By:  Bonnen                                                       H.B. No. 26 
A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
relating to responsibilities of certain state agencies concerning 
radioactive substances; imposing fees and surcharges.
	BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:                        
	SECTION 1.  Section 401.003, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended by amending Subdivisions (2), (4), (5), (6), and adding 
Subdivision (12-a) to read as follows:
		(2)  "Board" means the executive commissioner of the 
Health and Human Services Commission [Texas Board of Health].
		(4)  "Commission" means the Texas [Natural Resource 
Conservation] Commission on Environmental Quality.
		(5)  "Commissioner" means the commissioner of state 
[public] health services.
		(6)  "Department" means the [Texas] Department of State 
Health Services or other department designated by the executive 
commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission.
		(12-a)  "Gross receipts" includes, with respect to an 
entity or affiliated members, owners, shareholders, or limited or 
general partners, all receipts from the entity's disposal 
operations in Texas licensed under this chapter including any 
bonus, commission, or similar payment received by the entity from a 
customer, contractor, subcontractor, or other person doing 
business with the entity or affiliated members, owners, 
shareholders, or limited or general partners.  This term does not 
include receipts from the entity's operations in Texas, or 
affiliated members, owners, shareholders, or limited or general 
partners, for capital reimbursements, bona fide storage and 
processing, and federal or state taxes or fees on waste received 
uniquely required to meet the specifications of a license or 
contract.  The commission may promulgate rules in establishing the 
criteria for determining gross receipts consistent with the 
parameters of this definition.
	SECTION 2.  Subsections (a) and (b), Section 401.011, Health 
and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The department is the Texas Radiation Control Agency.  
The department has jurisdiction over activities and substances 
regulated under this chapter except as provided by Subsection (b) 
and Subchapters E, F, G, and K.
	(b)  The commission has jurisdiction to regulate and 
license:         
		(1)  the disposal of radioactive substances;                    
		(2)  the processing or storage of low-level radioactive 
waste or naturally occurring radioactive material waste received 
from other persons, except oil and gas NORM;
		(3)  the recovery or processing of source material in 
accordance with Subchapter G;
		(4)  the processing of by-product material as defined 
by Section 401.003(3)(B); and
		(5)  sites for the disposal of:                                        
			(A)  low-level radioactive waste;                                     
			(B)  by-product material; or                                          
			(C)  naturally occurring radioactive material 
waste [except by-product material defined by Section 
401.003(3)(B)].
	SECTION 3.  Section 401.054, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.054.  NOTICE AND HEARING.  (a)  The department or 
commission shall provide notice and an opportunity for a hearing on 
a matter under its jurisdiction as provided by its formal hearing 
procedures and Chapter 2001, Government Code, unless otherwise 
required by this chapter, on written request of a person affected by 
any of the following procedures:
		(1)  the denial, suspension, or revocation by the 
department or commission of a license or registration;
		(2)  the determination by the department or commission 
of compliance with or the grant of exemptions from a department or 
commission rule or order; or
		(3)  the grant or amendment by the department or 
commission of a specific license.
	(b)  The commission may hold a contested case hearing on a 
license application under this chapter on the commission's 
determination that a timely written request for a contested case 
hearing was filed by a person affected.  The determination of who is 
a person affected under this chapter is governed exclusively by 
this chapter [This section does not apply to license or 
registration activities for which other notice and hearing 
procedures are required by this chapter].
	(c)  The commission may hold a contested case hearing on an 
application for the renewal of or an amendment of a license issued 
under this chapter if a change is being requested that would 
constitute a major amendment and a person affected timely requests 
the hearing in writing.
	SECTION 4.  Section 401.104, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsection (f) to 
read as follows:
	(b)  Except as provided by Subsection (e), the commission by 
rule shall provide for licensing for the disposal of radioactive 
substances [material except for the disposal of by-product material 
defined by Section 401.003(3)(B).  The department by rule shall 
provide for licensing the disposal of by-product material defined 
by Section 401.003(3)(B)].
	(f)  A separate commercial storage and processing license 
may be issued for a site also licensed for disposal under this 
chapter.
	SECTION 5.  Subsection (a), Section 401.106, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The board or commission by rule may exempt a source of 
radiation or a kind of use or user from the licensing or 
registration requirements provided by this chapter and under the 
agency's jurisdiction if the board or commission finds that the 
exemption of that source of radiation or kind of use or user will 
not constitute a significant risk to the public health and safety 
and the environment.
	SECTION 6.  Subsection (c), Section 401.108, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(c)  The [department or] commission shall reevaluate every 
five years the qualifications and security provided by a license 
holder under Subchapter F or Subchapter G. The reevaluation may 
coincide with license renewal procedures if renewal and 
reevaluation occur in the same year.
	SECTION 7.  Subsection (b), Section 401.109, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(b)  The [department or] commission shall require a holder of 
a license that authorizes the disposal of radioactive substances 
[low-level radioactive waste as provided by Subchapter F] to 
provide security acceptable to the commission [agency] to assure 
performance of the license holder's obligations under this chapter.
	SECTION 8.  Section 401.111, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.111.  CRITERIA FOR CERTAIN UNSUITABLE NEW 
SITES.  (a)  The [board and] commission [each], in adopting rules 
for the issuance of licenses under the commission's jurisdiction 
[their respective jurisdictions] for new sites for processing or 
disposal of radioactive substances [low-level radioactive waste] 
from other persons, shall adopt criteria for the designation of 
unsuitable sites, including:
		(1)  flood hazard areas;                                                      
		(2)  areas with characteristics of discharge from or 
recharge of a groundwater aquifer system; or
		(3)  areas in which soil conditions make spill cleanup 
impracticable.       
