97-33031. Hazardous Materials: Radiation Protection Program Requirement  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 245 (Monday, December 22, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 66898-66900]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-33031]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Department of Transportation
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    Research and Special Programs Administration
    
    
    
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    49 CFR Part 172 et al.
    
    
    
    Hazardous Materials: Radiation Protection Program Requirement; Final 
    Rules
    
    
    
    49 CFR Part 172 et al.
    
    
    
    Hazardous Materials: Withdrawal of Radiation Protection Program; 
    Proposed Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 62, No. 245 / Monday, December 22, 1997 / 
    Rules and Regulations
    
    [[Page 66898]]
    
    
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Research and Special Programs Administration
    
    49 CFR Parts 172, 174, 175, 176, and 177
    
    [Docket No. RSPA-97-2850 (HM-169B)]
    RIN 2137-AD14
    
    
    Hazardous Materials: Radiation Protection Program Requirement
    
    AGENCY: Research and Special Programs Administration (RSPA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Revocation of direct final rule; Reinstatement of regulations.
    
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    SUMMARY: This action restores regulatory text that was removed by a 
    September 2, 1997 direct final rule because interested parties 
    submitted adverse comments on it. In the direct final rule, RSPA 
    removed regulations that require persons who offer, accept for 
    transportation, or transport radioactive materials to develop and 
    maintain written radiation protection programs. The effect of this 
    action is that the radiation protection program requirements issued on 
    September 28, 1995 remain in effect. RSPA is publishing a notice of 
    proposed rulemaking elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register 
    inviting further comments on the need to withdraw or revise the 
    radiation protection program requirements.
    
    DATES: The direct final rule published at 62 FR 46214 is revoked and 
    the text of affected provisions in Subpart I of Part 172 and 
    Secs. 174.705, 175.706, 176.703 and 177.827 are reinstated as of 
    September 30, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dr. Fred D. Ferate II, Office of 
    Hazardous Materials Technology, (202) 366-4545 or Charles E. Betts, 
    Office of Hazardous Materials Standards, (202) 366-8553; RSPA, U.S. 
    Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW, Washington, DC 
    20590-0001.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On September 28, 1995, RSPA published a final rule in the Federal 
    Register under Docket No. HM-169A (60 FR 50292). The changes made in 
    Docket HM-169A were part of RSPA's ongoing effort to harmonize the 
    Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR; 49 CFR 171-180) with 
    international standards and to improve radiation safety for workers and 
    the public during the transportation of radioactive materials.
        One of the substantive regulatory changes under Docket HM-169A is a 
    requirement to develop and maintain a written radiation protection 
    program (RPP). The RPP requirements are found in Subpart I of Part 172 
    of the HMR. Implementation provisions for rail, air, vessel and highway 
    are found in Secs. 174.705, 175.706, 176.703, and 177.827, 
    respectively. The RPP requirements apply, with certain exceptions, to 
    each person who offers for transportation, accepts for transportation, 
    or transports Class 7 (radioactive) materials. Compliance with the RPP 
    requirements was required after October 1, 1997.
        Following publication of the September 28, 1995 final rule, many 
    comments were received concerning technical difficulties in 
    implementing the RPP requirements. Subsequently, on April 19, 1996, 
    RSPA published in the Federal Register a request for comments on the 
    implementation of the RPP requirements (Notice 96-7; 61 FR 17349). In 
    Notice 96-7, RSPA stated its intention to develop guidance for the 
    radioactive material industry to facilitate compliance with the RPP 
    requirements.
        RSPA received 23 comments in response to Notice 96-7. After 
    considering these comments, RSPA decided that the concerns expressed 
    could not all be resolved through guidance; new rulemaking was required 
    in order to adequately address many of the issues raised in the 
    comments. RSPA determined that the current RPP requirements in Subpart 
    I of Part 172, and Secs. 174.705, 175.706, 176.703 and 177.827 should 
    be withdrawn, because they could not be corrected through rulemaking 
    action prior to the October 1, 1997 compliance date. Accordingly, RSPA 
    published a direct final rule on September 2, 1997 [62 FR 46214], 
    withdrawing the RPP requirements effective September 30, 1997, unless 
    an adverse comment or notice of intent to file an adverse comment was 
    received by September 30, 1997. The preamble to the direct final rule 
    discussed the concerns expressed in response to Notice 96-7.
    
