Application of Portland General Electric Co.

550 P.2d 465, 25 Or. App. 469, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2105
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 1, 1976
DocketCA 4727
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 550 P.2d 465 (Application of Portland General Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application of Portland General Electric Co., 550 P.2d 465, 25 Or. App. 469, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2105 (Or. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

*471 FOLEY, P. J.

This is a petition for judicial review pursuant to ORS 453.375(3) of an order by respondent Nuclear and Thermal Energy Council of Oregon 1 (NTEC), issued on April 11,1975, recommending to the Governor of Oregon the approval of respondent Portland General Electric Company’s (PGE) site certificate application subject to the terms, warranties and conditions of the site certificate agreement for construction of two 1,260 megawatt nuclear power plants near Arlington, Oregon. 2 Petitioners Marbet and Christiansen seek to have the order reversed and the matter remanded to NTEC’s successor for further proceedings.

This is the first contested site certificate application proceeding before NTEC. By way of introduction we quote the statute setting forth generally the Council’s responsibility to the people of this state, ORS 453.315:

"In the interests of the public health and the welfare of the people of this state, it is the declared public policy of this state that the beneficial development of peaceful uses of nuclear and thermal energy and the disposition of the wastes therefrom shall be accomplished in a manner consistent with protection to the public health and safety and in compliance with the air, water and other environmental protection policies of this state. * * *” (This language was amended by Oregon Laws 1975, ch 606, § 22, p 1455, primarily focusing its application upon energy sources in general. However, the substance of the statute was not affected.)

*472 Legislative guidance in the carrying out of the Council’s basic responsibility was also provided:

(a) NTEC must "[establish standards and promulgate rules that applicants for site certificates must meet including, but not limited to, standards of financial ability and qualifications as to ability to construct and operate * * * [the facility].” ORS 453.455(3).
(b) In performing all of its duties, including consideration of site certificate applications, NTEC must "set standards and promulgate rules for safety, construction and operation of thermal plants * * *.” ORS 453.515. 3
(c) NTEC was required to "adopt safety standards promulgated as rules for the operation of all thermal power plants * * *.” ORS 453.505(1). Such standards were to include, but were not limited to, emission standards, standards for necessary safety devices and procedures and standards governing the accumulation, storage, disposal and transportation of radioactive wastes. NTEC did adopt a set of *473 comprehensive construction and operating rules, OAR 345-26-005 through 345-26-200, effective March 11, 1975.
(d) ORS 453.345(3) required that NTEC in processing site certificate applications obtain comments and recommendations within specified deadlines from a total of 13 state agencies. Testimony was, in fact, secured, subject to cross-examination, from the agencies identified in the statute.
(e) NTEC was required, if it recommended issuance of a site certificate, to secure warranties from the applicant regarding its financial ability, its ability to construct and operate the facility, and the steps the applicant would take to protect the public health and safety. ORS 453.395(4). Breach of any of these warranties is sufficient to justify suspension or revocation of the site certificate. ORS 453.425.
(f) NTEC was required to impose conditions necessary "for the protection of the public health and safety” should it recommend issuance of a site certificate and must bind the applicant to all existing state laws. ORS 453.395(3). Breach of a site certificate condition likewise justifies revocation or suspension of the site certificate. ORS 453.425.
(g) NTEC was empowered by Oregon Laws 1975, ch 606, § 41, p 1466, to review all security programs for nuclear power plants and for the process of transporting shipments of radioactive materials to and from such plants.
(h) In recognition of the undisputed fact that nuclear power development poses substantial risks, NTEC was vested with extraordinary remedies to curtail the operations or, if necessary, force the immediate shutdown of a plant in the event of danger to the public health and safety. See ORS 453.545 and 453.555.

The first issue to be discussed is the status of the *474 intervenors in this proceeding and the scope of their intervention. ORS 453.375(2) provides:

"The council may, by proper order, permit any person to become a party complainant or defendant by intervention who appears to have an interest in the results of the hearing or who represents a public interest in such results. However, the request for intervention must be made before the final taking of evidence in the hearing.”

NTEC adopted procedural rules regarding intervention, Oregon Administrative Rules, ch 345, § 15-020, which in pertinent part provide as follows:

"(1) Persons whose interest may be affected by the proceeding may petition for leave to intervene as a party. The petition shall set forth the name and address of the petitioner, and his attorney, if any, and specify in reasonable specific detail the petitioner’s interest in the proceeding and the manner in which such interest will be affected.
*
"(3) The presiding officer at the hearing shall rule on petitions for intervention, and orders permitting intervention may be conditioned on such terms as the Council or the presiding hearing officer may direct. Petitions based only upon matters outside the Council’s jurisdiction will be denied.

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Bluebook (online)
550 P.2d 465, 25 Or. App. 469, 1976 Ore. App. LEXIS 2105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/application-of-portland-general-electric-co-orctapp-1976.