10 CFR §62.25
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)In making the determination required by § 62.21(a) of this part, the Commission will determine whether the circumstances described in the request for emergency access create a serious and immediate threat to the public health and safety or the common defense and security.
- (b)In making the determination that a serious and immediate threat exists to the public health and safety, the Commission will consider, notwithstanding the availability of any alternative identified in § 62.13 of this part:
- (1)The nature and extent of the radiation hazard that would result from the denial of emergency access, including consideration of—
- (i)The standards for radiation protection contained in part 20 of this chapter;
- (ii)Any standards governing the release of radioactive materials to the general environment that are applicable to the facility that generated the low level waste; and
- (iii)Any other Commission requirements specifically applicable to the facility or activity that is the subject of the emergency access request; and
- (2)The extent to which essential services affecting the public health and safety (such as medical, therapeutic, diagnostic, or research activities) will be disrupted by the denial of emergency access.
- (1)The nature and extent of the radiation hazard that would result from the denial of emergency access, including consideration of—
- (c)For purposes of granting temporary emergency access under § 62.23 of this part, the Commission will consider the criteria contained in the Commission's Policy Statement (45 FR 10950, February 24, 1977) for determining whether an event at a facility or activity licensed or otherwise regulated by the Commission is an abnormal occurrence within the purview of section 208 of the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974.
- (d)In making the determination that a serious and immediate threat to the common defense and security exists, the Commission will consider, notwithstanding the availability of any alternative identified in § 62.13 of this part:
- (e)In making the determination required by § 62.21(a)(2) of this part, the Commission will consider whether the person submitting the request—
- (f)In making the determination required by § 62.21(a)(2) of this part, the Commission will consider implementation of an alternative to be unreasonable if:
- (1)It adversely affects public health and safety, the environment, or the common defense and security; or
- (2)It results in a significant curtailment or cessation of essential services, affecting public health and safety or the common defense and security; or
- (3)It is beyond the technical and economic capabilities of the person requesting emergency access; or
- (4)Implementation of the alternative would conflict with applicable State or local or Federal laws and regulations; or
- (5)It cannot be implemented in a timely manner.
- (g)The Commission shall make an affirmative determination under § 62.21(a) of this part only if all of the alternatives that were considered are found to be unreasonable.
- (h)As part of its mandated evaluation of the alternatives that were considered by the generator, the Commission shall consider the characteristics of the wastes (including: physical properties, chemical properties, radioactivity, pathogenicity, infectiousness, and toxicity, pyrophoricity, and explosive potential); condition of current container; potential for contaminating the disposal site; the technologies or combination of technologies available for treatment of the waste (including incinerators; evaporators-crystallizers; fluidized bed dryers; thin film evaporators; extruders, evaporators; and Compactors); the suitability of volume reduction equipment to the circumstances (specific activity considerations, actual volume reduction factors, generation of secondary wastes, equipment contamination, effluent releases, worker exposure, and equipment availability); and the administrative controls which could be applied, in making a determination whether waste to be delivered for disposal under this part has been reduced in volume to the maximum extent practicable using available technology.