Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 23— - DEVELOPMENT AND CONTROL OF ATOMIC ENERGY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XVII— - ENFORCEMENT OF CHAPTER › § 2282a
Companies (and their subcontractors or suppliers) that have an indemnification agreement under 2210(d) who break DOE nuclear safety rules or who violate nuclear safety whistleblower protections must pay a civil fine of up to $100,000 for each violation. If the same violation keeps happening, each day counts as its own violation. The Secretary of Energy can act through the Administrator for Nuclear Security when using these rules. The Secretary can reduce, change, or cancel penalties and make rules to run the process. When setting a fine, the Secretary must look at how bad the violation was, the facts, how it affects the company, the company’s ability to pay, any past violations, blame, and other fair factors. Before a penalty is ordered, the Secretary must give notice and let the person choose, within 30 days of getting the notice, between two procedures: a full agency hearing with an administrative law judge (and an appeal to the court of appeals within 60 days), or a quicker process where the Secretary issues an order and, if unpaid after 60 days, asks a federal district court to review the case anew. That election can only be revoked with the Secretary’s permission. If a final penalty is unpaid, the Secretary can sue to collect and the final order cannot be reargued in that collection case. For not-for-profit contractors, total penalties in any one-year period cannot be more than the fees paid under the contract that year. “Not-for-profit” means no net earnings go to any person. “Nuclear safety whistleblower protections” means protections for contractor employees from retaliation for safety-related disclosures under the listed federal laws.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
42 U.S.C. § 2282a
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73