ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
May 18, 2000
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
)
RCRA SUBTITLE C UPDATE, USEPA
)
R00-13
AMENDMENTS (July 1, 1999, through
)
(Identical-in-Substance
December 31, 1999)
)
Rulemaking - Land)
Adopted Rule. Final Order.
OPINION OF THE BOARD (by E.Z. Kezelis):
Under Sections 7.2 and 22.4(a) of the Environmental Protection Act (Act) (415 ILCS
5/7.2 and 22.4(a) (1998)), the Board adopts amendments to the Illinois regulations that are
“identical in substance” to hazardous waste regulations that the United States Environmental
Protection Agency (USEPA) adopted to implement Subtitle C of the federal Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 (RCRA Subtitle C) (42 U.S.C. §§ 6921
et seq
.
(1998)). The nominal timeframe of this docket includes federal RCRA Subtitle C amendments
that USEPA adopted in the period July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999.
Sections 7.2 and 22.4(a) provide for quick adoption of regulations that are identical in
substance to federal regulations that USEPA adopts to implement Sections 3001 through 3005
of RCRA (42 U.S.C. §§ 6921-6925 (1998)). Section 22.4(a) also provides that Title VII of the
Act and Section 5 of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 ILCS 100/5-35 and 5-40
(1998)) do not apply to the Board’s adoption of identical-in-substance regulations. The federal
RCRA Subtitle C regulations are found at 40 C.F.R. 260 through 266, 268, 270, 271, 273,
and 279.
This opinion supports an order that the Board also adopts today. The Board will delay
filing the adopted amendments with the Office of the Secretary of State for 30 days following
the date of this opinion. The delay is pursuant to an agreement between USEPA and the State
of Illinois that allows USEPA additional time to review the adopted amendments before they
become effective.
FEDERAL ACTIONS CONSIDERED IN THIS RULEMAKING
The following briefly summarizes the federal actions considered in this rulemaking.
Docket R00-13: July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999, RCRA Subtitle C
Amendments
USEPA amended the federal RCRA Subtitle C regulations on four occasions during the
period July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999.
Each is summarized below:
2
64 Fed. Reg. 36466 (July 6, 1999)
USEPA adopted amendments that designate and regulate hazardous waste lamps as
universal waste.
64 Fed. Reg. 52828 (September 30, 1999)
USEPA adopted final emission standards for hazardous waste combustors. These
integrated air pollution control and hazardous waste regulations amend various segments
of the hazardous waste rules.
64 Fed. Reg. 56469 (October 20, 1999)
USEPA adopted a technical correction to its May 11, 1999 technical amendments to its
May 12, 1997 Phase IV land disposal restrictions (LDRs).
64 Fed Reg. 63209 (November 19, 1999)
USEPA adopted technical corrections to its September 30, 1999 final emission standards
for hazardous waste combustors.
Later RCRA Subtitle C (Hazardous Waste) Amendments of Interest
The Board engages in ongoing monitoring of federal actions. As of the date of this
opinion and accompanying order, we have identified two USEPA actions since December 31,
1999, that further amended the RCRA Subtitle C hazardous waste rules.
65 Fed. Reg. 12378 (March 8, 2000)
USEPA adopted increased accumulation limits and extended accumulation times for
wastewater treatment sludge from plating operations (USEPA hazardous waste number
F006) that is accumulated for metals recovery.
65 Fed. Reg. 14472 (March 17, 2000)
USEPA withdrew the listings for organobromine production wastes (USEPA hazardous
waste numbers K140 and U408) and the associated LDRs for these wastes.
When the Board observes an action outside the nominal timeframe of a docket that
would require expedited consideration in the pending docket, the Board will expedite
consideration of those amendments. Federal actions that could warrant expedited consideration
include those that directly affect the amendments involved in this docket, those for which
compelling reasons would warrant consideration as soon as possible, and those for which the
Board has received a request for expedited consideration. The Board has identified the federal
actions of March 8 and 17, 2000, as two actions that fulfill these criteria. Accordingly, we
have included both sets of amendments in the present update docket R00-13.
3
Unrelated Federal Action Having an Ancillary Impact on the Illinois RCRA
Subtitle C Regulations
In addition to the amendments to the federal RCRA Subtitle C regulations, another,
unrelated set of federal amendments might have an effect on the corresponding Illinois rules.
Most notably, 35 Ill. Adm. Code 720.111 includes several incorporations of federal regulations
by reference, and USEPA has amended 40 C.F.R. 136, which is included among the
incorporated references. The set of federal amendments to 40 C.F.R. 136 is as follows:
64 Fed. Reg. 73414 (December 30, 1999)
USEPA amended the 40 C.F.R. 136 methods for testing available cyanide in water for
the purposes of compliance with the Clean Water Act.
Summary Listing of the Federal Actions Forming the Basis of the Board’s
Actions in this Docket
Based on the foregoing, the federal actions that form the basis for Board action in this
update docket are as follows, in chronological order:
64 Fed. Reg. 36466 (July 6, 1999)
USEPA adopted amendments that designate and
regulate hazardous waste lamps as universal
waste.
64 Fed. Reg. 52828 (September 30, 1999)
USEPA adopted final emission standards for
hazardous waste combustors. These integrated
air pollution control and hazardous waste
regulations amend various segments of the
hazardous waste rules.
64 Fed. Reg. 56469 (October 20, 1999)
USEPA adopted a technical correction to its
May 11, 1999 technical amendments to its
May 12, 1997 Phase IV LDRs.
64 Fed Reg. 63209 (November 19, 1999)
USEPA adopted technical corrections to its
September 30, 1999 final emission standards
for hazardous waste combustors.
64 Fed. Reg. 73414 (December 30, 1999)
40 C.F.R. 136 amendments.
65 Fed. Reg. 12378 (March 8, 2000)
USEPA adopted increased accumulation limits
and extended accumulation times for
wastewater treatment sludge from plating
operations (USEPA hazardous waste number
F006) that is accumulated for metals recovery.
65 Fed. Reg. 14472 (March 17, 2000)
USEPA withdrew the listings for
organobromine production wastes (USEPA
hazardous waste numbers K140 and U408) and
the associated LDRs for these wastes.
4
PUBLIC COMMENTS
The Board adopted a proposal for public comment in this docket on March 2, 2000.
Notices of Proposed Amendments appeared for these amendments in the March 23, 2000 issue
of the
Illinois Register
, at 24 Ill. Reg. 4403 (Part 720), 4438 (Part 721), 4480 (Part 725), 4529
(Part 728), 4658 (Part 703), 4714 (Part 722), 4724 (Part 724), 4745 (Part 726), and 4766 (Part
733). The Board received public comments on the March 2, 2000 proposal for a period of 45
days following its publication in the
Illinois Register
. The comments received on the proposal
are listed below. The Board will delay filing the adopted amendments with the Office of the
Secretary of State for 30 days following the date of this order, in order to allow additional time
for USEPA to review the adopted amendments before they are filed and become effective. The
complete text of the adopted amendments appears in a separate order adopted this day.
Prior to the March 2, 2000 proposal for public comment, the Board received two
documents from the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules (JCAR) that indicate a number of
corrections that JCAR wishes the Board to make in this proceeding. These revisions are based
on JCAR’s review of the amendments of
June 17, 1999, in docket R99-15, and of
December 2,
1999, in docket R00-5. During the public comment period, JCAR submitted a series of
documents suggesting possible changes in the text of the amendments and base text as included
in the March 2, 2000 proposal for public comment in this docket R00-13. The Board made a
number of changes in the text based on the JCAR submissions. These revisions are outlined in
the table that begins at page 43 of this opinion.
During the public comment period, the Board received five public comments. Those
comments are listed as follows:
PC 1
Spent Lamp Recycling Technologies, Inc. (Spent Lamp Recycling): letter dated
May 5, 2000, from Laurence C. Kelly, President (received May 5, 2000).
PC 2
Air Cycle Corp. (Air Cycle): “Air Cycle Corporation’s Comments in
Opposition to the Board’s Proposal to Adopt the Identical-in-Substance Rules as
Set Forth in the Notice Published on March 2, 2000,” dated May 8, 2000, from
Steven P. Kaiser, the Law Offices of Steven P. Kaiser (received May 8, 2000).
PC 3
Commonwealth Edison Co. (Com Ed): letter dated May 8, 2000, from Mary F.
O’Toole, Director of Environmental Services (received May 9, 2000).
PC 4
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA): “Response of the Illinois
Environmental Protection Agency Pursuant to Public Comment Period for Proposed
Identical-in-Substance Rules,” dated May 8, 2000, from Susan J. Schroeder,
Associate Counsel, Division of Legal Counsel (received May 9, 2000).
PC 5
Illinois Manufacturers’ Association (IMA):
letter dated May 8, 2000, from Mark
Denzler, Associate Director—Government Affairs (received May 10, 2000)
.
5
Spent Lamp Recycling (PC 1), Air Cycle (PC 2), Com Ed (PC 3), and the IMA (PC 5)
all commented on a single aspect of the proposal for public comment: the prospective adoption
of the federal designation of spent lamps as universal waste. Specifically, these four entities
commented that the Board should not delete the existing State provisions that allow controlled
crushing of lamps for volume reduction. The Board considers these comments in the discussion
beginning at page 8 below.
IEPA comments (PC 4) include a small number of general corrections to the text. The
corrections made in response to IEPA suggestions are included in the table of revisions that
starts at page 43 of this opinion. More substantively, IEPA observed that the Board’s proposal
to change the requirement in Section 703.183(j) that the Part B application “show traffic control
signals” to a requirement that the application include “an indication of traffic control signals”
would render this provision ambiguous. The Board agrees with IEPA’s comment, and we have
altered the language to clarify that the application indicate “the locations and types of traffic
control signals.” The rest of IEPA’s substantive comments relate to the hazardous waste
combustor rule. The Board’s response to these additional comments is discussed beginning at
page 11.
DISCUSSION
The following discussion begins with a description of the types of deviations the Board
makes from the literal text of federal regulations in adopting identical-in-substance rules. It is
followed by a discussion of the amendments and actions undertaken in direct response to the
federal actions involved in this proceeding. This first series of discussions is organized by
federal subject matter, generally appearing in chronological order of the relevant
Federal
Register
notices involved. Finally, this discussion closes with a description of the amendments
and actions that are not directly derived from the federal actions.
General Revisions and Deviations from the Federal Text
In incorporating the federal rules into the Illinois system, some deviation from the
federal text is unavoidable. This deviation arises primarily through differences between the
federal and state regulatory structure and systems. Some deviation also arises through errors in
and problems with the federal text itself. The Board conforms the federal text to the Illinois
rules and regulatory scheme and corrects errors that we see in the text as we engage in these
routine update rulemakings.
In addition to the amendments derived from federal amendments, the Board often finds it
necessary to alter the text of various passages of the existing rules as provisions are opened for
update in response to USEPA actions. This involves correcting deficiencies, clarifying
provisions, and making other changes that are necessary to establish a clear set of rules that
closely parallel the corresponding federal requirements within the codification scheme of the
Illinois Administrative Code.
6
The Board updates the citations to the
Code of Federal Regulations
to the most recent
version available. As of the date of this opinion, the most recent version of the
Code of Federal
Regulations
available to the Board is the July 1, 1999 version. Thus, we have updated all
citations to the 1999 version, adding references to later amendments using their appropriate
Federal Register
citation, where necessary.
The Board substituted “or” for “/” in most instances where this appeared in the federal
base text, using “and” where more appropriate. The Board further used this opportunity to
make a number of corrections to punctuation, grammar, spelling, and cross-reference format
throughout the opened text. We changed “who” to “that” and “he” or “she” to “it,” where the
person to which the regulation referred was not necessarily a natural person, or to “he or she,”
where a natural person was evident; changed “which” to “that” for restrictive relative clauses;
substituted “shall” for “will”; capitalized the section headings and corrected their format where
necessary; and corrected punctuation within sentences.
In addition, the federal rules have been edited to establish a uniform usage throughout
the Board’s regulations. For example, with respect to “shall,” “will,” and “may,” “shall” is
used when the subject of a sentence has a duty to do something. “Must” is used when someone
has to do something, but that someone is not the subject of the sentence. “Will” is used when
the Board obliges itself to do something. “May” is used when choice of a provision is optional.
“Or” is used rather than “and/or,” and denotes “one or both.” “Either . . . or” denotes “one
but not both.” “And” denotes “both.”
JCAR has requested that the Board refer to the United States Environmental Protection
Agency in the same manner throughout all of our bodies of regulations—
i.e.
