[Federal Register Volume 64, Number 78 (Friday, April 23, 1999)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19868-19878]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 99-10190]
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NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
10 CFR Part 55
RIN 3150-AF62
Initial Licensed Operator Examination Requirements
AGENCY: Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is amending its
regulations to allow nuclear power facility licensees to prepare,
proctor, and grade the required written examinations and to prepare the
required operating tests that the NRC uses to evaluate the competence
of individuals applying for operator licenses at those plants. The
amendment requires facility licensees that elect to prepare the
examinations to prepare the examinations in accordance with NRC
operator licensing examination standards for power reactors; establish,
implement, and maintain procedures to control examination security and
integrity; submit, upon approval by an authorized representative of the
facility licensee, each examination and test to the NRC for review and
approval; and proctor and grade the written examinations upon NRC
approval. In making this final rule change, the NRC will continue to
administer (i.e., manage and oversee) the initial operator licensing
examination process by: Developing the generic fundamentals
examinations (which are also proctored by facility licensees);
reviewing and approving the facility-developed, site-specific written
examinations and operating tests; and independently conducting and
grading both the dynamic simulator and walk-through portions of the
operating test, which is considered the most performance-based aspect
of the licensing process and permits the NRC to evaluate the operator
and senior operator applicants' competence under normal and abnormal
plant conditions. The amendment preserves the NRC's authority to
prepare the examinations and tests in lieu of licensees and to exercise
its discretion and reject a power reactor facility licensee's
determination to prepare, proctor, and grade the written examinations
and prepare the operating tests. The Commission is concerned with
examination integrity; therefore, the amendment will also revise the
regulations to ensure that applicants, licensees, and facility
licensees understand the scope of the regulation.
EFFECTIVE DATE: This final rule is effective on October 20, 1999.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Siegfried Guenther, Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC
20555-0001, telephone: 301-415-1056; e-mail:sxg@nrc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
Section 107 of the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954, as amended,
requires the NRC to determine the qualifications of individuals
applying for an operator's license, to prescribe uniform conditions for
licensing these individuals, and to issue licenses as appropriate.
Pursuant to the AEA, 10 CFR Part 55 requires an applicant for an
operator license to pass an examination that satisfies the basic
content requirements specified in the regulation. The licensing
examination consists of the following parts: (1) A written generic
fundamentals examination (covering reactor theory, thermodynamics, and
components) that license applicants have to pass as a prerequisite for
taking the site-specific examination; (2) a site-specific written
examination covering plant systems, emergency and abnormal plant
procedures, and plant-wide generic knowledge and abilities; and (3) a
site-specific operating test consisting of three categories, including
a crew-based, dynamic simulator performance demonstration, an
individual, task-based walk-through covering control room and in-plant
systems, and various plant administrative requirements. Although
neither the AEA nor Part 55 specifies who must prepare, proctor, or
grade these examinations, the NRC has traditionally performed those
tasks itself or through its contract examiners. The NRC and its
contract examiners have used the guidance in NUREG-1021, ``Operator
Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors,'' once titled
``Operator Licensing Examiner Standards,'' to prepare the initial
operator licensing examinations. This document has been revised as
experience has been acquired in preparing the examinations. The current
version is designated Revision 8.1
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\1\ Copies are available for inspection or copying for a fee
from the NRC Public Document Room (PDR) at 2120 L Street NW,
Washington, DC 20555-0001; the PDR's mailing address is Mail Stop
LL-6; telephone is 202-634-3273; fax is 202-634-3343. Revision 8 of
NUREG-1021 is also available for downloading from the internet at
http://www.nrc.gov.
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In accordance with 10 CFR 170.12(i), the NRC's staff and
contractual costs are recovered from facility licensees that receive
examination services. In Fiscal
[[Page 19869]]
Year (FY) 1995, the NRC spent approximately $3 million on contractor
support for the preparation and administration of the initial operator
licensing examinations and for support of requalification program
inspections. On March 24, 1995, in SECY-95-075, ``Proposed Changes to
the NRC Operator Licensing Program,'' the staff advised the Commission
of its intent to eliminate the use of contractors by allowing facility
licensees to prepare the examinations. The NRC staff's proposal was
motivated by the general improvement in the performance level of power
reactor facility licensees' training programs, the NRC's continuing
efforts to streamline the functions of the Federal government, and the
need to accommodate anticipated resource reductions.
On April 18, 1995, the Commission approved the NRC staff's proposal
to initiate a transition process to revise the operator licensing
program and directed the NRC staff to consider carefully the experience
from pilot examinations before fully implementing the changes. On
August 15, 1995, the NRC issued Generic Letter (GL) 95-06, ``Changes in
the Operator Licensing Program,'' \1\ outlining the revised examination
development process and soliciting volunteers to participate in pilot
examinations to evaluate and refine the methodology.
Between October 1, 1995, and April 5, 1996, the NRC reviewed and
approved 22 operator licensing examinations, including both the written
examinations and the operating tests, prepared by facility licensees as
part of a pilot program. These examinations were prepared using the
guidance in Revision 7 (Supplement 1) of NUREG-1021\1\ and the
additional guidance in GL 95-06.
The results of the pilot examinations were discussed in SECY-96-
123, ``Proposed Changes to the NRC Operator Licensing Program,'' dated
June 10, 1996. Based on the results of the pilot program, the NRC staff
recommended that the Commission approve the implementation of the new
examination process on a voluntary basis until rulemaking could be
completed to require all power reactor facility licensees to prepare
the entire initial operator licensing examination and to proctor and
grade the written portion of the examination. On July 23, 1996, the
Commission authorized the staff to continue the pilot examination
process on a voluntary basis and directed the staff to develop a
rulemaking plan to justify the changes that would be necessary to 10
CFR Part 55. The Commission also directed the staff to address a number
of additional items (e.g., pros, cons, and vulnerabilities) regarding
the revised examination process to facilitate a Commission decision on
whether to implement the revised process on an industrywide basis.
With Commission approval, the NRC staff resumed conducting pilot-
style examinations on August 19, 1996, and by the end of June 1998 had
reviewed, approved, and administered 80 additional examinations that
were developed by facility licensees. This raised the total number of
examinations completed using the pilot process to 102.
On September 25, 1996, the NRC staff forwarded the rulemaking plan
and a response to the additional items to the Commission in SECY-96-
206, ``Rulemaking Plan for Amendments to 10 CFR part 55 to Change
Licensed Operator Examination Requirements.'' SECY-96-206 identified a
number of areas (i.e., quality and consistency, independence and public
perception, examination security, NRC resources, program stability, and
examiner proficiency) in which the NRC could be more vulnerable under
the revised examination process and described the measures that the NRC
has taken to manage the vulnerabilities. On December 17, 1996, the
Commission directed the staff to proceed with the proposed rulemaking.
The NRC staff forwarded the proposed rule (SECY-97-079, ``Proposed
Rule--Initial Licensed Operator Examination Requirements'') to the
Commission on April 8, 1997, and on June 26, 1997, the Commission
approved publication of the proposed rule for a 75-day comment period.
The proposed rule was published in the Federal Register (62 FR 42426)
on August 7, 1997. After the public comment period expired on October
21, 1997, 11 comment letters were received. Two additional comment
letters arrived after the expiration date but were also considered in
the development of the final rule.
As written, the proposed rule would have required all power reactor
facility licensees to prepare their operator licensing examinations and
to proctor and grade the written portion of those examinations.
