Public Availability of Material License Applications for Non-major Uranium Recovery, Decommissioning, and Federal Facility Material License Applications

Section 189 of the Atomic Energy Act provides an opportunity to request a hearing to any person whose interest may be affected by the granting, suspending, revoking or amending of a materials license. During the period December 22, 2005 to September 30, 2007, the NRC did not publicly disclose information on certain materials licensing actions as a result of a previous security policy, which has been modified. To ensure that the public is given notice and, thus, the opportunity to request a hearing on these materials licensing actions, the NRC is making available the following lists of materials licensing and other related actions (such as an environmental assessment) not previously disclosed during the above stated period:

Material Licensing and Other Related Applications Received on a Monthly Basis

The NRC will continue to update the following table to reflect materials licensing and other related applications received on a monthly basis for Non-major Uranium Recovery, Decommissioning, and Federal Facility Material License Applications.   Please see Data Dictionary (in Microsoft Excel format) for a description of the information contained in each of the fields in the Licensing Action documents listed below.

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Date ADAMS ML
Licensing Applications Received in 2024, year to date none to date
Licensing Applications Received in 2023 ML23310A310
Licensing Applications Received in 2022 ML22214A189
Licensing Applications Received in 2021 ML22098A165

Using the Lists of Material Licensing and Related Applications

The lists of materials licensing applications received are sorted by parameters including State, City and docket number.  A brief description of the action, such as a new application for license, renewal or amendment to an existing license, is also indicated (the key to the license action type is found at the end of the application).

Some of these licensing actions reference Sensitive Unclassified Non-Safeguards Information (SUNSI) and/or Safeguards Information (SGI). For some actions of this type, the NRC has established procedures to allow interested members of the public to obtain access to this information upon a showing of "need" (for SUNSI) or "need to know" (for SGI) and a showing that they would likely have standing in a hearing. Additionally, members of the public requesting access to SGI must be found trustworthy and reliable before being granted access to SGI, which involves completing a background check that includes fingerprinting. For details, see the full procedures. If you plan to request a hearing on a listed licensing action and believe that you may need access to SUNSI and/or SGI to do so, please contact the individuals listed above. Upon receipt of your inquiry, NRC staff will review the licensing action to determine whether the licensing action involves SUNSI and/or SGI and whether the access procedures should be applied to that action. After you receive a response from the Staff confirming the applicability of the procedures to the particular licensing action, you must follow those procedures if you do decide to submit a request for SUNSI or SGI. Do not submit an access request until NRC staff has confirmed the applicability of the procedures to a specific licensing action.

If you wish to file a hearing request regarding an individual licensing action, the requirements for filing a hearing request with the NRC can be found in the NRC regulations at 10 CFR 2.309. Where a Federal Register notice of agency action has not been published, this Web site notice constitutes the agency notice referred to in 10 CFR 2.309(b)(4)(i) for the purpose of determining the time limits for filing a hearing request (i.e., hearing requests must be filed not later than sixty (60) days after publication of notice on the NRC web site).