, air, water,
drinking water, RCRA Subtitle D (municipal solid waste landfill), RCRA Subtitle C (hazardous
waste), underground injection control (UIC), etc. The Board has decided to refer to the United
States Environmental Protection Agency as “USEPA.” We will continue this conversion in
future rulemakings as additional sections otherwise become open to amendment. We will
further convert “EPA” used in federal text to “USEPA,” where USEPA is clearly intended.
In examining the text of the rules in preparation for adding the federal amendments, the Board
discovered two anomalies in the text of Appendix A to Part 703, which is the table of classifications of
permit modifications. The two anomalies were directly derived from the federal text of the
corresponding Appendix I to 40 C.F.R. 270.42.
The first anomaly is that paragraph (F)(1)(c) appears unclear or out of place. Paragraph
(F)(1)(c) begins with the conjunction "or," and its subject matter does not immediately appear to relate
to the two paragraphs that precede it. Paragraph (F)(1)(c) relates to treatment processes. Paragraphs
that appear under (F)(1)(a) and (F)(1)(b) relate to modification or addition of container units at a
facility. Paragraph (F)(1)(c) appears to parallel paragraph (G)(1)(e), relating to tanks, which begins
“modification or addition of tank units or treatment processes necessary to treat . . . .” Thus, USEPA
may have intended that we read paragraph (F)(1)(c) with the implied introductory words “modification
or addition of container units” to parallel paragraph (G)(1)(c). As explained, however, paragraph
7
(F)(1)(c) appears ambiguous and misplaced starting with the conjunction “or.”
The Board proposed adding the introductory words “modification or addition of container
units” to paragraph (F)(1)(c). We believe that this enhances the clarity of this paragraph. The Board is
aware, however, that this could risk changing the meaning intended by USEPA. For this reason we
requested that USEPA and IEPA comment on the proposed addition. We specifically want to know
whether the added introductory words enhance the meaning of this paragraph intended by USEPA or if
the addition changes the meaning. If the added language is considered not acceptable by the
commenter, the Board would like the commenter to suggest alternative language to clarify this
paragraph.
The second anomaly is that Appendix A retains references to federal requirements and a
corresponding Illinois provision that no longer exist. Paragraphs (F)(1)(c), (F)(4)(a), (G)(1)(e),
(G)(5)(c), (H)(5)(c), and (J)(6)(c) refer to the requirements of 40 C.F.R. 268.8(a)(2)(ii), as
incorporated by reference in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 728.108. USEPA amended 40 C.F.R. 268.8 on June
1, 1990 (55 Fed. Reg. 22520, 22683), so that it was no longer effective after May 8, 1990. In
response, on April 1, 1991, in RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (April 1, 1990, through June 30,
1990) (April 11, 1991; corrected May 23, 1991; corrected August 8, 1991; uncorrected August 22,
1991), R90-11, the Board repealed corresponding 35 Ill. Adm. Code 728.108. USEPA subsequently
removed 40 C.F.R. 268.8 on April 8, 1996 (61 Fed. Reg. 15566, 15599), as a segment of the Phase
III LDRs.
While removing 40 C.F.R. 268.8, USEPA retained references to the requirements of 40 C.F.R.
268.8(a)(2)(ii) at paragraphs (F)(1)(c), (F)(4)(a), (G)(1)(e), (G)(5)(c), (H)(5)(c), and (J)(6)(c) of
Appendix I to 40 C.F.R. 270.42. Appendix A to Part 703 derives from this federal appendix. Thus,
both the Illinois hazardous waste rules and the federal rules on which they are based contain a reference
to federal requirements that no longer exist.
The Board must remove the references to State and federal provisions that no longer exist. This
is possible without changing the scope and meaning of the rules as intended by USEPA. The references
to 40 C.F.R. 268.8 are old, and they use alternative language. It is apparent from the April 8, 1996
discussion of the removal of federal Section 268.8, that this provision referred to a flexible treatment
standard that pre-existed the current LDR treatment standards for listed wastes set forth throughout 40
C.F.R. 268 and that Section 268.8 has been supplanted by the current LDRs. Deletion of the six
obsolete references to Section 268.8 will not affect those other treatment standards.
The references to 40 C.F.R. 268.8 and 35 Ill. Adm. Code 728.108 at paragraphs (H)(5)(c)
and (J)(6)(c) of Appendix A to Part 703 also include references to 40 C.F.R. 268.5(h)(2) and 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 728.105. These provisions relate to federal case-by-case extensions of the effective dates
of LDRs. Specifically, 40 C.F.R. 269.5(h)(2) requires that a landfill receiving hazardous waste under
an extension of a compliance deadline must comply with certain management standards. Parallel
references to the requirements of 40 C.F.R. 268.5(h)(2) also appear at 40 C.F.R. 268.30(c),
268.31(c), 268.34(c), 268.38(c), and 268.39(e), each of which are transitional requirements. Since the
8
LDRs of Subpart C or 40 C.F.R. 268 and corresponding 35 Ill. Adm. Code 728 prohibit land disposal
unless the waste meets the treatment standards of Subpart D, and since the references to 40 C.F.R.
268.5(h)(2) appear limited to transitional land disposal of waste, the Board believes that the references
to meeting alternative standards must have referred to the former narrative treatment standards of 40
C.F.R. 268.8.
For the foregoing reasons, the Board proposes to delete the references to 40 C.F.R. 268.5 and
35 Ill. Adm. Code 728.105. We request comments from USEPA and IEPA on the proposed deletion.
We specifically want to know whether the deletion of the references to the landfill requirements of 40
C.F.R. 268.5(h)(2) from paragraphs (H)(5)(c) and (J)(6)(c) changes the meaning intended by USEPA.
The Board has assembled tables to aid location of these alterations and to briefly outline
their intended purpose. The tables set forth the miscellaneous deviations from the federal text
and corrections to the pre-amended base text of the rules in detail. The tables are set forth and
explained beginning at page 18. There is no further discussion of most of the deviations and
revisions elsewhere in this opinion.
Discussion of Particular Federal Actions
Designation of Lamps as Universal Waste—Part 733 and Sections 703.123, 720.110, 721.109,
724.101, 725.101 and 728.101
USEPA adopted amendments to the hazardous waste regulations and the universal waste
rule on July 6, 1999 (64 Fed. Reg. 36466) that designated waste lamps as universal waste.
This action had the effect of removing the management of waste lamps from the generally-
applicable hazardous waste regulations.
The Board has incorporated the federal amendments into the appropriate segments of the
hazardous waste regulations and the universal waste rule. We have done so with only minor
deviations from the text of the federal amendments. Persons interested in the substance of the
underlying federal action should refer to the notice that appeared in the July 6, 1999 issue of the
Federal Register
. The tables that begin at page 18 of this opinion outline the minor deviations
that the Board has made in adapting the text of the federal amendments.
In essence, the present amendments reiterate a pre-existing State exclusion for mercury-
containing lamps from regulation as hazardous waste. On April 2, 1998, in docket R98-12, the
Board adopted a rule designating mercury-containing lamps as universal waste and excluding
them from regulation as hazardous waste. See
In re
Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703,
720, 721, 724, 725, 728, and 733 (Standards for Universal Waste Management) (April 2,
1998), R98-12. The Board adopted this exclusion pursuant to the legislative mandate of Section
22.23a of the Act (415 ILCS 5/22.23a (1998)) (see Pub. Act 90-502, effective August 19,
1997). Thus, the present amendments are primarily limited to the following: changing the
designation of the excluded materials from “waste mercury-containing lamp” to the federally-
adopted designation of “waste lamp” or “lamp;” conforming text to the federally-adopted
9
language; and deleting references to Section 22.23a of the Act. Adopting the federal language
alters some of the management standards for these materials, so this action does have a
substantive effect on management of the lamps affected. Further, by shifting the focus from
“mercury-containing lamps” to “waste lamps,” the amendments may broaden the scope of the
universal waste rule.
Additionally, in the March 2, 2000, proposal for public comment, the Board proposed
revising the Illinois rules so as to be identical-in-substance to the corresponding federal rules,
thereby prohibiting the universal waste handlers from treating the waste under Sections
733.113(b) and 733.133(b). Section 720.110 defines “treatment” in such a way that it would
include crushing for volume reduction.
The Board requested public comment on incorporation of the July 6, 1999 federal
designation of waste lamps as universal waste. In response, the Board received comments from
Spent Lamp Recycling (PC 1), Air Cycle (PC 2), Com Ed (PC 3), and the IMA (PC 5). These
four entities commented that the Board should not delete the existing State provisions that allow
controlled crushing of waste lamps for volume reduction. Although the federal rule prohibits
crushing lamps for volume reduction, USEPA recognizes that some states may already have
crushing programs in place that are, in effect, the equivalent of the federal prohibition. USPEA
has said that it will review each of the state programs on a case-by-case basis.
Illinois is a state that already has a crushing program in place. For the reasons
expressed below, the Board will retain the Illinois program in lieu of the federal prohibition.
On April 2, 1998, in
In re
Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703, 720, 721, 724, 725,
728, and 733 (Standards for Universal Waste Management), R98-12, the Board adopted
amendments to the RCRA Subtitle C rules that designated “waste mercury-containing lamps” as
universal waste. The Board took this action pursuant to the general rulemaking authority of
Sections 22.4(b), 22.23a, and 27 of the Act (415 ILCS 5/22.4(b), 22.23a, and 27 (1998)). In
R98-12, the Board thoroughly examined the issue of whether to allow controlled crushing of
mercury-containing lamps, and concluded that an absolute prohibition on controlled crushing for
volume reduction was not supported by the record.
In re
Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
703, 720, 721, 724, 725, 728, and 733 (Standards for Universal Waste Management) (April 2,
1998), R98-12, slip. op. at 4. Two hearings were held by the Board in both Springfield and
Chicago. After carefully considering the testimony, exhibits, and comments on the record, the
Board adopted a rule that would allow as follows:
[H]andlers and transporters of universal waste mercury-containing lamps [are
allowed] to crush lamps provided that the lamps are crushed in a closed system
designed and operated in a manner that any emissions of mercury from the
crushing system do not exceed 0.1 mg/m
3
when measured on the basis of time
weighted average over an 8-hour period.
Id.
at 5.
In adopting State standards for controlled crushing, the Board examined, in addition to
the proposal and comments of IEPA, a number of public comments from Beling Consultants;
10
Fluorecycle, Inc.; Spent Lamp Recycling Technologies, Inc.; Commonwealth Edison Company;
the Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group; and the Illinois Steel Group. The Board also
examined the standards adopted by the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA)
for exposure levels to mercury. In fact, the 0.1 mg/m
3
emission limit adopted by the Board as
being protective of human health and the environment, is the same as the exposure limit
established by OSHA.
1
In light of the substantial and thorough consideration the Board has already given to the
issue of lamp crushing, and in light of the Board’s well-reasoned conclusion that controlled
crushing of waste lamps should be permitted pursuant to regulation in Illinois, the Board will
retain the crushing rules now set forth in Sections 733.113(d)(3) and 733.133(d)(3), as
previously adopted in
In re
Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703, 720, 721, 724, 725, 728,
and 733 (Standards for Universal Waste Management) (April 2, 1998), R98-12.
In adopting the universal waste rule without a provision for crushing lamps, USEPA
stated its understanding that a number of states had already adopted a designation of waste
lamps as universal waste and that some of those states had also adopted rules allowing crushing
waste lamps for volume reduction. USEPA said, “USEPA believes that some state programs
may include standards for controlling emissions from mercury-containing lamps during crushing
that could be equivalent per RCRA Section 3006, to the federal prohibition.” 64 Fed. Reg.
36478 (July 6, 1999). USEPA stated as follows:
Therefore, [US]EPA will consider authorization of state programs that include
provisions for controlling treatment or crushing of universal waste lamps, where
the state program application includes a demonstration of equivalency to the
federal prohibition. Factors the Agency would expect such an application to
address include the effectiveness of technical requirements in controlling
emissions of hazardous constituents, the level of interaction of regulated entities
with the regulatory agency to ensure compliance with control requirements, and
other factors demonstrating that the state regulatory program would be equivalent
to the federal treatment prohibition.
64 Fed. Reg. 36478 (July 6, 1999).
As a result of the public comments received, and in light of the fact that the Board
believes that the crushing program adopted in
In re
Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703,
720, 721, 724, 725, 728, and 733 (Standards for Universal Waste Management) (April 2,
1998), R98-12, is the equivalent of the federal prohibition, the Board has decided to retain the
existing crushing provisions. Thus, newly renumbered Sections 733.113(d)(3) and
733.133(d)(3) retain the provisions of former Sections 733.113(d)(5) and 733.133(d)(5) from
1
In comments to the July 6, 1999 federal amendments, USEPA incorrectly suggested that the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) exposure limit is 0.05 mg/m
3
(64 Fed. Reg.
