 
that material.
    5. Any sources that have not been leak tested within six months 
prior to the transfer shall be leak tested by a person authorized to do 
so, prior to transfer of the source.
    6. The licensee shall notify Mr. Art Howell, Director, Division of 
Nuclear Materials Safety, NRC Region IV, Arlington, Texas, by telephone 
(817-860-8106) at least 5 business days prior to the date the 
radioactive materials are to be transferred so that the NRC may, if it 
elects, observe the transfer of the material.
    7. The licensee shall, within 5 days after transfer of the 
material, certify in writing, under oath or affirmation, to the 
Regional Administrator, NRC Region IV, (Texas Health Resources Tower, 
612 E. Lamar Blvd., Suite 400, Arlington, Texas 76011-4125), that all 
material has been properly transferred and provide the Regional 
Administrator copies of transfer records required by 10 CFR 30.51.
    It is further ordered that:
    8. Following NRC confirmation of the transfer of all NRC-licensed 
material currently possessed, as discussed above, License 25-21479-01 
is revoked.

[[Page 55364]]

    The Regional Administrator, Region IV, or designee, may, in 
writing, at any time prior to final agency action sustaining the 
revocation of License 25-21479-01, relax or rescind any of the above 
conditions upon demonstration by the licensee, in writing and under 
oath or affirmation, of good cause.

V

    In accordance with 10 CFR 2.202, the licensee must, and any other 
person adversely affected by this Order may, submit an answer to this 
Order within 20 days of its issuance. In addition, the licensee and any 
other person adversely affected by this Order may request a hearing on 
this Order within 20 days of its issuance. Where good cause is shown, 
consideration will be given to extending the time to answer or request 
a hearing. A request for extension of time must be directed to the 
Director, Office of Enforcement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 
Washington, DC 20555 0001, and include a statement of good cause for 
the extension.
    If a hearing is requested by a licensee or a person whose interest 
is adversely affected, the Commission will issue an Order designating 
the time and place of any hearings. If a hearing is held, the issue to 
be considered at such hearing shall be whether this Order should be 
sustained. Pursuant to 10 CFR 2.202(c)(2)(i), the licensee or any other 
person adversely affected by this Order, may, in addition to demanding 
a hearing, at the time the answer is filed or sooner, move the 
presiding officer to set aside the immediate effectiveness of the Order 
on the ground that the Order, including the need for immediate 
effectiveness, is not based on adequate evidence but on mere suspicion, 
unfounded allegations, or error.
    All documents filed in NRC adjudicatory proceedings, including a 
request for hearing, a petition for leave to intervene, any motion or 
other document filed in the proceeding prior to the submission of a 
request for hearing or petition to intervene, and documents filed by 
interested governmental entities participating under 10 CFR 2.315(c), 
must be filed in accordance with the NRC E-Filing rule (72 FR 49139, 
August 28, 2007). The E-Filing process requires participants to submit 
and serve all adjudicatory documents over the internet, or in some 
cases to mail copies on electronic storage media. Participants may not 
submit paper copies of their filings unless they seek an exemption in 
accordance with the procedures described below.
    To comply with the procedural requirements of E-Filing, at least 10 
days prior to the filing deadline, the participant should contact the 
Office of the Secretary by e-mail at [email protected], or by 
telephone at (301) 415-1677, to request (1) a digital ID certificate, 
which allows the participant (or its counsel or representative) to 
digitally sign documents and access the E-Submittal server for any 
proceeding in which it is participating; and (2) advise the Secretary 
that the participant will be submitting a request or petition for 
hearing (even in instances in which the participant, or its counsel or 
representative, already holds an NRC-issued digital ID certificate). 
Based upon this information, the Secretary will establish an electronic 
docket for the hearing in this proceeding if the Secretary has not 
already established an electronic docket.
    Information about applying for a digital ID certificate is 
available on NRC's public Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals/apply-certificates.html. System requirements for accessing 
the E-Submittal server are detailed in NRC's ``Guidance for Electronic 
Submission,'' which is available on the agency's public Web site at 
http://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. Participants may 
attempt to use other software not listed on the Web site, but should 
note that the NRC's E-Filing system does not support unlisted software, 
and the NRC Meta System Help Desk will not be able to offer assistance 
in using unlisted software.
    If a participant is electronically submitting a document to the NRC 
in accordance with the E-Filing rule, the participant must file the 
document using the NRC's online, web-based submission form. In order to 
serve documents through the Electronic Information Exchange, users will 
be required to install a web browser plug-in from the NRC Web site. 
Further information on the web-based submission form, including the 
installation of the Web browser plug-in, is available on the NRC's 
public Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html.
    Once a participant has obtained a digital ID certificate and a 
docket has been created, the participant can then submit a request for 
hearing or petition for leave to intervene. Submissions should be in 
Portable Document Format (PDF) in accordance with NRC guidance 
available on the NRC public Web site at http://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html. A filing is considered complete at the time the 
documents are submitted through the NRC's E-Filing system. To be 
timely, an electronic filing must be submitted to the E-Filing system 
no later than 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the due date. Upon receipt of 
a transmission, the E-Filing system time-stamps the document and sends 
the submitter an e-mail notice confirming receipt of the document. The 
E-Filing system also distributes an e-mail notice that provides access 
to the document to the NRC Office of the General Counsel and any others 
who have advised the Office of the Secretary that they wish to 
participate in the proceeding, so that the filer need not serve the 
documents on those participants separately. Therefore, applicants and 
other participants (or their counsel or representative) must apply for 
and receive a digital ID certificate before a hearing request/petition 
to intervene is filed so that they can obtain access to the document 
via the E-Filing system.
    A person filing electronically using the agency's adjudicatory E-
Filing system may seek assistance by contacting the NRC Meta System 
Help Desk through the ``Contact Us'' link located on the NRC Web site 
at http://www.nrc.gov/site-help/e-submittals.html, by e-mail at 
[email protected], or by a toll-free call at (866) 672-7640. The 
NRC Meta System Help Desk is available between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m., 
Eastern Time, Monday through Friday, excluding government holidays.
    Participants who believe that they have a good cause for not 
submitting documents electronically must file an exemption request, in 
accordance with 10 CFR 2.302(g), with their initial paper filing 
requesting authorization to continue to submit documents in paper 
format.
    Such filings must be submitted by: (1) First class mail addressed 
to the Office of the Secretary of the Commission, U.S. Nuclear 
Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, Attention: Rulemaking 
and Adjudications Staff; or (2) courier, express mail, or expedited 
delivery service to the Office of the Secretary, Sixteenth Floor, One 
White Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland 20852, 
Attention: Rulemaking and Adjudications Staff. Participants filing a 
document in this manner are responsible for serving the document on all 
other participants. Filing is considered complete by first-class mail 
as of the time of deposit in the mail, or by courier, express mail, or 
expedited delivery service upon depositing the document with the 
provider of the service. A presiding officer, having granted an 
exemption request from using E-Filing, may require a participant or 
party to use E-Filing if