	(b)  The [board and] commission [each] shall consult with the 
advisory board and with the Texas Water Development Board, the 
State Soil and Water Conservation Board, the Bureau of Economic 
Geology, and other appropriate state agencies in developing 
proposed rules.  The [board and] commission [each] by rule shall:
		(1)  require selection of sites in areas in which 
natural conditions minimize potential contamination of surface 
water and groundwater; and
		(2)  prohibit issuance of licenses for unsuitable sites 
as defined by the rules.
	SECTION 9.  Section 401.112, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.112.  LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE PROCESSING OR 
DISPOSAL LICENSE APPLICATION AND CONSIDERATIONS.  (a)  The 
[department or] commission[, within its jurisdiction], in making a 
licensing decision on a specific license application to process or 
dispose of low-level radioactive waste from other persons, shall 
consider:
		(1)  site suitability, geological, hydrological, and 
meteorological factors, and natural [naturals] hazards;
		(2)  compatibility with present uses of land near the 
site;                 
		(3)  socioeconomic effects on surrounding communities 
of operation of the licensed activity and of associated 
transportation of low-level radioactive waste;
		(4)  the need for and alternatives to the proposed 
activity, including an alternative siting analysis prepared by the 
applicant;
		(5)  the applicant's qualifications, including 
financial and technical qualifications and compliance history 
under the method for evaluation of compliance history developed by 
the commission under Section 5.754, Water Code, for an application 
to the commission [or the requirements of Section 401.110(b) for an 
application to the department];
		(6)  background monitoring plans for the proposed site;                       
		(7)  suitability of facilities associated with the 
proposed activities;     
		(8)  chemical, radiological, and biological 
characteristics of the low-level radioactive waste and waste 
classification under Section 401.053;
		(9)  adequate insurance of the applicant to cover 
potential injury to any property or person, including potential 
injury from risks relating to transportation;
		(10)  training programs for the applicant's employees;                        
		(11)  a monitoring, record-keeping, and reporting 
program;                  
		(12)  spill detection and cleanup plans for the 
licensed site and related to associated transportation of low-level 
radioactive waste;
		(13)  decommissioning and postclosure care plans;                             
		(14)  security plans;                                                         
		(15)  worker monitoring and protection plans;                                 
		(16)  emergency plans; and                                                    
		(17)  a monitoring program for applicants that includes 
prelicense and postlicense monitoring of background radioactive 
and chemical characteristics of the soils, groundwater, and 
vegetation.
	(b)  An applicant for the specific license must submit with 
the application information necessary for the commission [issuing 
agency] to consider the factors under Subsection (a).
	(c)  The [board and] commission [each within its 
jurisdiction] by rule shall provide specific criteria for the 
different types of licensed low-level radioactive waste activities 
for the listed factors and may include additional factors and 
criteria that the [board or] commission[, as appropriate,] 
determines necessary for full consideration of a license.
	SECTION 10.  Subsections (a) and (b), Section 401.113, 
Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  Before a hearing under Section 401.114 begins, the 
commission [agency holding the hearing] shall prepare or have 
prepared a written analysis of the effect on the environment of a 
proposed licensed activity that the commission [agency] determines 
has a significant effect on the human environment.
	(b)  The commission [agency] shall make the analysis 
available to the public not later than the 31st day before the date 
of a hearing under Section 401.114.
	SECTION 11.  Section 401.114, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.114.  NOTICE AND HEARING.  (a)  Before the 
[department or] commission[, within its jurisdiction,] grants or 
renews a license to process or dispose of low-level radioactive 
waste from other persons, the commission [agency] shall give notice 
and shall provide an opportunity for a public hearing in the manner 
provided by the commission's [agency's] formal hearing procedure 
and Chapter 2001, Government Code.
	(b)  In addition to other notice, the commission [agency] 
shall publish notice of the hearing in the manner provided by 
Chapter 313, Government Code, in the county in which the proposed 
facility is to be located.  The notice shall state the subject and 
the time, place, and date of the hearing.
	(c)  The commission [agency] shall mail, by certified mail in 
the manner provided by the commission's [agency's] rules, written 
notice to each person who owns property adjacent to the proposed 
site.  The notice must be mailed not later than the 31st day before 
the date of the hearing and must include the same information that 
is in the published notice.  If true, the commission [agency] or the 
applicant must certify that the notice was mailed as required by 
this subsection, and at the hearing the certificate is conclusive 
evidence of the mailing.
	SECTION 12.  Section 401.116, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.116.  LICENSE AMENDMENT.  The commission shall 
adopt rules to establish requirements for public notice of and 
public participation in the amendment of a license issued under 
this subchapter.  [(a)  An amendment to a license to process or 
dispose of low-level radioactive waste from other persons may take 
effect immediately.
	[(b)  The department or commission, as appropriate, shall 
publish notice of the license amendment once in the Texas Register 
and in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the 
licensed activity is located and shall give notice to any person who 
has notified the agency, in advance, of the desire to receive notice 
of proposed amendment of the license.
	[(c)  Notice under this section must include:                 
		[(1)  the identity of the license holder;                    
		[(2)  identification of the license; and                     
		[(3)  a short and plain statement of the license 
amendment's substance.
	[(d)  The agency shall give notice and hold a hearing to 
consider the license amendment if a person affected files a written 
complaint with the agency before the 31st day after the date on 
which notice is published under Subsection (b).  The agency shall 
give notice of the hearing as provided by Section 401.114].
	SECTION 13.  Section 401.117, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.117.  CONSTRUCTION LIMITATION.  The [department 
or] commission shall prohibit major construction relating to 
activities to be permitted under a license issued by the commission 
[agency] to process or dispose of low-level radioactive waste from 
other persons until the requirements in Sections 401.113 and 
401.114 are completed.
	SECTION 14.  Subsection (a), Section 401.202, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The commission [or department, within its respective 
jurisdiction,] may grant, deny, renew, revoke, suspend, or withdraw 
licenses for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste from other 
persons and for the processing of that waste.