    II. Revocation of Direct Final Rule
    
        The procedures governing issuance of direct final rules are in 49 
    CFR 106.39. These procedures provide for public notice and opportunity 
    for comment subsequent to publication of a direct final rule. They also 
    provide that if an adverse comment or notice of intent to file an 
    adverse comment is received, RSPA will issue a timely document in the 
    Federal Register to confirm that fact and withdraw the direct final 
    rule in whole or in part. Under the procedures, RSPA may then 
    incorporate the adverse comment into a subsequent direct final rule or 
    may publish a notice of proposed rulemaking.
        Two persons submitted adverse comments on the direct final rule: 
    Caliber System, Inc. and Davis Transport Inc. In summary, these parties 
    asserted that RSPA did not adequately consider worker safety, but had 
    overemphasized the comments on economic ability to comply and 
    overstated the inconsistency and compliance assurance issues associated 
    with the rule.
        In this document, RSPA is providing notice that the provisions 
    removed by the September 2, 1997 direct final rule are reinstated 
    because two adverse comments were submitted.
        RSPA is publishing a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) elsewhere 
    in this issue of the Federal Register to address the merits of the 
    adverse comments and to request additional comments concerning the need 
    to revoke or revise the RPP requirements.
    
    III. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
    
        Under regulations implementing the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 
    ``* * * an agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not 
    required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays 
    a currently valid OMB control number.'' 5 CFR 1320.8(b)(iii)(6). RSPA 
    has reviewed the HM-169A final rule and the information collection 
    approval for radioactive materials transportation requirements. (OMB 
    control number 2137-0510 was issued in January 1995 in anticipation of 
    the final rule to be issued under Docket HM-169A. That approval expires 
    on January 31, 1998, unless renewed.) Based on that review, RSPA 
    concludes that the OMB approval is limited to information collection 
    requirements other than the RPP requirements contained in Subpart I of 
    Part 172.
        In the NPRM, which RSPA is publishing concerning the need to 
    withdraw or revise the RPP requirements, RSPA is requesting comments 
    concerning the annual information collection burden attributable to 
    those requirements, and RSPA will seek OMB approval if the RPP 
    requirements are retained.
    
    IV. 1997 Edition of 49 CFR Parts 100-185
    
        Title 49 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) was revised 
    effective October 1, 1997. Because of the lateness of this document, 
    Subpart I of Part 172 and Secs. 174.705, 175.706, 176.703 and 177.827, 
    do not appear in the 1997
    
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    edition of the CFR. RSPA is publishing the full text of the affected 
    regulations in this document, as follows.
    
    List of Subjects
    
    49 CFR Part 172
    
        Hazardous materials transportation, Hazardous waste, Labeling, 
    Packaging and containers, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    49 CFR Part 174
    
        Hazardous materials transportation, Radioactive materials, Railroad 
    safety.
    
    49 CFR Part 175
    
        Air carriers, Hazardous materials transportation, Radioactive 
    materials, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    49 CFR Part 176
    
        Hazardous materials transportation, Maritime carriers, Radioactive 
    materials, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    49 CFR Part 177
    
        Hazardous materials transportation, Motor carriers, Radioactive 
    materials, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
        In consideration of the foregoing, the following provisions in 49 
    CFR parts 172, 174, 175, 176, and 177 are reinstated to read as 
    follows:
    
    PART 172--HAZARDOUS MATERIALS TABLE, SPECIAL PROVISIONS, HAZARDOUS 
    MATERIALS COMMUNICATIONS, EMERGENCY RESPONSE INFORMATION, AND 
    TRAINING REQUIREMENTS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 172 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 5101-5127; 49 CFR 1.53.
    
        2. In Part 172, Subpart I is reinstated to read as follows:
    
    Subpart I--Radiation Protection Program
    
    Sec.
    172.801 Applicability of the radiation protection program.
    172.803 Radiation protection program.
    172.805 Recordkeeping and notifications.
    172.807 Transitional provisions.
    
    Subpart I--Radiation Protection Program
    
    
    Sec. 172.801  Applicability of the radiation protection program.
    
        (a) Scope. This subpart prescribes requirements for developing and 
    maintaining a radiation protection program.
        (b) Applicability. This subpart applies to persons who offer for 
    transportation, accept for transportation, or transports Class 7 
    (radioactive) materials.
    
    
    Sec. 172.803  Radiation protection program.
    
