CHAPTER
Env-Hw 700 REQUIREMENTS FOR OWNERS AND
OPERATORS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE FACILITIES/HAZARDOUS WASTE TRANSFER FACILITIES
Statutory
Authority: RSA 147-A:3; RSA 147-B:7
REVISION NOTE #1:
Document
#9367, effective 1-28-09, readopted with amendments and redesignated the former
Chapter Env-Wm 700 as Env-Hw 700. The
redesignation from subtitle Env-Wm to Env-Hw was done pursuant to a rules
reorganization plan for Department rules approved by the Director of the Office
of Legislative Services on 9-7-05.
Document #9367 replaced all prior filings for hazardous waste rules
formerly in Chapter Env-Wm 700. The
numerals of the rules remained unchanged, and the source note information for
the rules under Document #9367 refer to those same numbers under the subtitle
Env-Wm.
REVISION NOTE #2:
Document #12922, effective 11-23-19,
readopted with amendments, repealed, or amended various rules in Chapter Env-Hw
700. Rules Env-Hw 705.01 titled
“Recordkeeping” and Env-Hw 705.02 titled “Quarterly Reporting” were
amended. The following rules in Chapter
Env-Hw 700 were readopted with amendments:
Env-Hw 701.01 Applicability.
Env-Hw 701.03 Prohibitions.
Env-Hw 703.01 General Manifest Requirements.
Env-Hw 703.02 Manifest Errors/Discrepancies.
Env-Hw 704.01 Rejected Shipments.
Env-Hw 705.03 Biennial Reporting.
Env-Hw 706.03 Waiver of Manifest and Permit Requirements
for Emergency Response.
Document #12922 repealed the following
rules in Chapter Env-Hw 700, and renumbered the former Env-Hw 703.05 as Env-Hw
703.03:
Env-Hw 703.03 Rail or Water Shipments.
Env-Hw 703.04 International Shipments.
PART Env-Hw 701
APPLICABILITY, EXEMPTIONS, AND PROHIBITIONS
Env-Hw
701.01 Applicability. This chapter shall apply to:
(a) Owners and operators of all facilities,
unless exempt under Env-Hw 800 or Env-Hw 701.02;
(b) A person disposing of hazardous waste by
means of ocean disposal pursuant to a permit issued under the Marine
Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act only to the extent the person is
deemed to have a permit-by-rule under Env-Hw 300;
(c) An operator of a POTW that treats, stores, or
disposes of hazardous waste only to the extent the operator is deemed to have a
permit-by-rule under Env-Hw 300;
(d) An owner and operator of a facility that
treats, stores, or disposes of hazardous wastes in accordance with 40 CFR Part
268, as incorporated by reference in Env-Hw 1200; and
(e) The storage of military munitions classified
as solid waste pursuant to 40 CFR 266.202 only to the extent identified in 40
CFR 266.205, but this chapter shall apply to the treatment and disposal of
hazardous waste military munitions.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision
Note #2 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700); ss by #13406, eff 7-23-22
Env-Hw 701.02 Exemptions.
(a)
This chapter shall not apply to:
(1) The entities identified in Env-Hw 303.02(a);
(2) The owner or operator of a solid waste
facility, as defined in RSA 149-M:4, IX and permitted by the department
pursuant to RSA 149-M to manage non-hazardous solid waste, provided that:
a.
The facility does not accept hazardous waste for transfer, treatment,
storage, or disposal and does not transfer, treat, store, or dispose of
hazardous waste; and
b.
If the facility
recovers energy from the combustion of solid waste from any source other than a
household, it does not combust any hazardous waste, including but not limited
to ash and baghouse filters, generated outside of, removed from, or stored at
the facility;
(3) The owner or operator of an elementary
neutralization unit or wastewater treatment unit that meets the requirements of
Env-Hw 304.04;
(4) A New Hampshire registered transporter that
stores manifested shipments of hazardous waste in containers meeting the
requirements of 40 CFR 262.30 for a period of less than 10 days, provided that:
a.
The wastes are en
route to the facility designated on the manifest; and
b.
Wastes are not transferred or removed from the vehicle;
(5) The owner or operator of a facility managing
recyclable materials described in Env-Hw 401.03(b)(34) – (36), Env-Hw 804.02,
and Env-Hw 1402.01(b), except to the extent that Env-Hw 700
requirements are referred to in Env-Hw 804 through Env-Hw 809
and Env-Hw 1400; and
(6) Subject to (c), below, a person engaged in
treatment or containment activities during immediate response to the situations
described in Env-Hw 303.02(c).
(b)
Env-Hw 705.01(b)(1) through (3), (b)(6) through (10), and (c), Env-Hw
705.02, Env-Hw 705.03, Env-Hw 707.03(a)(2) and (10), and Env-Hw 708.02(a)(2)
shall not apply to transfer facilities.
(c)
In the case of treatment
or containment activities during immediate response to a situation specified in
(a)(6), above:
(1) A facility owner and operator shall comply
with Env-Hw 708.02(a)(9) and Env-Hw 708.02(a)(10), except that the owner and
operator of an existing facility shall comply with 40 CFR 265.54 instead of 40
CFR 264.54;
(2) A person who continues or initiates hazardous
waste treatment or containment activities after the immediate response is over
shall be subject to Env-Hw 300 and this chapter; and
(3) In the case of an explosives or munitions
emergency response, including emergencies involving military munitions, the
requirements of 40 CFR 264.1(g)(8)(iv) and 40 CFR 265.1(c)(11)(iv) shall apply.
(d)
Env-Hw 703 and Env-Hw 704 shall not apply to owners and operators of:
(1) Onsite facilities that do not receive any
hazardous waste from offsite sources; or
(2) Offsite facilities with respect to waste
military munitions that are exempt from manifest requirements under 40 CFR
266.203(a).
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; amd
by #7578, eff 10-13-01; amd by #8790, eff 1-5-07; ss
by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #13406,
eff 7-23-22; ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES: 8-1-35
Env-Hw 701.03 Prohibitions.
(a)
Underground injection of hazardous waste shall be prohibited.
(b)
Wastes with EPA hazardous waste numbers F020, F021, F022, F023, F026,
and F027 shall not be managed at facilities subject to Env-Hw 707, unless:
(1) The wastewater treatment sludge is generated
in a surface impoundment as a part of the plant's wastewater treatment system;
(2) The waste is stored in tanks or containers;
(3)
The waste is stored or treated in waste piles that meet the requirements of
Env-Hw 707.04(e);
(4) The waste is burned in an incinerator that is
certified pursuant to the standards and procedures in Env-Hw 707.04(h); or
(5) The waste is burned in a facility that
thermally treats the waste in a device other than an incinerator and that is
certified pursuant to the standards and procedures in Env-Hw 707.04(i).
Source.
#5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #7578, eff 10-13-01; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw
700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922,
11-23-19 (See Revision Note #2 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700)
PART
Env-Hw 702 GENERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR
FACILITY OPERATORS
Env-Hw 702.01 Notification.
(a)
An operator of a facility shall notify the department prior to
conducting any hazardous waste activities that are subject to the hazardous
waste rules.
(b)
An operator of an existing facility shall notify the department within
30 days of the effective date of any statutory or regulatory amendment that
requires the facility to have a hazardous waste permit.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.02 Notification Information Requirements.
(a) The notification required by Env-Hw 702.01
shall be given by completing and submitting:
(1)
Form HWM-2 “RCRA C Site Identification Form” as amended August 2025; and
(2)
The following certification: “I certify, in accordance with Env-Hw 207,
under penalty of law that this document and all attachments were prepared under
my direction or supervision in accordance with a system designed to assure that
qualified personnel properly gather and evaluate the information submitted.
Based on my inquiry of the person or persons who
manage the system, or those persons directly
responsible for gathering the information, the information submitted is, to the
best of my knowledge and belief, true, accurate, and complete. I am aware that
there are significant penalties for submitting false information, including the
possibility of fines and imprisonment for knowing violations.”
(b) The operator shall notify the department, on
Form HWM-2 “RCRA C Site Identification Form” as amended August 2025, of any
changes to the information submitted pursuant to (a), above, within 30 days of
the effective date of any change.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #14281,
eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES: 8-1-35
Env-Hw 702.03 Notification Determination.
(a)
If the department, upon examination of a notification submitted as
specified in Env-Hw 702.02, determines that the operator has not provided all
of the information required by Env-Hw 702.02, the department shall notify the
operator in writing of each deficiency.
(b)
The operator shall, no later than 30 days from receipt of the notice of
deficiency, explain or correct the alleged deficiency.
(c)
If the operator does not respond within 30 days, the operator shall
submit a new notification.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.04 EPA Identification Number.
(a)
An operator of a facility or transfer facility shall not generate,
receive, transfer, treat, store, or dispose of hazardous waste without having
received an EPA identification number.
