Oregon Code § 459.355·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
[1987 c.876 §16; 1993 c.560 §43;
repealed by 1997 c.552 §40]
LIMITATION ON DISPOSAL
OF CERTAIN RADIOACTIVE MATERIALS
Note:
Sections 12 to 16 and 18, chapter
653, Oregon Laws 1991, provide:
Sec. 12.
(1) The Legislative Assembly finds
and declares:
(a) It is the
policy of this state to minimize the release to the environment of radioactive
material resulting from human activities;
(b) The United
States Congress, the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the United
States Department of Energy and the United States Environmental Protection
Agency have adopted measures intended to make possible federal deregulation of
certain radioactive material;
(c) Deregulation
would result in virtually unrestricted disposal or release of this radioactive
material into land disposal sites, incinerators, transportation systems,
waterways, sewage systems, recycling centers, consumer products or other parts
of the environment;
(d) Such
dissemination of radioactive material in the environment would represent an
unnecessary increased risk to the health, safety and welfare of the citizens of
this state and the environment;
(e) Such risk
would necessitate the implementation of a costly and widespread radiation
monitoring system to enable this state to insure that citizens are not exposed
to radiation from deregulated radioactive material; and
(f) Such
monitoring and verification of the absence of unacceptable risks resulting from
federal deregulation will be more costly to this state than the current
regulatory regime.
(2) Therefore,
the State of Oregon hereby declares that radioactive material shall continue to
be subject to regulatory control by this state. It is the purpose of sections
12 to 15 of this Act to guarantee that all radioactive material that was
subject to regulation by this state, the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, the United States Department of Energy, the United States
Environmental Protection Agency or any other state or federal agency as of
January 1, 1989, shall remain subject to regulation by this state and shall be
stored and disposed of only in licensed or approved radioactive waste storage
or disposal facilities. [1991 c.653 §12]
Sec. 13.
As used in sections 12 to 14,
chapter 653, Oregon Laws 1991:
(1) Facility
approved by the Oregon Health Authority means a facility for which there is a
license, permit, letter of agreement or other means by which the state
officially accepts the treatment, storage, recycling, incineration or disposal
method for radioactive material.
(2) Radioactive
material means any radioactive waste or other radioactive material resulting
from activities of the federal government, the United States Nuclear Regulatory
Commission or its licensees or licensees of a state that has entered into an
agreement under 42 U.S.C. 2021 and that satisfies the definition of low-level
radioactive waste in the federal Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act, 42
U.S.C. 2021b(9)(a), as of January 1, 1989. Radioactive material does not
include naturally occurring radionuclides, uranium mill tailings or high-level
radioactive waste. [1991 c.653 §13; 2001 c.900 §233; 2009 c.595 §1152]
Sec. 14.
Notwithstanding any declaration by
the federal government that certain radioactive material may be exempt from
regulatory control or below regulatory concern, no radioactive material may be
recycled, incinerated or disposed of in Oregon except at a facility approved by
the Oregon Health Authority specifically for the recycling, incineration or
disposal of radioactive material. [1991 c.653 §14; 2001 c.900 §234; 2009 c.595 §1153]
Sec. 15.
(1) No land disposal site in this
state shall knowingly accept solid waste from another state that contains
radioactive material. For purposes of this section, solid waste shall be
presumed not to contain radioactive material if:
(a) The solid
waste is from a state that is a party to the Northwest Interstate Compact on
Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management set forth in ORS 469.930; or
(b) The solid
waste is from a state that has a policy opposing exemption of radioactive
material from regulation that is similar to the policy carried out by sections
12 to 15 of this 1991 Act.
(2) As used in
this section, radioactive material has the meaning given in section 13 of
this 1991 Act. [1991 c.653 §15]
Sec. 16.
Section 15 of this Act is added to
and made a part of ORS 459.005 to 459.105. [1991 c.653 §16]
Sec. 18.
Sections 12 to 16 of this Act and
the amendments to ORS 469.992 by section 17 of this Act do not become operative
until the federal government or a state that has entered into an agreement
under 42 U.S.C. 2021 exempts from regulation or changes the regulatory status
of any radioactive material that is subject to regulation on January 1, 1989.
[1991 c.653 §18]
ENFORCEMENT