	SECTION 15.  Subsections (a) and (b), Section 401.241, 
Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  In determining the amount of security required of a 
[compact waste disposal facility license] holder of a license to 
dispose of radioactive substances under Section 401.109, the 
commission shall also consider the need for financial security to 
address and prevent unplanned events that pose a risk to public 
health and safety and that may occur after the decommissioning and 
closure of the radioactive substances [compact waste] disposal 
facility [or a federal facility waste disposal facility licensed 
under Section 401.216].
	(b)  The amount of security required of a compact waste 
disposal facility license holder under this section may not be less 
than $20 million at the time the disposal facility site is 
decommissioned.  The commission shall use interest earned on the 
security to offset any other financial obligations incurred by the 
license holder to the commission.  The commission shall establish a 
schedule for the total payment of the amount of the security 
required under this section based on:
		(1)  the amount of low-level radioactive waste received 
at the site;        
		(2)  the long-term risk to health, safety, and the 
environment posed by the waste; and
		(3)  the need to address and prevent unplanned events 
that pose a risk to public health and safety.
	SECTION 16.  Section 401.262, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.262.  MANAGEMENT OF CERTAIN BY-PRODUCT 
MATERIAL.  The commission [department] has sole and exclusive 
authority to assure that processing and disposal sites are closed 
and that by-product material is managed and disposed of in 
compliance with:
		(1)  the federal commission's applicable standards; and                       
		(2)  closure criteria the federal commission and the 
United States Environmental Protection Agency have determined are 
protective of human health and safety and the environment.
	SECTION 17.  Section 401.2625, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.2625.  LICENSING AUTHORITY.  The commission 
[commissioner] has sole and exclusive authority to grant, deny, 
renew, revoke, suspend, amend, or withdraw licenses for source 
material recovery and processing or for storage, processing, or 
disposal of by-product material.
	SECTION 18.  Subsections (a), (c), (d), (e), and (f), 
Section 401.263, Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as 
follows:
	(a)  If the commission [department] is considering the 
issuance, renewal, or amendment of a license to process materials 
that produce by-product materials or a license to dispose of 
by-product material and the commission [department] determines 
that the licensed activity will have a significant impact on the 
human environment, the commission [department] shall prepare or 
have prepared a written environmental analysis.
	(c)  The commission [department] shall give notice of the 
analysis as provided by commission [board] rule and shall make the 
analysis available to the public for written comment not later than 
the 31st day before the date of the hearing on the license.
	(d)  After notice is given, the commission [department] 
shall provide an opportunity for written comments by persons 
affected.
	(e)  The analysis shall be included as part of the record of 
the commission's [department's] proceedings.
	(f)  The commission [board] by rule shall prohibit major 
construction with respect to an activity that is to be licensed 
until the requirements of Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (e) are 
completed.
	SECTION 19.  Subsections (a), (c), and (d), Section 401.264, 
Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The commission [department] on its own motion may or on 
the written request of a person affected shall provide an 
opportunity for a public hearing on an application over which the 
commission [department] has jurisdiction to determine whether to 
issue, renew, or amend a license to process materials that produce 
by-product materials or a license to dispose of by-product 
materials in the manner provided by Chapter 2001, Government Code, 
and permit appearances with or without counsel and the examination 
and cross-examination of witnesses under oath.
	(c)  The commission [department] shall make a record of the 
proceedings and provide a transcript of the hearing on request of, 
and payment for, the transcript or provision of a sufficient 
deposit to assure payment by any person requesting the transcript.
	(d)  The commission [department] shall provide an 
opportunity to obtain a written determination of action to be 
taken.  The determination must be based on evidence presented to the 
commission [department] and include findings.  The written 
determination is available to the public.
	SECTION 20.  Section 401.265, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.265.  CONDITIONS OF CERTAIN BY-PRODUCT MATERIAL 
LICENSES.  The commission [department] shall prescribe conditions 
in a radioactive substances [material] license issued, renewed, or 
amended for an activity that results in production of by-product 
material to minimize or, if possible, eliminate the need for 
long-term maintenance and monitoring before the termination of the 
license, including conditions that:
		(1)  the license holder will comply with the applicable 
decontamination, decommissioning, reclamation, and disposal 
standards that are prescribed by the commission [board] and that 
are compatible with the federal commission's standards for sites at 
which those ores were processed and at which the by-product 
material is deposited; and
		(2)  the ownership of a disposal site, other than a 
disposal well covered by a permit issued under Chapter 27, Water 
Code, licensed on-site waste disposal associated with a licensed in 
situ leach uranium recovery facility, and the by-product material 
resulting from the licensed activity are transferred, subject to 
Sections 401.266-401.269, to:
			(A)  the state; or                                                           
			(B)  the federal government if the state declines 
to acquire the site, the by-product material, or both the site and 
the by-product material.
	SECTION 21.  Subsection (a), Section 401.266, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The commission [board] by rule or [order or the 
department by] order may require that before a license covering 
land used for the disposal of by-product material is terminated, 
the land, including any affected interests in the land, must be 
transferred to the federal government or to the state unless:
		(1)  the federal commission determines before the 
license terminates that the transfer of title to the land and the 
by-product material is unnecessary to protect the public health, 
safety, or welfare or to minimize danger to life or property; or
		(2)  the land is held in trust by the federal government 
for an Indian tribe, is owned by an Indian tribe subject to a 
restriction against alienation imposed by the federal government, 
is owned by the federal government, or is owned by the state.
	SECTION 22.  Section 401.267, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.267.  ACQUISITION AND SALE OF CERTAIN BY-PRODUCT 
MATERIALS AND SITES.  (a)  The commission [department] may acquire 
by-product material and fee simple title in land, affected mineral 
rights, and buildings at which that by-product material is disposed 
of and abandoned so that the by-product material and property can be 
managed in a manner consistent with protecting public health, 
safety, and the environment.
