# Radiation Sources on Army Land
> **US Department of Defense** · Final rule. · Published 2011-02-08 · Effective 2011-03-10 · 76 FR 6692
## Document
- **Document number:** 2011-2748
- **Category:** military-base
- **Sub-agency:** US Department of Defense
- **Federal Register citation:** 76 FR 6692
- **CFR reference:** 32 CFR 655
- **Publication date:** 2011-02-08
- **Effective date:** 2011-03-10
- **DOD docket:** Docket No. USA-2008-0001
## Abstract

The Department of the Army is finalizing revisions to its regulation concerning radiation sources on Army land. The Army requires non-Army agencies (including their civilian contractors) to obtain an Army Radiation Permit (ARP) from the garrison commander to use, store, or possess ionizing radiation sources on an Army installation. For the purpose of this rule, "ionizing radiation source" means any source that, if held or owned by an Army organization, would require a specific Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) license or Army Radiation Authorization (ARA). The purpose of the ARP is to protect the public, civilian employees, and military personnel on an installation from potential exposure to radioactive sources. The U.S. Army Safety Office, which is the proponent for the Army Radiation Safety Program, is finalizing revisions to the regulation to reflect the NRC changes to licensing of Naturally-Occurring and Accelerator-Produced Radioactive Material (NARM). Executive Order 12866 Regulatory Planning and Review was followed to rewrite this rule.

## Source
- [Federal Register document](https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2011/02/08/2011-2748/radiation-sources-on-army-land)
---
*AI Analytics · CC0 1.0*