TITLE 9. ENVIRONMENT
REGISTRAR'S NOTICE: The
following regulatory action is exempt from Article 2 of the Administrative
Process Act in accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 4 c of the Code of Virginia,
which excludes regulations that are necessary to meet the requirements of
federal law or regulations provided such regulations do not differ materially
from those required by federal law or regulation. The Virginia Waste Management
Board is also claiming an exemption from the Administrative Process Act in
accordance with § 2.2-4006 A 3 of the Code of Virginia, which excludes
regulations that consist only of changes in style or form or corrections of
technical errors. The Virginia Waste Management Board will receive, consider,
and respond to petitions by any interested person at any time with respect to
reconsideration or revision.
Title of Regulation: 9VAC20-60. Virginia Hazardous
Waste Management Regulations (amending 9VAC20-60-17, 9VAC20-60-18,
9VAC20-60-260 through 9VAC20-60-265, 9VAC20-60-268, 9VAC20-60-270, 9VAC20-60-273).
Statutory Authority: § 10.1-1402 of the Code of
Virginia; 42 USC § 6921 et seq.; 40 CFR Parts 260 through 272.
Effective Date: April 8, 2018.
Agency Contact: Lisa Ellis, Hazardous Waste Compliance
Coordinator, Department of Environmental Quality, 1111 East Main Street, Suite
1400, P.O. Box 1105, Richmond, VA 23218, telephone (804) 698-4237, or email
lisa.ellis@deq.virginia.gov.
Summary:
In this regulatory action, the Virginia Waste Management
Board incorporates Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations as published on
July 1, 2017, and adopts two final rules of the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) published in the Federal Register on November 28, 2016: Hazardous
Waste Export-Import Revisions and Hazardous Waste Generator Improvements Rule.
The hazardous waste export-import final rule (i) makes
existing export and import-related requirements more consistent with the
current import-export requirements for shipments between members of the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, (ii) enables electronic
submittal to the EPA of all export and import-related documents, and (iii)
enables electronic validation of consent in the Automated Export System for
export shipments subject to Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
export consent requirements prior to exit.
The hazardous waste generator improvements final rule (i)
reorganizes the hazardous waste generator regulations to be more user friendly,
(ii) improves understanding of how the RCRA hazardous waste generator
regulatory program works, (iii) addresses gaps in the existing regulations to
strengthen environmental protection, (iv) provides greater flexibility for
hazardous waste generators to manage their hazardous waste in a cost-effective
and protective manner, and (v) makes technical corrections and conforming
changes to address inadvertent errors and remove obsolete references to
programs that no longer exist.
Other amendments update or correct citations and make other
technical corrections.
9VAC20-60-17. Definitions created by these regulations.
A. The following words and terms when used in this chapter
shall have the following meanings unless the context clearly indicates
otherwise:
"Administrator" means the Administrator of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency or his designee. See 9VAC20-60-14
B 1.
"Another regulation of the Virginia Administrative
Code" means any regulation that is not in 9VAC20-60, the Virginia
Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
"Application, Part A" means that part of the
application that a permit applicant shall complete to qualify for interim
status under § 3005(e) of RCRA or this chapter and for consideration for a
permit.
"Application, Part B" means that part of the
application that a permit applicant shall complete to be considered for a
permit as required by 9VAC20-60-1010 9VAC20-60-270.
"Approved program" means a state program that has
been approved by the U.S. EPA. An "approved state" is one
administering an "approved program" under the hazardous waste management
provisions of RCRA.
"Authorization (authorized program)" means a state
hazardous waste program that has been approved under the authorities of RCRA.
"Authorized representative" means the manager,
superintendent, or person of equivalent responsibility responsible for the
overall operation of a facility or an operational unit (i.e., part of a
facility).
"Board" means the Virginia Waste Management Board.
"Commonwealth" means the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"Department" means the Virginia Department of Environmental
Quality.
"Director" means the Director of the Department of
Environmental Quality.
"Emergency permit" means a permit issued where an
imminent and substantial endangerment to human health or the environment is
determined to exist by the director.
"EPA" means the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency. See 9VAC20-60-14 B 2.
"EPA identification number" means the number
assigned by EPA or the department to each hazardous waste generator, hazardous
waste transporter, or hazardous waste facility.
"EPA hazardous waste number" means the number
assigned by EPA to each waste listed in Subpart D of 40 CFR Part 261 and to
each waste exhibiting a characteristic identified in Subpart C of 40 CFR Part
261.
"Hazardous material" means a substance or material
which has been determined by the Secretary of Transportation to be capable of
posing an unreasonable risk to health, safety, and property when transported in
commerce, and which has been so designated under 49 CFR Parts 171 and 173.
"HSWA" means the Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments of 1984 (P.L. 98-616).
"HSWA drip pad" means a drip pad where F032 wastes
are handled.
"HSWA tank" means a tank owned or operated by a
small quantity generator or an underground tank for which construction
commenced after July 14, 1986, or an underground tank that cannot be entered
for inspection.
"HWM" means hazardous waste management.
"Non-HSWA tank" means any tank that is not a HSWA
tank.
"Non-HSWA drip pad" means a drip pad where F034 or
F035 wastes are handled.
"Permit" means a control document issued by the
Commonwealth pursuant to this chapter, or by the EPA administrator pursuant to
applicable federal regulations. The term "permit" includes any
functional equivalent such as an authorization, license, emergency permit, or
permit by rule. It does not include interim status under RCRA or this chapter,
nor does it include draft permits.
"Permitted hazardous waste management facility" or
"permitted facility" means a hazardous waste treatment, storage, or
disposal facility that has received an EPA or Commonwealth permit in accordance
with the requirements of this chapter or a permit from an authorized state
program.
"Qualified engineer" or "engineer" means
a professional engineer certified to practice in the Commonwealth of Virginia.
"RCRA" means the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as
amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (42 USC § 6901 et
seq.).
"Regulation" means the control, direction and
governance of solid and hazardous waste activities by means of the adoption and
enforcement of laws, ordinances, rules and regulations.
"Responsible individual" means an individual
authorized to sign official documents for and act on behalf of a company or
organization. See also "authorized representative."
"Signature" means the name of a person written with
his own hand.
"State director" means the Director of the
Department of Environmental Quality.
"These regulations" means 9VAC20-60, the Virginia
Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
"VHWMR" means 9VAC20-60, the Virginia Hazardous
Waste Management Regulations.
B. Terms used in liability insurance requirements. In the
liability insurance requirements, the terms "bodily injury" and
"property damage" shall have the meanings given these terms by the
case law of the Virginia court system. However, these terms do not include
those liabilities which, consistent with standard industry practices, are
excluded from coverage in liability policies for bodily injury and property
damage. The department intends the meanings of other terms used in the
liability insurance requirements to be consistent with their common meanings
within the insurance industry.
9VAC20-60-18. Applicability of incorporated references based on
the dates on which they became effective.
Except as noted, when a regulation of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency set forth in Title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is referenced and incorporated herein, that regulation shall be as
it exists and has been published in the July 1, 2015 2017,
update.
9VAC20-60-260. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 260 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 260 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials, and other ancillaries that are a part of 40 CFR Part 260 are
also hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part 260 is incorporated by reference,
the following additions, modifications, and exceptions shall amend the
incorporated text for the purpose of its incorporation into these regulations:
1. In 40 CFR 260.10, the term "Administrator" shall
mean the administrator Administrator of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency or his designee.
2. In 40 CFR 260.10, the term "contained" shall be
appended by adding the following: (5) Hazardous secondary materials managed
under the exclusion provided in 40 CFR 261.4(a)(23) or (a)(24) shall not be
managed in a land-based unit unless the land-based unit meets the applicable
standards of 40 CFR Parts 260 through 270, as incorporated by reference, for management
of hazardous waste.
3. In 40 CFR 260.10, the term "EPA" shall mean the
United States Environmental Protection Agency.
4. In 40 CFR 260.10 the term "new tank system" and
"existing tank system," the reference to July 14, 1986, applies only
to tank regulations promulgated pursuant to federal Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendment (HSWA) requirements. HSWA requirement categories include:
a. Interim status and permitting requirements applicable to
tank systems owned and operated by small quantity generators;
b. Leak detection requirements for all underground tank
systems for which construction commenced after July 14, 1986; and
c. Permitting standards for underground tanks that cannot be
entered for inspection.
For non-HSWA regulations, the reference date shall be January
1, 1998.