	(b)  The commission [department] may sell land acquired 
under this section at the land's fair market value after the 
commission [department] has taken corrective action to restore the 
land to a condition that does not compromise the public health or 
safety or the environment.  The General Land Office shall negotiate 
and close a transaction under this subsection on behalf of the 
commission [department] using procedures under Section 31.158(c), 
Natural Resources Code.  Proceeds from the transaction shall be 
deposited in the Texas capital trust fund.
	SECTION 23.  Section 401.269, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.269.  MONITORING, MAINTENANCE, AND EMERGENCY 
MEASURES.  (a)  The commission [department] may undertake 
monitoring, maintenance, and emergency measures in connection with 
by-product material and property for which it has assumed custody 
under Section 401.267 that are necessary to protect the public 
health and safety and the environment.
	(b)  The commission [department] shall maintain the 
by-product material and property transferred to it in a manner that 
will protect the public health and safety and the environment.
	SECTION 24.  Subsections (a), (b), (e), and (f), Section 
401.270, Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  If the commission [department] finds that by-product 
material or the operation by which that by-product material is 
derived threatens the public health and safety or the environment, 
the commission [department] by order may require any action, 
including a corrective measure, that is necessary to correct or 
remove the threat.
	(b)  The commission [department] may issue an emergency 
order to a person responsible for an activity, including a past 
activity, concerning the recovery or processing of source material 
or the disposal of by-product material if it appears that there is 
an actual or threatened release of source material or by-product 
material that presents an imminent and substantial danger to the 
public health and safety or the environment, regardless of whether 
the activity was lawful at the time.  The emergency order may be 
issued without notice or hearing.
	(e)  The commission [department] shall use the security 
provided by the license holder to pay the costs of actions that are 
taken or that are to be taken under this section.  The commission
[department] shall send to the comptroller a copy of its order 
together with necessary written requests authorizing the 
comptroller to:
		(1)  enforce security supplied by the licensee;                               
		(2)  convert an amount of security into cash, as 
necessary; and             
		(3)  disburse from the security in the perpetual care 
account the amount necessary to pay the costs.
	(f)  If an order issued by the commission [department] under 
this section is adopted without notice or hearing, the order shall 
set a time, at least 10 but not more than 30 days following the date 
of issuance of the emergency order, and a place for a hearing to be 
held in accordance with the rules of the commission [board].  As a 
result of this hearing, the commission [department] shall decide 
whether to affirm, modify, or set aside the emergency order.  All 
provisions of the emergency order shall remain in force and effect 
during the pendency of the hearing, unless otherwise altered by the 
commission [department].
	SECTION 25.  Subchapter G, Chapter 401, Health and Safety 
Code, is amended by adding Sections 401.271 and 401.272 to read as 
follows:
	Sec. 401.271.  STATE FEE ON RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCES.  (a)  A 
holder of a license issued by the department or commission under 
this chapter that authorizes the disposal of a radioactive 
substance from other persons shall remit each quarter an amount 
equal to 10 percent of the license holder's gross receipts received 
from disposal operations under a license issued under this chapter 
that occur after the effective date of the Act enacting this section 
as follows:
		(1)  eight percent shall be remitted to the comptroller 
for deposit into the general revenue fund; and
		(2)  two percent shall be remitted to the host county in 
accordance with Sections 401.244(b) and (d).
	(b)  Subsection (a) does not apply to compact waste as 
defined by Section 401.2005(1), federal facility waste as defined 
in Section 401.2005(4), or industrial solid waste as defined by 
Section 361.003.
	Sec. 401.272.  AUDIT AUTHORITY.  The commission may audit a 
license holder's financial records and waste manifest information 
to ensure that the fees imposed under this chapter are accurately 
paid.  The license holder shall comply with the commission's 
audit-related requests for information.
	SECTION 26.  Section 401.301, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.301.  LICENSE AND REGISTRATION FEES [COLLECTED BY 
DEPARTMENT].  (a)  The commission and department may collect a fee 
for each license and registration the agency [it] issues.
	(b)  The commission and the board each by rule shall set the 
fee in an amount that may not exceed the actual expenses annually 
incurred to:
		(1)  process applications for licenses or 
registrations;                    
		(2)  amend or renew licenses or registrations;                                
		(3)  make inspections of license holders and 
registrants; and               
		(4)  enforce this chapter and rules, orders, licenses, 
and registrations under this chapter.
	(c)  The commission and department may collect a fee, in 
addition to the annual license and registration fee, of not less 
than 20 percent of the amount of the annual license and registration 
fee nor more than $10,000 per annum from each licensee or registrant 
who fails to pay the fees authorized by this section.
	(d)  The commission and department may require that each 
person who holds a specific license issued by the agency
[department] annually pay to the agency [department] an additional 
five percent of the appropriate annual fee set under Subsection 
(b).  Fees collected under this subsection shall be deposited to the 
credit of the perpetual care account. The fees are not refundable.
	(e)  The commission and department shall suspend assessment 
of a fee imposed under Subsection (d) if the amount of fees 
collected under that subsection reaches $500,000. If the balance of 
fees collected subsequently is reduced to $350,000 or less, the 
commission and department shall reinstitute assessment of the fee 
until the balance reaches $500,000.
	(f)  The commission may assess and collect additional fees 
from the applicant to recover the costs the commission incurs for 
administrative review, technical review, and hearings on the 
application.
	SECTION 27.  Subsection (a), Section 401.302, Health and 
Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
	(a)  The department, in coordination with the commission, 
may set and collect an annual fee from the operator of each nuclear 
reactor or other fixed nuclear facility in the state that uses 
special nuclear material.