Although the proposed rule would have imposed new requirements on
facility licensees, the NRC took the position that the backfit rule, 10
CFR 50.109, did not apply because the shift in responsibility for
preparing the examinations would not: (1) Constitute a ``modification
of the procedures required to operate a facility'' within the scope of
the backfit rule; (2) affect the basic procedures for qualifying
licensed operators; or (3) require facility licensees to alter their
organizational structures. However, based upon further review after
issuing the proposed rule, the NRC has concluded that there is
insufficient basis to support the original position. Therefore, the NRC
has decided to revise the final rule so power reactor facility
licensees may elect to prepare their written examinations and operating
tests (and proctor and grade the written examinations) in accordance
with NUREG-1021, or to have the NRC prepare the examinations, thereby
making a backfit analysis unnecessary.
Discussion
The pilot examinations demonstrated that the revised process, under
which facility licensees prepare the written examinations and operating
tests, is generally effective and efficient. From the time the pilot
program began in October 1995 through the end of June 1998, the NRC
staff reviewed, approved, and administered a total of 102 examinations
that were voluntarily developed by facility licensees under the pilot
examination and transition program.
Facility licensees prepared the written examinations and the
operating tests, proctored the written examinations, and graded the
written examinations using the guidance provided by the NRC in GL 95-06
during the early stages of the pilot program, and subsequently in
interim Revision 8 of NUREG-1021, ``Operator Licensing Examination
Standards for Power Reactors.'' NRC examiners thoroughly reviewed the
examinations and tests to determine if they were consistent with NRC
standards, directed facility licensees to make whatever changes were
necessary to achieve NRC standards if the submitted examinations and
tests were deficient, and approved the examinations and tests before
they were administered. NRC examiners independently administered all of
the operating tests, reviewed the written examination grading, and made
the final licensing recommendations for approval by NRC management.
Comments from the NRC chief examiners who evaluated the pilot
examinations indicate that the quality and level of difficulty of the
licensee-prepared examinations (when modified as directed by the NRC)
were generally comparable to the examinations prepared by the NRC
(i.e., by the staff or NRC contractors). The passing rate on the 102
pilot-style examinations administered through the end of June 1998 was
only slightly lower than the passing rate on the power reactor
licensing examinations administered
[[Page 19870]]
during FY 1995, the last year in which all examinations were prepared
by the NRC. However, considering the historical fluctuation in the
average examination passing rates and the other factors (e.g., training
program quality and screening of applicants by facility licensees) that
could be responsible for some or all of the observed difference, the
Commission has concluded that the observed change in the passing rates
is not significant. The average grades on the facility-prepared, NRC-
approved written examinations were also comparable if slightly lower
than the grades on examinations prepared by the NRC during FY 1995.
These data support the conclusion that the facility-prepared
examinations are discriminating at a conservative and acceptable level
and that the revised examination process is effective. Therefore, the
fact that some facility licensees will be preparing the examinations
with NRC review and approval, should have no negative effect on the
safe operation of the plants.
Although the NRC-approved examinations were comparable to NRC-
prepared examinations, essentially all of the examinations prepared by
facility licensees required some changes subsequent to NRC review, and
many of the examinations required significant rework. The NRC had
originally believed that, with training and experience, the industry
would quickly gain proficiency in preparing the examinations, but the
overall quality of the examinations submitted to the NRC during the
pilot program did not improve as expected over time. Although
approximately half of the 17 facility licensees that had prepared more
than one examination by the end of FY 1997 did maintain or improve the
quality of their second or third examination submittals, the quality of
the other facility licensees' second or third examinations was lower.
Consequently, the NRC has asked the industry to address the issue of
examination quality and determine the need for additional training on
examination development. The NRC will continue to: (1) Direct facility
licensees that prepare their examinations to revise the examinations as
necessary to achieve an acceptable level of quality and discrimination;
(2) withhold approval of those examinations that do not meet NRC
standards; (3) oversee the regional implementation of the operator
licensing process to ensure consistency; (4) address significant
deficiencies in the submitted examinations as licensee performance
issues in the examination reports, as appropriate; (5) conduct or
participate in workshops, as necessary, to ensure that facility
licensees understand the NRC's examination criteria; and (6) prepare
the licensing examinations for those facility licensees that elect not
to prepare their own examinations.
With regard to the efficiency of the revised examination process,
the experience to date supports the conclusion that the average
industry cost will not differ significantly from the cost of NRC-
prepared examinations. Comments from the industry reflect that the cost
for some facility licensees to prepare the examination was higher than
it would have been for an NRC-prepared examination; however, other
licensees prepared good quality examinations at lower cost than the
NRC. The industry generally attributed the higher cost to the revised
examination and administrative criteria under the pilot examination
process. Although the NRC acknowledges that the revised criteria
contribute somewhat to the elevated cost, many of the variables that
affect the quality and, consequently, the cost of the examination will
be under the facility licensees' control and can present an opportunity
for cost savings. For example, facility licensees that elect to prepare
the examinations will be able to manage the size and quality of their
examination banks and the training and experience of the personnel they
select to write their licensing examinations. The revised examination
process allows facility licensees to control the development of the
examinations and holds them responsible for their quality. If a
facility licensee submits an acceptable quality examination, it is
likely to save resources despite the additional administrative
criteria; however, if the facility licensee submits an examination that
requires many changes, it will likely cost more than if the NRC had
prepared the examination.
Comments from the NRC chief examiners who worked on the pilot
examinations indicate that the average amount of time spent reviewing
and revising the facility-prepared examinations was generally
consistent with the estimates developed before starting the pilot
program. Although a number (approximately 20 percent in FY 1997) of the
examinations required significantly more NRC effort than originally
anticipated to bring them up to the NRC's standards, the resource
burden was generally offset by other examinations that required less
effort to review and revise. The increased efficiency of the revised
examination process has enabled the NRC to eliminate the use of
contractors in the operator licensing program and conduct the initial
operator licensing and requalification inspection programs with the
existing NRC staff. Before initiating the pilot examination and
transition process at the beginning of FY 1996, the NRC spent
approximately $3 million per year on contractor assistance for initial
examinations and requalification inspections. In FY 1997, when facility
licensees prepared approximately 75 percent of the examinations, the
NRC's spending on contractor assistance for the licensing examinations
and requalification inspections decreased to approximately $0.5
million. The FY 1998 and FY 1999 budgets reflect the complete
elimination of contractor support for the operator licensing program
(with the exception of the generic fundamentals examination). Future
resource requirements for the operator licensing program will, in large
part, be driven by changes in the level of facility participation in
the voluntary examination development process.
In order to maintain the integrity of the operator licensing
written examinations required by 10 CFR 55.41 and 55.43 and the
operating tests required by 10 CFR 55.45, the Commission has amended
the final rule by adding a requirement for those power reactor facility
licensees that elect to prepare, proctor, and grade the written
examinations and prepare the operating tests, to establish, implement,
and maintain procedures that control the security and integrity of
those examinations and tests. The Commission's regulations in 10 CFR
55.49 already prohibit applicants, licensees (operators), and facility
licensees from engaging in any activity that compromises the integrity
of any examination or test required by 10 CFR 55. However, based on the
number of examination security incidents that have occurred since the
pilot examination program began, the Commission has concluded that
applicants, licensees, and facility licensees may not be aware that the
requirements of 10 CFR 55.49 cover more than just those activities
directly involving the physical administration of an examination or
test. In that regard, the Commission considers the integrity of an
examination or test to be compromised if any activity occurs that could
affect the equitable and consistent administration of the examination
or test, regardless of whether the activity takes place before, during,
or after the administration of the examination or test. Therefore, in
addition to requiring certain facility licensees to establish,
[[Page 19871]]
implement, and maintain procedures that control the security and
integrity of the examinations and tests, the Commission is also
amending 10 CFR 55.49 to clarify the scope of that regulation.
Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 identifies a number of examination
security and integrity guidelines (e.g., physical security precautions,
including the use of simulators and the mailing of examination
materials) that the affected facility licensees (i.e., those that elect
to prepare their own written examinations and operating tests) should
consider when establishing their procedures. Although the security and
integrity guidelines in NUREG-1021 are not regulatory requirements,
once a facility licensee has established its required procedures, the
Commission intends to monitor this area to ensure that the procedures
are implemented and maintained.
Consistent with the examination security and integrity guidelines
in NUREG-1021, facility employees with specific knowledge of any NRC
examination before it is given should not communicate the examination
contents to unauthorized individuals and should not participate in any
further instruction of the students scheduled to take the examination.
Before they are given access to the examination, facility employees are
expected to sign a statement acknowledging their understanding of the
restrictions. When the examinations are complete, the same employees
are expected to sign a post-examination statement certifying that they
have not knowingly compromised the examination.
NRC examiners are expected to be attentive to the facility
licensee's examination security measures, to review the security
expectations with the facility licensee at the time the examination
arrangements are confirmed, and to report any security concerns to NRC
management. If the NRC determines during its preparation that an
examination may have been compromised, it will not administer the
examination until the scope of the potential compromise is determined
and measures can be taken to address the integrity and validity of the
examination. Pursuant to 10 CFR 55.51, the NRC must make a
determination before issuing a license that the test or examination is
valid, meeting the requirements of the AEA and the Commission's
regulations. If the compromise is discovered after the examination has
been administered, the NRC will not complete the licensing action for
the affected applicants until the NRC staff can make a determination
regarding the validity of the examination. If the compromise is not
discovered until after the licensing action is complete, the NRC will
reevaluate the licensing decision. If the NRC determines that the
original licensing decision was based on an invalid examination, it
will take appropriate action pursuant to 10 CFR 55.61(b)(2).
As a separate action, the Commission is modifying its ``General
Statement of Policy and Procedures for NRC Enforcement Actions''
(Enforcement Policy) to provide examples of violations that may be used
as guidance in determining the appropriate severity level for
violations involving the compromise of an examination or test. The NRC
staff will evaluate all potential compromises of an examination or test
required by 10 CFR 55 to determine whether a violation of 10 CFR 55.49
has occurred. A compromise that is not detected before a license is
issued would be considered a significant regulatory concern and
categorized at least at Severity Level III. However, depending on the
circumstances as explained in the Enforcement Policy, the severity
level may be increased or decreased. The NRC intends to utilize its
enforcement authority including, as warranted, civil penalties and
orders against individuals and facility licensees who: (1) Compromise
the integrity of an examination in violation of 10 CFR 55.49; (2)
commit deliberate misconduct in violation of 10 CFR 50.5; or (3)
provide incomplete or inaccurate information to the NRC in violation of
10 CFR 50.9. In addition, cases involving willful violations may be
referred to the Department of Justice for criminal prosecution.
The Commission has reviewed the vulnerabilities and costs
associated with the revised examination process and considered the
measures that the NRC staff has taken to mitigate the vulnerabilities.
With regard to examination quality and level of difficulty, the
Commission acknowledges that the effectiveness of the revised
examination process is contingent on the NRC staff's review of the
facility-proposed examinations to ensure that NRC standards are
achieved. The Commission has concluded, based on the results of the
pilot examination program, that the controls implemented by the NRC
staff will provide reasonable assurance that the examinations that are
administered to the license applicants will provide a valid and
consistent basis upon which to make the licensing decisions regardless
of whether the examinations were prepared by the facility licensee or
the NRC. The Commission also realizes that the frequency of examination
security incidents and the risk of undetected compromises may increase
for those examinations that are prepared by facility licensees.
However, the Commission is confident that the measures discussed above
will sufficiently control the vulnerability in this area.
The Commission is aware that the original expectation that facility
licensees would eventually realize cost savings under the revised
process as they gain proficiency in preparing the examinations has not
yet been realized. However, the Commission has concluded that neither
the increased vulnerabilities nor the absence of clear industry cost
benefit provides sufficient basis for discontinuing the revised
examination process. The Commission also finds that the revised
examination process is more consistent with the NRC's other oversight
programs because it requires NRC examiners to review materials prepared
by facility licensees. The revised process enables NRC examiners to
focus more on the psychometric quality of examinations (e.g., the
cognitive level at which the questions are written and the plausibility
of the distractors or wrong answer choices) prepared by the facility
licensees than on the technical accuracy of the examinations, which was
their primary focus when the examinations were prepared by NRC
contractors. This shift in the NRC examiners' focus, coupled with the
facility licensees' technical expertise, has the potential to improve
the overall quality of the facility-prepared licensing examinations.
In the proposed rule, the NRC took the position that the backfit
rule (10 CFR 50.109) did not apply to this rulemaking. However, in its
review of the final rule, the Committee To Review Generic Requirements
(CRGR) opined that it was inclined to view the rule as a backfit and
recommended that the provisions of the proposed rule be implemented on
a voluntary basis, which would not constitute a backfit. Although the
NRC had considered and dismissed that alternative during the proposed
rulemaking because of concerns regarding resource planning, it has
since concluded that the benefits of the revised examination process
(e.g., improved regulatory efficiency and greater licensee control over
the examination costs) remain substantial even if every facility
licensee is not required to prepare its own examinations. Rather than
terminate the pilot program and resume the NRC-
[[Page 19872]]
prepared examination process on an industrywide basis, the NRC has
decided to amend the final rule to give facility licensees the option
to prepare their own examinations or to have them prepared by the NRC.
Summary of Public Comments
The 75-day public comment period began when the notice of proposed
rulemaking was published in the Federal Register (62 FR 42426) on
August 7, 1997, and closed on October 21, 1997. The notice (FRN)
requested public comment on the proposed rule, on the implementation
guidance in interim Revision 8 of NUREG-1021, and on the following two
questions:
1. Are there portions of the operator exams that are common to all
licensees, and would, therefore, be more efficiently developed by the
NRC?
2. Is the conclusion in the regulatory analysis correct that it
would be less costly for each licensee to prepare its own initial
operator examinations to be reviewed, revised, and administered by the
NRC, than to have one NRC contractor prepare these exams for all
licensed operators with the costs to be reimbursed by licensee fees?
The NRC received 13 comment letters on the proposed rule; two of
the letters arrived after the comment period closed, but they were
considered nonetheless. The respondents included three NRC examiners,
one contract examiner, five nuclear utilities and one utility employee,
one nonpower reactor facility licensee, the State of Illinois, and the
Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI), which submitted its comments on behalf
of the nuclear power industry. Copies of the public comments are
available in the NRC Public Document Room, 2120 L Street, NW (Lower
Level), Washington, DC, and on the internet at ``http://
ruleforum.llnl.gov/cgi-bin/rulemake?source=OE__PRULE''.
Seven of the respondents (three NRC examiners, one contract
examiner, one utility employee, one nonpower facility licensee, and the
State of Illinois) recommended that the rule change be disapproved.