If a notification from a facility or transfer facility is deemed
complete, the department shall assign an EPA identification number to the
facility or transfer facility.
(b)
A separate number shall be obtained for each site location.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.05 Facility Permits. The operator of a new or existing facility
shall comply with the permitting requirements of Env-Hw 300.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.06 Public Notification Plan. The operator of a facility or transfer
facility shall develop and follow a plan describing methods to inform the
public of the status of the activities undertaken at the facility or transfer
facility.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.07 Transfer of Ownership/Relinquishment of
Property Rights. The operator of a
facility seeking to have its permit transferred to a new operator shall comply
with 40 CFR 270.40, 7-1-05 edition, and RSA 147-A:4, IV.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7207-B, eff
2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See
Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09;
ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.08 Environmental and Health Requirements. Notwithstanding any provisions in this
chapter, the operator of a facility shall:
(a)
Meet all surface water standards as specified in the Federal Clean Water
Act and New Hampshire statutes according to RSA 485-A, and groundwater criteria
established by the Federal Safe Drinking Water Act and Env-Or 600;
(b)
Meet all air emission limits specified in the Federal Clean Air Act, RSA
125-C, and state implementation plans;
(c)
Prevent exposure of facility workers to chemicals in violation of
Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations; and
(d)
Prevent exposure of humans or the environment to harmful quantities of
hazardous waste or its constituents.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.09 General Design Requirements. A facility shall:
(a)
Be designed and operated to minimize the possibility of any unplanned
releases of hazardous waste or constituents;
(b)
Have diversion structures capable of diverting all surface water run-off
and run-on from the active portions of the facility for a 24-hour, 100-year
storm;
(c)
Be located above the 100-year flood level, unless it is an existing
facility:
(1) That is designed, constructed, operated and
maintained to prevent washout of any hazardous waste by a 100-year flood; or
(2) Whose operator ensures that all waste can be
removed safely before floodwaters can reach the
facility to a location where the wastes will not be
vulnerable to flood waters; and
(d)
Be designed so that all surface run-off from active portions of the
facility is collected and contained before it is discharged from a point
source, and is handled in accordance with the Federal Clean Water Act and New
Hampshire RSA 485-A.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.10 Groundwater Monitoring.
(a)
An operator of a facility with a surface impoundment, landfill, or land
treatment operation shall install and operate a groundwater monitoring/release
detection system capable of detecting the potential migration in groundwater of
hazardous waste or waste constituents outside the boundaries of the facility,
as specified below:
(1) Facilities that were in existence on July 1,
1980, shall implement a groundwater monitoring/ release detection program in
accordance with 40 CFR 265 Subpart F;
(2) Facilities that become subject to this
chapter due to statutory or regulatory amendments shall implement a groundwater
monitoring/release detection program in accordance with 40 CFR 265 Subpart F
within one year of the effective date of the statutory or regulatory
amendments; and
(3) New facilities shall implement a groundwater
monitoring/release detection program in accordance with 40 CFR 264 Subpart F.
(b)
Groundwater monitoring/release detection shall comply with RSA 485-C:13,
Env-Or 700, and either 40 CFR 264 Subpart F or 40 CFR 265 Subpart F, as
specified in (a), above, provided that in the case of a conflict, the more
protective requirement shall apply.
(c)
Unless a release detection permit is required pursuant to RSA 485-C:13,
the department shall waive any of the requirements of (b), above, if:
(1) The operator requests such a waiver in
writing as specified in Env-Hw 202; and
(2) The operator provides documentation that the
criteria for granting a waiver as specified in Env-Hw 202 are satisfied.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.11 Other Monitoring.
(a)
The department shall review the groundwater monitoring/release detection
plan proposed pursuant to Env-Hw 702.10(b) and all resulting data.
(b)
The department shall review the design and operations of all hazardous
waste facilities and transfer facilities other than those specified in Env-Hw
702.10(a) to determine whether the design and operation might allow any
hazardous waste or constituent to migrate off-site.
(c)
The department shall require the installation
and operation of a monitoring system, including monitoring of air emissions,
groundwater contamination, and leachate detection as appropriate to the
migration vectors identified by the department, for:
(1) A facility identified in Env-Hw 702.10(a), if
the groundwater monitoring/release detection plan proposed pursuant to Env-Hw
702.10(b) is not adequate to detect the off-site migration of all hazardous
wastes or constituents; or
(2) A facility or transfer facility not
identified in Env-Hw 702.10(a) whose design and/or operation might allow a
hazardous waste or constituent to migrate off site.
(d)
For a monitoring system specified in (c), above, the department shall
specify in writing:
(1) The monitoring system required;
(2) The frequency of analysis required; and
(3) The sampling and evaluation procedures and
criteria to be used.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.12 Alternate Monitoring Plan. If the department requires a monitoring
system pursuant to Env-Hw 702.11(c), the owner or operator may apply for a
waiver or may submit for approval an alternate monitoring
plan.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 702.13 Monitoring Response.
(a)
Upon detection of contamination of any groundwater, surface water, air,
or soil, the owner or operator of a facility shall immediately notify the
department’s emergency response team at the telephone number listed in Appendix
E, Monday through Friday, from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., and the New Hampshire state
police headquarters communications unit at the telephone number listed in
Appendix E at all other times.
(b)
Within 10 days of notification, the operator shall:
(1) Collect and evaluate samples on a more
frequent basis;
(2) Take preventive actions, such as requiring
more stringent operational procedures;
(3) Take remedial actions, including on-site
relocation of wastes;
(4) File a report, within 30 days of
notification, identifying the causes of contamination and delineating if they
are accidental, due to operating or design failures, or of unknown cause;
(5)
Provide evidence that the contamination can be mitigated by actions not
previously mentioned; and
(6) Temporarily cease operations so that the
causes can be found and corrected.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; amd by #10205,
eff 10-19-12; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
PART
Env-Hw 703 RECEIPT OF WASTE
Env-Hw
703.01 General Manifest Requirements.
(a) Upon receipt of a hazardous waste accompanied
by a manifest, the owner, operator, or responsible agent of the designated
facility shall comply with 40 CFR 264.71(a) through (k)
and 40 CFR 265.71(a) through (k), as
applicable, with 40 CFR 264.71(c) and 40 CFR 265.71(c) amended to read as
follows:
“(c) Whenever a shipment of hazardous
waste is initiated from a facility, the owner or operator of that facility must
comply with the requirements of Env-Hw 500. The provisions of Env-Hw 500
apply to owners or operators that are shipping hazardous waste which they
generated at that facility or operating as a large quantity generator
consolidating hazardous waste from very small quantity generators under Env-Hw
509.02(e).”
(b)
The export and import requirements of 40 CFR 264.71(a)(3) and (d) and 40
CFR 265.71(a)(3) and (d) shall not apply to a NH-only waste.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by 8714, INTERIM, eff
9-5-06, EXPIRES: 3-4-07; ss by #8790, eff 1-5-07; (See Revision Note #1 at
chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #10205, eff
10-19-12; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision Note
#2 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700); ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES:
8-1-35
Env-Hw
703.02
Manifest Errors/Discrepancies.
(a)
An owner, operator, or responsible agent shall comply with the manifest
discrepancy requirements of 40 CFR 264.72(a) through (c) and 40 CFR 265.72(a) through (c), as applicable.
(b)
An owner, operator, or responsible agent shall correct the following
discrepancies:
(1)
Significant differences, as that term is defined in 40 CFR 264.72(b) and
40 CFR 265.72(b), as applicable;
(2)
Incorrect or missing EPA identification numbers, generator names and
addresses; and
(3)
Missing fee exemption codes as provided in Env-Hw 510.03.
(c)
Post-receipt manifest data corrections shall be made in accordance with
40 CFR 264.71(l) and 40 CFR 265.71(l), as applicable.
(d)
If a post-receipt manifest data correction pertains to a shipment that
was accompanied by a paper manifest or a manifest that was printed for the
generator’s signature, the owner, operator, or responsible agent shall notify
the generator of the correction.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922,
11-23-19 (See Revision Note #2 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700)
Env-Hw 703.03 Unmanifested Waste Report.
(a)
If a facility accepts for treatment, storage, or disposal any hazardous
waste from an off-site source without an accompanying manifest, or shipping
paper for water or rail shipments, and if the waste is not excluded from the
manifest requirement by the hazardous waste rules, the operator shall submit an
unmanifested waste report to the department within 15 days of such acceptance.