        Each person who offers for transportation, accepts for 
    transportation, or transports Class 7 (radioactive) materials must 
    develop, implement and maintain a written radiation protection program 
    in accordance with the following:
        (a) Radiation exposures must be kept as low as reasonably 
    achievable (ALARA), with economic and social factors being taken into 
    account.
        (b) Radiation exposures must be controlled such that:
        (1) An occupationally exposed hazmat employee's annual effective 
    dose equivalent for occupational radiation exposure will not exceed 
    12.5 mSv (1.25 rem) in any 3 month period or 50 mSv (5 rem) in any 12 
    month period. For workers under the age of eighteen, the radiation dose 
    will not exceed 1.250 mSv (0.125 rem) in any 3 month period or 5.0 mSv 
    (0.5 rem) in any 12 month period;
        (2) Radiation exposures to members of the general public must be 
    less than 0.02 mSv (2 mrem) per hour. This level will be measured as if 
    an individual were present for an hour in any area where the general 
    public could be exposed to radiation during the course of 
    transportation, except that, if there is an occurrence where the dose 
    to a member of the general public equals or exceeds 0.02 mSv (2 mrem) 
    in one hour, the program must provide limits that will prevent an 
    individual from receiving cumulative doses totaling 1.0 mSv (100 mrem) 
    in any week or 5.0 mSv (500 mrem) in any twelve-month period;
        (3) The radiation dose to an embryo-fetus in a pregnant female 
    occupationally exposed hazmat employee, who has declared her pregnancy 
    to her employer, must not exceed 5.0 mSv (500 mrem) during the 
    pregnancy. This limit is to be achieved by limiting the radiation dose 
    of the declared pregnant worker to not more than 5.0 mSv (500 mrem) 
    during the nine months and not greater than 0.5 mSv (50 mrem) in any 
    one month; and
        (4) The radiation doses received by occupationally exposed hazmat 
    employees must be monitored by radiation dosimetry devices.
        (c) The Environmental Protection Agency report entitled ``Radiation 
    Protection Guidance to Federal Agencies for Occupational Exposure 
    (January 1987)''. This document is available from the U.S. 
    Environmental Protection Agency, Washington, DC 20460.
        (d) Exceptions. (1) The requirements of this subpart do not apply 
    to:
        (i) Persons who offer for transportation or transport less than 200 
    TI, not including TI calculated for criticality control purposes, of 
    packages in a 12-month period; or
        (ii) Those persons whose operations will not result in a hazmat 
    employee receiving an exposure of 5 mSv (500 mrem) or more per year. 
    This evaluation must consider the hazmat employers Class 7 
    (radioactive) materials transportation activities for a period of at 
    least 12 months. An evaluation must be conducted by a person 
    experienced with radiation protection programs and transportation 
    regulations and programs. The evaluator's competency may be evidenced 
    by being certified by the American Board of Health Physics, or by a 
    letter of recommendation from a State Radiation Official listed in the 
    most current issue of the ``Directory of Personnel Responsible For 
    Radiological Health Programs'' published annually by the Conference of 
    Radiation Control Program Directors, Frankfort, KY.
        (2) The requirements of this subpart may be satisfied by any 
    radiation protection program that has been approved by an appropriate 
    federal or state agency.
        (e) Guidance. (1) Each hazmat employer should review and follow the 
    guidance provided in the following documents when establishing and 
    maintaining their radiation protection program:
        (i) National Council on Radiation Protection and Measurements 
    (NCRP) Report No. 59, ``Operational Radiation Safety Program (1978)''. 
    The guidance in this report should be tailored to the practical needs 
    and operations of the hazmat employer and their occupationally exposed 
    hazmat employees.
        (ii) NCRP Report No. 116, ``Limitation of Exposure to Ionizing 
    Radiation (1993)''.
        (2) The reports referenced in paragraph (e)(1) of this section are 
    available from NCRP Publications, 7910 Woodmont Avenue, Bethesda, MD 
    20814.
    
    
    Sec. 172.805  Recordkeeping and notifications.
    