Five of the industry respondents (NEI and four utilities) supported the
rule change; however, one utility endorsed NEI's comments but stated
that it did not agree with the proposed rule in its present form. NEI
and two of the utilities stated that they would rather continue with a
voluntary program because it would allow greater flexibility for those
facility licensees with small training staffs. However, they would
support mandatory participation with the rule change rather than return
to the previous process under which NRC contractors wrote most of the
examinations.
Those comments related to the two specific questions raised in the
proposed rule and those that have a direct bearing on the rule are
discussed below. The comments are categorized as they relate to reactor
safety and the vulnerabilities discussed in SECY-96-206 (i.e., quality
and consistency, independence and public perception, security, NRC
resources, and examiner proficiency). The NRC received no comments
related to program stability.
One NRC examiner, NEI, four of the utilities, and the utility
employee also provided specific comments and recommendations regarding
the implementation guidance in interim Revision 8 of NUREG-1021. Those
comments are addressed in Attachment 1 of the Commission (SECY) paper
associated with this rulemaking. A copy of the SECY is available in the
NRC Public Document Room, on the internet at http://www.nrc.gov, or
from Siegfried Guenther, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, at 301-415-1056 or e-mail at
sxg@nrc.gov.
Comment: With regard to the first specific question included in the
proposed rulemaking, 2 of the 13 respondents (NEI and one utility)
stated that all of the common material is already included in the
generic fundamentals examination (GFE) and that the remaining elements
are best covered as part of the site-specific examination.
Response: It appears that the current allocation of topics between
the GFE and site-specific written examinations is generally perceived
to be an efficient method of covering the topics required by 10 CFR
55.41 and 55.43. Therefore, the Commission finds no basis for changing
the process to have the NRC separately develop portions of the initial
examination that would be common to all facilities.
Comment: Seven of the 13 respondents (NEI, two utilities, a utility
employee, and three examiners) directly or indirectly addressed the
second specific question in their letters. NEI and one utility stated
that the revised examination criteria in interim Revision 8 of NUREG-
1021 have increased the level of effort and will result in higher
licensing fees regardless of who prepares the examinations. However,
NEI and another utility agreed that comparing the cost of facility-
prepared examinations to those prepared by the NRC is difficult, but
they concluded that it should be less costly for facility licensees to
prepare the examinations than to have the NRC prepare them under the
same criteria.
NEI also stated that the relative cost of the two examination
processes should not be the only factor in deciding whether to proceed
with the rulemaking that would have required all power reactor facility
licensees to prepare their licensing examinations. NEI indicated that
preparing higher cognitive level questions requires detailed plant
knowledge, better provided by facility licensees, and that the revised
process (which has eliminated the use of NRC contractors to administer
the operating tests) will allow NRC staff to evaluate each applicant
without relying on third-party observers.
Two NRC examiners, one contract examiner, and a utility employee
asserted that the facility licensees' cost has increased under the
revised examination process. They cited various reasons for the
increased cost, including training personnel to write the examinations
and then restricting them from training the applicants, and upgrading
equipment to maintain examination security. The NRC examiners based
their comments on feedback from facility training personnel; one
examiner indicated that it took facility licensees an average of 700
hours to prepare each examination. The utility employee stated that the
rule change will simply transfer the cost of contractors from the NRC
to the utilities.
Response: The NRC acknowledges that the revised administrative
criteria in particular (e.g., the restrictions on which facility
training personnel would be allowed to write the pilot examinations and
the need to document the source of the test items) have probably caused
the cost of preparing the examinations to be somewhat higher than it
would have been if facility licensees had been allowed to prepare the
examinations using the same criteria that applied to the NRC and its
contractors before starting the pilot program. However, when the NRC
first developed the revised examination process, with its additional
administrative criteria, the NRC still believed that the cost for
facility licensees to prepare the examinations would be offset by the
reduction in the licensing fees and that a cost savings could be
realized as facility licensees gained experience with the process. Many
of the facility licensees that participated in the pilot program
demonstrated that it is possible to prepare an acceptable quality
examination at the same or lower cost than the NRC or its contractors
could prepare a comparable examination. The
[[Page 19873]]
fact that a number of facility licensees did not prepare acceptable
examinations may be as much an indication of the licensees'
inefficiency and inexperience as it is a symptom of deficiencies in the
examination criteria. Those facility licensees that did not initially
submit acceptable examinations, eventually paid more in fees because of
the additional effort required for the NRC to review, and the
licensees' staffs to rewrite, the examinations. Finally, it is possible
that the magnitude of the increase in effort and cost may be perceived
to be higher than it actually is because the industry had originally
expected to save money if the NRC would have allowed facility licensees
to prepare the examinations using the version of NUREG-1021 that was in
effect before beginning the pilot program.
With regard to the additional security costs cited by the
examiners, the Commission has stressed the importance of maintaining
examination security, but the NRC has not required facility licensees
to invest in additional physical security systems. However, the
frequency of security incidents since beginning the pilot examination
program has prompted the NRC to: (1) clarify the intent of 10 CFR 55.49
in the final rule; (2) amend the final examination rule to require
facility licensees that elect to prepare their examinations to
establish, implement, and maintain procedures to control examination
security and integrity; and (3) include additional security guidance in
the final version of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021. These actions will help
ensure, among other things, that facility licensees understand their
responsibility for maintaining control over the examination process.
The pilot examinations demonstrated that some of the people
assigned by facility licensees to develop the examinations did not have
sufficient expertise required to prepare good quality examination
materials consistent with NRC standards. As noted earlier, the NRC has
asked the industry to address the issue of examination quality and the
need for additional training on examination development. The NRC
acknowledges that the restrictions on the use of instructors to prepare
the licensing examinations may be partially responsible for limiting
the availability of qualified examination preparers. Moreover, the NRC
has concluded that the restrictions have placed an unnecessary burden
on facility licensees with minimal benefit and, therefore, has revised
the personnel restrictions in the final version of Revision 8 of NUREG-
1021 to allow facility instructors to prepare the licensing
examinations (including the written and operating test outlines, the
written examination questions, and the operating test details) without
regard to the amount of time they spent training the license
applicants. However, the instructors will still be precluded from
instructing the applicants once they begin working on the licensing
examination. This change is consistent with NRC policy regarding
instructor participation in requalification examinations and should
provide licensees that elect to prepare their examinations with
increased flexibility in managing their resources and possibly reduce
their costs.
The NRC has revised the regulatory analysis in response to the
public comments and lessons learned from the pilot program. The NRC has
also reevaluated the additional administrative criteria in interim
Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 and considers them reasonable and essential to
mitigate the vulnerabilities (e.g., quality, security, and conflict of
interest) of the new examination process and to facilitate the NRC
staff's review of the proposed examinations. These criteria are
retained in the final version of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021.
The issue of cost has lost much of its importance because the NRC
has decided to continue the revised examination process on a voluntary
basis rather than require each power reactor facility licensee to
prepare the examinations. It will be up to each facility licensee to
compare the cost of preparing its own examinations in accordance with
the criteria in the effective revision of NUREG-1021 with the cost of
having the NRC staff prepare the examinations and then make a decision
based on its available resources (and other considerations).
Comment: Two NRC examiners with pilot-examination experience
asserted that the quality of the simulator and walk-through tests has
decreased significantly and that, in most cases, the quality and
difficulty of the submitted examinations have been below NRC standards.