[[Page 55365]]

the presiding officer subsequently determines that the reason for 
granting the exemption from use of E-Filing no longer exists.
    Documents submitted in adjudicatory proceedings will appear in 
NRC's electronic hearing docket, which is available to the public at 
http://ehd.nrc.gov/EHD_Proceeding/home.asp, unless excluded pursuant 
to an order of the Commission, or the presiding officer. Participants 
are requested not to include personal privacy information, such as 
social security numbers, home addresses, or home phone numbers in their 
filings, unless an NRC regulation or other law requires submission of 
such information. With respect to copyrighted works, except for limited 
excerpts that serve the purpose of the adjudicatory filings and would 
constitute a Fair Use application, participants are requested not to 
include copyrighted materials in their submission.
    If a person other than the licensee requests a hearing, that person 
shall set forth with particularity the manner in which his interest is 
adversely affected by this Order and shall address the criteria set 
forth in 10 CFR 2.309(d).
    In the absence of any request for hearing, or written approval of 
an extension of time in which to request a hearing, the provisions 
specified in Section IV above shall be final 20 days from the date of 
this Order. If an extension of time for requesting a hearing has been 
approved, the provisions specified in Section IV shall be final when 
the extension expires if a hearing request has not been received. An 
answer or a request for hearing shall not stay the immediate 
effectiveness of this order.

    Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 2nd day of September 2010.

    For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Roy P. Zimmerman,
 Director, Office of Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2010-22627 Filed 9-9-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590-01-P