(b)
The unmanifested waste report shall contain the following information:
(1) The name, address and EPA identification
number of the facility;
(2) The name, address and EPA identification
number of the generator and transporter, if available;
(3) The date of receipt;
(4) For each unmanifested hazardous waste, its
quantity and a description by type and source;
(5) For each unmanifested hazardous waste, the
method of treatment, storage, or disposal;
(6) A full explanation of why the waste was
unmanifested; and
(7) A statement signed by the operator or a
responsible agent certifying, as specified in Env-Hw 207, the information in
the report.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; (formerly
Env-Hw 703.05, renumbered by #12922) (See Revision Note #2 at chapter heading
for Env-Hw 700)
PART
Env-Hw 704 REJECTED SHIPMENTS
Env-Hw 704.01 Rejected Shipments. If an operator rejects all or part of a
hazardous waste shipment or identifies a container residue that exceeds the
quantity limits for empty containers set forth in Env-Hw 401.03(d), the
operator shall comply with the manifest discrepancy requirements of 40 CFR
264.72(d) through (g) and 40 CFR 265.72(d) through (g), as applicable.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #8714, INTERIM, eff 9-5-06, EXPIRES: 3-4-07; ss by #8790, eff 1-5-07;
(See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09;
ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision Note #2 at
chapter heading for Env-Hw 700)
PART
Env-Hw 705 RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING
Env-Hw
705.01 Recordkeeping.
(a)
The operator of a facility other than a transfer facility shall keep a
written operating record at the facility as set forth in (b) through (d),
below.
(b)
Except
as specified in (b)(6) and (10), below, the following information shall be
recorded by the operator as it becomes available and maintained in the
operating record for 3 years, unless requirements specify they must be kept for
a longer period of time:
(1)
A copy of each shipping document and manifest, including:
a. Movement documents for
shipments subject to 40 CFR 262, Subpart H;
b. Manifest discrepancy reports; and
c. Unmanifested waste reports;
(2)
A copy of each quarterly and biennial activity report;
(3) Records and results of waste
analyses, hazardous waste determinations, and trial tests as required by Env-Hw
707, Env-Hw 708, and Env-Hw 1200, as applicable;
(4)
Summary reports and details of all incidents requiring contingency plan
implementation;
(5)
Records
and results of inspections, as required by Env-Hw 707
and Env-Hw 708, as applicable, including:
a. The time and date of facility inspections;
b. The inspector's name;
c. Notation of observation(s);
d. Dates and nature of maintenance; and
e. Remedial action(s) taken;
(6)
Monitoring data, testing data, analytical data, and corrective action(s)
as required by Env-Hw 707 and Env-Hw 708, except that records and results
pertaining to groundwater monitoring and cleanup shall be maintained until
facility closure and for the post-closure care period for disposal facilities;
(7)
For off-site facilities, notices to generators as required by Env-Hw
708.02(a)(1);
(8)
A statement obtained from the permittee, at least annually, certifying,
as specified in Env-Hw 207, that the permittee has a program in place to reduce
the volume and toxicity of hazardous waste generated by the permittee, as specified in
40 CFR 264.73(b)(9), as applicable;
(9)
The information required by 40 CFR 264.73(b)(11) through (16) and 40 CFR
265.73(b)(9) through (14), as applicable; and
(10)
Records of monitoring, testing, or analytical data as required by 40 CFR
264.73(b)(18), for 5 years.
(c)
The
following information shall be recorded by the operator as it becomes available
and maintained in the operating record until closure of the facility, unless
requirements specify they must be kept for a longer period of time:
(1)
A description and the quantity of each hazardous waste shipment
received, treated, stored, or disposed of at the facility, including:
a. The waste's common name;
b. If listed in Env-Hw 402 or a characteristic
waste under Env-Hw 403, the waste's EPA and state hazardous waste number or numbers,
as applicable;
c. The waste's physical form, such as liquid,
sludge, solid, or contained gas;
d. If not listed in Env-Hw 402, the process that
produced the waste;
e. The estimated or manifest-reported weight, or
volume and density, where applicable, in one of the units of measure specified
in 40 CFR 264 Appendix I, Table 1; and
f. The method, by handling code as specified in
40 CFR 264 Appendix I, Table 2, and date of treatment, storage, or disposal;
(2)
The method, location, and date of treatment, storage, and disposal;
(3)
The location of each hazardous waste within the facility and the
quantity at each location, including:
a. For disposal facilities, the location and
quantity of each hazardous waste, recorded on a map or diagram of each cell or
disposal area; and
b. For all facilities, cross-references to
specific manifest tracking numbers, if the waste was accompanied by a manifest;
(4)
Adjustments and calculations of closure and for disposal facilities,
post-closure cost estimates prepared in accordance with Env-Hw 707.03(a)(11) or
Env-Hw 708.02(a)(12);
(5)
Records of the quantities and date of placement of each shipment of
hazardous waste placed in land disposal units as required by 40 CFR
264.73(b)(10) and 40 CFR 265.73(b)(8), as applicable; and
(6)
The information required by 40 CFR 264.73(b)(19) and 40 CFR
265.73(b)(15), as applicable.
(d)
Any specified retention period shall be automatically extended while any
enforcement action is pending.
(e)
The operator of a transfer facility shall keep a written operating
record at the transfer facility as set forth in (b)(4) and (5), above, and maintain the
operating record in accordance with (d), above.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #6384-B, eff 11-26-96; amd by #7207-B, eff
2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; amd by #8714,
INTERIM, eff 9-5-06, EXPIRES: 3-4-07; amd by #8790,
eff 1-5-07; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter
heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; amd by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision Note #2 at chapter
heading for Env-Hw 700); ss by #13406, eff 7-23-22
Env-Hw 705.02 Quarterly Reporting.
(a)
For the purposes of quarterly reporting, the term “facility” does not
include hazardous waste transfer facilities.
(b)
An operator of a hazardous waste facility located in New Hampshire that
receives hazardous waste from out-of-state for the purpose of treating,
storing, or disposing of such waste shall pay a fee based on the quantity of
said out-of-state wastes.
(c)
For each facility that meets the criteria in (b), above, the department
shall compile a hazardous waste quarterly activity
report summarizing the facility’s hazardous waste manifest information from the
electronic manifest system and then mail or email the report to the
facility. If a facility meets the
criteria of (b), above, and has not received a quarterly activity report within
45 days following the last day of the previous quarter, the facility shall
contact the department and the department shall send a new report.
(d)
The reporting quarters shall be as follows:
(1) 1st Quarter - January 1 to March 31;
(2) 2nd
Quarter - April 1 to June 30;
(3) 3rd Quarter - July 1 to September 30; and
(4) 4th Quarter - October 1 to December 31.
(e)
A facility quarterly report shall include the following information:
(1) Reporting quarter;
(2) Name, address, telephone number, and EPA
identification number of the reporting facility;
(3) Weight in pounds of the hazardous waste
received by the facility from out-of-state sources;
(4) The EPA and NH hazardous waste numbers, as
applicable, for each waste received by the facility from out-of-state sources;
and
(5) The amount of the fee payment due the state of New Hampshire.
(f)
The operator shall:
(1) Review the quarterly report for accuracy;
(2) Correct any errors;
(3)
Notify the department of any needed corrections within 30 days of
receipt of the report; and
(4)
Provide a statement signed by a responsible company official certifying,
as specified in Env-Hw 207,
the report.
(g)
The operator shall submit each quarterly activity report to the
department, together with the fee due to the state of New Hampshire, within 30
days from receipt.
(h)
A quarterly fee payment shall be made by the hazardous waste facility’s
operator.
(i)
As authorized by RSA 147-B:8, III, the fee shall be $0.007 per kilogram,
or $0.003 per pound, on hazardous wastes received by
the facility from out-of-state sources during the reporting quarter.
(j)
Fees paid by check or money order shall be made payable to “Treasurer,
State of New Hampshire.”
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; amd by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision Note #2 at chapter
heading for Env-Hw 700)
Env-Hw 705.03 Biennial Reporting.
(a)
On even-numbered years, the department shall prepare a biennial report
as required by 40 CFR 264.75 or 40 CFR 265.75, as applicable, on behalf of each
facility, other than a transfer facility, based on information provided
pursuant to Env-Hw 702.02, manifest information in the electronic manifest system,
and quarterly reports. Transfer
facilities shall not be subject to biennial reporting requirements.
(b)
If a facility has not received a biennial report from the department by
February 1 of an even-numbered year, the facility shall ask the department to
send a new biennial report.
(c)
The operator shall:
(1) Review the biennial report for accuracy;
(2) Correct any errors;
(3) Notify the department of any needed
corrections by March 1 of that year;
(4)
Provide the department with any additional information necessary to
complete the biennial report as required in 40 CFR 264.75 or 40 CFR 265.75, as
applicable; and
(5) Submit to the department a complete copy of
the biennial report by March 1 of that year, including a signed statement by
the operator certifying, as specified in Env-Hw 207, the information in the
report.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #12922, 11-23-19 (See Revision
Note #2 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700); ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES:
8-1-35
Env-Hw 705.04 Additional Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements.