5. In 40 CFR 260.10, the term "Regional
Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator Regional
Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency or his designee.
6. In 40 CFR 260.10 definitions of the terms
"Person," "State," and "United States," the term
"state" shall have the meaning originally intended by the Code of
Federal Regulations and not be supplanted by "Commonwealth of Virginia."
7. In 40 CFR 260.10 and wherever elsewhere in Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations the term "universal waste" appears, it
shall be amended by addition of the following sentence: "In addition to
the hazardous wastes listed herein, the term "universal waste" shall
include those hazardous wastes listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of
the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations as universal wastes, under
such terms and requirements as shall therein be ascribed."
8. Throughout 40 CFR 260.11(a), the terms "EPA" and
"U.S. Environmental Protection Agency" shall not be supplanted with
the term "Commonwealth of Virginia."
9. In Part XIV (9VAC20-60-1370 et seq.), the Virginia
Hazardous Waste Management Regulations contain provisions analogous to 40 CFR
260.30, 40 CFR 260.31, 40 CFR 260.32,
40 CFR 260.33, 40 CFR 260.34, 40 CFR
260.40, and 40 CFR 260.41. These sections of 40 CFR Part 260 are not
incorporated by reference and are not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations.
10. Sections 40 CFR 260.2, 40 CFR 260.20, 40 CFR 260.21, 40 CFR 260.22, and 40 CFR
260.23 are not included in the incorporation of 40 CFR Part 260 by reference
and are not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
11. Appendix I to 40 CFR Part 260 is not incorporated by
reference and is not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
12. In the 40 CFR 260.10 definitions of the terms "AES
filing compliance date," and "Electronic import-export reporting
compliance date," the term "EPA" shall have the meaning originally
intended by the Code of Federal Regulations and not be supplanted by
"Department of Environmental Quality."
9VAC20-60-261. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 261 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 261 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials, and other ancillaries that are a part of 40 CFR Part 261 are also
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
261 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. Any agreements required by 40 CFR 261.4(b)(11)(ii) shall be
sent to the United States Environmental Protection Agency at the address shown
and to the Department of Environmental Quality, P.O. Box 1105, Richmond,
Virginia 23218.
2. In 40 CFR 261.4(e)(3)(iii), the text "in the Region
where the sample is collected" shall be deleted.
3. In 40 CFR 261.4(f)(1), the term "Regional
Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator Regional
Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency or his designee.
4. In 40 CFR 261.6(a)(2), recyclable materials shall be
subject to the requirements of 9VAC20-60-270 and Part XII (9VAC20-60-1260 et
seq.) of this chapter.
5. No hazardous waste from a conditionally exempt small
quantity generator shall be managed as described in 40 CFR 261.5(g)(3)(iv) or 40 CFR
261.5(g)(3)(v) unless such waste management is in full compliance with all
requirements of the Solid Waste Management Regulations (9VAC20-81) Reserved.
6. In 40 CFR 261.9 and wherever elsewhere in Title 40 of the
Code of Federal Regulations there is a listing of universal wastes or a listing
of hazardous wastes that are the subject of provisions set out in 40 CFR Part
273 as universal wastes, it shall be amended by addition of the following
sentence: "In addition to the hazardous wastes listed here, the term
"universal waste" and all lists of universal waste or waste subject
to provisions of 40 CFR Part 273 shall include those hazardous wastes listed in
Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations as universal wastes, in accordance with the terms and requirements
described."
7. In Subparts B and D of 40 CFR Part 261, the term
"Administrator" shall mean the administrator Administrator
of the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and the term
"Director" shall not supplant "Administrator" throughout
Subparts B and D.
8. For the purpose of this chapter, any solid waste is a
hazardous waste if it is defined to be hazardous waste under the laws or
regulations of the state in which it first became a solid waste.
9. In 40 CFR 261.6(c)(1) and 40 CFR 261.6(c)(2)
mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities must also comply with all
applicable requirements of 9VAC20-60-264 B 34 and 9VAC20-60-265 B 21.
10. In Subpart E of 40 CFR Part 261, the term
"EPA" shall have the meaning originally intended by the Code of
Federal Regulations and not be supplanted by "Department of Environmental
Quality."
11. In 40 CFR 261.2(a), reference to 40 CFR 260.30, 40 CFR 260.31, and 40 CFR 260.34 are replaced
by analogous provisions of Part XIV (9VAC20-60-1370 et seq.) of this chapter
12. In 40 CFR 261.3(a)(2), reference to exclusion under 40 CFR 260.20 and 40 CFR 260.22 are not
incorporated by reference.
9VAC20-60-262. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 262 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 262 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials, and other ancillaries that are parts of 40 CFR Part 262 are also
hereby incorporated as parts of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
262 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. In 40 CFR 262.42(a)(2), the words "for the Region in
which the generator is located" is deleted from the incorporated text and
is not a part of these regulations.
2. In 40 CFR 262.12, 40 CFR 262.53, 40 CFR 262.54,
40 CFR 262.55, 40 CFR 262.56,
and 40 CFR 262.57 262.18 and 40 CFR 262 Subpart H, the term
"Administrator" shall mean the administrator Administrator
of the United States Environmental Protection Agency or his designee.
3. In 40 CFR 262.12, 40 CFR 262.53, 40 CFR 262.54,
40 CFR 262.55, 40 CFR 262.56,
and 40 CFR 262.57, 262.18 and 40 CFR 262 Subpart H, the term
"Regional Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator
Regional Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental
Protection Agency or his designee.
4. For accumulation areas established before March 1, 1988,
all large quantity generators shall notify the department of each location
where he accumulates hazardous waste in accordance with 40 CFR 262.34 by March
1, 1988. For accumulation areas established after March 1, 1988, he a
large quantity generator shall notify the department and document in the
operating record that he intends to accumulate hazardous waste in accordance
with 40 CFR 262.34 262.17 prior to or immediately upon the
establishment of each 90-day accumulation area. In the case of a new large
quantity generator who creates such accumulation areas after March 1, 1988, he
shall notify the department at the time the generator files the Notification of
Hazardous Waste Activity EPA Form 8700-12 that he intends to
accumulate hazardous waste in accordance with 40 CFR
262.34 262.18. This notification shall specify the exact location
of the 90-day accumulation area at the site.
5. In addition to the requirements in 40 CFR Part 262,
management of hazardous wastes is required to comply with the Regulations
Governing the Transportation of Hazardous Materials (9VAC20-110), including
packaging and labeling for transport.
6. A generator shall not offer his hazardous waste to a
transporter that has not received an EPA identification number or to a facility
that has not received a permit and an EPA identification number.
7. In 40 CFR 262.24, 40 CFR 262.25, and 40 CFR Part 262,
Subpart H, the terms "EPA" and "Environmental Protection
Agency" shall mean the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
8. In addition to the requirements of this section, large
quantity generators are required to pay an annual fee. The fee schedule and fee
regulations are contained in Part XII (9VAC20-60-1260 through 9VAC20-60-1286)
of this chapter.
9. Within 40 CFR 262.24, the reference to "system"
means the United States Environmental Protection Agency's national electronic
manifest system.
10. Regardless of the provisions of 9VAC20-60-18, the
requirements of 40 CFR 262.24(g) are not incorporated into this chapter.
11. In 40 CFR 262.11(c) and 40 CFR 262.11(d), the term
"Administrator" shall mean the Administrator of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency.
12. No hazardous waste from a very small quantity generator
shall be managed as described in 40 CFR 262.14(a)(5)(iv) or 40 CFR
262.14(a)(5)(v) unless such waste management is in full compliance with all
requirements of the Solid Waste Management Regulations (9VAC20-81).
13. In 40 CFR 262 Subpart H, the term
"Administrator" shall mean the Administrator of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency.
9VAC20-60-263. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 263 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 263 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials, and other ancillaries that are parts of 40 CFR Part 263 are also
hereby incorporated as parts of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
263 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. Additional requirements for transportation of hazardous
materials are included in Part VII (9VAC20-60-420 et seq.) of this chapter and
in the Regulations Governing the Transportation of Hazardous Materials
(9VAC20-110).
2. Sections of 40 CFR 263.10(d), 40 CFR 263.20(a)(2), 40 CFR 263.21(a)(2), 40 CFR 263.30, and
40 CFR 263.31 are not incorporated by reference and are not a part of the
Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations. See 9VAC20-60-490 for
requirements related to transportation discharge management.