36477 (July 6, 1999)), when in fact the limit is 0.1 mg/m
3
(29 C.F.R. 1910.1000, table Z-2 (1999)).
11
docket R98-12 that allow crushing under specified conditions. The only change that the Board
made was to alter the term “mercury-containing lamp,” to “waste lamp.”
The Board notes that we will refrain from filing these amendments with the Office of the
Secretary of State for 30 days following the date of this order, until after June 18, 2000. We
request that IEPA and USEPA read the adopted provisions and submit any comments that they
might have in response to these changes sufficiently in advance of June 18, 2000, to allow the
Board to respond as appropriate before these rules are filed and become effective.
Hazardous Waste Combustor Rule—Parts 703 and 726 and Sections
720.110, 721.138, 724.440,
724.701, and 725.440
On
September 30, 1999
(
64 Fed. Reg. 52828
), USEPA adopted final National Emission
Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) applicable to hazardous waste combustors.
USEPA adopted a set of corrections to its September 30, 1999 action on November 19, 1999 (64
Fed. Reg. 63209). The actual NESHAP appears as 40 C.F.R. 63, Subpart EEE, which is beyond the
scope of our present proceeding. However, several aspects of this final NESHAP involved
amendments to the federal hazardous waste rules. The hazardous waste segments of the September 30,
1999, and November 19, 1999 actions are incorporated in this proceeding.
The Board incorporated the
September 30, 1999, and November 19, 1999
federal
amendments
without significant deviation from the federal text. The table that begins at page 18 of this
opinion outlines the deviations from the literal text of the federal amendments. Persons interested in the
details of the federal amendments should consult the September 30, 1999, and November 19, 1999
Federal Register
notices.
Three deviations from the federal text warrant specific mention. First, the Board has altered the
definition of “lamp” in 40 C.F.R. 260.10. The altered segment of the definition reads, “
A lamp is
specifically designed to produce radiant energy, most often in the ultraviolet, visible, and infra-
red regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.” The Board has changed the conjunction to read
“ultraviolet, visible, or infra-red regions” in Section 720.110. Since a lamp could emit
radiation in fewer than all three bands, the Board does not think that USEPA intended to limit
the definition in this way. Second, the Board has codified Table 1 to 40 C.F.R. 261.38 as a
separate Appendix Y to Part 261. This was done to avoid the margin limitations of the former
codification within Section 721.138 in light of the addition of two new columns to the table by
USEPA. Third, the Board has reworded the footnote numbered “1” in this table to enhance its
clarity. As we understand the federal requirement in this footnote, USEPA intends a limitation
of 25 mg/kg at 10,000 BTU/lb for total organic halogen, with the limits for individual organic
halide compounds to remain as set forth elsewhere in the table.
The Board requested public comment on our incorporation of the September 30, 1999,
and November 19, 1999 final NESHAP for hazardous waste combustors. We received
comments from IEPA (PC 4) in response. First, IEPA raised some questions regarding the
interplay of the RCRA Subtitle C requirements and the maximum achievable control
12
technologies (MACT) requirements. IEPA observed that portions of the federal amendments
exempt from certain hazardous waste regulations, those facilities that comply with the federal
Clean Air Act MACT requirements. The limited exemption is only intended to apply to
substantive hazardous waste management standards in Sections 724.440(b)(1) and 726.200(b)(1)
and to RCRA Subtitle C permitting requirements in Sections 703.205(e), 703.208, 703,221,
and 703.232. IEPA is concerned that the proposed amendments could be interpreted as an
exemption for all units at a facility from the various hazardous waste regulations, rather than an
exemption from only those rules pertaining to air emissions and related parameters. We share
IEPA’s concerns.
Under 40 C.F.R. 264.340(b)(1) (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 724.440(b)(1)),
a hazardous waste combustor is exempted from the treatment, storage, and disposal (T/S/D)
facility standards of 40 C.F.R. 264 (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 724) when the
facility owner or operator has demonstrated compliance with the MACT standards of 40 C.F.R.
63, Subpart EEE. Notwithstanding the exemption, the owner or operator must still comply
with some of the basic T/S/D facility standards: the general provisions; the general facility
standards; the preparedness and prevention, contingency plan and emergency procedures
requirements; the manifest and recordkeeping requirements; release, closure and post-closure
care requirements; financial responsibility requirements; and the air emissions standards
applicable to equipment leaks and tanks, containers, and surface impoundments. Similarly, 40
C.F.R. 266.100(b)(1) (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 726.200(b)(1)) exempts a facility
owner or operator from the specific waste and specific facility standards of 40 C.F.R. 266
(corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 726) when the facility owner or operator has
demonstrated compliance with the MACT standards of 40 C.F.R. 63, Subpart EEE. The
owner or operator must still comply with some of the basic part 266 requirements, as well as
the above-cited T/S/D facility standards of part 264 and those of 40 C.F.R. 265 (corresponding
with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725).
In assembling the proposal for public comment, the Board used the federal language of
40 C.F.R. 264.340(b) and 266.100(b) at corresponding 35 Ill. Adm. Code 724.440(b) and
726.200(b), with minimal deviation. IEPA observes in PC 4 that these segments of text could
create the mistaken belief that the exemptions apply to all units at a facility, rather than only
those units that comply with the MACT standards. IEPA cites a segment of USEPA’s
preamble discussion of its intent in support of its assertion that USEPA did not intend a blanket
exemption:
Under [the approach adopted by USEPA as a] final rule, MACT air emissions
and related operating requirements are to be included in title V permits; RCRA
permits will continue to be required for all other aspects of the combustion unit
and the facility that are governed by RCRA (e.g., corrective action, general
facility standards, other combustor-specific concerns such as materials handling,
risk-based emissions limits and operating requirements, as appropriate, and other
hazardous waste management units).
64 Fed Reg. 52828, 52975 (Sept. 30,1999).
13
After re-examining the text, the Board agrees that such ambiguity is possible, but the
ambiguity is in the federal text itself. As a result, the Board is limited in its ability to correct the
problem. Altering the text of Sections 724.440(b) and 726.200(b) in order to remove this
ambiguity could result in a change to the scope and meaning of the federally-derived regulation.
However, the Board believes that merely mentioning the ambiguity and repeating USEPA’s
intent does not sufficiently clarify the rules. Accordingly, the Board has added the above-
referenced segment of the
Federal Register
discussion to the Board notes at the end of Sections
724.440(b) and 726.200(b). This additional language should clarify that the exemption from the
hazardous waste requirements is limited to only those units covered by the MACT standards.
As to the permitting requirements, newly added text at 40 C.F.R. 270.19(e), 270.22
preamble, 270.62 preamble, and 270.66 preamble (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code
703.205(e), 703.208, 703,221, and 703.232) exempt facilities that comply with the MACT
standards of 40 C.F.R. 63, Subpart EEE, from various of the RCRA Subtitle C permit
requirements. The exemption is limited in that USEPA left intact the authority to require the
submission of information necessary to impose permit conditions necessary to protect human
health and the environment.
The Board adopted the federal language of these four provisions into the text of the
Illinois rules with only minimal deviation. IEPA has asserted that there is ambiguity in the
scope of the four exemption passages as incorporated from the federal text, and it has requested
that the Board clarify the scope of the exemptions. IEPA has specifically requested that the
Board clarify when it may require a site-specific risk assessment (SSRA), as recommended by
USEPA, to determine when additional permit requirements are necessary to ensure that there is
adequate protection of human health and the environment.
The Board does not think that additional clarification of when IEPA may require an
SSRA under the federally-derived provisions is necessary. The general authority under 40
C.F.R. 270.10(k) and 270.32(b)(2) (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703.188 and
703.241(a)(2)) to require such permit conditions as are necessary to protect human health and
the environment is referred to by USEPA as the “omnibus” provisions. USEPA has
recommended that the tool of an SSRA be used on a case-by-case basis and as necessary to
fulfill the requirements of the omnibus provisions and to determine the need for additional
permit requirements to protect human health and the environment. (
See
64 Fed. Reg. 52840
(Sept. 30, 1999)). Nowhere is the federal policy recommending the use of SSRAs codified.
However, since the SSRA has regularly been required when necessary to determine the need
for additional permit requirements under the general omnibus provisions, the fact that a MACT-
compliant facility remains subject to the omnibus provisions should clearly indicate that the
SSRA remains an available tool, notwithstanding the exemption. This is also true as to those
permit conditions that are necessary to establish operating conditions to ensure adequate
treatment of post-combustion treatment residues. No further clarification from the Board is
needed.
14
Finally, IEPA raises another issue with respect to the exemptions from the permit
requirements of Sections 703.205(e), 703.208, 703,221, and 703.232. IEPA requests
clarification as to whether a unit that is not subject to the MACT requirements would remain
subject to the RCRA Subtitle C requirements. The Board believes that the exemption language
is already clear. The language provides that the exemptions from the RCRA Subtitle C permit
requirements apply only if the facility owner or operator demonstrates compliance with the
MACT requirements. If the MACT requirements do not apply, there can be no such
demonstration and, consequently, no exemption. The Board sees no need to further clarify this
aspect of the rules.
Technical Amendments to the Phase IV LDR Amendments—Part 728 and Sections 721.132 and
722.134
The Board adopted the original May 12, 1997 Phase IV LDR amendments on
August 20, 1998, in consolidated update docket R97-21/R98-3/R98-5. The Board adopted the
May 11, 1998 technical amendments on June 17, 1999, in update docket R99-15. The Board
completed the federal amendments on December 2, 1999, in RCRA Subtitle C update docket,
R00-5, by adopting a federal technical correction into Section 722.134(d).
On October 20, 1999
(64 Fed. Reg. 56469)
, USEPA adopted additional technical corrections to the Phase IV LDR rules.
The Board adopts that latest set of technical corrections in this docket. All of these amendments are
minor.
The Board has incorporated the federal amendments without deviation from the federal text.
Persons interested in the details of the federal amendments should consult the October 20, 1999
Federal Register
notice. Those interested in the major segments of the federal amendments
incorporated into the Illinois hazardous waste rules in the prior update docket should refer to the opinion
and order in
In re
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1998, through December 31,
1998) (
June 17, 1999), R99-15.
The Board requested public comment on our incorporation of the October 20, 1999
federal corrections to the Phase IV LDR rules. We received no comments on the March 2,
2000 proposal for public comment in this regard, so the Phase IV LDR corrections remain
substantively unaltered in the final version that the Board adopts today.
Incorporation of 40 C.F.R. 136 by Reference—Section 720.111
USEPA adopted amendments to 40 C.F.R. 136, which are the Clean Water Act
analytical procedures, on December 30, 1999 (64 Fed. Reg. 73414). The methods affected relate to
testing available cyanide in water. The Board has incorporated 40 C.F.R. 136 by reference in Section
720.111 of the hazardous waste rules. Persons interested in the details of the federal amendments
should refer to the appropriate
Federal Register
notice cited above.
The Board has incorporated the federal amendments without deviation. We have updated the
version of 40 C.F.R. 136 incorporated by reference by adding the three cited
Federal Register
notices
15
to the incorporation. The Board has included all three notices without regard to whether the individual
methods updated or added by USEPA are actually used to achieve or demonstrate compliance under
the RCRA Subtitle C regulatory scheme.
The Board requested public comment on the update to the version of 40 C.F.R. 136
incorporated by reference for the purposes of the Illinois RCRA Subtitle C hazardous waste regulatory
program.
We received no comments on the March 2, 2000 proposal for public comment in this
regard, so the updated incorporation of 40 C.F.R. 136 remains substantively unaltered in the
final version that the Board adopts today.
Accumulation of Plating Sludge Intended for Metals Recovery—Section 722.134
On March 8, 2000 (65 Fed. Reg. 12378), USEPA extended the allowable accumulation time
for wastewater treatment sludge from plating operations (USEPA hazardous waste number F006).
Under new subsections (g) and (h) of 40 C.F.R. 262.34, a large-quantity generator of F006 plating
wastewater sludge may now accumulate up to 20,000 kilograms of this waste for up to 180 days if the
waste is accumulated for metals recovery. The generator may accumulate the waste for up to 270 days
if it will transport the waste 200 miles or more for metals recovery. Prior to these amendments, the
generally-applicable hazardous waste accumulation time applied. The generally-applicable hazardous
waste accumulation rule allows accumulation up to 90 days, unless the generator produces less than
1000 kilograms of waste per month. Under the generally-applicable rules, these smaller quantity
generators may accumulate up to 6000 kilograms of waste for up to 180 days (or up to 270 days if the
waste is to be transported 200 miles or more).