	SECTION 28.  Subsections (c), (e), (f), and (g), Section 
401.305, Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(c)  Money and security in the perpetual care account may be 
administered by the department or commission only for the 
decontamination, decommissioning, stabilization, reclamation, 
maintenance, surveillance, control, storage, and disposal of 
radioactive substances [material] for the protection of the public 
health and safety and the environment under this chapter and for 
refunds under Section 401.303.
	(e)  The department or commission may use money in the 
perpetual care account to pay for measures:
		(1)  to prevent or mitigate the adverse effects of 
abandonment of radioactive substances [materials], default on a 
lawful obligation, insolvency, or other inability by the holder of 
a license issued by the department or commission to meet the 
requirements of this chapter or of department or commission rules; 
and
		(2)  to assure the protection of the public health and 
safety and the environment from the adverse effects of ionizing 
radiation.
	(f)  The department or commission may provide, by the terms 
of a contract or lease entered into between the department or 
commission and any person or by the terms of a license issued by the 
department or commission to any person, for the decontamination, 
closure, decommissioning, reclamation, surveillance, or other care 
of a site or facility subject to department or commission 
jurisdiction under this chapter as needed to carry out the purpose 
of this chapter.
	(g)  The existence of the perpetual care account does not 
make the department or commission liable for the costs of 
decontamination, transfer, transportation, reclamation, 
surveillance, or disposal of radioactive substances [material] 
arising from a license holder's abandonment of radioactive 
substances [material], default on a lawful obligation, insolvency, 
or inability to meet the requirements of this chapter or of 
department or commission rules.
	SECTION 29.  Section 401.343, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.343.  RECOVERY OF SECURITY.  (a)  The department 
or commission shall seek reimbursement, either by an order of the 
department or commission or a suit filed by the attorney general at 
the [department's] request of the department or commission, of 
security from the perpetual care account used by the department  or 
commission to pay for actions, including corrective measures, to 
remedy spills or contamination by radioactive substances 
[material] resulting from a violation of this chapter relating to 
an activity under the [department's] jurisdiction of the department 
or commission or a violation of a rule, license, registration, or 
order adopted or issued by the department or commission under this 
chapter.
	(b)  On request by the department or commission, the attorney 
general shall file suit to recover security under this section.
	SECTION 30.  The heading to Subchapter K, Chapter 401, 
Health and Safety Code, is amended to read as follows:
SUBCHAPTER K.  LICENSING AUTHORITY OF TEXAS [NATURAL RESOURCE
CONSERVATION] COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY AND THE
RAILROAD COMMISSION OF TEXAS
	SECTION 31.  Subsections (a) and (b), Section 401.412, 
Health and Safety Code, are amended to read as follows:
	(a)  Upon the transfer of the rights, powers, duties, 
obligations, functions, and activities related to the regulation 
and licensing of the disposal of radioactive substances from the 
department to the commission, and [N]notwithstanding any other 
provision of this chapter and subject to Sections 401.102 and 
401.415, the commission has sole and exclusive authority to 
directly regulate and to grant, deny, renew, revoke, suspend, 
amend, or withdraw licenses for the disposal of radioactive 
substances.  [In this subsection, "radioactive substance" does not 
include by-product material as defined by Section 401.003(3)(B).]
	(b)  Upon the transfer of the rights, powers, duties, 
obligations, functions, and activities related to the regulation 
and licensing of the disposal of radioactive substances from the 
department to the commission, and [N]notwithstanding any other 
provision of this chapter, the commission [commissioner] has the 
sole and exclusive authority to grant, deny, renew, revoke, 
suspend, amend, or withdraw licenses for the recovery and 
processing of source material or disposal of by-product material 
under Subchapter G.
	SECTION 32.  Section 401.413, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.413.  COMMISSION DISPOSAL LICENSE REQUIRED.  A 
person required by another section of this chapter to obtain a 
license for the disposal of a radioactive substance is required to 
obtain the license from the commission and not from the department.  
[This section does not apply to a person required to obtain a 
license for recovery or processing of source material or for 
recovery, processing, or disposal of by-product material as defined 
by Section 401.003(3)(B).]
	SECTION 33.  Section 401.414, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 401.414.  MEMORANDA [MEMORANDUM] OF 
UNDERSTANDING.  The Texas [Natural Resource Conservation] 
Commission on Environmental Quality, the Health and Human Services 
Commission, and the Railroad Commission of Texas [and the board of 
health] by rule shall adopt memoranda [a memorandum] of 
understanding defining their respective duties under this chapter.
	SECTION 34.  Section 401.415, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended by amending Subsections (a), (d), and (e) and adding 
Subsection (f) to read as follows:
	(a)  Notwithstanding any other provision of this chapter, 
the Railroad Commission of Texas:
		(1)  has sole authority to regulate and issue licenses, 
permits, and orders, and establish fees to pay for costs to regulate 
the processing, storage, and disposal of oil and gas NORM waste and 
the decontamination and maintenance of oil-field equipment; and
		(2)  may, in order to protect public health and safety 
and the environment, require the owner or operator of oil and gas 
equipment used in exploration, production, or disposal to:
			(A)  determine whether the equipment contains or 
is contaminated with oil and gas NORM waste; and
			(B)  identify any equipment determined to contain 
or be contaminated with oil and gas NORM.
	(d)  The Railroad Commission of Texas shall consult with the 
department and the commission [Texas Natural Resource Conservation 
Commission] as appropriate regarding administration of this 
section.