(a)
The operator of a facility shall report in writing to the department any
instances of non-compliance that threaten public health or the environment, any
planned changes to the facility, and any relevant facts that were not provided
in the permit application of the facility.
(b)
The operator shall comply with the reporting and recordkeeping
requirements of Env-Hw 304.12, and 40 CFR 264.74, 40 CFR 265.74, 40 CFR 264.77
and 40 CFR 265.77, including requirements for saving application records,
certifying facility closure, and complying with land disposal data standards
and other reporting and recordkeeping duties.
(c)
The operator shall submit any additional reports, for example,
monitoring data, specified on the facility’s permit.
(d)
All reports required by permits shall be signed and certified, as
specified in Env-Hw 207, by a person described in 40 CFR 270.11.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; amd by #10205, eff 10-19-12; ss by
#12349, eff 8-14-17
PART
Env-Hw 706 EMERGENCY ACTIONS; REMEDIAL
ACTIONS
Env-Hw 706.01 Immediate Action After Any Discharge.
(a)
In the event of any discharge of hazardous waste or of a material that
when discharged becomes a hazardous waste that poses a threat to human health
or the environment, including but not limited to a discharge into storm drains
or sanitary sewers, onto the land or into the air, groundwater or surface
waters, the owner or operator shall report the discharge:
(1) Immediately, not to exceed one hour from the
discovery of the release; and
(2) To local emergency officials and to:
a. The department’s emergency response team at
the telephone number listed in Appendix E, Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 4
p.m.; or
b.
The New Hampshire state police headquarters communications unit at the
telephone number listed in Appendix E, 24 hours per day.
(b)
The owner and operator also shall comply with the emergency procedures
as specified in 40 CFR 265.56.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #10205, eff 10-19-12; ss by #12349,
eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 706.02 Discharge Cleanup.
(a)
The owner and operator shall immediately contain and cleanup,
within 24 hours, any discharge of hazardous waste or material that, when
discharged, becomes a hazardous waste.
(b)
All recovered hazardous waste, contaminated soil or surface water, and
any other materials that result from a discharge shall be managed in accordance
with Env-Hw 500 and Env-Or 600.
(c)
If the hazardous waste discharge cannot be or is not cleaned up within
24 hours of the occurrence, the owner or operator shall comply with the
requirements of Env-Or 600.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #6384-B, eff
11-26-96; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See
Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09;
ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES: 8-1-35
PART
Env-Hw 707 REQUIREMENTS FOR EXISTING
FACILITIES
Env-Hw 707.01 Applicability. This part shall apply to:
(a)
A facility that qualifies for interim status until a standard permit is
issued under Env-Hw 300 or until applicable closure and post-closure
requirements of Env-Hw 707.03(a)(11) are met;
(b)
The owner and operator of a facility in existence on July 1, 1980, who
failed to provide timely notification as first required under He-P 1905; and
(c)
The owner and operator of a facility in existence on July 1, 1980, who
failed to file a permit application as first required by He-P 1905.
Source.
#12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 707.02 General Requirements. To obtain and maintain interim status, as
described under Env-Hw 304.02(e), the operator of an existing facility shall
comply with this part, unless exempt pursuant to Env-Hw 701.02.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17 (formerly
Env-Hw 707.01)
Env-Hw 707.03 Operation Requirements.
(a)
Operators of existing facilities shall comply with the following
operation requirements:
(1) 40 CFR 265.12, required notices;
(2) 40 CFR 265.13, general waste analysis;
(3) 40 CFR 265.14, security;
(4) 40 CFR 265.15, general inspection
requirements;
(5) 40 CFR 265.16, personnel training;
(6)
40 CFR 265.17, general requirements for ignitable, reactive, or incompatible wastes, including those wastes or materials listed in 40 CFR
265 Appendix V;
(7) 40 CFR 265.19, construction quality assurance
program;
(8) 40 CFR 265, Subpart C, preparedness and
prevention;
(9) 40 CFR 265, Subpart D, contingency plan and
emergency procedures;
(10) 40 CFR 265, Subpart F, groundwater
monitoring;
(11) 40 CFR 265, Subpart G, closure and
post-closure; and
(12) Subject to (b), below, 40 CFR 265, Subpart H,
financial requirements.
(b)
The liability insurance required pursuant to 40 CFR 265.147(b)(1),
identified in (a)(12), above, shall be as specified in 40 CFR 264.147(b)(1)(i)
and (ii).
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7207-B, eff
2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #7578, eff 10-13-01; (See Revision Note
#1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; amd by #10205, eff 10-19-12; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
(formerly Env-Hw 707.02)
Env-Hw 707.04 Technical Requirements. An operator of an existing facility shall
comply with the following technical requirements:
(a)
40 CFR 265.1(d);
(b)
40 CFR 265, Subpart I - use and management of containers;
(c)
40 CFR 265, Subpart J - tank systems, including:
(1) Determining the absence or presence of free
liquids by using the paint filter liquids test, test method 9095B in EPA
publication SW-846, available as noted in Appendix B; and
(2) The requirements for maintaining protective
distances as required in Tables 2-1 through 2-6 of the National Fire Protection
Association’s “Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code,” NFPA 30, 1977 or 1981,
as incorporated by reference in 40 CFR 260.11 and available as noted in
Appendix B;
(d)
40 CFR 265, Subpart K - surface impoundments;
(e)
40 CFR 265, Subpart L - waste piles;
(f)
40 CFR 265, Subpart M - land treatment;
(g)
40 CFR 265, Subpart N - landfills, including determining the absence or
presence of free liquids by using the paint filter liquids test, test method
9095B in EPA publication SW-846, available as noted in Appendix B;
(h)
40 CFR 265, Subpart O - incinerators;
(i)
40 CFR 265, Subpart P - thermal treatment;
(j)
40 CFR 265, Subpart Q - chemical, physical, and biological treatment;
(k)
40 CFR 265, Subpart W - drip pads;
(l) 40 CFR 265, Subpart DD - containment
buildings; and
(m)
40 CFR 265, Subpart EE - hazardous waste munitions and explosives
storage.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; amd by #10739, eff 12-2-14; ss by
#12349, eff 8-14-17 (formerly Env-Hw 707.03); ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25,
EXPIRES: 8-1-35
Env-Hw 707.05 Land Disposal Restrictions. Operators of existing facilities shall comply
with Env-Hw 1200 relative to restrictions on land disposal of hazardous wastes.
Source.
#12349, eff 8-14-17
PART
Env-Hw 708 REQUIREMENTS FOR FACILITIES
WITH A STANDARD PERMIT AND/OR A TRANSFER FACILITY PERMIT
Env-Hw 708.01 General Operation Requirements. To maintain a standard permit or a transfer
facility permit, the operator of a facility or transfer facility shall comply
with this part.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff 8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for
Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 708.02 Operation Requirements.
(a)
An operator of a facility shall comply with the following operation
requirements:
(1) 40 CFR 264.12, required notices;
(2) 40 CFR 264.13, general waste analysis;
(3) 40 CFR 264.14, security;
(4) 40 CFR 264.15, general inspection
requirements;
(5) 40 CFR 264.16, personnel training;
(6)
40 CFR 264.17, general requirements for
ignitable, reactive, or incompatible wastes, including
those wastes or materials listed in 40 CFR 264 Appendix V;
(7) 40 CFR 264.18, location standards, except
that the provisions of Env-Hw 304.08(b) shall be applied in lieu of all flood
mitigation provisions set forth in 40 CFR 264.18(b);
(8) 40 CFR 264.19, construction quality assurance
program;
(9) 40 CFR 264, Subpart C, preparedness and
prevention, except that for a transfer facility, aisle space requirements shall
not apply to waste containers stored on a vehicle used to transport that waste;
(10) 40 CFR 264, Subpart D, contingency plan and
emergency procedures;
(11) 40 CFR 264, Subpart F, releases from solid
waste management units;
(12) 40 CFR 264, Subpart G, closure and
post-closure; and
(13) Subject to (b) and (c), below, 40 CFR 264,
Subpart H, financial requirements.
(b)
Documents required by (a)(13), above, may be submitted in unsigned or
signed form with the operator's standard permit or transfer facility permit
application.
