Arlette Howard
Fee Policy Analyst
Office of the Chief Financial Officer
It’s that time of the year, when we ask the public for their comments about proposed changes to our fees.
The
NRC is required by law to recover approximately 90 percent of our
budget through fees. Each year, the NRC publishes a proposed regulation
establishing fees for the upcoming year to recoup the costs of
regulatory services performed by the NRC.
There
are two types of fees the NRC charges. One is an hourly rate and flat
application fees, and the other is an annual fee. Both types of fees
recover the costs of regulating the commercial use of radioactive
materials. Hourly fees recover the costs of providing specific services
to individual licensees (or potential licensees) such as reviewing
applications and performing inspections. Annual fees recover all costs
associated with regulatory activities that benefit all licensees.
For
fiscal year 2013, the NRC’s estimated budget is about $1 billion. Based
on this amount, the NRC must recover about $925 million through fees by
Sept. 30. In our regulations, approximately 40 percent of the fees will
be billed for licensee-specific services and the remaining 60 percent
will be billed as annual fees.
The
proposed fee rule includes several changes. First, we are proposing to
change the current hourly rate from $274 to $277. Secondly, we would
revise the flat license application fees (found in our federal
guidelines 10 CFR Parts
170.21 and
170.31) to reflect the new hourly rate.
And,
finally, we propose to revise the annual fees to recover the costs of
providing regulatory services that benefit all classes of licensees. The
annual fees would increase for spent fuel storage facilities, research
and test reactors, fuel facilities, most material users and uranium
recovery facilities licenses and would decrease for operating reactors
and U.S. Department of Energy transportation licenses.
We
will continue to keep our fees as low as possible by ensuring our
programs are conducted efficiently and effectively, and requesting from
Congress only resources necessary to perform our mission.
No comments:
Post a Comment