3. In 40 CFR 263.20, the terms "EPA" and
"Environmental Protection Agency" shall mean the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, and the reference to "system" means
the United States Environmental Protection Agency's national electronic
manifest system.
4. Regardless of the provisions of 9VAC20-60-18, the
requirements of 40 CFR 263.20(a)(8) are not incorporated into this chapter.
9VAC20-60-264. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 264 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 264 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials and other ancillaries that are a part of 40 CFR Part 264 are also
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
264 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. Sections 40 CFR 264.1(d), 40 CFR 264.1(f), 40 CFR
264.149, 40 CFR 264.150, 40 CFR 264.301(l), and Appendix VI are not included in
the incorporation of 40 CFR Part 264 by reference and are not a part of
the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
2. In 40 CFR 264.1(g)(11) and wherever elsewhere in Title 40
of the Code of Federal Regulations there is a listing of universal wastes or a
listing of hazardous wastes that are the subject of provisions set out in 40
CFR Part 273 as universal wastes, it shall be amended by addition of the
following sentence: "In addition to the hazardous wastes listed here, the
term "universal waste" and all lists of universal waste or waste
subject to provisions of 40 CFR Part 273 shall include those hazardous
wastes listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of the Virginia Hazardous
Waste Management Regulations as universal wastes, in accordance with the terms
and requirements described."
3. In 40 CFR 264.12(a), the term "Regional
Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator Regional
Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency or his designee.
4. In 40 CFR 264.33, the following sentence shall be added to
the end of the paragraph: "A record of tests or inspections will be maintained
on a log at that facility or other reasonably accessible and convenient
location."
5. In addition to the notifications required by 40 CFR
264.56(d)(2), notification shall be made to the on-scene coordinator, the
National Response Center, and the Virginia Department of Emergency Management,
Emergency Operations Center. In the associated report filed under 40 CFR 264.56(j)
264.56(i), the owner or operator shall include such other information
specifically requested by the director, which is reasonably necessary and
relevant to the purpose of an operating record.
6. In 40 CFR 264.93, "hazardous constituents" shall
include constituents identified in 40 CFR Part 264 Appendix IX in addition to
those in 40 CFR Part 261 Appendix VIII.
7. The federal text at 40 CFR 264.94(a)(2) is not incorporated
by reference. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR 264.94(a)(2):
"For any of the constituents for which the USEPA has established a Maximum
Contaminant Level (MCL) under the National Primary Drinking Water Regulation,
40 CFR Part 141 (regulations under the Safe Drinking Water Act), the
concentration must not exceed the value of the MCL; or if the background
level of the constituent is below the MCL; or."
8. The owner or operator must submit the detailed, written
closure cost estimate described in 40 CFR 264.142 upon the written request of
the director.
9. In 40 CFR 264.143(b)(1), 40 CFR 264.143(c)(1), 40 CFR
264.145(b)(1), and 40 CFR 264.145(c)(1), any surety company issuing
surety bonds to guarantee payment or performance must be licensed pursuant to
Chapter 10 (§ 38.2-1000 et seq.) of Title 38.2 of the Code of Virginia.
10. In 40 CFR 264.143(b), 40 CFR 264.143(c), 40 CFR 264.145(b) and 40 CFR 264.145(c), any
owner or operator demonstrating financial assurance for closure or post-closure
care using a surety bond shall submit with the surety bond a copy of the deed
book page documenting that the power of attorney of the attorney-in-fact
executing the bond has been recorded pursuant to § 38.2-2416 of the Code
of Virginia.
11. Where in 40 CFR 264.143(c)(5) the phrase "final
administrative determination pursuant to section 3008 of RCRA" appears, it
shall be replaced with "final determination pursuant to Chapter 40 (§
2.2-4000 et seq.) of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia."
12. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.143(d)(8): "Following a final administrative determination pursuant to
Chapter 40 (§ 2.2-4000 et seq.) of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia that the
owner or operator has failed to perform final closure in accordance with the
approved closure plan, the applicable regulations or other permit requirements
when required to do so, the director may draw on the letter of credit."
13. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR 264.143(e)(1):
"An owner or operator may satisfy the requirements of this section by
obtaining closure insurance which conforms to the requirements of this
paragraph and submitting a certificate of such insurance, along with a complete
copy of the insurance policy, to the department. An owner or operator of a new
facility must submit the certificate of insurance along with a complete copy of
the insurance policy to the department at least 60 days before the date on
which the hazardous waste is first received for treatment, storage or disposal.
The insurance must be effective before this initial receipt of hazardous waste.
At a minimum, the insurer must be licensed pursuant to Chapter 10
(§ 38.2-1000 et seq.) of Title 38.2 of the Code of Virginia."
14. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR 264.143(f)(3)(ii), 40 CFR
264.145(f)(3)(ii) and 40 CFR
264.147(f)(3)(ii): "A copy of the owner's or operator's audited financial
statements for the latest completed fiscal year; including a copy of the
independent certified public accountant's report on examination of the owner's
or operator's financial statements for the latest completed fiscal year;
and"
15. In addition to the other requirements in 40 CFR
264.143(f)(3), 40 CFR 264.145(f)(3) and 40 CFR 264.147(f)(3), an owner or
operator must submit confirmation from the rating service that the owner or
operator has a current rating for its most recent bond issuance of AAA, AA, A,
or BBB as issued by Standard and Poor's or Aaa, Aa, A, or Baa as issued by
Moody's if the owner or operator passes the financial test with a bond rating
as provided in 40 CFR 264.143(f)(1)(ii)(A).
16. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.143(h) and 40 CFR 264.145(h): "An owner or operator may use a
financial assurance mechanism specified in this section to meet the
requirements of this section for more than one facility in Virginia. Evidence
of financial assurance submitted to the department must include a list showing,
for each facility, the EPA Identification Number, name, address, and the amount
of funds for closure or post-closure assured by the mechanism. The amount of
funds available through the mechanism must be no less than the sum of funds
that would be available if a separate mechanism had been established and
maintained for each facility. In directing funds available through the
mechanism for closure or post-closure care of any of the facilities covered by
the mechanism, the director may direct only the amount of funds designated for
that facility, unless the owner or operator agrees to the use of additional
funds available under the mechanism."
17. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR 264.144, "the owner or operator
must submit a detailed, written post-closure cost estimate upon the written
request of the director."
18. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.144(b): "During the active life of the facility and the post-closure
period, the owner or operator must adjust the post-closure cost estimate for
inflation within 60 days prior to the anniversary date of the establishment of
the financial instrument(s) instruments used to comply with 40 CFR
264.145. For owners or operators using the financial test or corporate
guarantee, the post-closure cost estimate must be updated for inflation within
30 days after the close of the firm's fiscal year and before the submission of
updated information to the department as specified in 40 CFR
264.145(f)(5). The adjustment may be made by recalculating the post-closure
cost estimate in current dollars or by using an inflation factor derived from
the most recent Implicit Price Deflator for Gross National Product published by
the U.S. Department of Commerce in its Survey of Current Business as specified
in 40 CFR 264.142(b)(1) and (2). The inflation factor is the result of
dividing the latest published annual Deflator by the Deflator for the previous
year.
a. The first adjustment is made by multiplying the
post-closure cost estimate by the inflation factor. The result is the adjusted
post-closure cost estimate.
b. Subsequent adjustments are made by multiplying the latest
adjusted post-closure cost estimate by the latest inflation factor."
19. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.144(c): "During the active life of the facility and the post-closure
period, the owner or operator must revise the post-closure cost estimate within
30 days after the director has approved the request to modify the post-closure
plan, if the change in the post-closure plan increases the cost of post-closure
care. The revised post-closure cost estimate must be adjusted for inflation as
specified in 264.144(b)."
20. Where in 40 CFR 264.145(c)(5) the phrase "final
administrative determination pursuant to section 3008 of RCRA" appears, it
shall be replaced with "final determination pursuant to Chapter 40 (§
2.2-4000 et seq.) of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia."
21. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.145(d)(9): "Following a final administrative determination pursuant to
Chapter 40 (§ 2.2-4000 et seq.) of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia that the
owner or operator has failed to perform post-closure in accordance with the
approved post-closure plan, the applicable regulations, or other permit
requirements when required to do so, the director may draw on the letter of
credit."
22. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
264.145(e)(1): "An owner or operator may satisfy the requirements of this
section by obtaining post-closure insurance which conforms to the requirements
of this paragraph and submitting a certificate of such insurance to the
department. An owner or operator of a new facility must submit the certificate
of insurance along with a complete copy of the insurance policy to the
department at least 60 days before the date on which the hazardous waste is
first received for treatment, storage or disposal. The insurance must be
effective before this initial receipt of hazardous waste. At a minimum, the
insurer must be licensed pursuant to Chapter 10 (§ 38.2-1000 et seq.) of
Title 38.2 of the Code of Virginia."
23. In 40 CFR 264.147(a)(1)(ii), 40 CFR 264.147(b)(1)(ii), 40 CFR 264.147(g)(2), and 40 CFR
264.147(i)(4), the term "Virginia" shall not be substituted for the
term "State" or "States."
24. In 40 CFR 264.191(a), the compliance date of January 12,
1988, applies only for HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the compliance date is
November 2, 1997, instead of January 12, 1997.
25. In 40 CFR 264.191(c), the reference to July 14, 1986,
applies only to HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the applicable date is November
2, 1987, instead of July 14, 1986.
26. In 40 CFR 264.193, the federal effective dates apply only
to HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the applicable date is November 2, 1997,
instead of January 12, 1997.
27. A copy of all reports made in accordance with 40 CFR
264.196(d) shall be sent to the director and to the chief administrative
officer of the local government of the jurisdiction in which the event occurs.
The sentence in 40 CFR 264.196(d)(1), "If the release has been
reported pursuant to 40 CFR Part 302, that report will satisfy this
requirement." is not incorporated by reference into these regulations and
is not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
28. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR 264.570(a):
"The requirements of this subpart apply to owners and operators of
facilities that use new or existing drip pads to convey wood drippage,
precipitation and/or surface water run-off to an associated collection system.
Existing HSWA drip pads are those constructed before December 6, 1990, and
those for which the owner or operator has a design and has entered into a
binding financial or other agreement for construction prior to December 6,
1990. Existing non-HSWA drip pads are those constructed before January 14,
1993, and those for which the owner or operator has a design and has entered
into a binding financial or other agreements for construction prior to January
14, 1993. All other drip pads are new drip pads. The requirement at 40 CFR
264.573(b)(3) to install a leak collection system applies only to those HSWA
drip pads that are constructed after December 24, 1992, except for those
constructed after December 24, 1992, for which the owner or operator has a
design and has entered into a binding financial or other agreement for
construction prior to December 24, 1992. For non-HSWA drip pads, the
requirement at 40 CFR 264.573(b)(3) to install a leak collection system
applies only to those non-HSWA drip pads that are constructed after September
8, 1993, except for those constructed after September 8, 1993, for which the
owner or operator has a design and has entered into a binding financial or
other agreement for construction prior to September 8, 1993."
29. In 40 CFR 264.1030(c), the reference to 40 CFR 124.15
shall be replaced by a reference to 40 CFR 124.5.
30. The underground injection of hazardous waste for
treatment, storage or disposal shall be prohibited throughout the Commonwealth
of Virginia.
31. In addition to the notices required in Subpart B and
others parts of 40 CFR Part 264, the following notices are also required:
a. The owner or operator of a facility that has arranged to
receive hazardous waste from a foreign source (a source located outside of the
United States of America) shall notify the department and administrator in
writing at least four weeks in advance of the date the waste is expected to
arrive at the facility. Notice of subsequent shipments of the same waste from
the same foreign source is not required.
b. The owner or operator of a facility that receives hazardous
waste from an off-site source (except where the owner or operator of the
facility is also the generator of this waste) shall inform the generator in
writing that he has appropriate permits for, and will accept, the waste that
the generator is shipping. The owner or operator shall keep a copy of this
written notice as part of the operating record.
c. Before transferring ownership or operation of a facility
during its operating life, or of a disposal facility during the post-closure
care period, the owner or operator shall notify the new owner or operator in
writing of the requirements contained in this section and 9VAC20-60-270. An
owner or operator's failure to notify the new owner or operator of the above
requirements in this section and 9VAC20-60-270 in no way relieves the
new owner or operator of his obligation to comply with all applicable
requirements.
d. Any person responsible for the release of a hazardous
substance from the facility that poses an immediate or imminent threat to
public health and who is required by law to notify the National Response Center
shall notify the department and the chief administrative officer of the local
government of the jurisdiction in which the release occurs or their designees.
In cases when the released hazardous substances are hazardous wastes or
hazardous waste constituents additional requirements are prescribed by Subpart
D of 40 CFR Part 264.
32. In 40 CFR 264.71, the terms "EPA" and
"Environmental Protection Agency" shall mean the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, and the reference to "system" means
the United States Environmental Protection Agency's national electronic
manifest system.
33. Regardless of the provisions of 9VAC20-60-18, the
requirements of 40 CFR 264.71(j) are not incorporated into this chapter.
34. Requirements for mercury-containing lamp recycling
facilities. The following requirements apply to all facilities that recover or
reclaim mercury from lamps.
a. All owners and operators of mercury-containing lamp
recycling facilities shall:
(1) Have established markets for the utilization of reclaimed
materials and be able to identify these markets to the department;
(2) Only introduce into the processing equipment lamps or
devices for which the equipment was specifically designed to process and
operate and maintain processing equipment consistent with the equipment
manufacturer's specifications; and
(3) Not speculatively accumulate the materials.
b. If a mercury-containing lamp recycling facility's
processed materials are to be delivered to a facility other than a mercury
reclamation facility, the owner or operator shall:
(1) Demonstrate proper equipment operation and efficiency
by sampling and analytical testing of the processed materials. The testing
shall ensure that such processed materials (i) have less than three parts per
million of "average mercury" during each consecutive 12-week time
period of operations ("average mercury" shall be calculated pursuant
to subdivision 34 b (3) of this subsection); (ii) have less than five parts per
million of total mercury as reported in the "weekly composite sample of
process operations" ("weekly composite sample of process
operations" shall be calculated pursuant to subdivision 34 b (3) of this
subsection); (iii) are not a hazardous waste; and (iv) comply with 40 CFR Part 268, if applicable.
(2) Retest, reprocess, or deliver to a mercury reclamation
facility processed materials that are in excess of the allowable levels of
mercury specified in subdivision 34 b (1) of this subsection.
(3) Sample and perform analytical testing of the processed
material for total mercury as follows:
(a) Facility operators shall take daily physical samples of
the mercury-containing materials at the point at which they exit the processing
equipment. These samples shall be representative of the materials
processed during that day.
(b) At the beginning of each week, the prior week's daily
samples shall be consolidated into one weekly sample, which shall be submitted
for chemical analysis of total mercury content using an approved EPA
methodology. At least three separate daily samples shall be taken in order to
obtain a weekly sample. When a facility is not operating at least three days
during a week, that week will be dropped out of the 12-week rolling average as
calculated under subdivision 34 b (3) (c) of this subsection. However, all
daily samples that are in a week that has been dropped out shall be counted
towards the very next weekly sample that is included in a 12-week rolling average.
The result of this analysis shall be considered the "weekly composite
sample of process operations."
(c) The "average mercury" value calculation shall be
the rolling average of weekly composite sample results from samples taken
during the most recent 12-week time period with each new weekly composite
sample result replacing the oldest sample result that was used in the previous
12-week period.
c. Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities shall ensure
that the separated materials that are generated from their operations are
suitable and safe for their intended end use and shall bear the burden of
responsibility for the safety of these materials sold or delivered from the
operations. Facilities shall notify in writing receiving sources, other than mercury
reclamation facilities, of the amount and type of hazardous substances present
in the processed materials as demonstrated by laboratory analysis.
d. Operating requirements. Mercury-containing lamp recycling
facilities shall be operated in accordance with the following requirements:
(1) Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities shall control
mercury emissions through the use of a single air handling system with
redundant mercury controls and comply with the following:
(a) The owner or operator shall operate, monitor, and maintain
an air handling system with redundant air pollution control equipment in order
to reduce the mercury content of the air collected during the volume reduction
and mercury recovery and reclamation processes.
(b) Redundant air pollution control equipment shall
incorporate at least two carbon filters or equivalent technology arranged in a
series so that the air passes through both filters before being released. In
the event of a single filter failure, each filter shall be designed to ensure
compliance with the risk-based protectiveness standards for mercury vapor
provided in subdivision 34 e of this subsection.