(c)
If the documents required by (a)(13), above, are submitted unsigned with
a permit application, the operator shall submit the documents signed:
(1) Before a permit will be issued by the
department for an existing facility; or
(2) For a new facility, at least 60 days before
hazardous waste is first received at the facility.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #6384-B, eff 11-26-96; ss by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00;
ss by #7578, eff 10-13-01; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw
700) ss by #9367, eff 1-28-09; amd by #10205, eff
10-19-12; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Env-Hw 708.03 Technical Requirements. The operator of a facility shall:
(a)
Treat, store, or dispose of wastes according to
best engineering judgment and with the best available technology;
(b)
Design and operate the facility so as to minimize the quantity and
impact of planned and non-planned releases of hazardous waste or waste
constituents into the environment;
(c)
Use the best available solution for managing the hazardous wastes received; and
(d)
Comply with the following requirements and standards:
(1) 40 CFR 264, Subpart I - use and management of
containers;
(2) 40 CFR 264, Subpart J - tank systems,
including:
a. Determining the absence or presence of free
liquids by using the paint filter liquids test, test method 9095B in EPA
publication SW-846, available as noted in Appendix B; and
b. The requirements for maintaining protective
distances as required in Tables 2-1 through 2-6 of the National Fire Protection
Association’s “Flammable and Combustible Liquids Code,” NFPA 30, 1977 or 1981,
as incorporated by reference in 40 CFR 260.11 and available as noted in
Appendix B;
(3) 40 CFR 264, Subpart K - surface impoundments;
(4) 40 CFR 264, Subpart L - waste piles;
(5) 40 CFR 264, Subpart M - land treatment;
(6) 40 CFR 264, Subpart N - landfills, including
determining the absence or presence of free liquids by using the paint filter
liquids test, test method 9095B in EPA publication SW-846, available as noted
in Appendix B;
(7) 40 CFR 264, Subpart O - incinerators;
(8) 40 CFR 264, Subpart W - drip pads;
(9) 40 CFR 264, Subpart X - miscellaneous units;
(10) 40 CFR 264, Subpart DD - containment
buildings; and
(11) 40 CFR 264, Subpart EE - hazardous waste
munitions and explosives storage.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91; ss by #5886, eff 8-26-94; amd
by #7207-B, eff 2-26-00; ss by #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17; ss by #14281, eff 8-1-25, EXPIRES:
8-1-35
Env-Hw 708.04 Land Disposal Restrictions. Operators of facilities shall comply with
Env-Hw 1200 relative to restrictions on land disposal of hazardous wastes.
Source.
#12349, eff 8-14-17
PART
Env-Hw 709 STANDARDS FOR THE MANAGEMENT
OF CERTAIN HAZARDOUS WASTES AND TYPES OF HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITIES
Env-Hw 709.01 Standards. An owner and operator shall comply with the
following standards as applicable to the specific hazardous wastes
and facility types:
(a)
Env-Hw 805 - recyclable materials used in a manner constituting
disposal;
(b)
Env-Hw 806 - hazardous waste burned for energy recovery;
(c)
Env-Hw 808 - recyclable materials used for precious metal recovery;
(d)
Env-Hw 809 - spent lead-acid batteries being reclaimed; and
(e)
40 CFR 266, Subpart M - military munitions.
Source.
#5053, eff 1-24-91, EXPIRED: 1-24-97
New. #7333, eff 8-1-00; ss by #9215, INTERIM, eff
8-1-08; (See Revision Note #1 at chapter heading for Env-Hw 700) ss by #9367,
eff 1-28-09; ss by #12349, eff 8-14-17
Appendix
A: State Statutes, Federal Regulations
Implemented
|
Rule Section(s) |
State Statute(s) |
Federal Regulation(s) |
|
Env-Hw 701 |
RSA 147-A:3, III, IV, and XXV |
40 CFR 264; 40 CFR 265 |
|
Env-Hw 702 |
RSA 147-A:3, III, IV, VI, and VII; RSA 147-A:4 |
40 CFR 264; 40 CFR 265 |
|
Env-Hw 703-704 |
RSA 147-A:3, V and VI |
40 CFR 264 Subpart E; |
|
Env-Hw 705 |
RSA 147-A:3, V, and VI; RSA 147-B:8 |
40 CFR 264 Subpart E; |
|
Env-Hw 706 |
RSA 147-A:3, III, IV, VI, VII, and XXV; RSA 147-A:11 |
40 CFR 264.56; 40 CFR 265.56 |
|
Env-Hw 707 |
RSA 147-A:3, III, IV, VII, and XIII |
40 CFR 265 |
|
Env-Hw 708 |
RSA 147-A:3, III, IV, VII, and XIII |
40 CFR 264 |
|
Env-Hw 709 |
RSA 147-A:3, IV |
40 CFR 266 |
Appendix B: Incorporation by Reference Information
|
Rule |
Title |
Obtain
at: |
|
Env-Hw
707.04(c)(1); Env-Hw
707.04(g); Env-Hw
708.03(d)(2)a.; Env-Hw
708.03(d)(6) |
EPA
publication “SW-846 Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste,
Physical/Chemical Methods”, Third Edition, as amended through Update VII
dated July 30, 2021 |
National Technical
Information Service (NTIS) 5285 Port Royal Road Springfield, VA
22161 (800) 553-NTIS
[(800)-553-6847] Free online at: |
|
Env-Hw
707.04(c)(2); Env-Hw
708.03(d)(2)b. |
“Flammable
and Combustible Liquids Code,” NFPA 30, 1977 or 1981 |
National Fire
Protection Association 1 Batterymarch Park Quincy, MA 02269 (617) 770-3000,
(800) 344-3555 Free online at: https://www.nfpa.org/codes-and-standards/nfpa-30-standard-development/30 |
Appendix C:
State Statutory Definitions
III.
“Disposal” means the discharge, deposit, incineration, injection, dumping,
spilling, leaking or placing of any waste into or onto any land or water so
that the waste or any constituent of the waste may enter the environment, be
emitted into the air, or be discharged into any waters, including groundwaters.
IV.
“Facility” means a location at which hazardous waste is subjected to treatment,
storage or disposal and may include a facility where hazardous waste has been
generated.
VI.
“Generator” means any person who owns or operates a facility where hazardous
waste is generated.
VII.
“Hazardous waste” means a solid, semi-solid, liquid or contained gaseous waste,
or any combination of these wastes:
(a)
Which, because of either quantity, concentration, or physical, chemical,
or infectious characteristics may:
(1)
Cause or contribute to an increase in mortality or an increase in
irreversible or incapacitating reversible illness; or
(2)
Pose a present or potential threat to human health or the environment
when improperly treated, stored, transported, disposed of or otherwise
mismanaged.
(b)
Or which has been identified as a hazardous waste by the department
using the criteria established under RSA 147-A:3, I or as listed under RSA
147-A:3, II. Such wastes include, but are not limited
to, those which are reactive, toxic, corrosive, ignitable, irritants, strong
sensitizers or which generate pressure through decomposition, heat or other
means. Such wastes do not include radioactive substances that are regulated by the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, or household pharmaceutical wastes
collected pursuant to RSA 318-E.
VIII.
“Hazardous waste management” means the systematic control of the generation,
collection, sorting, storage, processing, treatment, recovery and disposal of
hazardous waste.
X.
“Manifest” means the form used for identifying the origin, quantity,
composition, routing and destination of hazardous waste.
XI.
“Operator” means any person who, either directly or indirectly, operates or
otherwise controls or directs activities at a facility.
XI-a.
“Owner” means any person who, either directly or indirectly owns a facility.
The term “owner” does not include a person who, without participation in the
management or actual operation of a facility, holds indicia of ownership
primarily to protect a mortgage on real property on which a facility is located
or a security interest in personal property located at the facility.
XII.
“Person” means any individual, trust, firm, joint stock company, corporation
(including a government corporation), partnership, association, state,
municipality, commission, United States government or any agency thereof,
political subdivision of the state, or any interstate body.
XII-a.
“Spent material” means any material that has been used and, as a result of
contamination, can no longer serve the purpose for which it was produced
without processing.
XIII.
“Storage” means the containment of hazardous wastes, either on a temporary
basis or for a period of years, in such a manner as not to constitute disposal
of the hazardous wastes.
XIV.
"Trade secret'' means any confidential formula, pattern, device or
compilation of information which is used in the employer's business and which
gives him an opportunity to obtain an advantage over competitors who do not
know or use it. A trade secret is known to the employer and those employees to
whom it is necessary to confide it.
XV.
“Transport” means the movement of hazardous wastes from the point of generation
to any intermediate points and, finally, to the point of ultimate storage or
disposal.
XVI.
“Transporter” means any person who transports hazardous waste.
XVII.
“Treatment” means any process, including neutralization, designed to change the
physical, chemical or biological character or composition of any hazardous
waste so as to neutralize the waste or to render the waste not hazardous, safer
for transport, amenable to recovery, amenable to storage or reduced in volume.
XVIII.
“Waste” means any matter consisting of: garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste
treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control
facility and other spent, discarded or abandoned material including solid,
liquid, semi-solid, or contained gaseous material resulting from industrial,
commercial, mining, and agricultural operations, and from community activities,
but does not include domestic sewage, irrigation return waters, wastewater
discharges in compliance with applicable state or federal permits, or source,
special nuclear, or by-product material as defined by the Atomic Energy Act of
1954, as amended.
III.
“Facility” means any site, area or location where hazardous waste or hazardous
materials are or have been treated, stored, generated, disposed of, or
otherwise come to be located.