	(e)  To ensure that the State of Texas retains its Agreement 
Status with the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, and to ensure 
that radioactive materials are managed consistently to protect the 
public health and safety and the environment, the Railroad 
Commission of Texas shall issue rules on the management of oil and 
gas NORM waste, including rules governing processing, storage, and 
disposal of the waste, decontamination and maintenance of oil-field 
equipment, and fees established pursuant to Subsection (a).  In 
developing those rules, the railroad commission [and in so doing] 
shall consult with the commission [Texas Natural Resource 
Conservation Commission] and the department [Department of Health] 
regarding protection of the public health and the environment.  The 
rules of the railroad commission shall provide protection for 
public health, safety, and the environment equivalent to the 
protection provided by rules of the commission applicable to 
processing, storage, and disposal of other NORM wastes having 
similar properties, quantities, and distribution[, although the 
approved methods and sites for disposing of oil and gas NORM wastes 
may be different from those approved for other NORM wastes].
	(f)  In adopting a fee structure, the Railroad Commission of 
Texas may consider any factors necessary to provide for the 
equitable allocation among NORM operators of the costs of 
administering the railroad commission's oil and gas NORM program 
under this section.  The total amount of fees estimated to be 
collected under rules adopted by the railroad commission under this 
section may not exceed the estimated costs of administering the 
railroad commission's oil and gas NORM program under this section.
	SECTION 35.  Section 361.015, Health and Safety Code, is 
amended to read as follows:
	Sec. 361.015.  JURISDICTION:  RADIOACTIVE WASTE.  (a)  The 
commission is the state agency under Chapter 401 that licenses and 
regulates radioactive waste storage, processing, and disposal 
activities not preemptively regulated by the federal government.
	(b)  Except as provided by Subsection (a), the Health and 
Human Services Commission, acting through the Department of State 
Health Services or other department as designated by the executive 
commissioner of the Health and Human Services Commission, [The 
Texas Department of Health] is the state agency under Chapter 401 
that regulates radioactive waste activities[, excluding disposal,] 
not preemptively regulated by the federal government.
	(c)  The Railroad Commission of Texas is the state agency 
that licenses and regulates the possession, storage, processing, 
handling, and disposal of oil and gas NORM waste and the 
decontamination and maintenance of oil-field equipment.
	SECTION 36.  Subchapter B, Chapter 27, Water Code, is 
amended by adding Section 27.023 to read as follows:
	Sec. 27.023.  AUTHORIZATION FOR AREA-WIDE IN SITU MINING OF 
RADIOACTIVE SUBSTANCES.  (a)  As a component of an injection well 
permit, the commission may issue an authorization for in situ 
mining of radioactive substances in a specified production area.  
The authorization may not contain a provision that requires any 
additional approval of the commission or any additional hearing for 
the permit holder to conduct minor in situ mining in the production 
area.  The commission by rule shall define the difference between 
major and minor in situ mining.
	(b)  On or after the effective date of the Act enacting this 
section, a rule or provision of a permit or order of the commission 
that requires additional approval of the commission or an 
additional hearing for the permit holder to conduct minor in situ 
mining in the production area specified in an injection well permit 
is not effective.  Notwithstanding any provision of this code or of 
a commission rule or order, an application for minor in situ 
authorization is not subject to a contested case hearing, 
regardless of when the application is submitted.
	(c)  This section does not affect the authority of the 
commission to: 
		(1)  revoke, suspend, or amend a permit issued under 
this chapter;   
		(2)  investigate a permit holder or an action taken 
under or in violation of a permit issued under this chapter; or
		(3)  enforce a provision of a permit issued under this 
chapter.      
	(d)  The change in law made by this section does not affect 
any matter that is a subject of litigation on or before November 1, 
2005.  An administrative law judge presiding over a licensure 
proceeding under this section shall expedite the procedures 
necessary to complete the hearing in a timely manner.
	SECTION 37.  (a)  An application for a new license to dispose 
of by-product material that is filed with the Department of State 
Health Services on or before January 1, 2005, shall be processed as 
follows:
		(1)  a license application subject to this subsection 
shall be governed only by the rules and regulations of the 
department effective at the time such application was filed;
		(2)  the department shall complete any technical review 
of a license application subject to this subsection and may issue a 
draft license no later than January 1, 2006;
		(3)  the department shall render a final decision on a 
license application subject to this subsection no later than 
January 1, 2007: and
		(4)  a contested case hearing held on a license 
application subject to this subsection that was filed with the 
department on or before January 1, 2005, shall be timely conducted 
to meet the requirement of (a)(3).  Discovery in such a hearing 
shall be limited to not more than 60 days in order to meet this 
limitation. Notice of hearing shall be provided to the applicant, 
the office of public interest counsel, the commissioner, and the 
person who timely requested a contested case hearing by mail at 
least 10 days in advance of the hearing.
	(b)  On the thirtieth day following the department's final 
decision regarding a license application subject to subsection (a), 
the following rights, powers, duties, obligations, functions, 
activities, property, programs, and appropriations are transferred 
to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality:
		(1)  all rights, powers, duties, obligations, 
functions, and activities:    
			(A)  that Chapter 401, Health and Safety Code, 
assigns to the Texas Department of Health, the Texas Board of 
Health, or their successor agencies or to the governing body, 
officers, or employees of that department, that board, or their 
successor agencies, including the Health and Human Services 
Commission and the Department of State Health Services; and
			(B)  that are related to licensing and regulation 
of:                      
				(i)  radioactive substances recovery, 
storage, processing, and disposal; or
				(ii)  long-term care of decommissioned sites 
for disposal of by-product material;
		(2)  all equipment, information, documents, 
facilities, and other property of the Health and Human Services 
Commission or the Department of State Health Services pertaining to 
licensing and regulation of:
			(A)  radioactive substances recovery, storage, 
processing, and disposal under the jurisdiction of the Texas 
Commission on Environmental Quality as provided by Subsection (b), 
Section 401.011, Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act; or
			(B)  long-term care of decommissioned sites for 
disposal of by-product material;
		(3)  all appropriations for the state fiscal biennium 
that begins September 1, 2005, made to the Health and Human Services 
Commission or the Department of State Health Services for 
activities related to licensing and regulation of:
			(A)  radioactive substances recovery, storage, 
processing, and disposal under the jurisdiction of the Texas 
Commission on Environmental Quality as provided by Subsection (b), 
Section 401.011, Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act; or
			(B)  long-term care of decommissioned sites for 
disposal of by-product material; and
		(4)  the unexpended and unobligated portions of the 
appropriations for the state fiscal biennium beginning September 1, 
2003, made to the Health and Human Services Commission or the 
Department of State Health Services for activities described by 
Subdivision (3) of this subsection.