New subsection (i) further provides that the generator may obtain an extension of the
accumulation time of up to an additional 30 days or an exception to the 20,000 kilogram limit where it
can demonstrate need due to “unforeseen, temporary, and uncontrollable circumstances.” This is very
similar to the generally-applicable provisions in existing subsections (b) and (f), which provide for grants
of up to an additional 30 days under these circumstances.
The Board has incorporated the March 8, 2000 federal action into the present update docket in
order to confer the benefits of the federal relaxation without delay. The Board has incorporated the
federal provisions into Section 722.134 of the Illinois regulations without significant deviation from the
federal text. The deviations from the federal text are listed in the table that begins at page 18 of this
opinion. The Board directs attention to the federal notice of final action in the March 8, 2000 issue of
the
Federal Register
for further details of the federal decision to extend the accumulation time for F006
waste accumulated for metals recovery.
There are two deviations from the text of the federal amendments that warrant specific mention.
The first deviation is that the Board has added to subsection (a) specific references to subsections (g),
(h), and (i). Subsection (a) lists subsections (e) and (f) as exceptions to the general rule, and it appears
that USEPA inadvertently omitted adding references to new subsections (g), (h), and (i), which also
contain exceptions to the general rule. The second deviation is that the Board has provided for the use
16
of a provisional variance in order to obtain a 30-day extension of the accumulation time or an exception
to the 20,000-kilogram accumulation limit. Use of a provisional variance is consistent with the current
practice of obtaining a 30-day extension under subsections (b) and (f).
Since the Board’s proposal for public comment was adopted prior to the March 8, 2000
federal action, the Board is now requesting that any comments, from USEPA or other interested
persons, be submitted by no later than June 11, 2000. Due to time constraints involved in this
rulemaking, the mailbox rule of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 101.102 will not apply. The timely receipt of any
comments before that date will allow the Board to consider whether alteration of the regulatory text is
necessary before it is filed with the Office of the Secretary of State and becomes effective.
Withdrawal of Organobromine Waste Listings and LDRs—Sections 721.132, 721.133,
721.Appendices G and H, 728.133, and 728.Tables T and U
On
March 17, 2000
(
65 Fed. Reg. 14472
), USEPA
withdrew the hazardous waste
listings for organobromine production wastes (USEPA hazardous waste numbers K140 and
U408) and the associated LDRs for these wastes. This was in response to a court order in
Great Lakes Chemical Corp. v. EPA, No. 98-1312, 1999 WL 322757 (D.C. Cir. Apr. 9,
1999), which vacated the listings. USEPA also deleted the associated underground injection
restrictions, and the Board will incorporate those federal amendments in
In re
UIC Update,
USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999)
, R00-11.
USEPA adopted the recently withdrawn organobromine waste rule on May 4, 1998 (63 Fed.
Reg. 24596). The Board incorporated the hazardous waste listings and associated LDRs in
In re
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1997, through December 31, 1997)
(December 17, 1998), R98-21/R99-2/R99-7 (Consolidated). The effect of the federal withdrawal is
that organobromine production wastes are no longer listed hazardous wastes and there is no longer a
restriction on their land disposal.
The Board has incorporated this March 17, 2000 federal action into the present update docket
in order to confer the benefits of the federal relaxation without delay. The Board has incorporated the
federal provisions into Sections 721.132, 721.133, 721.Appendices G and H, 728.133, and
728.Tables T and U of the Illinois regulations without significant deviation from the federal text. Without
this action, USEPA hazardous waste numbers K140 and U408 would remain listed hazardous wastes
in Illinois despite the March 17, 2000 withdrawal by USEPA. The deviations from the federal text are
listed in the table that begins at page 18 of this opinion. The Board directs attention to the federal notice
of final action in the March 17, 2000 issue of the
Federal Register
for further details of the federal
decision to withdraw the hazardous waste listings for organobromine production wastes.
Since the March 17, 2000 federal action was not included in our March 2, 2000 proposal for
public comment, the Board has received no comments on our incorporation of the federal decision to
withdraw the hazardous waste listings for organobromine production wastes. The Board requests that
USEPA and other interested persons examine our incorporation of the March 17, 2000 withdrawal of
17
the hazardous waste listings. If USEPA or any other person desires to comment on the withdrawal of
the hazardous waste listings, the Board requests that those comments be submitted by no later than June
11, 2000. Due to time constraints involved in this rulemaking, the mailbox rule of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
101.102 will not apply. The timely receipt of any comments before that date will allow the Board to
consider whether alteration of the regulatory text is necessary before it is filed with the Office of the
Secretary of State and becomes effective.
Proposed Deferral of Phase IV LDR Standards for PCBs in Contaminated Soils—Sections 728.132
and 728.149
On February 16, 2000 (65 Fed. Reg. 7809), USEPA proposed deferring a Phase IV LDR that
it adopted on May 26, 1998 (63 Fed. Reg. 28556), which was included by the Board in
In re
RCRA
Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1997, through December 31, 1997) (December 17,
1998), R98-21/R99-2/R99-7 (Consolidated). The rule under review requires that polychlorinated
biphenyls (PCBs) be considered an underlying hazardous constituent in soils that exhibit the toxicity
characteristic. USEPA stated that it is considering the deferral of this rule because it is discouraging
generators from cleaning up contaminated soils, contrary to what USEPA intended when it adopted the
alternative standards for contaminated soils. The proposed deferral would require generators to clean
up contaminated soils to the standard levels for all underlying hazardous constituents except PCBs.
The Board noted this pending set of federal amendments in the March 2, 2000 proposal for
public comment. Since the public comment period for USEPA’s proposal to defer the Phase IV LDR
ended on April 3, 2000, and it was possible at that time that USEPA could act promptly to adopt the
deferral, the Board raised the possibility that these later federal amendments could become a segment of
the adopted R00-13 amendments. The federal deferral would have constituted a relaxation of the
federal LDRs, and the law in Illinois would have become more stringent than the federal rules during the
time before the Board could adopt corresponding final amendments to the Illinois rules. This would
have delayed conferring the benefit of the federal regulatory relaxation on entities in Illinois. However,
USEPA has not acted to adopt the deferral as of the date of this order. Accordingly, we will not be
incorporating the prospective deferral at this time.
Incorporation by Reference
In response to the proposal for public comment, JCAR has raised a question regarding the
Board’s incorporation by reference in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 720.111 of the federal statutory definition of
“pesticide.” The federal statute is also referenced in the definition found at 35 Ill. Adm. Code 733.109.
The federal definition of “pesticide” was adopted under the Board’s identical-in-substance authority, an
authority that is not subject to the general rulemaking provisions of Section 5-35 of the Illinois
Administrative Procedures Act (APA). See 415 ILCS 5/22.4 (1998). The incorporation by reference
provisions of the APA apply only to those rulemakings adopted under Section 5-35. See 5 ILCS
100/5-75 (1998). Because the Board’s authority to adopt identical-in-substance rules is not governed
by Section 5-35, the Board’s incorporation by reference of federal statutes, which are a necessary
18
component of these rules, is not improper. Therefore, in this identical-in-substance rulemaking, the
Board will retain the incorporation of necessary federal statues.
Discussion of Miscellaneous Housekeeping Amendments
The tables below list numerous corrections and amendments that are not based on
current federal amendments. The first table (beginning immediately below) includes deviations
made in this Proposal for Public Comment from the verbatim text of the federal amendments.
The second table (beginning below at page 24) contains corrections and clarifications that the
Board
made i
n the base text involved in this proposal. The amendments listed in this second
table are not directly derived from the current federal amendments. Some of the entries in these
tables are discussed further in appropriate segments of the general discussion beginning at page
4 of this opinion.
Table 1:
Deviations from the Text of the Federal Amendments
Illinois Section
40 C.F.R. Section
Revision(s)
703.205 preamble
270.19
Retained the introductory phrase “for
facilities that incinerate hazardous waste”,
the closing phrase “in completing the Part B
application”, and the ending colon
703.205(e)
270.19(e)
Added explanatory language “the federal
National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants (NESHAPs) of”; added
language indicating incorporation of the
NESHAP by reference
703.208 preamble
270.22 preamble
Added explanatory language “the federal
National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants (NESHAPs) of”; added
language indicating incorporation of the
NESHAP by reference
703.221
270.62 preamble
Added the federal preamble as a separate
section, to correspond with the codification
of 40 C.F.R. 62 as several sections of 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 703.Subpart E; added
explanatory language “the federal National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air
Pollutants (NESHAPs) of”; added language
indicating incorporation of the NESHAP by
reference; changed “this section” to
“Sections 703.221 through 703.225”; added
a Board Note indicating 40 C.F.R. 270.62
preamble as the source of this Section
19
703.232 preamble
270.66 preamble
Added explanatory language “the federal
National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Air Pollutants (NESHAPs) of”; added
language indicating incorporation of the
NESHAP by reference
703.Appendix A
(A)(8)
270.42 Appendix I
(A)(8)
Added asterisk to mark footnote instead of
superscript “
1
”
703.Appendix A
(L)(9)
270.42 Appendix I (L)(9)
Retained the reference to “Section
703.280(j)” since the Board corrected the
error in the original adoption
720.110 “dioxins and
furans”
260.10 “dioxins and
furans”
Added quotation marks to the defined term;
added the conjunction “or” and replaced
parentheses around the abbreviation for the
defined term with quotation marks
720.110 “lamp”
260.10 “lamp”
Added quotation marks to the defined term;
added the conjunction “or”; replaced the
words “is defined as” with “means”;
changed conjunction “and” to “or”; changed
“electric lamp” to the defined term “lamp”;
corrected “high intensity” to two words
720.110 “TEQ”
260.10 “TEQ”
Added quotation marks to the defined term;
changed “dioxin/furan congeners” to
conjunction “dioxin and furan congeners”
721.138(d) &
721.Table Y
261.38(d)
Moved the table at this subsection into a new
Section 721.Table Y
721.Table Y
261.38, Table 1
Added “note” before the note number in the
table and footnote 1, adding colon in the
footnote; changed to the plural for the group
heading “halogenated organics”; replaced
the em dash with “means” in the footnotes
and used lower case “not applicable” and
“nondetect”; added “as organic halogen”
and “as the” and replaced “below” with “in
the table at the levels indicated” to Note 1
for enhanced clarity
722.134(a)
262.34(a)
Added reference to the exceptions of
subsections (g), (h), and (i)
722.134(g)
262.34(g)
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive
relative clause; changed “who” to “which”;
added comma after “180 days” to offset a
parenthetical; added “the generator fulfills
the following conditions”
722.134(g)(1)
262.34(g)(1)
Added a comma to offset the final element of
a series
20
722.134(g)(4)
262.34(g)(4)
Added “conditions”
722.134(g)(4)(A)
262.34(g)(4)(i)
Added “in one of the following containing
devices”
722.134(g)(4)(A)(i)
262.34(g)(4)(i)(A)
Deleted the ending compound conjunction
“and/or”
722.134(g)(4)(A)(ii)
262.34(g)(4)(i)(B)
Changed the ending compound conjunction
“and/or” to “or”
722.134(g)(4)(A)(iii)
262.34(g)(4)(i)(C)
Added a comma after “buildings” to offset
an independent clause; changed “must” to
“shall”; changed “the following” to “listed
in subsection (g)(4)(F) of this Section” and
changed the ending punctuation to a period
to codify 40 C.F.R. 262.34(g)(4)(i)(C)(
1
)
and (g)(4)(i)(C)(
2
) as 35 Ill. Adm. Code
722.134(g)(4)(F)(i) and (g)(4)(F)(ii)
722.134(g)(4)(F)
262.34(g)(4)(i)(C)
Codified 40 C.F.R. 262.34(g)(4)(i)(C)(
1
)
and (g)(4)(i)(C)(
2
) as 35 Ill. Adm. Code
722.134(g)(4)(F)(i) and (g)(4)(F)(ii) to
comply with
Illinois Administrative Code
codification requirements; added explanatory
Board note
722.134(h)
262.34(h)
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive
relative clause; changed “who” to “which”
(twice); deleted unnecessary commas (four
times, after “F006”, “waste”,
“transportation”, and “recovery”); added
comma after “270 days” to offset a
parenthetical
722.134(i)
262.34(i)
Changed “who” to “which” (twice); deleted
unnecessary commas (twice, after “waste”
and “transportation”); added commas to
offset parentheticals (three times, after “270
days”, “703”, and “270-day”)
722.134(i)(1)
262.34(i)
Organized the extension language into a
separate subsection and added language
relevant to provisional variances
722.134(i)(2)
262.34(i)
Organized the exception language into a
separate subsection and added language
relevant to provisional variances
722.134(i)(3)
262.34(i)
Added a reference to IEPA procedural rules
pertaining to requests for provisional
variances
21
724.440(b)(1)
264.340(b)(1)
Added incorporation by reference language;
added commas to offset “under 40 CFR
63.1207(j) and 63.1210(d)” as a
parenthetical
724.440(b)(2)
264.340(b)(2)
Added “
of 40 CFR 63, Subpart EEE” for
enhanced clarity; added
a comma to offset the
final element of a series
724.440(b) Board
Note
264.340(b)
Added a Board note to explain the direct
implementation of the federal MACT
standards in Illinois
724.701 preamble
264.601 preamble
Retained the verb “are” in the passage “such
terms and conditions as are necessary . . .”;
used semicolons to separate elements of a
series containing commas; added
incorporation by reference language
725.440(b)(1)
265.340(b)(1)
Added incorporation by reference language;
added commas to offset “under 40 CFR
63.1207(j) and 63.1210(d)” as a
parenthetical
725.440(b)(2)
265.340(b)(2)
Reworded to active voice to parallel Section
724.440(b)(2)
for enhanced clarity; added
a
comma to offset the final element of a series
725.440(b) Board
Note
265.340(b)
Added a Board note to explain the direct
implementation of the federal MACT
standards in Illinois; added the quotation