XIII.
"Used oil" means any oil that has been refined from crude oil, or
synthetic oil, which, through use or handling, has become unsuitable for its
original purpose due to the presence of physical or chemical impurities or loss
of original properties.
Appendix
D: Federal Definitions and Regulations
(a) In any case in which the state in which waste
is generated, or the state in which waste will be transported to a designated
facility, requires that the waste be regulated as a hazardous waste or
otherwise be tracked through a hazardous waste manifest, the designated
facility that receives the waste shall, regardless of the state in which the
facility is located:
(1) Complete
the facility portion of the applicable manifest;
(2) Sign and
date the facility certification;
(3) Submit
to the e-Manifest system a final copy of the manifest for data processing
purposes; and
(4) Pay the
appropriate per manifest fee to EPA for each manifest submitted to the
e-Manifest system, subject to the fee determination methodology, payment
methods, dispute procedures, sanctions, and other fee requirements specified in
subpart FF of part 264 of this chapter.
40 CFR 260.5
(a) For purposes of this section, “state-only
regulated waste” means:
(1) A
non-RCRA waste that a state regulates more broadly under its state regulatory
program, or
(2) A RCRA
hazardous waste that is federally exempt from manifest requirements, but not
exempt from manifest requirements under state law.
(b) In any case in which a state requires a RCRA
manifest to be used under state law to track the shipment and transportation of
a state-only regulated waste to a receiving facility, the facility receiving
such a waste shipment for management shall:
(1) Comply
with the provisions of §§ 264.71 (use of the manifest) and 264.72 (manifest
discrepancies) of this chapter; and
(2) Pay the
appropriate per manifest fee to EPA for each manifest submitted to the
e-Manifest system, subject to the fee determination methodology, payment
methods, dispute procedures, sanctions, and other fee requirements specified in
subpart FF of part 264 of this chapter.
Act
or RCRA means
the Solid Waste Disposal Act, as amended by the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act of 1976, as amended, 42 U.S.C. section 6901 et seq.
Administrator
means the
Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, or his designee.
Aerosol
can means a non-refillable receptacle
containing a gas compressed, liquefied, or dissolved under pressure, the sole
purpose of which is to expel a liquid, paste, or powder and fitted with a
self-closing release device allowing the contents to be ejected by the gas.
Aquifer
means a
geologic formation, group of formations, or part of a formation capable of
yielding a significant amount of ground water to wells or springs.
Authorized
representative means the person responsible for the overall operation of a facility or
an operational unit (i.e., part of a facility), e.g., the plant manager,
superintendent or person of equivalent responsibility.
Battery
means a
device consisting of one or more electrically connected electrochemical cells
which is designed to receive, store, and deliver electric energy. An
electrochemical cell is a system consisting of an anode, cathode, and an
electrolyte, plus such connections (electrical and mechanical) as may be needed
to allow the cell to deliver or receive electrical energy. The term battery
also includes an intact, unbroken battery from which the electrolyte has been
removed.
Boiler
means
an enclosed device using controlled flame combustion and having the following
characteristics:
(1)(i) The unit must have physical
provisions for recovering and exporting thermal energy in the form of steam,
heated fluids, or heated gases; and
(ii) The unit’s combustion chamber and
primary energy recovery sections(s) must be of integral design. To be of
integral design, the combustion chamber and the primary energy recovery
section(s) (such as waterwalls and superheaters) must be physically formed into
one manufactured or assembled unit. A unit in which the combustion chamber and
the primary energy recovery section(s) are joined only by ducts or connections
carrying flue gas is not integrally designed; however, secondary energy
recovery equipment (such as economizers or air preheaters) need not be
physically formed into the same unit as the combustion chamber and the primary
energy recovery section. The following units are not precluded from being
boilers solely because they are not of integral design: process heaters (units
that transfer energy directly to a process stream), and fluidized bed
combustion units; and
(iii)
While in operation, the unit must maintain a thermal energy recovery
efficiency of at least 60 percent, calculated in terms of the recovered energy
compared with the thermal value of the fuel; and
(iv)
The unit must export and utilize at least 75 percent of the recovered
energy, calculated on an annual basis. In this calculation, no credit shall be
given for recovered heat used internally in the same unit. (Examples of
internal use are the preheating of fuel or combustion air, and the driving of
induced or forced draft fans or feedwater pumps); or
(2)
The unit is one which the Regional Administrator has determined, on a
case-by-case basis, to be a boiler, after considering the standards in §
260.32.
Certification
means a
statement of professional opinion based upon knowledge and belief.
Confined
aquifer means an
aquifer bounded above and below by impermeable beds or by beds of distinctly
lower permeability than that of the aquifer itself; an aquifer containing
confined ground water.
Container
means any portable device in which a
material is stored, transported, treated, disposed of, or otherwise handled.
Containment
building means a hazardous waste management unit
that is used to store or treat hazardous waste under the provisions of subpart
DD of parts 264 or 265 of this chapter.
Contingency
plan means a document setting out an
organized, planned, and coordinated course of action to be followed in case of
a fire, explosion, or release of hazardous waste or hazardous waste
constituents which could threaten human health or the environment.
Dike
means an embankment or ridge of either
natural or man-made materials used to prevent the movement of liquids, sludges,
solids, or other materials.
Drip
pad is an engineered structure consisting
of a curbed, free-draining base, constructed of non-earthen materials and
designed to convey preservative kick-back or drippage from treated wood,
precipitation, and surface water run-on to an associated collection system at
wood preserving plants.
Electronic
manifest (or e-Manifest) means the electronic
format of the hazardous waste manifest that is obtained from EPA’s national
e-Manifest system and transmitted electronically to the system, and that is the
legal equivalent of EPA Forms 8700–22 (Manifest) and 8700–22A (Continuation
Sheet).
Electronic
Manifest System (or e-Manifest
System) means EPA’s national information technology system through which the
electronic manifest may be obtained, completed, transmitted, and distributed to
users of the electronic manifest and to regulatory agencies.
Explosives
or munitions emergency means
a situation involving the suspected or detected presence of unexploded ordnance
(UXO), damaged or deteriorated explosives or munitions, an improvised explosive
device (IED), other potentially explosive material or device, or other
potentially harmful military chemical munitions or device, that creates an
actual or potential imminent threat to human health, including safety, or the
environment, including property, as determined by an explosives or munitions
emergency response specialist. Such situations may require immediate and
expeditious action by an explosives or munitions emergency response specialist
to control, mitigate, or eliminate the threat.
Explosives
or munitions emergency response means
all immediate response activities by an explosives and munitions emergency
response specialist to control, mitigate, or eliminate the actual or potential
threat encountered during an explosives or munitions emergency. An explosives
or munitions emergency response may include in place render-safe procedures,
treatment or destruction of the explosives or munitions and/or transporting
those items to another location to be rendered safe, treated, or destroyed. Any
reasonable delay in the completion of an explosives or munitions emergency
response caused by a necessary, unforeseen, or uncontrollable circumstance will
not terminate the explosives or munitions emergency. Explosives and munitions
emergency responses can occur on either public or private lands and are not
limited to responses at RCRA facilities.
Explosives
or munitions emergency response specialist means
an individual trained in chemical or conventional munitions or explosives
handling, transportation, render-safe procedures, or destruction techniques.
Explosives or munitions emergency response specialists include Department of
Defense (DOD) emergency explosive ordnance disposal (EOD), technical escort
unit (TEU), and DOD-certified civilian or contractor personnel; and other
Federal, State, or local government, or civilian personnel similarly trained in
explosives or munitions emergency responses.
Free
liquids means
liquids which readily separate from the solid portion
of a waste under ambient temperature and pressure.
Ground
water means water below the land surface in a
zone of saturation.
Incompatible
waste means a hazardous waste which is
unsuitable for:
(1)
Placement in a particular device or facility because it may cause
corrosion or decay of containment materials (e.g., container inner liners or
tank walls); or
(2) Commingling
with another waste or material under uncontrolled conditions because the commingling might produce heat or pressure, fire or
explosion, violent reaction, toxic dusts, mists, fumes, or gases,
or flammable fumes or gases.
(See
appendix V of parts 264 and 265 of this chapter for examples.)
Injection
well means a well into which fluids are
injected. (See also “underground injection”.)
Inner
liner means a continuous layer of material
placed inside a tank or container which protects the construction materials of
the tank or container from the contained waste or reagents used to treat the
waste.
International
shipment means the transportation of hazardous
waste into or out of the jurisdiction of the United States.
Lamp,
also referred to as “universal waste
lamp”, is defined as the bulb or tube portion of an electric lighting device. A
lamp is specifically designed to produce radiant energy, most often in the
ultraviolet, visible, and infra-red regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Examples of common universal waste electric lamps include, but are not limited
to, fluorescent, high intensity discharge, neon, mercury vapor, high pressure
sodium, and metal halide lamps.