All four examiners who submitted comments cited various reasons why the
quality and difficulty of the facility-prepared examinations might be
lower than examinations prepared by the NRC or its contract examiners,
including: (1) the facility licensees' tendency to narrow the scope of
the operating test to those procedures that the facility believes are
important (and emphasized in the training program); and (2) the belief
that most facility training personnel do not have the expertise to
develop valid test items. Two NRC examiners asserted that the quality
of the examinations has not improved during the pilot program and is
not likely to improve because there is nothing to prevent licensees
from using different people to develop successive examinations. A
utility employee asserted that the utilities' limited contact with the
process by preparing an examination once every 18 to 24 months will not
foster consistency or develop skilled examination writers.
Two NRC examiners asserted that the elimination of NRC contract
examiners who participated in examinations across the four NRC regions
will be detrimental to examination consistency. One NRC examiner
asserted that the guidance in interim Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 is not
sufficiently prescriptive to ensure nationwide consistency in the level
of knowledge tested and the level of difficulty of the examinations and
that several specific changes should be included in NUREG-1021 to
address his concerns.
The State of Illinois asserted that the quality and consistency of
the written examination questions can be maintained because the NRC can
change and approve the questions before they are used. However, the
State also recommended that the NRC should compile the examination
questions and proctor the examinations (refer to the conflict-of-
interest discussion below).
According to NEI, the recent facility-prepared examinations were of
higher quality than the examinations prepared by the NRC before the
pilot program started. Many of the NRC-prepared examinations had to be
revised in response to the facility licensees' technical reviews.
Response: Essentially all of the facility-prepared examinations
required some changes and many required significant changes to make
them conform to the NRC's standards for quality and level of
difficulty. According to the questionnaires completed by the NRC chief
examiners responsible for the pilot examinations, the average facility-
prepared written examination required approximately 10 to 20 changes,
which is consistent with the number of changes often required on
examinations prepared by NRC contract examiners. Most NRC chief
examiners judged the final examinations (with the NRC's changes
incorporated) to be comparable to recent NRC-prepared examinations in
terms of quality and level of difficulty. Moreover, the fact that the
passing rate on the facility-prepared examinations is generally
consistent with the historical passing rate on examinations prepared by
the NRC suggests that the NRC-approved examinations have discriminated
at an
[[Page 19874]]
acceptable level and that they have provided an adequate basis for
licensing the applicants at those facilities.
Although the NRC expected that the proposed examination quality
would improve as facility licensees gained experience and familiarity
with the NRC's requirements and expectations, the overall quality of
examinations submitted to the NRC during the transition process did not
improve appreciably over time. Although approximately half of the 17
facility licensees that had prepared more than one examination by the
end of FY 1997 did maintain or improve the quality of their second or
third examination submittals, the quality of the other facility
licensees' second or third examinations was lower. Although it is
unclear to what extent the problems with proposed examination quality
and difficulty have been caused by a lack of sufficient expertise on
the part of the examination writers, the NRC has asked the industry to
address this issue. Furthermore, the NRC staff has conducted and
participated in a number of public meetings and workshops in an effort
to communicate its expectations to the facility employees who will be
preparing the examinations. Additional NRC and industry workshops will
be conducted to address examination quality and solicit industry
feedback.
In SECY-96-206, the NRC staff discussed the issues of examination
quality and consistency and how they might be affected when a large
number of facility employees assume the role that had been filled by a
smaller number of experienced NRC and contract examiners. The NRC
staff's comprehensive examination reviews versus the examination
criteria in NUREG-1021, in combination with supervisory reviews and the
examination oversight activities conducted by the Office of Nuclear
Reactor Regulation, should mitigate the vulnerability in this area.
Moreover, the industry and staff initiatives to improve the expertise
of the examination writers should eventually enhance the quality and
consistency of the facility-prepared examinations.
Comment: All four examiners who submitted comments, a nonpower
reactor facility licensee, and the State of Illinois asserted that
allowing the facility licensees to prepare the operator licensing
examinations decreases the level of independence and creates a conflict
of interest for facility personnel having responsibility for training
and licensing the operators. Their letters maintained that the new
process makes it possible for the utilities to ``teach the
examination,'' to test applicants only on what was taught, or to avoid
testing in areas with known difficulties. One NRC examiner noted that
the new process places training managers in a no-win situation because
if applicants fail the examination, the managers look like poor
trainers, and if the examination is too easy, the NRC gives them a bad
report. He and another NRC examiner asserted, based on their experience
during the pilot examinations, that some facility personnel openly
admitted that they would develop the easiest possible examination to
ensure that all their applicants would pass.
One NRC examiner noted that the NRC review and approval process
cannot adequately compensate for the conflict-of-interest problems
inherent in the revised examination process and recommended a change to
interim Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 that would limit the licensees'
latitude in selecting topics for the examination outline. The State of
Illinois suggested that the NRC should compile the questions and
proctor the examination to maintain more of the checks and balances
that existed under the old process.
The nonpower reactor facility licensee noted that most professional
licensing examinations are developed by independent agencies, and that
this fosters a sense of professionalism in the license applicants.
Response: The NRC agrees that the revised examination process
decreases the level of independence in the licensing process and may
create a potential conflict of interest for facility personnel involved
in preparing the examination. However, the Commission has concluded
that restricting the training activities of those individuals when they
become involved in preparing the licensing examination, in combination
with the NRC's enforcement authority, will adequately mitigate the
vulnerability in this area. Although the NRC has amended the final
version of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 to allow instructors to participate
in the examination development regardless of their involvement in
training the license applicants (as discussed above in response to
comments concerning the industry burden under the revised examination
process), the NRC has also amended NUREG-1021 to include an expectation
that facility licensees will use an objective, systematic process for
preparing the written examination outlines. This process enhancement
should limit the potential for bias in the selection of topics to be
evaluated on the written examination.
The NRC will continue to monitor the facility licensees'
examination development programs and implement additional restrictions,
as necessary, if actual bias problems are identified. Moreover, if the
NRC determines that a facility licensee has intentionally biased the
scope, content, or level of difficulty of an examination (i.e.,
compromised its integrity contrary to 10 CFR 55.49) to enhance the
chances that its applicants would pass the examination, the NRC will
utilize its enforcement authority including, as warranted, civil
penalties, orders against the individuals involved, and charging the
individuals involved with deliberate misconduct pursuant to 10 CFR
50.5.
Concerns regarding the potential for conflict of interest and the
frequency of security incidents since beginning the pilot examination
program have prompted the NRC to review the clarity of 10 CFR 55.49.
The regulation encompasses not only activities like cheating and lapses
in security but also activities that compromise the integrity or
validity of the examination itself (e.g., noncompliance with the
criteria designed to limit the potential for bias in the selection of
topics to be evaluated on the written examination). Therefore, the NRC
has concluded that it would be beneficial to amend 10 CFR 55.49 to
clarify its intent and to amend the examination rule to require power
reactor facility licensees that elect to prepare their licensing
examinations to establish procedures to control examination security
and integrity.
Comment: Three NRC examiners and the State of Illinois asserted
that the revised examination process increases the threat to
examination security. One examiner noted that the examination is onsite
for a longer period of time, thereby proportionally increasing the risk
of being compromised. Another examiner cited the fact that a number of
examination reports have documented problems with security.