from the
Federal Register
explaining the
interplay of the MACT and RCRA Subtitle
C standards
726.200(b)(1)
266.100(b)(1)
Added incorporation by reference language;
added commas to offset “under 40 CFR
63.1207(j) and 63.1210(d)” as a
parenthetical
726.200(b) Board
Note
266.100(b)
Added a Board note to explain the direct
implementation of the federal MACT
standards in Illinois; added the quotation
from the
Federal Register
explaining the
interplay of the MACT and RCRA Subtitle
C standards
726.200(d)(1)
266.100(d)(1)
Used the singular “
an owner or operator of a
lead recovery furnace that is subject”; added “of
40 CFR 63, Subpart X” to enhance clarity;
changed “must” to “shall”
22
726.200(d)(3)
266.100(d)(3)
Used the singular “
an owner or operator of a
lead recovery furnace that is subject”; added “of
40 CFR 63, Subpart X” to enhance clarity
726.200(h)
266.100(h)
Used the singular “
an owner or operator of a
lead recovery furnace that processes . . . and
which is . . . is”; added “of 40 CFR 63, Subpart
X” to enhance clarity; changed “to be exempt”
to “to become exempt”; changed “must” to
“shall”
726.201(c)(1)
266.101(c)(1)
Changed “storage and treatment” to “storage
or treatment”
726.205(c)
266.105(c)
Used subscripts in the variables “
P
c
” and
“P
m
”; set forth variable definitions in separate
lines
726.205(c)(3)
266.105(c)(3)
Changed the numeral to “seven”
726.212(b)(1)
266.112(b)(1)
Added the parenthetical reference to the defined
abbreviation “(D/F)”; added “the documents
referenced in”
726.212(b)(2)(A)
266.112(b)(2)(i)
Added the parenthetical reference to the defined
abbreviation “(D/F)”; added “the documents
referenced in”
726.212(b)(2)(A)
Board note
266.112(b)(2)(i) note
Added an explanation of when the expiration of
the federal administrative stay takes effect in
Illinois
726.Appendix H
266, Appendix VIII
Retained spelling “tetrachloroethylene” in
place of “tetra chloroethylene”
728.107(a)(3)(C)
268.7(a)(3)(iii)
Used “shall” in place of “must”; removed a
comma after “facility” that separated a
dependent clause from the subject of the
sentence; used singular “a generator . . . is”
733.105(a)
273.5(a)
Changed “persons managing” to “persons
that manage”; added a comma to offset the
parenthetical “as described”
733.105(b)
273.5(b)
Changed “persons managing” to “persons
that manage”
733.105(b)(1)
273.5(b)(1)
Added a comma to offset the parenthetical
“as described”
733.109 “lamp”
273.9
Placed the defined term in quotation marks;
used “or” in place of a comma and “also
referred to as”; used “or” in place of “and”;
changed “examples of common universal
waste electric lamps” to “common examples
of universal waste electric lamps”
23
733.113(d)
273.13(d)
Retained “manner” in place of “way”
733.113(d)(1)
273.13(d)(1)
Changed “any lamp” to “all lamps”; added
comma to offset the final element of a series
733.113(d)(2)
273.13(d)(2)
Added a comma and “the small quantity
handler shall” to create an independent
clause; changed “containers” to “any
container used”; added commas to offset the
final element of series (twice)
733.132(b)(4)
273.32(b)(4)
Retained a conjunction before the final
element of a series
733.132(b)(5)
273.32(b)(5)
Retained the conjunction “or” in place of
“and” before the final element of a series
733.133(d)
273.32(d)
Retained “manner” in place of “way”
733.133(d)(1)
273.13(d)(1)
Changed “any lamp” to “all lamps”; added
comma to offset the final element of a series
733.133(d)(2)
273.13(d)(2)
Added a comma and “the large quantity
handler shall” to create an independent
clause; changed “containers” to “any
container used”; added commas to offset the
final element of series (twice)
Table 2:
Board Housekeeping Amendments
Section
Source
Revision(s)
703. Authority note
Board
Added a reference to Section 7.2 of the Act
703. Source note
Board
Removed a reference to the “PCB” reporter
703.123
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
703.123(a)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
703.123(b)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
703.123(c)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
703.123(h)(4)
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to federally-used
“lamps”; changed citation to “733.105” to more closely
correlate with the structure of the federal regulations
703.123(h)(4) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including a reference to a
Federal Register
notice of an amendment; deleted the explanatory
reference to Section 22.23a of the Act; adjusted the
margin for the Note to correspond with the entire
Section
703.161(a) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.161(b)
JCAR
Corrected subsection indent level
24
703.161(b) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.183(j)
Board,
IEPA
Added the introductory phrase “a description of the area”;
added “traffic (twice)”; added the definite article “the”;
added “area traffic”; changed “describe” to “a description
of”; changed “show” to “the locations and types of”
703.183(m)
JCAR
Added a comma after “include” to offset a parenthetical
703.183(s)(12)
JCAR
Changed “disposed” to “disposed of”
703.183(s)(12) Board
Note
JCAR
Hyphenated “case-by-case;” changed the indent level of
the Board note to correspond with all of subsection (s)
703.183 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.205
JCAR
Changed to singular “subsection”
703.205(c)(1)(C)
Board
Changed “U.S. EPA” to “USEPA”
703.205(c)(1)(D)
Board
Changed “U.S. EPA” to “USEPA;” added the ending
conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(2)(F)
Board
Changed “system(s)” to “systems”
703.205(c)(2)(I)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(3)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section”
703.205(c)(3)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section”
703.205(c)(5)
Board
Changed “burn(s)” to “burns”
703.205(c)(5)(B)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(6)(H)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(7)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(8)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section;” changed ending
punctuation to a semicolon
703.205 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including a reference to a
Federal Register
notice of an amendment; adjusted the margin for the
Note to correspond with the entire Section
703.208
JCAR
Capitalized the word “Section”
703.208(a)(1)(A)
Board
Changed to plural “subsections”; “below” to “of this
Section”
703.208(a)(1)(B)
Board
Changed “below” to “of this Section”
703.208(a)(2)(B)(ii)
Board
Changed the format of the incorporation reference
language to the current Board-preferred format,
“incorporated by reference in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.111,” offset by commas
703.208(a)(2)(B)(iii)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section”
703.208(a)(2)(B)(iv)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section”
703.208(a)(2)(B)(v)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section” (twice); corrected
the spelling of “doses”
703.208(a)(4)
Board
Changed “above” to “of this Section” (twice)
25
703.208(a)(5)
JCAR
Changed “by” to “of”
703.208(a)(6)
Board
Removed erroneous sentence, “
If data from a similar
device . . . under similar conditions”
703.208(a)(6)(a)(iii)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (a)”
703.208(b)(3)
Board
Changed “fuel(s)” to “fuels”
703.208(b)(6)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (b)”
703.208(c)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.208 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including a reference to a
Federal Register
notice of an amendment; adjusted the margin for the
Note to correspond with the entire Section
703.220
Board
Renumbered Section 703.221 to Section 703.220 in
order to accommodate the new preamble language to 40
C.F.R. 270.62 as Section 703.221
703.220(b)
Board
Added “must comply with all of the following
requirements” to complete the introductory language
703.220(b)(1)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a period
703.220(b)(2)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a period
703.220(b)(3)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a period
703.220(b)(4)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a period
703.220(b)(5)(E)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a period and removed
the conjunction “and”
703.220(b)(7)
Board
Changed “which” to “that”
703.220 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including a reference to a
Federal Register
notice of an amendment; adjusted the margin for the
Note to correspond with the entire Section
703.232(b)(1)
JCAR
Corrected “most” to “must”
703.232(c)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.232(c)(2)(A)
Board
Changed the ending punctuation from a period to a
semicolon
703.232(c)(2)(B)
Board
Changed the ending punctuation from a period to a
semicolon; added the ending conjunction “and”
703.232(c)(3)(F)
Board
Changed “system(s)” to “systems”
703.232(c)(4)
JCAR
Added a comma before “including” to offset a
parenthetical
703.232(c)(5)
Board
Changed “date(s)” to “dates”
703.232(c)(9)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.232(d)(6)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”
703.232(e)
Board
Changed “constituent(s)” to “constituents”
703.232(f)(4)
Board
Changed “HCl/Chlorine gas” to “HCl and chlorine
gas”; added a comma to offset the final element of a
series
26
703.232(f)(5)
Board
Changed “HCl/Chlorine gas” to “HCl and chlorine
gas”; changed “chlorine/chloride” to “chlorine and
chloride”
703.232(g)
Board
Changed “the Section” to “this Section”; added “all of
the following information”; added the definite article
“the”
703.232 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including a reference to a
Federal Register
notice of an amendment; adjusted the margin for the
Note to correspond with the entire Section
703.301(a) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.301(b)(3)
JCAR
Changed semicolons to commas for consistency (twice)
703.301(b) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.301(c) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(a) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(b) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(c) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(d) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(e) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(f) Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(f)(1)
Board
Changed “hearing(s)” to “hearings”
703.303(g)
JCAR
Changed “an RAP” to “a RAP”
703.303(g) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.303(h)
JCAR
Changed “a finally effective RAP” to “a final, effective
RAP”
703.303(h) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(a) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(b) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(c) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(d)
JCAR
Removed unnecessary comma after “initiative”
27
703.304(d) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(e) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(e)(3) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(f) Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(g) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304(h) Board
Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.304 Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
703.306(c)
JCAR
Changed “Subpart H of this Part” to “this Subpart H”
703.306(d)(4)
JCAR,
Board
Added a period after “time”, capitalized the definite
article “the”, added a period after “703.183(k)”, added
a space between the parentheses, and moved the closing
period inside the parentheses to render the provision as
three separate sentences—two of which are parenthetical
703.306 Board Note
Board
Adjusted the margin for the Note to correspond with the
entire Section
703.Appendix A
(B)(2)
Board
Changed “
quality assurance/control” to “quality assurance
or quality control”
703.Appendix A
(D)(3)(e)
JCAR
Changed reference to “paragraph D(3)(f) below”
703.Appendix A
(F)(1)(c)
Board
Added the introductory words,
“modification or addition
of container units”; d
eleted the reference to treatment
predicated on the narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8,
which no longer exists
703.Appendix A
(F)(4)(a)
Board
Deleted the reference to treatment predicated on the
narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8, which no longer
exists
703.Appendix A
(G)(1)(e)
Board
Deleted the reference to treatment predicated on the
narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8, which no longer
exists
703.Appendix A
(G)(5)(c)
Board
Deleted the reference to treatment predicated on the
narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8, which no longer
exists
703.Appendix A
(H)(5)(c)
Board
Deleted the reference to treatment predicated on the
narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8, which no longer
exists
28
703.Appendix A
(J)(6)(c)
Board
Deleted the reference to treatment predicated on the
narrative standard of 40 C.F.R. 268.8, which no longer
exists
703.Appendix A
(L)(8)
JCAR
Changed “alternate” to “alternative”
703.Appendix A
(L)(9)
JCAR
Changed to lower case “subpart”
703.Appendix A (M)
JCAR
Deleted ending punctuation
703.Appendix A
(M)(5)(b)
JCAR
Added ending punctuation
703.Appendix A (N)
JCAR
Deleted ending punctuation
703.Appendix A
Board Note
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
; adjusted the margin for the Note to
correspond with the entire Section
720. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (three
times); provided full citation for adoption of R00-5
amendments
720.110
“aboveground tank”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the word “tank” within
the body of the definition
720.110
“Administrator”
Board
Changed “U.S.” to “United States”
720.110 “ancillary
equipment”
Board
Changed “tank(s)” to “tanks”
720.110 “boiler”
Board
Changed “physical characteristics” to “boiler physical
characteristics”; “section(s)” to “sections” (three times);
added ending punctuation to the parenthetical in the third
sub-paragraph
720.110 “closed
portion”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “contingency
plan”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “corrective
action management
plan” Board note
Board
Separated the Board note from the text of the definition
720.110 “designated
facility”
Board
Changed “which” to “of which any of the following is
true”; changed “has” to “the facility has” (three times)”
updated the reference to the
Code of Federal Regulations
(twice); changed “is” to “the facility is”; changed
“which has” to “the facility has”; removed commas that
separated “other than Illinois” into a parenthetical;
changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
29
720.110 “electric
lamp”
Board
Replaced the previously-defined term “electric lamp”
with the federally-defined term “lamp”; removed Board
note
720.110 “existing
hazardous waste
management (HWM)
facility”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause; capitalized the word “State”; added a semicolon
to the end of the first sub-paragraph; changed “which”
to “that” and removed unnecessary commas offsetting a
restrictive relative clause in the second sub-paragraph
720.110 “existing tank
system”
Board
Changed present-tense “is” and “has” to past-tense
“was”; changed “which” to “that” and removed
unnecessary commas offsetting a restrictive relative
clause in the second sub-paragraph
720.110 “explosives
or munitions
emergency response
specialist”
Board
Changed “U.S.” to “United States”; changed “U.S.