	(c)  Appropriations transferred under Subdivision (4), 
Subsection (b) of this section, are transferred for the remainder 
of that state fiscal biennium.
	(d)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, as of the 
date of the transfer prescribed by Subsection (b) of this section, 
has full responsibility for the administration and enforcement of 
laws related to licensing or regulation of radioactive substances 
recovery, storage, processing, and disposal under the jurisdiction 
of the commission as provided by Subsection (b), Section 401.011, 
Health and Safety Code, as amended by this Act, and licensing or 
regulation of long-term care of decommissioned sites for the 
disposal of by-product material. The Texas Commission on 
Environmental Quality shall carry out all related duties, 
responsibilities, functions, and activities as provided by law, 
including those assigned by any other Acts of the 79th Legislature, 
Regular Session or 1st Called Session, 2005.
	(e)  The transfer of rights, powers, duties, obligations, 
functions, activities, property, and programs of the Health and 
Human Services Commission or the Department of State Health 
Services to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality made by 
this Act does not affect or impair any act done or obligation, 
right, license, permit, requirement, or penalty accrued or existing 
under the former law; that law remains in effect for the purposes of 
any action concerning such an act done or obligation, right, 
license, permit, requirement, or penalty. The Texas Commission on 
Environmental Quality shall continue a proceeding of the Health and 
Human Services Commission or the Department of State Health 
Services that is related to a responsibility, duty, activity, 
function, or program transferred by this Act, including processing 
an application for a license or other authorization and including 
enforcing the requirements of Chapter 401, Health and Safety Code, 
or a rule adopted under that chapter. A rule of the Health and Human 
Services Commission or the Department of State Health Services 
related to a responsibility, duty, activity, function, or program 
transferred by this Act is enforceable as a rule of the Texas 
Commission on Environmental Quality until the Texas Commission on 
Environmental Quality adopts other rules.
	(f)  Control of and title to all property and material 
acquired by this state or an agency of this state under Section 
401.267, Health and Safety Code, before the effective date of this 
Act shall be transferred to the Texas Commission on Environmental 
Quality on this state's behalf as soon as practicable. This section 
does not apply to property or material sold by the state under 
Subsection (b) of that section before the effective date of this 
Act.
	(g)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall 
provide an opportunity for employees of the Health and Human 
Services Commission or the Department of State Health Services who 
have performed duties related to a right, power, duty, obligation, 
responsibility, function, activity, or program transferred by this 
Act to request a transfer to commission employment. In making 
employment decisions under this subsection, the Texas Commission on 
Environmental Quality shall:
		(1)  ensure that state and federal requirements are met 
by commission employees; and
		(2)  consider the value of maintaining continuity in 
the personnel staffing relevant programs.
	(h)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, the 
Health and Human Services Commission, and the Department of State 
Health Services by interagency agreement or contract shall 
cooperate in preventing any delay that may be caused by or may occur 
in the transfer of property or personnel or a right, power, duty, 
obligation, responsibility, function, activity, or program made by 
this Act.
	(i)  The transfers made by this Act do not affect any matter 
that is the subject of litigation pending on the effective date of 
this Act.
	(j)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall 
continue any applications review or processing and any hearings 
that concern a matter subject to transfer under Subsection (b) of 
this section that, on the date of the transfer, is being conducted 
by the Health and Human Services Commission or the Department of 
State Health Services or their successor agencies. The agencies 
shall cooperate and consult with each other to ensure that any delay 
necessitated by the transfer is minimized to the greatest extent 
possible. The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall 
utilize progress made on any technical review or environmental 
analysis conducted by the department prior to the effective date of 
this Act.
	(k)  An application for the renewal or amendment of a license 
to recover or process source material and to dispose of the 
associated by-product material that was received prior to January 
1, 2005, and is pending with the Department of State Health Services 
on October 31, 2005, is considered, based on federal requirements, 
approved by the Department of State Health Services on January 1, 
2007 unless the Department of State Health Services before that 
date determines that the application should not be approved because 
of a health or safety emergency or because the applicant 
substantially fails to meet application requirements.
	(l)  By January 1, 2007, the Department of State Health 
Services shall:      
		(1)  approve any pending remediation plan that is 
subject to the transfer required under this section, according to 
federal requirements;
		(2)  inspect the related remediation sites to ensure 
that remedial actions have been completed according to the approved 
plan; and
		(3)  report to the federal Nuclear Regulatory 
Commission the department's approval of the plan and the results of 
the inspection under Subdivisions (1) and (2) of this subsection.
	(m)  A remediation plan that is subject to the transfer 
required under this section the approval of which is pending with 
the Department of State Health Services on January 1, 2007 is 
considered, based on federal requirements, approved by the 
department on January 1, 2007, unless the department or the Texas 
Commission on Environmental Quality before that date determines 
that the plan should not be approved because of a health or safety 
emergency or because the plan substantially fails to meet 
requirements for approval.