Response: As discussed in SECY-96-206 and SECY-97-079, the
Commission is aware of the vulnerability in this area because several
security incidents have occurred since beginning the pilot examination
program. Therefore, based on the comments received and the experience
with security incidents, the NRC has: (1) clarified 10 CFR 55.49 in the
final rule to ensure that applicants, licensees, and facility licensees
understand the scope and intent of the regulation; (2) amended the
final examination rule to require facility licensees that elect to
prepare their licensing examinations to establish, implement, and
maintain procedures to control examination security and integrity; (3)
strengthened the discussion of examination security in
[[Page 19875]]
the final version of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021; and (4) modified NUREG-
1600, ``General Statement of Policy and Procedures for NRC Enforcement
Actions,'' to address enforcement action against parties subject to the
requirements in 10 CFR 55.49. NRC examiners are expected to review the
NRC's physical security guidelines and the facility licensee's specific
plans for ensuring examination security at the time the examination
arrangements are confirmed with the designated facility contact.
Furthermore, the NRC has issued an Information Notice to advise power
reactor facility licensees of the NRC's perspective and expectations
regarding the integrity of examinations developed by the facility
licensees' employees and representatives, and it has asked NEI to take
the initiative in developing a model for securing examinations.
As a separate action, the NRC will not administer any examination
that may have been compromised until the scope of the potential
compromise is determined and measures can be taken to address the
integrity and validity of the examination. If the compromise is
discovered after the examination has been administered, the NRC will
not complete the licensing action for the affected applicants until the
staff can make a determination regarding the impact that the compromise
has had on the examination process. If the compromise is not discovered
until after the licensing action is complete, the NRC will reevaluate
the licensing decision pursuant to 10 CFR 55.61(b)(2) if it determines
that the original licensing decision was based on an invalid
examination.
Comment: One NRC examiner disagreed with the conclusion in the
proposed rulemaking that the facility-prepared examination process is
an efficient use of NRC resources when compared to the NRC-prepared or
contractor-prepared examinations. He noted that, in most cases, the
quality and difficulty of the proposed examinations have been below NRC
standards (as discussed above) and that it has taken a significant
effort on the part of the NRC chief examiner to achieve an acceptable
product.
An NRC contract examiner asserted that NRC cost-saving is a poor
reason for changing the rule, since the utilities pay for the
examinations anyway. He noted that the pilot examination process has
led to a loss of certified examiners and contends that those NRC
examiners who are left will become more dissatisfied with their jobs
and will leave because they will be required to travel more to
compensate for the loss of contractors.
Response: The NRC acknowledges that many of the facility-prepared
examinations (about 20 percent in FY 1997) required significantly more
NRC examiner time than desired or planned in order to achieve NRC
quality standards. However, questionnaires filled out by NRC chief
examiners for the pilot examinations indicate that the average amount
of time spent on reviewing and upgrading the examinations is generally
consistent with the estimates developed before starting the pilot
program (i.e., approximately 170 examiner-hours). As noted in SECY-97-
079, the NRC has issued a memorandum to its regional administrators
emphasizing the importance of: (1) Assigning adequate resources to
carry out the operator licensing task; (2) completing a review of every
facility-prepared examination; and (3) not administering any
examination that fails to meet NRC standards for quality and level of
difficulty. Furthermore, all the time that NRC examiners spend
reviewing an examination and modifying it so that it meets NRC
standards is ultimately billed to the facility licensee.
The Commission acknowledges that facility licensees bear the cost
of preparing the licensing examinations whether or not the NRC performs
this function. However, this rule will give facility licensees more
control over the cost of licensing operators at their facility, and the
pilot examination program has demonstrated that some facility licensees
will save resources if they elect to prepare their own licensing
examinations.
The NRC's budget cuts have necessitated agencywide downsizing,
which can be expected to increase the burden of travel for many NRC
employees, not just the operator licensing examiners. The number of NRC
full-time equivalent (FTE) license examiners has remained essentially
constant throughout the pilot program and, aside from normal attrition
and staff turnover, the loss of certified examiners has been limited to
NRC contractors.
Comment: Two NRC examiners expressed concern that examiner
proficiency will decrease as a result of implementing the revised
examination process. One of the examiners stated that examination
reviewers will not maintain the same base of knowledge as examination
writers maintained and that they will lose their familiarity with plant
operating procedures.
Response: The Commission has concluded that the revised examination
process affords sufficient NRC staff involvement that NRC examiners
will maintain an acceptable level of proficiency. An NRC examiner will
review and approve every facility-prepared examination before it is
administered to ensure that it conforms to the criteria specified in
NUREG-1021 for content, format, quality, and level of knowledge and
difficulty. NRC examiners will also continue to independently
administer and grade both the dynamic simulator and the plant walk-
through portions of the operating tests. Because NRC examiners will be
administering all of the operating tests, the Commission believes that
the revised process will enable the examiners to accrue more experience
in a shorter period of time and to maintain their proficiency. New NRC
license examiners will still be required to complete a standardized
training program, including the development of a written examination
and operating test, as part of their qualification process. Moreover,
the NRC will ensure that the in-house capability to prepare the
examinations is maintained by: (1) Requiring a regional supervisor to
review and approve every examination and the Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation to conduct periodic examination reviews; (2) conducting
examiner refresher training; and (3) convening an operator licensing
examiners' training conference at intervals not to exceed 24 months.
Although experience during the voluntary pilot program and informal
feedback from the industry suggests that facility licensees are likely
to request the NRC to prepare a sufficient number of examinations to
maintain the proficiency of its examiners, each region will be required
to write at least one initial operator licensing examination per
calendar year.
Comment: A utility employee asserted that the revised examination
process will not enhance the competency of the operators or reactor
safety because the facilities' training resources will be diverted from
their primary purpose (i.e., training the applicants) as much as six
months before the examination date. Three NRC examiners also took issue
with the conclusion in the proposed rulemaking that the NRC staff's
focus on operator performance and its core of experience will improve
under the pilot examination process because contractors will no longer
be used to administer the operating tests. Two of the examiners
asserted that the reduction in the amount of procedural research by
examiners will result in the identification and correction of fewer
procedural problems. Two of the examiners also stated that the contract
[[Page 19876]]
examiners help maintain examination consistency across the NRC regions
and that their contribution to the operator licensing program goes
beyond simple task completion.
Response: The Commission expects that those training departments
that cannot readily and safely absorb the examination development work
will use the funds that they were previously paying to the NRC through
the fee recovery program to secure the additional personnel to do the
extra work or request the NRC to prepare the examinations. If a
facility licensee decides to prepare the examination and, as a result,
places insufficient resources on either training or testing, the
quality of its proposed licensing examinations or the passing rate on
those examinations would most likely suffer. Although many of the
facility-prepared examinations have required significant changes to
achieve NRC quality standards, the examination results, to date, are
generally consistent with the results on previous NRC-prepared
examinations, suggesting that the quality of the facility licensees'
training programs has not been affected. Therefore, the fact that
facility licensees will have the option of preparing the examinations
is not expected to have a negative effect on reactor safety.
The NRC acknowledges that the contract examiners identified
procedural and training problems in addition to their primary
responsibility for preparing and administering the licensing
examinations, and that they helped maintain examination consistency by
working on examinations in each of the NRC's regions. As noted in
connection with the discussion of examination quality, the Commission
realizes that the revised examination process increases the possibility
of inconsistency, but it believes that the examination criteria in the
final version of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021, in combination with the
NRC's examination oversight programs, will minimize these
inconsistencies so that they remain within acceptable limits.