(c) A sample of air shall be collected after the first carbon
filter (or equivalent technology) and upstream of the second once each
operating day while mercury-containing lamps or devices are being processed.
The mercury content of the sample shall be determined for comparison with the
risk-based protectiveness standards provided in subdivision 34 e of this
subsection.
(d) The owner or operator shall operate, monitor, and maintain
the air pollution control equipment in such a manner as not to exceed the
risk-based protectiveness standards under subdivision 34 e of this subsection
for mercury vapor downstream of the first carbon filter (or equivalent
technology) and upstream of the second carbon filter.
(2) The area in which the processing equipment is located
shall be fully enclosed and kept under negative pressure while processing
mercury-containing lamps or devices.
e. Testing for mercury releases from lamp crushing units shall
be performed using a mercury vapor analyzer that has been approved for the
application by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration or the
Virginia Department of Labor and Industry or a comparable device that has been
calibrated by the manufacturer or laboratory providing the equipment. Mercury
vapor monitors used for testing must be capable of detecting mercury at the
applicable concentrations provided below or lower in air and must be equipped
with a data recording device to provide a record of measurements taken. Mercury
monitoring data shall be documented and available for inspection in accordance
with subdivision 34 g of this subsection. The acute exposure protectiveness
standard is 300 µg/m3 for a 10-minute exposure with the
understanding that the acute exposure protectiveness standard is considered a
ceiling value and at no time during bulb crushing operation will the air
concentrations of mercury exceed 300 µg/m3. The following are
risk-based protectiveness standards at a distance of five feet from the bulb
crushing unit:
Monthly Bulb Crushing Duration
(X Hours/Month)*
|
Chronic Exposure Air Emission
Limit (µg/m3)
|
Acute Exposure Air Emission
Limit (µg/m3)
|
X = 32
|
1.314skin µg/m3
|
300 µg/m3
|
8 < X < 32
|
6.317 skin µg/m3
|
300 µg/m3
|
X = 8
|
27.375 skin µg/m3
|
300 µg/m3
|
*Monthly crushing duration is determined based on the
maximum number of hours that bulb crushing occurred in any one month over the
last 12-month period.
|
f. Closure. Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities must
prepare and maintain a closure plan conforming to the requirements of 40 CFR
Part 264, Subpart G as adopted by reference in this section. Financial
assurance shall be provided to the department in accordance with 40 CFR Part
264, Subpart H as adopted by reference in this section.
g. Recordkeeping requirements. The owner or operator of a
mercury-containing lamp recycling facility shall maintain records of monitoring
information that (i) specify the date, place, and time of measurement; (ii)
provide the methodology used; and (iii) list the analytical results. The
records maintained shall include all calibration and maintenance records of
monitoring equipment. The owner or operator shall retain records of all
monitoring data and supporting information available for department inspection
for a period of at least three years from the date of collection.
35. The following additional information is required from
owners or operators of facilities that store or treat hazardous waste in waste
piles if an exemption is sought to Subpart F of 40 CFR Part 264 and 40 CFR
264.251 as provided in 40 CFR 264.250(c) and 40 CFR 264.90(b)(2):
a. An explanation of how the standards of 40 CFR 264.250(c) will be complied with; and
b. Detailed plans and an engineering report describing how
the requirements of 40 CFR 264.90(b)(2) will be met.
9VAC20-60-265. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 265 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 265
are hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials and other ancillaries that are parts of 40 CFR Part 265 are also hereby incorporated as parts of the
Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
265 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. Sections 40 CFR 265.1(c)(4), 40 CFR 265.149 and 40 CFR
265.150 and Subpart R of 40 CFR Part 265 are not included in the incorporation
of 40 CFR Part 265 by reference and are not a part of the Virginia Hazardous
Waste Management Regulations.
2. In 40 CFR 265.1(c)(14) and wherever elsewhere in Title 40
of the Code of Federal Regulations there is a listing of universal wastes or a
listing of hazardous wastes that are the subject of provisions set out in 40
CFR Part 273 as universal wastes, it shall be amended by addition of the
following sentence: "In addition to the hazardous wastes listed here, the
term "universal waste" and all lists of universal waste or waste
subject to provision of 40 CFR Part
273 shall include those hazardous wastes listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et
seq.) of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations as universal
wastes, in accordance with the terms and requirements described."
3. A copy of all reports and notices made in accordance with
40 CFR 265.12 shall be sent to the department, the administrator and the chief
administrative officer of the local government of the jurisdiction in which the
event occurs.
4. In 40 CFR 265.12(a), the term "Regional
Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator Regional
Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency or his designee.
5. In 40 CFR 265.33, the following sentence shall be added to
the end of the paragraph: "A record of tests or inspections will be
maintained on a log at that facility or other reasonably accessible and
convenient location."
6. In addition to the notifications required by 40 CFR
265.56(d)(2), notification shall be made to the on-scene coordinator, the
National Response Center, and the Virginia Department of Emergency Management,
Emergency Operations Center. In the associated report filed under 40 CFR 265.56(j)
265.56(i), the owner or operator shall include such other information
specifically requested by the director, which is reasonably necessary and
relevant to the purpose of an operating record.
7. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR 265.91, a log
shall be made of each ground water monitoring well describing the soils or rock
encountered, the permeability of formations, and the cation exchange capacity
of soils encountered. A copy of the logs with appropriate maps shall be sent to
the department.
8. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
265.143(g) and 40 CFR 265.145(g): "An owner or operator may use a
financial assurance mechanism specified in this section to meet the
requirements of this section for more than one facility in Virginia. Evidence
of financial assurance submitted to the department must include a list showing,
for each facility, the EPA Identification Number, name, address, and the amount
of funds for closure or post-closure assured by the mechanism. The amount of
funds available through the mechanism must be no less than the sum of funds
that would be available if a separate mechanism had been established and
maintained for each facility. In directing funds available through the
mechanism for closure or post-closure care of any of the facilities covered by
the mechanism, the director may direct only the amount of funds designated for
that facility, unless the owner or operator agrees to the use of additional
funds available under the mechanism.
9. In 40 CFR 265.147(a)(1)(ii), 40 CFR 265.147(g)(2), and 40
CFR 265.147(i)(4), the term "Virginia" shall not be substituted for
the term "State" or "States."
10. In 40 CFR 265.191(a), the compliance date of January 12,
1988, applies only for HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the compliance date is
November 2, 1986.
11. In 40 CFR 265.191(c), the reference to July 14, 1986,
applies only to HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the applicable date is November
2, 1987.
12. In 40 CFR 265.193, the federal effective dates apply only
to HSWA tanks. For non-HSWA tanks, the applicable date of January 12, 1987, is
replaced with November 2, 1997.
13. The following text shall be substituted for 40 CFR
265.440(a): "The requirements of this subpart apply to owners and
operators of facilities that use new or existing drip pads to convey wood
drippage, precipitation and/or surface water run-off to an associated
collection system. Existing HSWA drip pads are those constructed before
December 6, 1990, and those for which the owner or operator has a design and
has entered into a binding financial or other agreement for construction prior
to December 6, 1990. Existing non-HSWA drip pads are those constructed before
January 14, 1993, and those for which the owner or operator has a design and
has entered into a binding financial or other agreement for construction prior
to January 14, 1993. All other drip pads are new drip pads. The requirement at
40 CFR 265.443(b)(3) to install a leak collection system applies only to those
HSWA drip pads that are constructed after December 24, 1992, except for those
constructed after December 24, 1992, for which the owner or operator has a
design and has entered into a binding financial or other agreement for
construction prior to December 24, 1992. For non-HSWA drip pads, the
requirement at 40 CFR 264.573(b)(3) to install a leak collection system applies
only to those non-HSWA drip pads that are constructed after September 8, 1993,
except for those constructed after September 8, 1993, for which the owner or
operator has a design and has entered into a binding financial or other
agreement for construction prior to September 8, 1993."
14. In 40 CFR 265.1083(c)(4)(ii), the second occurrence of the
term "EPA" shall mean the United States Environmental Protection
Agency.
15. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR 265.310, the
owner or operator shall consider at least the following factors in addressing
the closure and post-closure care objectives of this part:
a. Type and amount of hazardous waste and hazardous waste
constituents in the landfill;
b. The mobility and the expected rate of migration of the
hazardous waste and hazardous waste constituents;
c. Site location, topography, and surrounding land use, with
respect to the potential effects of pollutant migration;
d. Climate, including amount, frequency and pH of
precipitation;
e. Characteristics of the cover, including material, final
surface contours, thickness, porosity and permeability, slope, length of run of
slope, and type of vegetation on the cover; and
f. Geological and soil profiles and surface and subsurface
hydrology of the site.
