Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 108— - NUCLEAR WASTE POLICY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - OTHER PROVISIONS RELATING TO RADIOACTIVE WASTE › § 10221
Prepare a mission plan report that gives enough clear information to guide the repository program and the related research, development, and demonstration work. The plan must say what scientific, engineering, and technical information is needed for siting and building a test and evaluation facility and repositories; list any missing information and give a schedule with major milestones and cost estimates to get that information; identify financial, political, legal, or institutional problems and plans or recommended laws to fix them; include the Secretary’s views on the test facility’s purpose; summarize research results and compare different rock types or geologic settings; include the needed guidelines from section 10132(a); describe known candidate sites and the planned site tests (like excavations and tests with radioactive or nonradioactive materials), safety controls, and cleanup if a site is rejected; explain how high-level waste or spent fuel would be solidified and packaged, what facilities and materials are needed, and an R&D plan and schedule for making suitable packages; estimate total repository capacity needed to handle all waste and spent fuel through December 31, 2020 both if no commercial reprocessing happens and if it does, plus the number and type of repositories, their construction schedule, and how long each would accept waste; give yearly cost estimates for building and running those repositories and any other needed facilities; and identify possible economic or other harms to a State or Indian tribe near a site. Send a draft mission plan within 15 months after January 7, 1983 to the States, affected Indian tribes, the Commission, and other agencies for their comments. Those agencies must say exact objections. The Secretary must publish notices in the Federal Register when the plan is submitted and when comments are received, and must explain publicly if the plan is not changed to meet objections. After considering comments and making any changes, the Secretary must send the mission plan to Congress within 17 months after January 7, 1983; Congress then has a 30-calendar-day review period (excluding long adjournments).
Full Legal Text
The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 10221
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73