Land
treatment facility means
a facility or part of a facility at which hazardous waste is applied onto or
incorporated into the soil surface; such facilities are disposal facilities if
the waste will remain after closure.
Leachate
means any liquid, including any
suspended components in the liquid, that has percolated through or drained from
hazardous waste.
Liner
means a continuous layer of natural or
man-made materials, beneath or on the sides of a surface impoundment, landfill,
or landfill cell, which restricts the downward or lateral escape of hazardous
waste, hazardous waste constituents, or leachate.
Military
munitions means all ammunition
products and components produced or used by or for the U.S. Department of
Defense or the U.S. Armed Services for national defense and security, including
military munitions under the control of the Department of Defense, the U.S. Coast
Guard, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), and National Guard personnel. The
term military munitions includes: confined gaseous, liquid, and solid
propellants, explosives, pyrotechnics, chemical and riot control agents,
smokes, and incendiaries used by DOD components, including bulk explosives and
chemical warfare agents, chemical munitions, rockets, guided and ballistic
missiles, bombs, warheads, mortar rounds, artillery ammunition, small arms
ammunition, grenades, mines, torpedoes, depth charges, cluster munitions and
dispensers, demolition charges, and devices and components thereof. Military
munitions do not include wholly inert items, improvised explosive devices, and
nuclear weapons, nuclear devices, and nuclear components thereof. However, the term does include non-nuclear
components of nuclear devices, managed under DOE’s nuclear weapons program
after all required sanitization operations under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
as amended, have been completed.
Mining
overburden returned to the mine site means
any material overlying an economic mineral deposit which is removed to gain
access to that deposit and is then used for reclamation of a surface mine.
On-site
means the same or geographically
contiguous property which may be divided by public or private right-of-way,
provided the entrance and exit between the properties is at a cross-roads
intersection, and access is by crossing as opposed to going along, the right-of-way.
Non-contiguous properties owned by the same person but connected by a
right-of-way which he controls and to which the public does not have access, is
also considered on-site property.
Pesticide
means any substance or mixture of
substances intended for preventing, destroying, repelling, or mitigating any
pest, or intended for use as a plant regulator, defoliant, or desiccant, other
than any article that:
(1)
Is a new animal drug under FFDCA section 201(w), or
(2)
Is an animal drug that has been determined by regulation of the
Secretary of Health and Human Services not to be a new animal drug, or
(3)
Is an animal feed under FFDCA section 201(x) that bears or contains any
substances described by paragraph (1) or (2) of this definition.
Pile
means any non-containerized
accumulation of solid, nonflowing hazardous waste that is used for treatment or
storage and that is not a containment building.
Point
source means any discernible, confined, and
discrete conveyance, including, but not limited to any pipe, ditch, channel,
tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure, container, rolling stock, concentrated
animal feeding operation, or vessel or other floating craft, from which
pollutants are or may be discharged. This term does not include return flows
from irrigated agriculture.
Recognized
trader means a person domiciled in the United
States, by site of business, who acts to arrange and facilitate transboundary
movements of wastes destined for recovery or disposal operations, either by
purchasing from and subsequently selling to United States and foreign
facilities, or by acting under arrangements with a United States waste facility
to arrange for the export or import of the wastes.
Representative
sample means a sample of a universe or whole
(e.g., waste pile, lagoon, ground water) which can be expected to exhibit the
average properties of the universe or whole.
Run-off
means any rainwater, leachate, or other
liquid that drains over land from any part of a facility.
Run-on
means any rainwater, leachate, or other
liquid that drains over land onto any part of a facility.
Sludge
means any solid, semi-solid, or liquid
waste generated from a municipal, commercial, or industrial wastewater
treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control
facility exclusive of the treated effluent from a wastewater treatment plant.
State
means any of the several States, the
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands,
Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Surface
impoundment or impoundment means
a facility or part of a facility which is a natural topographic depression,
man-made excavation, or diked area formed primarily of earthen materials
(although it may be lined with man-made materials), which is designed to hold
an accumulation of liquid wastes or wastes containing free liquids, and which
is not an injection well. Examples of surface impoundments are holding,
storage, settling, and aeration pits, ponds, and lagoons.
Tank
means a stationary device, designed to
contain an accumulation of hazardous waste which is constructed primarily of
non-earthen materials (e.g., wood, concrete, steel, plastic) which provide
structural support.
Tank
system means a hazardous waste storage or
treatment tank and its associated ancillary equipment and containment system.
Totally
enclosed treatment facility means
a facility for the treatment of hazardous waste which is directly connected to
an industrial production process and which is constructed and operated in a
manner which prevents the release of any hazardous waste or any constituent
thereof into the environment during treatment. An example is a pipe in which
waste acid is neutralized.
Transport
vehicle means a motor vehicle or rail car used
for the transportation of cargo by any mode. Each cargo-carrying body (trailer,
railroad freight car, etc.) is a separate transport vehicle.
Transportation
means the movement of hazardous waste
by air, rail, highway, or water.
Treatability
Study means a
study in which a hazardous waste is subjected to a treatment process to
determine: (1) Whether the waste is amenable to the treatment process, (2) what
pretreatment (if any) is required, (3) the optimal process conditions needed to
achieve the desired treatment, (4) the efficiency of a treatment process for a
specific waste or wastes, or (5) the characteristics and volumes of residuals
from a particular treatment process. Also included in this definition for the
purpose of the § 261.4 (e) and (f) exemptions are liner compatibility,
corrosion, and other material compatibility studies and toxicological and
health effects studies. A ‘‘treatability study’’ is not a means to commercially
treat or dispose of hazardous waste.
United
States means the 50 States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,
American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
Universal
Waste Transporter means
a person engaged in the off-site transportation of universal waste by air,
rail, highway, or water.
Vessel
includes every description of
watercraft, used or capable of being used as a means of transportation on the
water.
Wipe means
a woven or non-woven shop towel, rag, pad, or swab made of wood pulp, fabric,
cotton, polyester blends, or other material.
A
“by-product” is a material that is not one of the primary products of a
production process and is not solely or separately produced by the production
process. Examples are process residues such as slags or distillation column
bottoms. The term does not include a co-product that is produced for the
general public’s use and is ordinarily used in the form it is produced by the
process.
40 CFR 261.1(c)(6)
“Scrap
metal” is bits and pieces of metal parts (e.g., bars, turnings, rods, sheets,
wire) or metal pieces that may be combined together with bolts or soldering
(e.g., radiators, scrap automobiles, railroad box cars), which when worn or
superfluous can be recycled.
40 CFR 261.1(c)(9)
“Excluded
scrap metal” is processed scrap metal, unprocessed home scrap metal, and
unprocessed prompt scrap metal.
“Processed scrap metal” is scrap metal
which has been manually or physically altered to either separate it into
distinct materials to enhance economic value or to improve the handling of
materials. Processed scrap metal includes, but is not limited to scrap metal
which has been baled, shredded, sheared, chopped, crushed, flattened, cut,
melted, or separated by metal type (i.e., sorted), and, fines, drosses and related materials which have been agglomerated.
(Note: shredded circuit boards being sent for recycling are not considered
processed scrap metal. They are covered under the exclusion from the definition
of solid waste for shredded circuit boards being recycled (§ 261.4(a)(14)).
40 CFR 261.1(c)(11)
“Home
scrap metal” is scrap metal as generated by steel mills, foundries, and
refineries such as turnings, cuttings, punchings, and
borings.
40 CFR 261.1(c)(12)
“Prompt
scrap metal” is scrap metal as generated by the metal working/fabrication
industries and includes such scrap metal as turnings, cuttings, punchings, and borings. Prompt scrap is also known as
industrial or new scrap metal.
“Domestic
Sewage” means untreated sanitary wastes that pass through a sewer system.
40 CFR 262.81
EPA
Acknowledgment of Consent (AOC)
means the letter EPA sends to the exporter documenting the specific terms of
the country of import’s consent and the country(ies)
of transit’s consent(s). The AOC meets the definition of an export license in
U.S. Census Bureau regulations 15 CFR 30.1.
Exporter,
also known as primary exporter on the RCRA hazardous waste manifest, means the
person domiciled in the United States who is required to originate the movement
document in accordance with § 262.83(d) or the manifest for a shipment of
hazardous waste in accordance with subpart B of this part, or equivalent State
provision, which specifies a foreign receiving facility as the facility to
which the hazardous wastes will be sent, or any recognized trader who proposes
export of the hazardous wastes for recovery or disposal operations in the
country of import.
Importer
means the person to whom possession or other form of legal control of the
hazardous waste is assigned at the time the imported hazardous waste is
received in the United States.