When the NRC initiated the pilot program, its goal was to eliminate
the need for NRC contract examiners without compromising the existing
levels of reactor safety. Because NRC examiners will be administering
all of the operating tests, the revised process will enable the NRC
examiners to accrue more experience in a shorter period of time and may
improve the consistency of the operating test evaluations and the
licensing decisions. Although the total number of procedures reviewed
in the process of developing examinations may be fewer under the
revised method, NRC examiners will still be expected to review and
identify discrepancies in the procedures that will be exercised during
the walk-through portion of the operating test and during the simulator
scenarios.
Other Comments
Since beginning the pilot examination program, the NRC has sought
to obtain up-to-date insights regarding the effectiveness of the
revised examination process based on the staff's growing body of
experience in reviewing the facility-prepared examinations. Many of the
staff comments received have paralleled the public comments and require
no further attention in this notice. However, one recommendation to
amend the wording of the proposed regulation is considered worthy of
discussion and incorporation. Specifically, it was recommended that the
rule should indicate that a key manager would be responsible for
submitting the examination because that individual would be in a
position to ensure that the facility licensee's operations and training
departments apply sufficient resources to prepare a quality
examination. The NRC finds that the recommendation is consistent with
normal NRC practice and the analogous regulatory requirement in
Sec. 55.31(a)(3), which requires ``* * * an authorized representative
of the facility licensee by which the applicant will be employed * *
*'' to submit a written request that examinations be administered to
the applicant. Therefore, the wording of the final examination rule has
been amended to require an authorized representative of the facility
licensee to approve the written examinations and operating tests before
they are submitted to the NRC for review and approval.
Availability of Guidance Document for Preparing Operator Licensing
Examinations
As a consequence of preparing and administering the initial
operator licensing examinations over a number of years, the NRC has
developed a substantial body of guidance to aid its examiners. That
guidance has been published in various versions of NUREG-1021, the
latest version of which (final Revision 8) incorporates lessons learned
since interim Revision 8 was published in February 1997, as well as
refinements prompted by the comments submitted in response to the FRN
of August 7, 1997 (62 FR 42426), which solicited public comments in
conjunction with the proposed rulemaking. A copy of the final version
of Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 will be mailed to each facility licensee;
in accordance with NRC practice, revisions of NUREG-1021 are announced
in the Federal Register when they are issued and become effective six
months after the date of issuance. Copies may be inspected and/or
copied for a fee at the NRC's Public Document Room, 2120 L Street NW
(Lower Level), Washington, DC. Final Revision 8 of NUREG-1021 is also
electronically available for downloading from the internet at ``http://
www.nrc.gov.''
The NRC will prepare, administer, and grade initial operator
licensing examinations when requested by facility licensees and at
least four times a year to maintain the proficiency of its examiners.
NRC examiners will use the criteria in the effective version of NUREG-
1021 to evaluate whether an applicant meets the Commission's
regulations. In this regard, NUREG-1021 is comparable to the Standard
Review Plan (SRP), which establishes the criteria that the NRC uses to
evaluate Part 50 license applications. Licensees that elect to prepare
their own licensing examinations will also be required to use the
guidance in the effective version of NUREG-1021. As provided in NUREG-
1021, licensees may identify differences from the NUREG-1021
examination criteria and evaluate how the proposed alternatives provide
an acceptable method of complying with the Commission's regulations.
The NRC staff will review any proposed alternatives and make a decision
regarding their acceptability. The NRC will not approve any alternative
that would compromise its statutory responsibility of prescribing
uniform conditions for the operator licensing examinations.
Final Rule
This regulation adds a new section, Sec. 55.40, ``Implementation,''
to Subpart E of 10 CFR Part 55. Paragraph (a) of Sec. 55.40 states the
NRC's intent to use the criteria in the version of NUREG-1021,
``Operator Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors,'' in
effect six months before the examination date when preparing and
evaluating the written examinations required by Secs. 55.41 and 55.43,
and the operating tests required by Sec. 55.45. The NRC uses the
criteria in NUREG-1021 to evaluate whether an applicant meets the
Commission's regulations. In this regard, NUREG-1021 is comparable to
the Standard Review Plan, which establishes the criteria that the NRC
uses to evaluate Part 50 license applications. Pursuant to Section 107
of the AEA of 1954, as amended, the NRC must prescribe uniform
conditions for
[[Page 19877]]
licensing individuals applying for operator licenses.
Based on the success of the pilot examination program, paragraph
(b) of Sec. 55.40 allows power reactor facility licensees to prepare,
proctor, and grade the written examinations required by Secs. 55.41 and
55.43 and to prepare the operating tests required by Sec. 55.45,
subject to the following conditions:
(1) To ensure uniformity pursuant to the AEA, the facility licensee
shall prepare the examinations and tests in accordance with NUREG-1021;
(2) To minimize the possibility that the required written
examinations and operating tests might be compromised, the facility
licensee shall establish, implement, and maintain procedures to control
the security and integrity of the examinations and tests;
(3) To ensure that the facility licensee's operations and training
departments apply sufficient resources to prepare a quality
examination, an authorized representative of the facility licensee
shall approve the examinations before they are submitted to the NRC for
review and approval; and
(4) To ensure that NRC standards for quality are maintained, the
facility licensee must receive Commission approval of its proposed
written examinations and operating tests before they are given.
These requirements are contained in Secs. 55.40(b)(1), (2), (3),
and (4) respectively.
As provided in NUREG-1021, licensees may identify differences from
the NUREG-1021 examination criteria and evaluate how the proposed
alternatives provide an acceptable method of compliance with NRC
regulations. The NRC staff will review any proposed alternatives and
make a decision regarding their acceptability. However, the NRC will
not approve any alternative that would compromise its statutory
responsibility of prescribing uniform conditions for the operator
licensing examinations. The NRC staff will review the facility-prepared
written examinations and operating tests against the criteria in NUREG-
1021 and direct whatever changes are necessary to ensure that adequate
levels of quality, difficulty, and consistency are maintained. After
the NRC staff reviews and approves a written examination, the facility
licensee will proctor and grade the examination consistent with the
guidance in NUREG-1021. The NRC staff will continue to independently
administer and grade the operating tests, review and approve the
written examination results, and make the final licensing decisions.
The facility licensee will not conduct parallel operator evaluations
during the dynamic simulator or the walk-through tests.
Pursuant to the requirements in Sec. 55.40(c), the NRC staff will
prepare the licensing examinations and tests upon written request by a
power reactor facility licensee in accordance with Sec. 55.31(a)(3). In
addition, the NRC may exercise its discretion to reject a power reactor
facility licensee's determination to prepare the required written
examinations and operating tests, and to proctor and grade the written
examinations. The NRC will then prepare, proctor, and grade the written
examinations and prepare the operating tests for the facility licensee.
This provision of the regulation allows the NRC to maintain its
proficiency and to perform these activities if the NRC questions a
licensee's ability to prepare an acceptable examination.
Paragraph (d) of Sec. 55.40 reasserts that the NRC will continue to
prepare and administer the written examinations and operating tests for
non-power reactor facility licensees. The NRC has taken this position
because the non-power reactor community does not have an accreditation
process for training and qualification or the resources to prepare the
examinations.
This regulation also amends Sec. 55.49 because the NRC has
determined, since the proposed rule was published, that applicants,
licensees, and facility licensees may be interpreting Sec. 55.49 too
narrowly by limiting it to actual cases of cheating. The amendment
clarifies that the regulation pertains to all activities that could
affect the equitable and consistent administration of the examination,
including activities before, during, and after the examination is
administered.