16. Additionally, during the post-closure care period, the
owner or operator of a hazardous waste landfill shall comply with the
requirements of 40 CFR 265.116 and the following items:
a. Maintain the function and integrity of the final cover as
specified in the approved closure plan;
b. Maintain and monitor the leachate collection, removal, and
treatment system, if present, to prevent excess accumulation of the leachate in
the system;
c. Maintain and monitor the landfill gas collection and
control system, if present, to control the vertical and horizontal escape of
gases;
d. Protect and maintain, if present, surveyed benchmarks; and
e. Restrict access to the landfill as appropriate for its
post-closure use.
17. The underground injection of hazardous waste for treatment,
storage or disposal shall be prohibited throughout the Commonwealth of
Virginia.
18. Regulated units of the facility are those units used for
storage treatment or disposal of hazardous waste in surface impoundments, waste
piles, land treatment units, or landfills that received hazardous waste after
July 26, 1982. In addition to the requirements of Subpart G of 40 CFR Part 265, owners or operators of
regulated units who manage hazardous wastes in regulated units shall comply
with the closure and post-closure requirements contained in Subpart G of 40 CFR
Part 264, Subpart H of 40 CFR Part
264, and Subpart K of 40 CFR Part 264 through Subpart N of 40 CFR Part 264, as
applicable, and shall comply with the requirements in Subpart F of 40 CFR Part
264 during any post-closure care period and for the extended ground water
monitoring period, rather than the equivalent requirements contained in 40 CFR
Part 265. The following provisions shall also apply:
a. For owners or operators of surface impoundments or waste
piles included above who intend to remove all hazardous wastes at closure in
accordance with 40 CFR 264.228(a)(1)
or 40 CFR 264.258(a), as applicable, submittal of contingent closure and
contingent post-closure plans is not required. However, if the facility is
subsequently required to close as a landfill in accordance with Subpart N of 40
CFR Part 264, a modified closure plan shall be submitted no more than 30 days
after such determination. These plans will be processed as closure plan
amendments. For such facilities, the corresponding post-closure plan shall be
submitted within 90 days of the determination that the unit shall be closed as
a landfill.
b. A permit application as required under 9VAC20-60-270 to
address the post-closure care requirements of 40 CFR
264.117 and for ground water monitoring requirements of 40 CFR 264.98, 40 CFR
264.99, or 40 CFR 264.100, as
applicable, shall be submitted for all regulated units that fail to satisfy the
requirements of closure by removal or decontamination in 40 CFR 264.228(a)(1), 40 CFR 264.258(a), or 40 CFR 264.280(d) and 40 CFR 264.280(e), as
applicable. The permit application shall be submitted at the same time as the
closure plan for those units closing with wastes in place and six months
following the determination that closure by removal or decontamination is
unachievable for those units attempting such closure. The permit application
shall address the post-closure care maintenance of both the final cover and the
ground water monitoring wells as well as the implementation of the applicable
ground water monitoring program whenever contaminated soils, subsoils, liners,
etc., are left in place. When all contaminated soils, subsoils, liners, etc.,
have been removed yet ground water contamination remains, the permit
application shall address the post-closure care maintenance of the ground water
monitoring wells as well as the implementation of the applicable ground water
monitoring program.
c. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR
264.112(d)(2)(i) for requesting an extension to the one-year limit, the owner
or operator shall demonstrate that he will continue to take all steps to
prevent threats to human health and the environment.
d. In addition to the requirements of 40 CFR 264.119(c), the
owner or operator shall also request a modification to the post-closure permit
if he wishes to remove contaminated structures and equipment.
19. In 40 CFR 265.71, the terms "EPA" and
"Environmental Protection Agency" shall mean the United States
Environmental Protection Agency, and the reference to "system" means
the United States Environmental Protection Agency's national electronic
manifest system.
20. Regardless of the provisions of 9VAC20-60-18, the
requirements of 40 CFR 265.71(j) are not incorporated into this chapter.
21. Requirements for mercury-containing lamp recycling
facilities. The following requirements apply to all facilities that recover or
reclaim mercury from lamps:
a. All owners and operators of mercury-containing lamp
recycling facilities shall:
(1) Have established markets for the utilization of reclaimed
materials and be able to identify these markets to the department;
(2) Only introduce into the processing equipment lamps or
devices for which the equipment was specifically designed to process and operate
and maintain processing equipment consistent with the equipment manufacturer's
specifications; and
(3) Not speculatively accumulate the materials.
b. If a mercury-containing lamp recycling facility's
processed materials are to be delivered to a facility other than a mercury
reclamation facility, the owner or operator shall:
(1) Demonstrate proper equipment operation and efficiency
by sampling and analytical testing of the processed materials. The testing
shall ensure that such processed materials (i) have less than three parts per
million of "average mercury" during each consecutive 12-week time
period of operations ("average mercury" shall be calculated pursuant
to subdivision 21 b (3) of this subsection); (ii) have less than five parts per
million of total mercury as reported in the "weekly composite sample of
process operations" ("weekly composite sample of process
operations" shall be calculated pursuant to subdivision 21 b (3) of this
subsection); (iii) are not a hazardous waste; and (iv) comply with 40 CFR
Part 268, if applicable.
(2) Retest, reprocess, or deliver to a mercury reclamation
facility processed materials that are in excess of the allowable levels of
mercury specified in subdivision 21 b (1) of this subsection.
(3) Sample and perform analytical testing of the processed
material for total mercury as follows:
(a) Facility operators shall take daily physical samples of
the mercury-containing materials at the point at which they exit the processing
equipment. These samples shall be representative of the materials
processed during that day.
(b) At the beginning of each week, the prior week's daily
samples shall be consolidated into one weekly sample that shall be submitted
for chemical analysis of total mercury content using an approved EPA methodology.
At least three separate daily samples shall be taken in order to obtain a
weekly sample. When a facility is not operating at least three days during a
week, that week will be dropped out of the 12-week rolling average as
calculated under subdivision 21 b (3) (c) of this subsection. However, all
daily samples that are in a week that has been dropped out shall be counted
towards the very next weekly sample that is included in a 12-week rolling
average. The result of this analysis shall be considered the "weekly
composite sample of process operations."
(c) The "average mercury" value calculation shall be
the rolling average of weekly composite sample results from samples taken
during the most recent 12-week time period with each new weekly composite sample
result replacing the oldest sample result that was used in the previous 12-week
period.
c. Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities shall ensure
that the separated materials that are generated from their operations are
suitable and safe for their intended end use and shall bear the burden of
responsibility for the safety of these materials sold or delivered from the
operations. Facilities shall notify in writing receiving sources, other than
mercury reclamation facilities, of the amount and type of any hazardous
substances present in the processed materials as demonstrated by laboratory
analysis.
d. Operating requirements. Mercury-containing lamp recycling
facilities shall be operated in accordance with the following requirements:
(1) Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities shall control
mercury emissions through the use of a single air handling system with
redundant mercury controls and comply with the following:
(a) The owner or operator shall operate, monitor, and maintain
an air handling system with redundant air pollution control equipment in order
to reduce the mercury content of the air collected during the volume reduction
and mercury recovery and reclamation processes.
(b) Redundant air pollution control equipment shall
incorporate at least two carbon filters or equivalent technology arranged in a
series so that the air passes through both filters before being released. In
the event of a single filter failure, each filter shall be designed to ensure
compliance with the risk-based protectiveness standards for mercury vapor
provided in subdivision 21 e of this subsection.
(c) A sample of air shall be collected after the first carbon
filter (or equivalent technology) and upstream of the second once each
operating day while mercury-containing lamps or devices are being processed.
The mercury content of the sample shall be determined for comparison with the
risk-based protectiveness standards provided in subdivision 21 e of this
subsection.
(d) The owner or operator shall operate, monitor, and maintain
the air pollution control equipment in such a manner as not to exceed the
risk-based protectiveness standards under subdivision 21 e of this subsection
for mercury vapor downstream of the first carbon filter (or equivalent
technology) and upstream of the second carbon filter.