40
CFR 266.500
Evaluated hazardous waste
pharmaceutical means
a prescription hazardous waste pharmaceutical that has been evaluated by a
reverse distributor in accordance with § 266.510(a)(3) and will not be sent to
another reverse distributor for further evaluation or verification of
manufacture credit.
Hazardous waste pharmaceutical means a pharmaceutical that is a solid
waste, as defined in § 261.2, and exhibits one or more characteristics
identified in part 261 subpart C or is listed in part 261 subpart D. A
pharmaceutical is not a solid waste, as defined in § 261.2, and therefore not a
hazardous waste pharmaceutical, if it is legitimately used/reused (e.g.,
lawfully donated for its intended purpose) or reclaimed. An over-the-counter
pharmaceutical, dietary supplement, or homeopathic drug is not a solid waste,
as defined in § 261.2, and therefore not a hazardous waste pharmaceutical, if
it has a reasonable expectation of being legitimately used/reused (e.g.,
lawfully redistributed for its intended purpose) or reclaimed.
Healthcare facility means any person that is lawfully
authorized to—
(1) Provide preventative, diagnostic,
therapeutic, rehabilitative, maintenance or palliative care, and counseling,
service, assessment or procedure with respect to the physical or mental
condition, or functional status, of a human or animal or that affects the
structure or function of the human or animal body; or
(2) Distribute, sell, or dispense
pharmaceuticals, including over-the-counter pharmaceuticals, dietary
supplements, homeopathic drugs, or prescription pharmaceuticals. This
definition includes, but is not limited to, wholesale distributors, third-party
logistics providers that serve as forward distributors, military medical
logistics facilities, hospitals, psychiatric hospitals, ambulatory surgical
centers, health clinics, physicians’ offices, optical and dental providers,
chiropractors, long-term care facilities, ambulance services, pharmacies,
long-term care pharmacies, mail-order pharmacies, retailers of pharmaceuticals,
veterinary clinics, and veterinary hospitals. This definition does not include
pharmaceutical manufacturers, reverse distributors, or reverse logistics
centers.
Long-term care facility means a licensed entity that provides
assistance with activities of daily living, including managing and
administering pharmaceuticals to one or more individuals at the facility. This
definition includes, but is not limited to, hospice facilities, nursing
facilities, skilled nursing facilities, and the nursing and skilled nursing
care portions of continuing care retirement communities. Not included within
the scope of this definition are group homes, independent living communities, assisted
living facilities, and the independent and assisted living portions of
continuing care retirement communities.
Non-creditable hazardous waste
pharmaceutical means
a prescription hazardous waste pharmaceutical that does not have a reasonable
expectation to be eligible for manufacturer credit or a nonprescription
hazardous waste pharmaceutical that does not have a reasonable expectation to
be legitimately used/reused or reclaimed. This includes but is not limited to,
investigational drugs, free samples of pharmaceuticals received by healthcare
facilities, residues of pharmaceuticals remaining in empty containers, contaminated
personal protective equipment, floor sweepings, and clean-up material from the
spills of pharmaceuticals.
Pharmaceutical means any drug or dietary supplement
for use by humans or other animals; any electronic nicotine delivery system
(e.g., electronic cigarette or vaping pen); or any liquid nicotine (e-liquid)
packaged for retail sale for use in electronic nicotine delivery systems (e.g.,
pre-filled cartridges or vials). This definition includes, but is not limited
to, dietary supplements, as defined by the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act;
prescription drugs, as defined by 21 CFR 203.3(y); over-the-counter drugs;
homeopathic drugs; compounded drugs; investigational new drugs; pharmaceuticals
remaining in non-empty containers; personal protective equipment contaminated
with pharmaceuticals; and clean-up material from spills of pharmaceuticals.
This definition does not include dental amalgam or
sharps.
Potentially creditable hazardous waste
pharmaceutical
means a prescription hazardous waste pharmaceutical that has a reasonable
expectation to receive manufacturer credit and is—
(1) In original manufacturer packaging
(except pharmaceuticals that were subject to a recall);
(2) Undispensed; and
(3) Unexpired or less than one year past
expiration date. The term does not include evaluated hazardous waste
pharmaceuticals or nonprescription pharmaceuticals including, but not limited
to, over-the-counter drugs, homeopathic drugs, and dietary supplements.
Reverse distributor means any person that receives and
accumulates prescription pharmaceuticals that are potentially creditable
hazardous waste pharmaceuticals for the purpose of facilitating or verifying
manufacturer credit. Any person, including forward distributors, third-party
logistics providers, and pharmaceutical manufacturers, that processes
prescription pharmaceuticals for the facilitation or verification of
manufacturer credit is considered a reverse distributor.
Land
disposal means
placement in or on the land, except in a corrective action management unit or
staging pile, and includes, but is not limited to, placement in a landfill,
surface impoundment, waste pile, injection well, land treatment facility, salt
dome formation, salt bed formation, underground mine or cave, or placement in a
concrete vault, or bunker intended for disposal purposes.
40 CFR 270.2
Site
means the land or water area where any
facility or activity is physically located or conducted, including adjacent
land used in connection with the facility or activity.
An
unused battery becomes a waste on the date the handler decides to discard it.
40
CFR 273.3(c)(1)
A recalled pesticide described in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section becomes a waste on the first date on which
both of the following conditions apply:
(i)
The generator of the recalled pesticide agrees to participate in the recall;
and
(ii)
The person conducting the recall decides to discard (e.g., burn the pesticide
for energy recovery).
40
CFR 273.3(c)(2)
An unused pesticide product described
in paragraph (a)(2) of this section becomes a waste on the date the generator
decides to discard it.
40
CFR 273.4(c)(2)
Unused mercury-containing equipment
becomes a waste on the date the handler decides to discard it.
40
CFR 273.5(c)(2)
An unused lamp becomes a waste on the
date the handler decides to discard it.
40 CFR 273.6(c)(2)
An
unused aerosol can becomes a waste on the date the handler decides to discard
it.
40 CFR 273.13(e)(4)(i)
Conduct
puncturing and draining activities using a device specifically designed to
safely puncture aerosol cans and effectively contain the residual contents and
any emissions thereof.
40 CFR 273.33(c)(2)
A
large quantity handler of universal waste may remove mercury-containing ampules
from universal waste mercury-containing equipment provided the handler:
(i)
Removes and manages the ampules in a manner designed to prevent breakage of the
ampules;
(ii)
Removes the ampules only over or in a containment device (e.g., tray or pan
sufficient to collect and contain any mercury released from an ampule in case
of breakage);
(iii)
Ensures that a mercury clean-up system is readily available to immediately
transfer any mercury resulting from spills or leaks of broken ampules from that
containment device to a container that is subject to all applicable
requirements of 40 CFR parts 260 through 272;
(iv)
Immediately transfers any mercury resulting from spills or leaks from broken
ampules from the containment device to a container is subject to all applicable
requirements of 40 CFR parts 260 through 272;
(v)
Ensures that the area in which ampules are removed is well ventilated and
monitored to ensure compliance with applicable OSHA exposure levels for
mercury;
(vi)
Ensures that employees removing ampules are thoroughly familiar with proper
waste mercury handling and emergency procedures, including transfer of mercury
from containment devices to appropriate containers;
(vii)
Stores removed ampules in closed, non-leaking containers that are in good
condition;
(viii)
Packs removed ampules in the container with packing materials adequate to
prevent breakage during storage, handling, and transportation;
40
CFR 279.1
Processing
means chemical or physical operations designed to produce from used oil, or to
make used oil more amenable for production of, fuel
oils, lubricants, or other used oil-derived product.
Processing includes, but is not limited to: blending used oil with virgin petroleum products,
blending used oils to meet the fuel specification, filtration, simple
distillation, chemical or physical separation and re-refining.
Used
oil generator means any person, by
site, whose act or process produces used oil or whose act first causes used oil
to become subject to regulation.
Used
oil processor/re-refiner
means a facility that processes used oil.
Used
oil transporter means any person who
transports used oil, any person who collects used oil from more than one
generator and transports the collected oil, and owners and operators of used
oil transfer facilities. Used oil transporters may consolidate or aggregate
loads of used oil for purposes of transportation but, with the following
exception, may not process used oil. Transporters may conduct incidental
processing operations that occur in the normal course of used oil
transportation (e.g., settling and water separation), but that are not designed
to produce (or make more amenable for production of) used oil derived products
or used oil fuel.
40
CFR 279.22(b)(1)
Containers
and aboveground tanks used to store used oil at generator facilities must be:
(1) In good condition (no severe rusting, apparent structural defects or
deterioration).
Appendix E:
Emergency Telephone Numbers
|
Organization |
Telephone
Number |
Days/Hours |
|
DES Emergency Response Team |
(603) 271-3899 |
Monday through Friday; 8 a.m. to 4
p.m. |
|
N.H. State Police Headquarters
Communications Unit |
(603) 223-4381 |
Every day; 24 hours per day |