Title 42 › Chapter 108— NUCLEAR WASTE POLICY › Subchapter I— DISPOSAL AND STORAGE OF HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE, SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL, AND LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE › Part C— Monitored Retrievable Storage › § 10161
Requires the Secretary to finish a detailed study and send Congress, by June 1, 1985, a plan for building one or more monitored retrievable storage (MRS) facilities for high-level radioactive waste and spent nuclear fuel. The plan must show site-specific designs that hold only civilian waste, allow continuous monitoring and easy retrieval, and keep the waste safe long term (including replacing parts of the facility if needed). It must set up a federal program for siting, building, licensing (by the Commission), and running such facilities; explain how generators and owners will pay the costs; include designs and cost estimates good enough to get construction bids, congressional approval, and fast startup; and show how the facilities will work with other storage and disposal sites. The Secretary must consult with the Commission and the Administrator and include their comments. For the first facility the plan must offer at least 3 possible sites and at least 5 alternative site-and-design combinations, and must recommend a preferred option. The environmental assessment that goes to Congress must compare the five alternatives. Preparing and sending this proposal only needs an environmental assessment, not a full environmental impact statement. If Congress later authorizes construction, the full environmental laws apply to building the facility, except any environmental study does not have to re-examine the need for the facility or the design criteria listed above. The Commission must license any authorized facility, and when reviewing the first licensing application it cannot consider the need for the facility or alternatives to the required design features. After Congress authorizes construction, the Secretary must make yearly impact-aid payments to affected local governments from the Nuclear Waste Fund (subject to future appropriations), with priority to the most affected and with rules for how the money may be used. No MRS may be built in a State that contains a site approved for repository site characterization under section 10132 until that site is no longer a candidate; the restriction also stays for any site chosen for a repository. Authorized MRS facilities must follow other listed provisions of this title, and where those provisions say “repository” they apply to an MRS.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 10161
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60