DOD” to “USDOD” (twice)
720.110 “facility”
JCAR
Changed to lower case “section”
720.110 “federal,
State, and local
approvals . . .”
JCAR
Changed to upper case “State”
720.110 “generator”
Board
Changed to singular “produces”
720.110 “hazardous
waste constituent”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “incinerator”
Board
Changed “that” to “of which the following is true”;
changed “uses” to “the facility uses”; added comma and
added “it” to create an independent clause; changed
“meets” to “the facility meets”
720.110 “incompatible
waste”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “industrial
furnace”
Board
Added semicolons (twelve times) and the conjunction
“and” to separate the subparagraphs; changed “industrial
furnace” in lower case and removed the quotation marks
720.110 “infrared
incinerator”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “inground
tank”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the word “tank”
720.110 “in
operation”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “inner liner”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “landfill cell”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “liner”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” and removed an unnecessary
comma offsetting a restrictive relative clause
30
720.110 “manifest”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “mercury-
containing lamp”
Board
Deleted the definition in favor of the definition of the
federally-used term “lamp”; deleted the Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
720.110 “military
munitions”
Board
Changed “U.S.” to “United States” (five times);
changed “U.S. DOE” to “USDOE”; changed “U.S.
DOD” to “USDOD”
720.110 “movement”
JCAR,
Board
Changed “that hazardous waste transported” to
“hazardous waste that is transported”
720.110 “new
hazardous waste
management (HWM)
facility”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause; deleted an unnecessary comma after
“commenced”
720.110 “new tank
system”
JCAR
Changed to past-tense “commenced”
720.110 “onground
tank”
Board
Removed quotation marks form the word “tank” within
the body of the definition
720.110 “manifest”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “partial
closure”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “pesticide”
Board
Changed the ending punctuation of the subparagraphs to
semicolons (twice); removed quotation marks from the
word “pesticide” in the body of the definition; changed
“subsections of this definition” to “paragraphs of this
definition”
720.110 “plasma arc
incinerator”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “qualified
groundwater scientist”
Board note
Board
Removed quotation marks from the words “state
registration” and “professional certification”
720.110 “remediation
waste”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “replacement
unit”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the words “replacement
unit” in the body of the definition
720.110
“representative
sample”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “SIC Code”
JCAR
Added “Classification”
720.110 “sludge”
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “facility” to offset a
parenthetical
720.110 “sludge
dryer”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
31
720.110 “small
quantity generator”
Board
Changed the defined term to lower case; changed
“which” to “that” for a restrictive relative clause
720.110 “staging pile”
JCAR
Placed “remediation waste” in quotation marks
720.110 “sump”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the words “sump” in the
body of the definition
720.110 “surface
impoundment”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “thermal
treatment”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “totally
enclosed treatment
facility”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “treatability
study”
Board
Changed the ending punctuation of the subparagraphs to
semicolons (four times) and added the conjunction
“and”; removed quotation marks from the words
“treatability study” in the body of the definition
720.110 “treatment”
Board
Changed “such” to “the” (twice); deleted “so as to”
(twice)
720.110 “underground
tank”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the words “tank” in the
body of the definition
720.110 “vessel”
Board
Removed unnecessary comma
720.110 “wastewater
treatment unit”
Board
Changed “which” to “of which the following is true”;
added “it” to open each subparagraph (three times);
changed “which” to “that” for restrictive relative clauses
(twice)
720.110 “water (bulk
shipment)”
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
720.110 “well
injection”
JCAR
Moved period inside parentheses
720.111
JCAR,
Board
Moved the incorporation language from subsection (a)
720.111(a)
JCAR,
Board
Moved the incorporation language from subsection (a) to
the preamble; added preamble language indicating the
sources in subsection (a)
720.111(a) “ACI”
“ACI 318-83”
JCAR
Deleted comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “API”
JCAR
Deleted commas from the issue dates (four times)
720.111(a) “ATPI”
“APTI Course 415”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “ASTM”
“ASTM Method D
88-87”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
32
720.111(a) “ASTM”
“ASTM Method G21-
70”
JCAR
Replaced an em-dash with a comma
720.111(a) “ASTM”
“ASTM Method G22-
76”
JCAR
Replaced an em-dash with a comma
720.111(a) “GPO”
“Test Methods for
Evaluating . . .
JCAR
Deleted unnecessary commas from the issue dates (five
times)
720.111(a) “NACE”
“Control of External
Corrosion . . .
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“APTI Course 415”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Generic Quality
Assurance . . .”
JCAR
Changed to lower case “document”; deleted unnecessary
space from the document number
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Guideline on Air
Quality Models”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary period; changed to lower case
“document”
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Method 164,
Revision A . . .”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary period; changed to lower case
“document”; added missing closing parenthesis
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Methods for
Chemical Analysis
. . .”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary comma from the issue date;
changed to lower case “document”; removed space from
the document number
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Methods Manual
. . .”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary comma from the issue date;
changed to lower case “document”
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Petitions to Delist
. . .”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary comma from the issue date;
changed to lower case “document number”; removed
space from the document number
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Screening Procedures
. . .”
JCAR
Removed an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “NTIS”
“Test Methods . . .”
JCAR
Changed to lower case “document number”
720.111(a) “OECD”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary closing parenthesis mark
720.111(a) “USDOD”
Board
Changed “U.S. DOD” to “USDOD”
720.111(a) “USEPA”
“Technical Assistance
Document”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
33
720.111(a) “USEPA”
“Screening Procedures
. . .”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “USGSA”
Board
Changed “U.S. GSA” to “USGSA”
720.111(b)
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
(twenty times), including updating the
Federal Register
reference (once)
721. Authority note
Board
Added a reference to Section 7.2 of the Act
721. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (five times);
removed commas before “at” (twice)
721.109(d)
Board
Changed federally-defined term “lamps”; corrected
cross-reference to “733.105”; deleted Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
721.132 “K158”
JCAR
Changed “bag house” to “baghouse”
721.132 “K148”
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “including” to offset a
parenthetical
721.133(a)
Board
Removed an unnecessary comma
721.133(b)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.133(c)
Board
Added a comma to offset a parenthetical
721.133(c) Board note
Board
Changed commas to semicolons to separate major
elements of a series containing subseries (twice); deleted
the word “being”
721.133(d)
Board
Removed unnecessary commas (twice); changed
“which” to “that” for a restrictive relative clause
721.133(d) Board note
Board
Added “of this Part” to correct cross-reference format
721.133(e)
Board
Removed an unnecessary comma; added the words “the
following”
721.133(e) Board note
Board
Added a comma to offset a parenthetical; changed “only
is listed” to “is only listed”
721.133(f)
Board
Added the words “the following”
721.138(a)(1)(B)
Board
Removed colon in the middle of the sentence
721.138(c)(1)(B)
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “circulation” to offset a
parenthetical
721.138(c)(1)(B)(ii)
Board
Changed “unit(s)” to “units”
721.138(c)(1)(B)(v)
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma after the word “office”
721.138(c)(1)(C)(ii)
Board
Changed “code(s)” to “codes”
721.138(c)(1)(C)(iii)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(2)(C)
Board
Added “35 Ill. Adm. Code”
721.138(c)(2)
JCAR
Corrected cross-reference to “subsections (a) or (b) and
(c)(1) of this Section”
721.138(c)(7)
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
34
721.138(c)(7)(A)(ii)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(7)(A)(iii)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(7)(B)(ii)
Board
Changed “person(s)” to “persons”
721.138(c)(8)
Board
Moved the Board note to the end of the subsection
721.138(c)(8)(I)
Board
Changed “re-tested” to “retested”
721.138(c)(10)(H)(ii)
Board
Changed “person(s)” to “persons”
721.138(c)(10)(H)
JCAR
Corrected to plural “include”
721.138(c)(10)(H)(vi)
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(10)(I)
Board
Changed ending punctuation to a semicolon
721.138(c)(12)
JCAR
Corrected to singular “its”
721.Appendix G end
note
Board
Added a comma to offset the final element of a series
721.Appendix G end
note
Board
Added the words “that are” for enhanced clarity
721.Appendix Y
Board
Changed to upper case abbreviation “NA” (three times);
abbreviated “non-detect” to “NA” (151 times)
722. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (three
times); provided full citation for adoption of R00-5
amendments
722.134(a)(1)(D)(i)
JCAR
Changed “with respecting” to “with respect to”
722.134(d)(5)(D)(i)
JCAR
Added end conjunction “and”
724. Source note
Board
Removed a reference to the “PCB” reporter; provided
full citation for adoption of R00-5 amendments
724.101(c)
Board
Changed “U.S.C.” to “USC”
724.101(g)(11)(D)
Board
Changed federally-defined term “lamps”; corrected
cross-reference to “733.105”; deleted Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
724.101(j)(3)(A)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
724.101(j)(3)(B)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
724.440(a)(2)
Board
Changed “who” to “that”
724.440(c)
JCAR
Capitalized the word “Analysis” in the cited Section title
724.440(c)(1)(A)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
724.440(c)(1)(B)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
724.440(c)(2)
Board
Removed a comma and changed “which” to “that” for a
restrictive relative clause
724.440(d)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause; corrected cross-reference to “subsection
(b)(1)(A), (b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), or (b)(1)(D) of this
Section”; capitalized the word “Analysis” in the cited
Section title
35
724.440(e)
JCAR,
Board
Changed to lower case and hyphenated the words
“short-term” in the parenthetical information on the cited
Sections, since this is not a Section title
724.701 preamble
Board
Changed “724.Subparts I through O and AA through
CC” to “Subparts I through O and AA through CC of
this Part”
724.701(b)(11)
Board
Corrected the spelling of “caused”
724.983(b)(1)
JCAR
Corrected “(c)(2)(F)” by adding a closing parenthesis
725. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (four times);
removed a comma before “at”
725.101(c)(11)(B)
Board
Changed “725.Subparts C and D” to “Subparts C and
D of this Part”
725.101(c)(14)(C)
Board
Removed unnecessary conjunction “and”
725.101(c)(14)(D)
Board
Changed federally-defined term “lamps”; corrected
cross-reference to “733.105”; deleted Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
725.101(d)(3)
Board
Changed “725.Subpart L” to “Subpart L of this Part”
725.440(c)(1)(A)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
725.440(c)(1)(B)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
725.980(b)(5)
JCAR
Changed to capitalized “State”
725.980(b)(6)
JCAR
Corrected the title and added the missing citation to the
federal “Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982”
725.984(b)(3)(C)
JCAR
Changed brackets to parentheses
725.984(b)(5)(C)(ii)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to singular “subsection
(a)(3)”
725.984(b)(5)(D)
JCAR
Added a closing period after each of the definitions of
the variables “j” and “m”
725.984(b)(6)(A)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to lower case “appendix”
725.984(b)(6)(B)
JCAR
Added colon after “where”; added a closing period after
the definition of the variable “k
y
”
725.984(b)(9)(C)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to lower case “appendix”
725.984(c)(3)(B)(i)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to lower case “appendix”
725.984(d)
JCAR,
Board
Added the definite article, “the”, and “is as follows” to
complete the preamble
725.984(d)(1)
JCAR
Added a comma to complete offsetting a parenthetical
725.987(c)(2)
JCAR
Changed a comma to a semicolon to separate the
elements of a major series
725.987(c)(4)(C)
JCAR
Corrected “detected for” to “detected in”
725.987(d)(2)
JCAR
Changed “in or out of” to “into or out of”
725.987(d)(4)(C)
JCAR
Corrected “detected for” to “detected in”
726. Authority note
Board
Added a reference to Section 7.2 of the Act
726.200(d)(1)
Board
Deleted an unnecessary comma
726.200(d)(1)(A)(iv)
JCAR
Changed cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”
36
726.200(d)(1)(B)
JCAR
Changed cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”; placed
quotation marks on the title of the reference, “Test
Methods . . .”