(2) The area in which the processing equipment is located
shall be fully enclosed and kept under negative pressure while processing
mercury-containing lamps or devices.
e. Testing for mercury releases from lamp crushing units shall
be performed using a mercury vapor analyzer that has been approved for the
application by the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration or the
Virginia Department of Labor and Industry or a comparable device that has been
calibrated by the manufacturer or laboratory providing the equipment. Mercury
vapor monitors used for testing must be capable of detecting mercury at the
applicable concentrations provided below or lower in air and must be equipped
with a data recording device to provide a record of measurements taken. Mercury
monitoring data shall be documented and available for inspection in accordance
with subdivision 21 g of this subsection. The acute exposure protectiveness
standard is 300 µg/m3 for a 10-minute exposure with the understanding
that the acute exposure protectiveness standard is considered a ceiling value
and at no time during bulb crushing operation will the air concentrations of
mercury exceed 300 µg/m3. The following are risk-based
protectiveness standards at a distance of five feet from the bulb crushing
unit:
Monthly Bulb Crushing Duration
(X Hours/Month)*
|
Chronic Exposure Air Emission
Limit (µg/m3)
|
Acute Exposure Air Emission
Limit (µg/m3)
|
X = 32
|
1.314skin µg/m3
|
300 µg/m3
|
8 < X < 32
|
6.317 skin µg/m3
|
300 µg /m3
|
X = 8
|
27.375 skin µg/m3
|
300 µg/m3
|
*Monthly crushing duration is determined based on the
maximum number of hours that bulb crushing occurred in any one month over the
last 12-month period.
|
f. Closure. Mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities must
prepare and maintain a closure plan conforming to the requirements of 40 CFR
Part 265, Subpart G as adopted by reference in this section. Financial
assurance shall be provided to the department in accordance with 40 CFR Part
265, Subpart H as adopted by reference in this section.
g. Recordkeeping requirements. The owner or operator of a
mercury-containing lamp recycling facility shall maintain records of monitoring
information that (i) specify the date, place, and time of measurement; (ii)
provide the methodology used; and (iii) list the analytical results. The
records maintained shall include all calibration and maintenance records of
monitoring equipment. The owner or operator shall retain records of all
monitoring data and supporting information available for department inspection
for a period of at least three years from the date of collection.
22. In 40 CFR 265.12, the term "EPA" shall mean
the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
9VAC20-60-268. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 268 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 268 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials and other ancillaries that are a part of 40 CFR Part 268 are also
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
268 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. In 40 CFR 268.1(e)(3), the term "EPA" means the
United States Environmental Protection Agency.
2. In 40 CFR 268.1(f) and wherever elsewhere in Title 40 of
the Code of Federal Regulations there is a listing of universal wastes or a
listing of hazardous wastes that are the subject of provisions set out in 40
CFR Part 273 as universal wastes, it shall be amended by addition of the
following sentence: "In addition to the hazardous wastes listed herein,
the term "universal waste" and all lists of universal waste or waste
subject to provisions of 40 CFR Part 273 shall include those hazardous wastes
listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of the Virginia Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations as universal wastes, under such terms and requirements
as shall therein be ascribed."
3. In 40 CFR 268.5, 40 CFR 268.6, 40 CFR 268.10, 40 CFR
268.11, 40 CFR 268.12, 40 CFR 268.40(b), 40 CFR 268.42(b),
and 40 CFR 268.44(a) through (g) (m), the term
"Administrator" shall mean the administrator Administrator
of the United States Environmental Protection Agency or his designee, the term
"Regional Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator
Regional Administrator of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency for Region III or his designee, and the term "EPA" shall mean
the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
4. In 40 CFR 268.9(d) 268.7(d), the term
"EPA Region or authorized State" shall mean the Commonwealth of
Virginia.
5. 40 CFR 268.13 is not included in the incorporation of 40 CFR
Part 268 by reference and is not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations.
6. Any applications or petitions made to the director or the
department in compliance with 40 CFR 268.44 shall comply with procedures
of Part XIV (9VAC20-60-1370 et seq.) of these regulations.
7. In Subpart C of 40 CFR Part 268 there are dates on which a
provision is or was to begin and dates on which national capacity variances
expires or expired. None of these dates prior to the effective date of these
regulations shall be incorporated by reference or be a part of the Virginia
Hazardous Waste Management Regulations. Requirements associated with these
expired dates shall be considered to be currently in effect. This exclusion
from these regulations shall not be considered to remove or diminish any
responsibility a person has or had regarding these dates under federal
requirements related to the dates or during the interim following these dates.
9VAC20-60-270. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 270 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, those regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 270 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials and other ancillaries that are a part of incorporated sections of 40 CFR
Part 270 are also hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
270 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. In 40 CFR Part 270 and wherever elsewhere in Title 40 of
the Code of Federal Regulations there is a listing of universal wastes or a
listing of hazardous wastes that are the subject of provisions set out in 40
CFR Part 273 as universal wastes, it shall be amended by addition of the
following sentence: "In addition to the hazardous wastes listed herein,
the term "universal waste" and all lists of universal waste or waste
subject to provisions of 40 CFR Part 273 shall include those hazardous wastes
listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of the Virginia Hazardous Waste
Management Regulations as universal wastes, under such terms and requirements
as shall therein be ascribed."
2. In 40 CFR 270.5, the term "Administrator" shall
mean the administrator Administrator of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency or his designee.
3. In 40 CFR 270.5, the term "Regional
Administrator" shall mean the regional administrator Regional
Administrator of Region III of the United States Environmental Protection
Agency or his designee.
4. The underground injection of hazardous waste for treatment,
storage or disposal shall be prohibited throughout the Commonwealth of Virginia,
and no permits shall be issued for underground injection facilities.
5. Validity of the federal HWM permits. This section replaces
40 CFR 270.51, which is not included in the incorporation of 40 CFR Part 270 by
reference and is not a part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
a. Hazardous waste management facilities located in Virginia
which possess an effective final RCRA permit issued by the United States
Environmental Protection Agency will be considered to possess a valid Virginia
hazardous waste management permit for the duration of the unexpired term of the
federal permit, provided that:
(1) The facility remains in compliance with all of the
conditions specified in the federal permit;
(2) The operator submits a complete copy of the federal permit
to the department no later than the effective date of the federal permit; and
(3) The owner and operator of the facility submit a request to
continue the federal permit addressed to the department.
b. Federal permits issued to hazardous waste management
facilities located in Virginia by the United States Environmental Protection
Agency pursuant to HSWA requirements which constitute the federal portion of
the combined Virginia--United States Environmental Protection Agency RCRA permits
are considered, for the purposes of this chapter, as addenda to the Virginia
permits and will remain in effect during the unexpired term of the Virginia
permit.
6. All permit applications and reapplications required by
these regulations shall be accompanied by an appropriate permit application fee
as specified in Part XII (9VAC20-60-1260 et seq.) of this chapter. Applications
or reapplications not accompanied by such fees will not be considered complete.
The director shall not issue a permit before receiving a complete application
except permits by rule, emergency permits, or continued federal permits. In
addition, an application for a permit is not complete until the department
receives an application form and any supplemental information, which are completed
to the department's satisfaction. The completeness of any application for a
permit shall be judged independently of the status of any other permit
application or permit for the same facility or activity. In cases where Part A
of the application was first submitted to the United States Environmental
Protection Agency Administrator, a copy of such submission shall also be sent
to the department.
7. Interim status.
a. The director may deny interim status to any owner or
operator if, at the time the Part A application is submitted, the facility is
in violation of any regulation of the board so as to pose a substantial present
or potential hazard to human health or environment.
b. Unless subject of an exception specified in 40 CFR 270.73, interim status terminates when
final disposition of a permit application is made or when interim status is
terminated by the director. Interim status may be terminated for any of the
following reasons:
(1) Failure to submit a completed Part B application on time;
(2) Failure to furnish any information required by this
chapter;
(3) Falsification, misrepresentation or failure to fully
disclose any information submitted or required to be kept under this chapter;
(4) Violation of this chapter; and
(5) A determination that the facility poses a significant
threat to public health or the environment.
c. The director may terminate the interim status upon
receiving a voluntary request for such an action from the owner and the
operator of the facility.
(1) To be considered for voluntary termination such request
shall:
(a) Be received by the department prior to the issuance of the
request to submit Part B of the permit application in accordance with this
section; and
(b) Be accompanied by a waiver of procedures contained in this
section.