	(n)  Notwithstanding the changes to Chapter 401, Health and 
Safety Code, made by this Act, the Department of State Health 
Services shall retain jurisdiction over, and render a final 
decision on, an application for an amended license to store or 
process radioactive substances that was filed with the department 
on or before January 1, 2005, and that has been referred to the 
State Office of Administrative Hearings by the department before 
the effective date of this Act. A license application subject to 
this subsection is governed only by the laws of the state and the 
rules and regulations of the department effective at the time the 
application was filed. Once a final decision is rendered by the 
department, jurisdiction over any license issued shall be 
transferred to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality.
	(o)  Prior to the transfer of the rights, powers, duties, 
obligations, functions, and activities related to the regulation 
and licensing of the disposal of radioactive substances from the 
department to the commission under subsection (b), the department 
shall provide the commission with the opportunity to comment on the 
development and drafting of license conditions related to the 
technical requirements for the disposal of radioactive substances. 
Upon the transfer of the rights, powers, duties, obligations, 
functions, and activities related to the regulation and licensing 
of the disposal of radioactive substances from the department to 
the commission under subsection (b), the commission may initiate an 
amendment or a modification to a license issued by the department.
	SECTION 38.  (a)  In the event that the department does not 
render a final determination on a license application subject to 
Section 37 (a) of this Act in a timely manner in accordance with 
Section 37 (b) of this Act, the department shall remain responsible 
for rendering a final determination on the license application.
	SECTION 39.  (a)  In this section, "license" means a license 
that authorizes the license holder to receive, process, store, and 
transfer by-product material, as defined by Paragraph (B), 
Subdivision (3), Section 401.003, Health and Safety Code.
	(b)  On the effective date of this Act, a condition of a 
license that would subject the license holder to a civil or 
administrative penalty for the license holder's failure to transfer 
by-product material to certain disposal sites by a certain date is 
void.
	SECTION 40.  (a)  This Act does not impair, delay, or affect 
the priority established by law for processing and review of the 
application for a license to dispose of low-level radioactive waste 
that was filed with the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality 
before January 1, 2005.
	(b)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall 
give priority to the processing and review of a license application 
described by Subsection (a) of this section over all other 
applications that pertain to radioactive substances or radioactive 
waste pending before the commission except for those applications 
the executive director of the Texas Commission on Environmental 
Quality determines are necessarily of a higher priority to avert or 
address an emergency concerning the public health or safety.
	(c)  The department shall, in the following order, give 
priority to the review and processing of:
		(1)  an application for the renewal or amendment of a 
license to recover or process source material and to dispose of the 
associated by-product material that was received prior to January 
1, 2005;
		(2)  an application for termination of a license to 
recover or process source material and dispose of associated 
by-product material generated in this state; and
		(3)  a new application for a permit to recover or 
process source material and dispose of associated by-product 
material generated in this state.
	(d)  Upon the transfer of the rights, powers, duties, 
obligations, functions, and activities related to the regulation 
and licensing of the disposal of radioactive substances from the 
department to the commission, and subject to the priority given 
under Subsections (a) and (b) of this section, the Texas Commission 
on Environmental Quality shall give priority to the review and 
processing of applications pursuant to Subsection (c) of this 
section.
	SECTION 41.  Notwithstanding other law or any rule on the 
subject of timeliness of an applicant providing information 
pertaining to an application for a license from the Texas 
Commission on Environmental Quality, the applicant for a license 
shall assist the commission in meeting any deadlines imposed by 
Chapter 401, Health and Safety Code, by submitting to the 
commission any information the commission requires regarding the 
application in a prompt and timely manner.
	SECTION 42.  (a)  Pursuant to the transfer schedule in 
Section 37 (b) of this Act:
		(1)  all money appropriated to the Department of State 
Health Services for the regulation of the commercial storage and 
processing and the disposal of radioactive waste, except money 
related to the regulation of oil and gas naturally occurring 
radioactive material waste, is transferred to the Texas Commission 
on Environmental Quality, including $447,608 out of the General 
Revenue Fund in each fiscal year of the state fiscal biennium 
beginning September 1, 2005; and
		(2)  eight full-time equivalent employees of the 
Department of State Health Services working in the regulation of 
the commercial storage and processing and the disposal of 
radioactive waste, except those employees whose work is related to 
the regulation of oil and gas naturally occurring radioactive 
material waste, are transferred to the Texas Commission on 
Environmental Quality.
	(b)  Fee revenues deposited to the credit of the General 
Revenue Fund (No. 0001), Revenue Code 3589, are appropriated to the 
Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in the amounts not to 
exceed $1,181,156 for the state fiscal year beginning September 1, 
2005, and not to exceed $1,064,656 for the state fiscal year 
beginning September 1, 2006.
	(c)  The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality shall use 
the appropriated money to regulate radioactive waste as provided by 
Chapter 401, Health and Safety Code.
	(d)  The number of full-time equivalent employees authorized 
for the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality is increased by 
an additional eight for each fiscal year of the state fiscal 
biennium beginning September 1, 2005.
	(e)  The governor with the advice of the Legislative Budget 
Board may resolve any disputes concerning the transfer of 
appropriations and employees from the Department of State Health 
Services to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality under 
this Act.
	SECTION 43.  (a)  The following sections of this Act shall 
become effective on the effective date of this Act:
		(1)  Section 1                                                                
		(2)  Section 25                                                               
		(3)  Section 26                                                               
		(4)  Section 27                                                               
		(5)  Section 36                                                               
		(6)  Section 37                                                               
		(7)  Section 38                                                               
		(8)  Section 39                                                               
		(9)  Section 40                                                               
		(10)  Section 41                                                              
		(11)  Section 42                                                              
		(12)  Section 43                                                              
	(b)  All other sections of this Act become effective pursuant 
to Section 37 (b) of this Act.
	SECTION 44.  This Act takes effect immediately if it 
receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to each 
house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas Constitution. 
If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for immediate 
effect, this Act takes effect November 1, 2005.