726.200(d)(3)
JCAR
Changed cross-reference to “this subsection (d)” (twice)
726.200(d)(3)(A)
Board
Deleted an unnecessary period from the beginning of
“Appendices”
726.200(d)(3)(A)(i)
Board
Changed a semicolon to a comma
726.200(d)(3)(A)(ii)
Board
Changed to lower case “toxicity characteristic”
726.200(h)
JCAR
Changed to lower-case “subpart X”
726.200(i) “toxicity
equivalence”
Board
Added a comma and “incorporated by reference”
726.201(c)(1)
Board
Changed to singular “an owner or operator . . . stores
or treats . . . is”; changed “35 Ill. Adm. Code
724.Subparts A through L, 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.Subparts
A through L” to “35 Ill. Adm. Code 724 and 725”; changed
“
subsection (c)
(2), below” to “subsection (c)(2) of this
Section”; added “any”; changed to singular “facility operated
by an intermediary (processor, blender, distributor . . .”
726.201(c)(2)
Board
Changed to singular “an owner or operator . . . burns
. . . it generates is”; changed “35 Ill. Adm. Code
724.Subparts A through L, 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.Subparts
A through L” to “35 Ill. Adm. Code 724 and 725”; changed
“
subsection (c)
(1), above” to “subsection (c)(1) of this
Section”
726.205(a)
Board
Changed the format of the incorporation reference
language to the current Board-preferred format,
“incorporated by reference in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.111,” offset by commas; added “incorporated by
reference in”; removed “(“eye”)”; added “of this Part”
726.212(a)(2)
JCAR
Added “of” before “normal” for clarity
726.212(a)(3)
JCAR
Added “of” before “normal” for clarity
726.212(b)(1)
Board
Changed “U.S. EPA” to “USEPA”
726.212(b)(1)(A)
Board
Added a comma and “incorporated by reference”;
changed “Section 726.Appendix I” to “Appendix I of
this Part
”
726.212(b)(1)(B)
Board
Changed “subs
ection (b)(1)(A) above” to “subsection
(b)(1)(A)e of this Section”; h
yphenated “waste-derived”
726.212(b)(2)(A)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(1) above” to “subsection (b)(1)
of this Section” (twice); changed “Section 726.Appendix
G” to “Appendix G of this Part
” (four times); changed
“U.S. EPA” to “USEPA” (four times)
726.212(b)(2)(B)
Board
Deleted ending conjunction “and”; corrected the cross-
reference to “Appendix G of this Part”
37
726.212(b)(2)(C)
JCAR
Hyphenated “24-hour” (twice)
726.212(c)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(1) above” to “subsection (b)(1)
of this Section”
726.App. H
USEPA,
JCAR
Added the missing entry for “2,4-toluene diisocyanate”;
corrected the spelling of “polychlorinated” (twice)
728. Table of Contents
Board
Added a comma to the heading for Section 728.101;
corrected “HTMR” in the heading for Table G
728. Authority note
Board
Added a reference to Section 7.2 of the Act
728. Source note
Board
Added a reference to
“amended at 15 Ill. Reg. 11937,
effective August 12, 1991”
728.101 heading
Board
Added a comma to the heading
728.101(c)(4)(A)(i)
Board
Changed “U.S.” to “United States”
728.101(d)
Board
Changed “U.S.C.” to “USC”
728.101(e)(3)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
728.101(e)(4)
Board
Deleted unnecessary ending conjunction “or”
728.101(f)(3)
Board
Added ending semicolon
728.101(f)(4)
Board
Changed federally-defined term “lamps”; corrected
cross-reference to “733.105”; deleted Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
728.102 “RCRA
corrective action”
Board
Changed to lower case “states”
728.102 “soil”
Board
Changed “U.S.” to “United States”
728.107(a)(6)
Board
Removed unnecessary conjunction “and”
728.107(b)(3)(B)
JCAR
Removed the duplicate word “Section”
728.107(b)(4)(E)
certification
Board
Added a comma to complete offset of a parenthetical “as
defined in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 728.102(i)”; moved
“universal treatment standards”
728.107(b)(6)
Board
Removed extra parenthesis marks to correct cross-
references to “subsection (b)(3)” (twice) and “subsection
(b)(4)”
728.107(c)(2)
Board
Removed extra parenthesis mark following “35 Ill.
Adm. Code 720.111”; added “35 Ill. Adm. Code” to
cross-reference
728.109(d)(1)(B)
Board
Changed “group(s)” to “groups”
728.109(d)(3)(A)
Board
Added a comma to offset the parenthetical “if already
complete”
728.140(a)(1)
Board
Removed quotation marks from the defined term “total
waste standards” already in parentheses
728.140(a)(2)
Board
Removed quotation marks from the defined term “waste
extract standards” already in parentheses
728.140(a)(3)
Board
Removed quotation marks from the defined term
“technology standard” already in parentheses
38
728.140(b)
Board
Corrected cross-reference to “35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.111” (twice)
728.140(f)
Board
Corrected cross-reference to “35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.111”
728.140(i)
Board
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
728.140(j)
Board
Changed a comma to a semicolon; deleted an
unnecessary conjunction “and”
728.140(j) Board note
Board
Removed the explanatory note, since USEPA corrected
the numbering error in the federal counterpart
728.Table T “D001”
Board
Placed the footnote number inside the punctuation in the
column headings (twice)
728.Table T “F024”
JCAR
Corrected the spelling of “bis(3-ethylhexyl) phthalate”
728.Table T “K027”
JCAR
Deleted the unnecessary article “the”
728.Table T “K140”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
728.Table T “K142”
JCAR
Corrected the spelling of “indeno(1,2,3-cd)pyrene”
728.Table T “K169”
Board
Changed “xylene(s)” to “xylenes”
728.Table T “K170”
Board,
JCAR
Changed “xylene(s)” to “xylenes”
728.Table T “K171”
Board,
JCAR
Changed “xylene(s)” to “xylenes”; corrected “mg/L” to
“mg/l” (three times)
728.Table T “K172”
Board
Changed “xylene(s)” to “xylenes”; corrected “mg/L” to
“mg/l” (three times)
728.Table T “P098”
Board
Removed period after “potassium cyanide”
728.Table T note 5
JCAR
Added comma to offset the parenthetical “except for
. . .”; changed “upon” to “on” (twice)
728.Table T note 10
JCAR
Changed a comma to a semicolon
728.Table T Board
note
JCAR
Updated the reference to the
Code of Federal
Regulations
, including the
Federal Register
citation
733. Table of Contents
Board
Repealed Section 733.107
733. Authority note
Board
Added a reference to Section 7.2 of the Act
733.101(a)(3)
Board
Corrected the cross-reference to “Section 733.104”
733.101(a)(4)
Board
Changed federally-defined term “lamps”; corrected
cross-reference to “733.105”; deleted Board note
referring to Section 22.23a of the Act
733.102(a)(1)
Board
Changed “subsection (b) below” to “subsection (b) of
this Section”
733.102(b)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (c) below” to “subsection (c) of
this Section”
733.103(a)
Board
Changed “subsection (b) below” to “subsection (b) of
this Section”
733.103(a)(1)(A)
Board
Changed “U.S.C.” to “USC”; removed the section
symbol “§”
39
733.103(b)(1)
Board
Changed “subsection (a)(1) above” to “subsection (a)(1)
of this Section”; changed “subsection (a)(2) above” to
“subsection (a)(2) of this Section”
733.103(b)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (a) above” to “subsection (a) of
this Section”
733.103(b)(3)
Board
Changed “subsection (c) below” to “subsection (c) of
this Section”; changed “subsection (d) below” to
“subsection (d) of this Section”
733.103(b)(4)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(3) above” to “see subsection
(b)(3) of this Section”
733.103(c)(1)
Board
Changed “subsection (a)(1) above” to “subsection (a)(1)
of this Section”
733.103(c)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (a)(2) above” to “subsection (a)(2)
of this Section”
733.103(d)(1)
Board
Changed “subsection (a)(1) above” to “subsection (a)(1)
of this Section”
733.103(d)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (a)(2) above” to “subsection (a)(2)
of this Section”
733.104(a)
Board
Changed “subsection (b) below” to “subsection (b) of
this Section”
733.104(b)(1)
Board
Changed “subsection (c) below” to “subsection (c) of
this Section”
733.104(b)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(1) above” to “see subsection
(b)(1) of this Section”
733.107
Board
Repealed the prior Section in favor of the new federally-
derived provision at Section 733.105
733.108(a)
Board
Changed to singular “a person that manages . . . its
option”; added “any of”; changed “them” to “the
waste”
733.108(a)(1)
Board
Added “which” for subsequent restrictive relative clause
733.108(a)
Board
Changed to singular “a person that commingles”; added
“any of”; changed “subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) above”
to “see subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this Section”
733.109 “battery”
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
733.109 “electric
lamp”
Board
Deleted the definition in favor of the new federally-
derived definition of “lamp”; deleted the Board note
relating to Section 22.23a of the Act
733.109 “large
quantity handler of
universal waste”
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to the new
federally-derived “lamps”; deleted the Board note
relating to Section 22.23a of the Act
40
733.109 “pesticide”
Board
Corrected the cross-references to “35 Ill. Adm. Code
720.111” (three times); changed sub-paragraph ending
punctuation to a semicolon (twice); added a comma after
“35 Ill. Adm. Code 720.111” to offset a parenthetical
733.109 “small
quantity handler of
universal waste”
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to the new
federally-derived “lamps”; deleted the Board note
relating to Section 22.23a of the Act
733.109 “thermostat”
Board
Corrected the cross-references to “Section
733.113(c)(2)”
733.109 “universal
waste”
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to the new
federally-derived “lamps”; deleted the Board note
relating to Section 22.23a of the Act
733.109 “universal
waste handler”
Board
Removed quotation marks from the defined term as it
appears in a sub-paragraph
733.113(a)
Board
Changed “way” to “manner”
733.113(a)(3)(B)
Board
Changed to upper case “State”; corrected “is” to “as”
733.113(b)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(1) above” to “subsection (b)(1)
of this Section”
733.113(c)(2)(G)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
733.113(c)(3)(B)
JCAR
Capitalized the word “State”
733.113(d)
Board
Changed “universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “lamps” (twice); deleted the
subsections (d)(1)(A), (d)(1)(B), (d)(3) through (d)(5)(F),
and the end Board note referencing section 22.23a of the
Act
733.113(d)(1)
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to the new
federally-derived “lamps”; deleted “at all times”
733.113(d)(2)
Board
Changed “universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “universal waste lamps”;
deleted “at all times, . . . lamp breakage”
733.113(d)(3)
Spent
Lamp
Recycling,
Air Cycle,
Com Ed,
IMA
Retained the language of former subsection (d)(5)
relating to spent lamp volume reduction, altering the
usage to the federal “spent lamps”
733.113(d) Board
Note
Board
Deleted the reference to the Public Act, since the
amendment now appears in printed versions of the Act
733.114(a)
Board
Changed “battery(ies)” to “batteries” (three times)
733.114(b)(2)
Board
Changed “pesticide(s)” to “pesticides” (twice)
733.114(c)(3)(B)
Board
Changed “subsectio
n (c)(1)(A) above” to “subsection
(c)(1)(A) of this Section”
733.114(c)(3)(C)
Board
Changed “subsectio
ns (c)(1)(A) and (c)(1)(B) above” to
“subsection (c)(1)(A) and (c)(1)(B) of this Section”
41
733.114(c)(2)
Board
Changed “pesticide(s)” to “pesticides” (twice)
733.114(d)
Board
Changed “thermostat(s)” to “thermostats” (three times)
733.114(e)
Board
Changed “universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “lamp”; changed “lamp(s)” to
“lamps” (three times); deleted Board note
733.132(a)(1)
Board
Changed “subsectio
ns (a)(2)and (a)(3) below” to
“subsections (a)(2)and (a)(3) of this Section”
733.132(b)(4)
Board
Changed conjunction from “and
” to “or”; changed
“
mercury-containing lamps” to the new federally-derived
“lamps”; added ending conjunction “and”
733.132(b)(5)
Board
Changed conjunction from “and
” to “or”; changed
“
mercury-containing lamps” to the new federally-derived
“lamps”
733.132 Board note
Board
Deleted the reference to section 22.23a of the Act
733.133(a)
