
From the U.S. Code Online via GPO Access
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[Laws in effect as of January 23, 2000]
[Document not affected by Public Laws enacted between
  January 23, 2000 and December 4, 2001]
[CITE: 42USC10174a]

 
                 TITLE 42--THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND WELFARE
 
                    CHAPTER 108--NUCLEAR WASTE POLICY
 
  SUBCHAPTER I--DISPOSAL AND STORAGE OF HIGH-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE, 
           SPENT NUCLEAR FUEL, AND LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE
 
                         Part G--Other Benefits
 
Sec. 10174a. Report


(a) In general

    Within one year of December 22, 1987, the Secretary shall report to 
Congress on the potential impacts of locating a repository at the Yucca 
Mountain site, including the recommendations of the Secretary for 
mitigation of such impacts and a statement of which impacts should be 
dealt with by the Federal Government, which should be dealt with by the 
State with State resources, including the benefits payments under 
section 10173a of this title, and which should be a joint Federal-State 
responsibility. The report under this subsection shall include the 
analysis of the Secretary of the authorities available to mitigate these 
impacts and the appropriate sources of funds for such mitigation.

(b) Impacts to be considered

    Potential impacts to be addressed in the report under this \1\ 
subsection (a) of this section shall include impacts on--
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    \1\ So in original. The word ``this'' probably should not appear.
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        (1) education, including facilities and personnel for elementary 
    and secondary schools, community colleges, vocational and technical 
    schools and universities;
        (2) public health, including the facilities and personnel for 
    treatment and distribution of water, the treatment of sewage, the 
    control of pests and the disposal of solid waste;
        (3) law enforcement, including facilities and personnel for the 
    courts, police and sheriff's departments, district attorneys and 
    public defenders and prisons;
        (4) fire protection, including personnel, the construction of 
    fire stations, and the acquisition of equipment;
        (5) medical care, including emergency services and hospitals;
        (6) cultural and recreational needs, including facilities and 
    personnel for libraries and museums and the acquisition and 
    expansion of parks;
        (7) distribution of public lands to allow for the timely 
    expansion of existing, or creation of new, communities and the 
    construction of necessary residential and commercial facilities;
        (8) vocational training and employment services;
        (9) social services, including public assistance programs, 
    vocational and physical rehabilitation programs, mental health 
    services, and programs relating to the abuse of alcohol and 
    controlled substances;
        (10) transportation, including any roads, terminals, airports, 
    bridges, or railways associated with the facility and the repair and 
    maintenance of roads, terminals, airports, bridges, or railways 
    damaged as a result of the construction, operation, and closure of 
    the facility;
        (11) equipment and training for State and local personnel in the 
    management of accidents involving high-level radioactive waste;
        (12) availability of energy;
        (13) tourism and economic development, including the potential 
    loss of revenue and future economic growth; and
        (14) other needs of the State and local governments that would 
    not have arisen but for the characterization of the site and the 
    construction, operation, and eventual closure of the repository 
    facility.

(Pub. L. 97-425, title I, Sec. 175, as added Pub. L. 100-202, 
Sec. 101(d) [title III, Sec. 300], Dec. 22, 1987, 101 Stat. 1329-104, 
1329-121; Pub. L. 100-203, title V, Sec. 5031, Dec. 22, 1987, 101 Stat. 
1330-240.)

                          Codification

    Pub. L. 100-202 and Pub. L. 100-203 added identical sections.