(2) Termination under this part will not be granted to the
owner and operator of the facility:
(a) Which is not in compliance with the standards contained in
9VAC20-60-265; or
(b) When termination proceedings have been instituted under
this section.
d. The effective date of the termination of the interim status
will be determined by the director to allow for proper closure of the facility
in accordance with Subpart G of 40 CFR Part 264 and Subpart G of 40 CFR Part
265, as applicable.
8. Each permit shall include permit conditions necessary to
achieve compliance with the Virginia Waste Management Act (§ 10.1-1400 et seq.
of the Code of Virginia) and regulations, including each of the applicable
requirements specified in this part (Part III) of these regulations. In
satisfying this provision, the director may incorporate applicable requirements
of Part III directly into the permit or establish other permit conditions that
are based on these requirements.
9. In addition to the other general information requirements
to be part of the contents of any Part B in 40 CFR 270.14(b), the following
information is required for all hazardous waste management facilities, except
as provided otherwise:
a. A copy of the general inspection schedule required by 40
CFR 264.15(b). Include, where applicable, as part of the inspection schedule,
specific requirements in 40 CFR 264.174, 40 CFR 264.193(i), 40 CFR
264.195, 40 CFR 264.226, 40 CFR
264.254, 40 CFR 264.273, 40 CFR
264.303, 40 CFR 264.573, 40 CFR 264.574, 40 CFR
264.602, 40 CFR 264.1033, 40 CFR 264.1052, 40 CFR
264.1053, and 40 CFR 264.1058.
b. Traffic pattern, estimated volume (number, types of
vehicles) and control; describe access road surfacing and load bearing
capacity; show traffic control signals.
10. A period of 30 days shall elapse between the date of
public notice and the date of a public hearing under 40 CFR 270.42(b)(4)
and 40 CFR 270.42(c)(4).
11. Notices given under 40 CFR 270.30(l)(1) shall be written.
12. The following additional information is required from
owners or operators of facilities that store or treat hazardous waste in waste
piles if an exemption is sought to Subpart F of 40 CFR Part 264 and 40 CFR
264.251 as provided in 40 CFR 264.250(c) and 40 CFR 264.90(b)(2):
a. An explanation of how the standards of 40 CFR 264.250(c)
will be complied with; and
b. Detailed plans and an engineering report describing how
the requirements of 40 CFR 264.90(b)(2) will be met Reserved.
13. The agencies of the Commonwealth publish notices of regulatory
activity, permit hearings and other official notices in the Virginia Register.
Any references in incorporated federal text that indicate a publication is to
be made in the Federal Register shall be construed to mean the Virginia
Register when such publication is to be made by an agency of the Commonwealth.
14. Appeal rights and procedures related to a remedial action
plan (RAP) included in 40 CFR 270.155, especially appeals to the EPA
Environmental Appeals Board, are not incorporated into these regulations.
Appeals of actions related to the content or process of developing a RAP will
be governed by the Administrative Process Act, Chapter 40 (§ 2.2-4000 et
seq.) of Title 2.2 of the Code of Virginia.
15. The conditions of an expired permit continue in force
until the effective date of the new permit if the permittee has submitted a
timely reapplication that is a complete application for a new permit;
and the director, through no fault of the permittee, does not issue a new
permit with an effective date on or before the expiration date of the previous
permit. Permits that are continued remain fully effective and enforceable.
When the permittee is not in compliance with the conditions of
the expiring or expired permit, the director may choose to do any or all of the
following:
a. Initiate enforcement action based on the permit that has
been continued;
b. Issue a notice of intent to deny the new permit. If the
permit is denied, the owner or operator would then be required to cease
activities authorized by the continued permit or be subject to enforcement
action for operating without a permit;
c. Issue a new permit with appropriate conditions; or
d. Take other actions authorized by this chapter.
16. Part XII (9VAC20-60-1260 through 9VAC20-60-1285) 9VAC20-60-1286)
of this chapter applies to all permitted facilities, to facilities operating
under interim status, to facilities subject to an order or agreement, and to
all large quantity generators. In addition to permit application fees, a
permitted treatment, storage, and disposal facility is assessed an annual fee.
A facility that operates under interim status, a facility that is subject to an
order or agreement, and a large quantity generator are also assessed annual
fees.
17. Regardless of the provisions of 9VAC20-60-18, the
revisions to 40 CFR Part 270 as promulgated by U.S. EPA on October 30, 2008,
(73 FR 64757-64788) (definition of solid waste rule) are not adopted
herein.
18. In 40 CFR 270.5, the term "Director" and
"State Director" shall mean the Director of the Department of
Environmental Quality or his designee.
9VAC20-60-273. Adoption of 40 CFR Part 273 by reference.
A. Except as otherwise provided, the regulations of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency set forth in 40 CFR Part 273 are
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations. Except as otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference
materials and other ancillaries that are a part of 40 CFR Part 273 are also
hereby incorporated as part of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management
Regulations.
B. In all locations in these regulations where 40 CFR Part
273 is incorporated by reference, the following additions, modifications, and
exceptions shall amend the incorporated text for the purpose of its
incorporation into these regulations:
1. In 40 CFR 273.32(a)(3), the term "EPA" shall mean
the United States Environmental Protection Agency.
2. In addition to universal
wastes included in 40 CFR Part 273, other wastes are defined to be universal wastes
in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.) of these regulations. Part XVI also
contains waste specific requirements associated with the waste defined to be
universal waste therein. In 40 CFR 273.1, the definitions in 40 CFR 273.9,
and wherever elsewhere in Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations there is
a listing of universal wastes or a listing of hazardous waste that are the
subject of provisions set out in 40 CFR Part 273 as universal wastes, it shall
be amended by addition of the following sentence: "In addition to the
hazardous wastes listed here, the term "universal waste" and all
lists of universal waste or waste subject to provisions of 40 CFR Part 273
shall include those hazardous wastes listed in Part XVI (9VAC20-60-1495 et seq.)
of the Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations as universal wastes, in
accordance with the terms and requirements described." Any listing of
universal wastes in 40 CFR Part 273 shall incorporate the universal wastes set
out in Part XVI in a manner identical to those included in the federal text;
whether, for example, as in 40 CFR 273.32(b)(4), 40 CFR 273.32(b)(5), 40 CFR
273.39(b)(2), and 40 CFR 273.62(a)(20) or as items to be included in a
calculation or requirement as in the definitions of "Large Quantity Handler
of Universal Waste" and "Small Quantity Handler of Universal
Waste."
3. In addition to the requirements contained in 40 CFR
273, the following requirements shall apply:
a. A used lamp shall be considered to be discarded and a waste
on the date the generator permanently removes it from its fixture. An unused
lamp becomes a waste on the date the generator discards it since that is the
date on which he is deemed to have decided to discard it in accordance with 40
CFR 273.5(c)(2).
b. A handler having a waste subject to the requirements of 40
CFR 273.13(a)(3)(i) or 40 CFR 273.33(a)(3)(l) is also subject to 9VAC20-60-270
and Parts IV (9VAC20-60-305 et seq.), VII (9VAC20-60-420 et seq.), and XII
(9VAC20-60-1260 et seq.) of this chapter.
c. Small and large quantity handlers of universal waste (i)
may only crush mercury-containing lamps for size reduction at the site of
generation or under the control of the generator as defined in 9VAC20-60-1505 B
4 and (ii) shall comply with the applicable mercury-containing lamps crushed
for size reduction requirements of 9VAC20-60-1505.
d. All large quantity handlers of universal waste lamps (i.e.,
generators who accumulate 5000 kilograms or more of universal waste lamps) must
prepare and maintain a closure plan conforming to the requirements of 40 CFR
Part 264, Subpart G as adopted by reference in 9VAC20-60-264. Financial
assurance shall be provided to the department in accordance with 40 CFR Part
264, Subpart H as adopted by reference in 9VAC20-60-264.
e. The owner or operator of a destination facility that
recycles mercury-containing lamps with or without storing the
mercury-containing lamps before they are recycled must comply with all
applicable requirements of 9VAC20-60-264 B 34 and 9VAC20-60-265 B 21 for
mercury-containing lamp recycling facilities.
4. In 40 CFR 273 Subpart F the term "EPA" shall
mean the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and the term
"Administrator" shall mean the Administrator of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency or his designee.
5. In 40 CFR 273 Subpart G, the term
"Administrator" shall mean the Administrator of United States
Environmental Protection Agency or his designee.
VA.R. Doc. No. R18-5265; Filed February 12, 2018, 9:27 a.m.