Environmental Impact: Categorical Exclusion
The NRC has determined that this rule is the type of action
described as a categorical exclusion in 10 CFR 51.22(c)(1). Therefore,
neither an environmental impact statement nor an environmental
assessment has been prepared for this regulation.
Paperwork Reduction Act Statement
This final rule amends information collection requirements that are
subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq).
These were approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB),
approval number 3150-0101. The additional public reporting burden for
this collection of information is estimated to average 500 hours per
response, including the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing the collection of information (i.e., preparing
the examinations). The additional, one-time burden for power reactor
facility licensees that elect to prepare their licensing examinations
to establish procedures to prevent the examinations from being
compromised is not expected to exceed 100 hours per facility; and the
burden of maintaining those procedures is estimated at approximately 10
hours per facility per year. Send comments on any aspect of this
collection of information, including suggestions for reducing the
burden, to the Information and Records Management Branch (T-6F33), U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Washington, DC 20555-0001, or by
internet electronic mail to bjs1@nrc.gov, and to the Desk Officer,
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, NEOB-10202, (3150-0101),
Office of Management and Budget, Washington, DC 20503.
Public Protection Notification
The NRC 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.
Regulatory Analysis
The Commission has prepared a regulatory analysis on this
regulation. The analysis examines the costs and benefits of the
alternatives considered by the Commission. The regulatory analysis is
available for inspection in the NRC Public Document Room, 2120 L Street
NW (Lower Level), Washington, DC. Single copies of the analysis may be
obtained from Siegfried Guenther, Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation,
U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, at 301-415-1056 or by e-mail at
sxg@nrc.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Certification
In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, (5
U.S.C. 605(b)), the Commission certifies that this rule does not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This rule affects only the licensing and operation of nuclear power
plants. The companies that own these plants do not fall within the
scope of the definition of ``small entities'' described in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act or the Small Business Size Standards stated
in regulations issued by the Small Business Administration at 13 CFR
part 121.
[[Page 19878]]
Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
In accordance with the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, the NRC has determined that this action is not a
major rule and has verified this determination with the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs of OMB.
Backfit Analysis
In the proposed rule, the NRC took the position that the backfit
rule (10 CFR 50.109) did not apply because the proposed shift in
responsibility for preparing the examinations: (1) Would not constitute
a ``modification of the procedures required to operate a facility''
within the scope of the backfit rule; (2) would not have affected the
basic procedures for qualifying licensed operators; and (3) would not
have required facility licensees to alter their organizational
structures. However, upon further review, the NRC has concluded that
there is insufficient basis to support the original position.
Therefore, the NRC has decided to revise the final rule so that power
reactor facility licensees may elect to prepare their written
examinations and operating tests (and proctor and grade the written
examinations) in accordance with NUREG-1021 or to have the NRC prepare
the examinations. Eliminating the requirement for all facility
licensees to prepare their examinations and tests obviates the need for
a backfit analysis.
Enforcement Policy
In conjunction with this final rule, the Commission is separately
publishing modifications to NUREG-1600, ``General Statement of Policy
and Procedure for NRC Enforcement Actions,'' to address enforcement
action against parties subject to the requirements in 10 CFR 55.49
(i.e., Part 55 license applicants/licensees and Part 50 licensees).
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 55
Criminal penalties, Manpower training programs, Nuclear power
plants and reactors, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons given in the preamble and under the authority of
the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended; the Energy Reorganization
Act of 1974, as amended; and 5 U.S.C. 552 and 553; the NRC adopts the
following amendments to 10 CFR part 55.
PART 55--OPERATORS' LICENSES
1. The authority citation for Part 55 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 107, 161, 182, 68 Stat. 939, 948, 953 , as
amended, sec. 234, 83 Stat. 444, as amended (42 U.S.C. 2137, 2201,
2232, 2282); secs. 201, as amended, 202, 88 Stat. 1242, as amended,
1244 (42 U.S.C. 5841, 5842).
Sections 55.41, 55.43, 55.45, and 55.59 also issued under sec.
306, Pub. L. 97-425, 96 Stat. 2262 (42 U.S.C. 10226). Section 55.61
also issued under secs. 186, 187, 68 Stat. 955 (42 U.S.C. 2236,
2237).
2. In Sec. 55.8, paragraph (c)(4) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 55.8 Information collection requirements; OMB approval
* * * * *
(4) In Secs. 55.40, 55.41, 55.43, 55.45, and 55.59, clearance is
approved under control number 3150-0101.
* * * * *
3. A new Sec. 55.40 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 55.40 Implementation.
(a) The Commission shall use the criteria in NUREG-1021, ``Operator
Licensing Examination Standards for Power Reactors,'' \1\ in effect six
months before the examination date to prepare the written examinations
required by Secs. 55.41 and 55.43 and the operating tests required by
Sec. 55.45. The Commission shall also use the criteria in NUREG-1021 to
evaluate the written examinations and operating tests prepared by power
reactor facility licensees pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.
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\1\ Copies of NUREGs may be purchased from the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, P.O. Box 38082,
Washington, DC 20402-9328. Copies are also available from the
National Technical Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road,
Springfield, VA 22161. A copy is available for inspection and/or
copying in the NRC Public Document Room, 2120 L Street, NW (Lower
Level), Washington, D.C.
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(b) Power reactor facility licensees may prepare, proctor, and
grade the written examinations required by Secs. 55.41 and 55.43 and
may prepare the operating tests required by Sec. 55.45, subject to the
following conditions:
(1) Power reactor facility licensees shall prepare the required
examinations and tests in accordance with the criteria in NUREG-1021 as
described in paragraph (a) of this section;
(2) Pursuant to Sec. 55.49, power reactor facility licensees shall
establish, implement, and maintain procedures to control examination
security and integrity;
(3) An authorized representative of the power reactor facility
licensee shall approve the required examinations and tests before they
are submitted to the Commission for review and approval; and
(4) Power reactor facility licensees must receive Commission
approval of their proposed written examinations and operating tests.
(c) In lieu of paragraph (b) of this section and upon written
request from a power reactor facility licensee pursuant to
Sec. 55.31(a)(3), the Commission shall, for that facility licensee,
prepare, proctor, and grade, the written examinations required by
Secs. 55.41 and 55.43 and the operating tests required by Sec. 55.45.
In addition, the Commission may exercise its discretion and reject a
power reactor facility licensee's determination to elect paragraph (b)
of this section, in which case the Commission shall prepare, proctor,
and grade the required written examinations and operating tests for
that facility licensee.
(d) The Commission shall prepare, proctor, and grade the written
examinations required by Secs. 55.41 and 55.43 and the operating tests
required by Sec. 55.45 for non-power reactor facility licensees.
4. Section 55.49 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 55.49 Integrity of examinations and tests.
Applicants, licensees, and facility licensees shall not engage in
any activity that compromises the integrity of any application, test,
or examination required by this part. The integrity of a test or
examination is considered compromised if any activity, regardless of
intent, affected, or, but for detection, would have affected the
equitable and consistent administration of the test or examination.
This includes activities related to the preparation and certification
of license applications and all activities related to the preparation,
administration, and grading of the tests and examinations required by
this part.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 19th day of April, 1999.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Annette Vietti-Cook,
Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. 99-10190 Filed 4-22-99; 8:45 am]
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