HR-4136-119
Referred to the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Sponsored by Mike Levin (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would establish an independent office within the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) dedicated to advocating for the public and supporting participation in NRC proceedings and activities. It would also authorize the NRC to reimburse certain individuals and groups for reasonable attorney's fees, expert witness fees, and other costs incurred while participating in NRC proceedings, when participating without compensation would create a significant financial hardship.
Who benefits
Community groups and residents near nuclear facilities who currently cannot afford to participate in NRC licensing or rulemaking proceedings. Environmental and public interest organizations with limited budgets. Individual citizens who want to engage in NRC proceedings but face financial barriers. Small local governments near nuclear sites that lack resources to hire legal or technical experts. Attorneys and expert witnesses who would be compensated for work on qualifying proceedings.
Who is hurt
Nuclear power plant operators and applicants, who may face more frequent, better-resourced opposition in licensing and rulemaking proceedings, potentially increasing costs and timelines. Existing NRC budget and staff resources, which would need to absorb the new office's operating costs. Taxpayers who fund the NRC, since the agency's costs are partially recovered through fees charged to licensees, which could be passed on to ratepayers. Applicants for new nuclear facilities who may experience longer or more complex approval processes.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that NRC proceedings are highly technical and expensive, creating a structural imbalance where well-funded industry applicants routinely outmatch under-resourced community groups and individuals. They contend that meaningful public participation is essential to the legitimacy of nuclear regulatory decisions — which affect public health and safety near facilities — and that fee compensation programs modeled on similar intervenor funding mechanisms at agencies like the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission have successfully broadened participation without unduly burdening the regulatory process.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding a new advocacy office inside the NRC creates a structural conflict of interest, placing a body tasked with opposing or complicating agency decisions within the same agency that makes those decisions. They contend that the fee compensation provision could be exploited to fund repetitive or dilatory interventions, increasing costs and timelines for nuclear projects at a time when expanded nuclear capacity is widely seen as critical to meeting energy demand and decarbonization goals, ultimately harming ratepayers and energy reliability.