        (a) A hazmat employer must document their radiation protection 
    program and maintain written records of the radiation protection 
    program activities, including dosimetry records, described in this 
    subpart. These records must be made available to the Associate 
    Administrator for Hazardous Materials
    
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    Safety or other authorized officials in written form within seven days 
    of a written request.
        (b) A hazmat employer must keep a record of the radiation dose that 
    each hazmat employee has received and provide it to the employee in 
    reasonable time following a request during employment and no more than 
    three months after end of employment.
        (c) Each hazmat employer must notify the Associate Administrator 
    for Hazardous Materials Safety, in writing, if a hazmat employee 
    receives a dose exceeding 12.5 mSv (1250 mrem) in any calendar quarter 
    or 50 mSv (5,000 mrem) in one year, or if a member of the general 
    public is likely to receive a dose exceeding 5 mSv (500 mrem) in one 
    year as a result of the hazmat employer's transportation activities. 
    Such a notification must be made as soon as practicable following 
    awareness of the occurrence.
        (d) If an offeror or carrier of Class 7 (radioactive) materials is 
    not required to establish a radiation protection program, they must 
    develop and keep records which demonstrate why a program is not 
    required (i.e., either the total TI of packages transported in any 12 
    month period is less than 200, or that the current Class 7 
    (radioactive) materials transport activities are the same as the 
    activities that were reviewed by a competent radiation protection 
    specialist whose evaluation demonstrated that no worker will receive a 
    dose exceeding 5 mSv (500 mrem) in one year).
    
    
    Sec. 172.807  Transitional provisions.
    
        Compliance with the requirements of this subpart is required after 
    October 1, 1997.
    
    PART 174--CARRIAGE BY RAIL
    
        3. The authority citation for part 174 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 5101-5127; 49 CFR 1.53.
    
        4. Section 174.705 is reinstated to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 174.705  Radiation protection program.
    
        Unless otherwise excepted, a carrier shall not transport a Class 7 
    (radioactive) material by rail unless each of its occupationally 
    exposed hazmat employees is under a radiation protection program that 
    complies with the requirements of subpart I of part 172 of this 
    subchapter.
    
    PART 175--CARRIAGE BY AIRCRAFT
    
        5. The authority citation for part 175 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 5101-5127; 49 CFR 1.53.
    
        6. Section 175.706 is reinstated to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 175.706  Radiation protection program.
    
        Unless otherwise excepted, a carrier shall not transport a Class 7 
    (radioactive) material by aircraft unless each of its occupationally 
    exposed hazmat employees is under a radiation protection program that 
    complies with the requirements of subpart I of part 172 of this 
    subchapter.
    
    PART 176--CARRIAGE BY VESSEL
    
        7. The authority citation for part 176 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 5101-5127; 49 CFR 1.53.
    
        8. Section 176.703 is reinstated to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 176.703  Radiation protection program.
    
        Unless otherwise excepted, a carrier shall not transport a Class 7 
    (radioactive) material by vessel unless each of its occupationally 
    exposed hazmat employees is under a radiation protection program that 
    complies with the requirements of subpart I of part 172 of this 
    subchapter.
    
    PART 177--CARRIAGE BY PUBLIC HIGHWAY
    
        9. The authority citation for part 177 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 5101-5127; 49 CFR 1.53.
    
        10. Section 177.827 is reinstated to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 177.827  Radiation protection program.
    
        Unless otherwise excepted, a carrier shall not transport a Class 7 
    (radioactive) material by motor vehicle unless each of its 
    occupationally exposed hazmat employees is under a radiation protection 
    program that complies with the requirements of subpart I of part 172 of 
    this subchapter.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on December 12, 1997, under authority 
    delegated in 49 CFR Part 1.
    Kelley S. Coyner,
    Acting Administrator.
    [FR Doc. 97-33031 Filed 12-19-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-60-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
12/22/1997
Department:
Research and Special Programs Administration
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Revocation of direct final rule; Reinstatement of regulations.
Document Number:
97-33031
Dates:
The direct final rule published at 62 FR 46214 is revoked and the text of affected provisions in Subpart I of Part 172 and Secs. 174.705, 175.706, 176.703 and 177.827 are reinstated as of September 30, 1997.
Pages:
66898-66900 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. RSPA-97-2850 (HM-169B)
RINs:
2137-AD14: Hazardous Materials: Radiation Protection Program Requirement
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2137-AD14/hazardous-materials-radiation-protection-program-requirement
PDF File:
97-33031.pdf
CFR: (9)
49 CFR 12.5
49 CFR 172.801
49 CFR 172.803
49 CFR 172.805
49 CFR 172.807
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