Board
Changed “way” to “manner”
733.133(a)(3)(B)
Board
Changed to upper case “State”
733.133(b)
Board
Changed “way” to “manner”
733.133(b)(2)
Board
Changed “subsection (b)(1) above” to “subsection (b)(1)
of this Section”
733.133(c)
Board
Changed “way” to “manner”
733.133(c)(2)(G)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
733.133(c)(3)(C)
Board
Changed to upper case “State”
733.133(d)
Board
Changed “universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “lamps” (twice); deleted the
subsections (d)(1)(A), (d)(1)(B), (d)(3) through (d)(5)(F),
and the end Board note referencing section 22.23a of the
Act
733.133(d)(1)
Board
Changed “mercury-containing lamps” to the new
federally-derived “lamps”; deleted “at all times”
733.133(d)(2)
Board
Changed “universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “universal waste lamps”;
deleted “at all times, . . . lamp breakage”
733.133(d)(3)
Spent
Lamp
Recycling,
Air Cycle,
Com Ed,
IMA
Retained the language of former subsection (d)(5)
relating to spent lamp volume reduction, altering the
usage to the federal “spent lamps”
733.133(d) Board
Note
Board
Deleted the reference to the Public Act, since the
amendment now appears in printed versions of the Act
733.134(a)
Board
Changed “battery(ies)” to “batteries” (three times)
733.134(b)(2)
Board
Changed “pesticide(s)” to “pesticides” (twice)
42
733.134(c)(1)(B)
Board
Changed “subsectio
n (c)(1)(A) above” to “subsection
(c)(1)(A) of this Section”
733.134(c)(1)(C)
Board
Changed “subsectio
ns (c)(1)(A) and (c)(1)(B) above” to
“subsection (c)(1)(A) and (c)(1)(B) of this Section”
733.134(c)(2)
Board
Changed “pesticide(s)” to “pesticides” (twice)
733.134(d)
Board
Changed “thermostat(s)” to “thermostats” (three times)
733.134(e)
Board
Changed “Universal waste mercury-containing lamps” to
the new federally-derived “lamps”; changed “in which
the lamps” to “in which such lamps” changed “shall” to
“must”; changed “lamp(s)” to “lamps” (three times)
733.134 Board note
Board
Removed the Board note referring to Section 22.23a of
the Act
733.181(b)
Board
Added ending conjunction “or”
Table 3:
Revisions to the Text of the Proposed Amendments in Final Adoption
Section Revised
Source(s)
of
Revision(s)
Revision(s)
703. Source note
Board
Removed a reference to the “PCB” reporter
703.183(j)
IEPA
Changed “an indication of” to “the locations and types of”
703.183(m)
JCAR
Added a comma after “include” to offset a parenthetical
703.183(s)(12) Board
Note
JCAR
Changed the indent level of the Board note to
correspond with all of subsection (s)
703.205
JCAR
Changed to singular “subsection”
703.205(c)(1)(D)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(2)(I)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(5)(B)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(6)(H)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(7)
Board
Added the ending conjunction “and”
703.205(c)(8)
Board,
JCAR
Changed ending punctuation to a semicolon
703.208
JCAR
Changed “40 CFR part 63” to “40 CFR 63”; capitalized
the word “Section”
703.208(a)(1)(A)
Board
Changed to plural “subsections”
703.208(a)(5)
JCAR
Changed “by” to “of”
703.208(a)(6)(a)(iii)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (a)”
703.208(b)(6)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (b)”
703.208(c)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.221
JCAR
Corrected spelling of “Section” in Section heading;
corrected citation to “40 CFR 63”
43
703.232
JCAR
Changed “in of” to “of”; corrected citation to “40 CFR
63”
703.232(b)(1)
JCAR
Corrected “most” to “must”
703.232(c)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.232(c)(4)
JCAR
Added a comma before “including” to offset a
parenthetical
703.232(c)(9)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (c)”
703.232(d)(6)
JCAR
Changed the cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”
703.232(g)
JCAR
Changed “the Section” to “this Section”
703.306(d)(4)
JCAR,
Board
Added a period after “time”, capitalized the definite
article “the”, added a period after “703.183(k)”, added
a space between the parentheses, and moved the colsing
period inside the parentheses to render the provision as
three separate sentences—two of which are parenthetical
703.Appendix A
(D)(3)(e)
JCAR
Changed reference to “paragraph D(3)(f) below”
703.Appendix A
(L)(8)
JCAR
Changed “alternate” to “alternative”
703.Appendix A
(L)(9)
JCAR
Changed to lower case “subpart”
703.Appendix A (M)
JCAR
Deleted ending punctuation
703.Appendix A
(M)(5)(b)
JCAR
Added ending punctuation
703.Appendix A (N)
JCAR
Deleted ending punctuation
720. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (three
times); provided full citation for adoption of R00-5
amendments
720.110 “boiler”
JCAR
Added ending punctuation to the parenthetical in the
third sub-paragraph
720.110 “existing
hazardous waste
management facility”
JCAR
Capitalized the word “State”
720.110 “existing tank
system”
JCAR
Changed present-tense “is” and “has” to past-tense
“was”
720.110 “facility”
JCAR
Changed to lower case “section”
720.110 “federal,
State, and local
approvals . . .”
JCAR
Changed to upper case “State”
720.110 “movement”
JCAR,
Board
Changed “that hazardous waste transported” to
“hazardous waste that is transported”
720.110 “new
hazardous waste
management facility”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma after “commenced”
44
720.110 “new tank
system”
JCAR
Changed to past-tense “commenced”
720.110 “pesticide”
JCAR
Changed “subsections of this definition” to “paragraphs
of this definition”
720.110 “SIC Code”
JCAR
Added “Classification”
720.110 “sludge”
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “facility” to offset a
parenthetical
720.110 “small
quantity generator”
JCAR
Changed the defined term to lower case
720.110 “staging pile”
JCAR
Placed “remediation waste” in quotation marks
720.110 “well
injection”
JCAR
Moved period inside parentheses
720.111
JCAR,
Board
Moved the incorporation language from subsection (a)
720.111(a)
JCAR,
Board
Moved the incorporation language from subsection (a) to
the preamble; added preamble language indicating the
sources in subsection (a)
720.111(a) “ACI”
“ACI 318-83”
JCAR
Deleted comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “API”
JCAR
Deleted commas from the issue dates (four times)
720.111(a) “ATPI”
“APTI Course 415”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “ASTM”
“ASTM Method D
88-87”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “GPO”
“Test Methods for
Evaluating . . .
JCAR
Deleted unnecessary commas from the issue dates (five
times)
720.111(a) “NACE”
“Control of External
Corrosion . . .
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “OECD”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary closing parenthesis mark
720.111(a) “USEPA”
“Technical Assistance
Document”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
720.111(a) “USEPA”
“Screening Procedures
. . .”
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma from the issue date
721. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (five times);
removed commas before “at” (twice)
721.132 “K140”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
721.132 “K158”
JCAR
Changed “bag house” to “baghouse”
45
721.132 “K148”
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “including” to offset a
parenthetical
721.133(a)
Board
Removed an unnecessary comma
721.133(b)
Board
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.133(c)
Board
Added a comma to offset a parenthetical
721.133(c) Board note
Board
Changed commas to semicolons to separate major
elements of a series containing subseries (twice); deleted
the word “being”
721.133(d)
Board
Removed unnecessary commas (twice); changed
“which” to “that” for a restrictive relative clause
721.133(d) Board note
Board
Added “of this Part” to correct cross-reference format
721.133(e)
Board
Removed an unnecessary comma; added the words “the
following”
721.133(e) Board note
Board
Added a comma to offset a parenthetical; changed “only
is listed” to “is only listed”
721.133(f)
Board
Added the words “the following”
721.133(f) “U408”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
721.138(c)(1)(B)
JCAR
Added a comma after the word “circulation” to offset a
parenthetical
721.138(c)(1)(B)(v)
JCAR
Deleted an unnecessary comma after the word “office”
721.138(c)(2)
JCAR
Corrected cross-reference to “subsections (a) or (b) and
(c)(1) of this Section”
721.138(c)(7)
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(10)(H)
JCAR
Corrected to plural “include”
721.138(c)(10)(H)(vi)
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
721.138(c)(12)
JCAR
Corrected to singular “its”
721.138(d)
Board
Corrected the ending punctuation to a period
721.App. G “K140”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
721.App. G end note
Board
Added a comma to offset the final element of a series
721.App. H “2,4,6-
tribromophenol”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
721.App. H end note
Board
Added “that are” for enhanced clarity
721.App. Y
“cadmium”
USEPA,
IEPA
Moved “1.2” from the “concentration limit” column to
the “detection limit” column
721.App. Y
“oxygenates”
USEPA
Corrected the spelling of the heading “oxygenates”
721.App. Y
“isosafrole”
USEPA,
IEPA
Corrected the quantity in the “concentration limit”
column to “2400”
46
721.App. Y “4-nitro-
aniline”
IEPA
Corrected the quantity in the “concentration limit”
column to “2400”
721.App. Y “aramite”
USEPA
Corrected the CAS number to “140-57-8”
721.App. Y “2-
chloronaphthalene”
USEPA
Corrected the spelling of “2-chloronaphthalene”
722. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (three
times); provided full citation for adoption of R00-5
amendments
722.134(a)
Board
Added reference to the exceptions of subsections (g),
(h), and (i) as a segment of the March 6, 2000 federal
amendments
722.134(a)(4)
Board
Deleted “treatment, storage, and disposal facility” as
unnecessary
722.134(g)
Board
Added as a segment of the March 6, 2000 federal
amendments
722.134(h)
Board
Added as a segment of the March 6, 2000 federal
amendments
722.134(i)
Board
Added as a segment of the March 6, 2000 federal
amendments
724. Source note
Board
Removed a reference to the “PCB” reporter; provided
full citation for adoption of R00-5 amendments
724.440(b)(1)
JCAR
Capitalized the word “Part”
724.440(b) Board note
IEPA
Added the explanatory quotation from the
Federal
Register
724.440(c)
JCAR
Capitalized the word “Analysis” in the cited Section title
724.440(c)(1)(C)
JCAR
Removed underlining from the words “as determined by
the”
724.440(d)
JCAR
Corrected cross-reference to “subsection (b)(1)(A),
(b)(1)(B), (b)(1)(C), or (b)(1)(D) of this Section”;
capitalized the word “Analysis” in the cited Section title
724.440(e)
JCAR,
Board
Changed to lower case and hyphenated the words
“short-term” in the parenthetical information on the cited
Sections, since this is not a Section title
725. Source note
Board
Removed references to the “PCB” reporter (four times);
removed a comma before “at”
725.984(b)(5)(D)
JCAR
Added a closing period after the definition of the
variable “m”
725.987(c)(2)
JCAR
Changed a comma to a semicolon to separate the
elements of a major series
726.200(b)(1)
JCAR
Changed to lower-case “subpart EEE” (twice); changed
to upper case “this Part”
726.200(b)(2)(A)
JCAR,
IEPA
Corrected the reference to “726.203(l)”
47
726.200(b) Board note
IEPA
Added a Board note to explain the direct implementation
of the federal MACT standards in Illinois; added the
quotation from the
Federal Register
explaining the
interplay of the MACT and RCRA Subtitle C standards
726.200(d)(1)(A)(iv)
JCAR
Changed cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”
726.200(d)(1)(B)
JCAR
Changed cross-reference to “this subsection (d)”; placed
quotation marks on the title of the reference, “Test
Methods . . .”
726.200(d)(3)
JCAR
Changed to lower-case “subpart X”; changed cross-
reference to “this subsection (d)” (twice)
726.200(h)
JCAR
Changed to lower-case “subpart X”
726.200(i) “toxicity
equivalence”
JCAR
Added a comma to offset the incorporation parenthetical
726.205(c)(3) “toxicity
equivalence”
JCAR
Capitalized “Subpart”
726.212(a)(2)
JCAR
Added “of” before “normal” for clarity
726.212(a)(3)
JCAR
Added “of” before “normal” for clarity
726.212(b)(1)(A)
JCAR
Added a comma to offset the incorporation parenthetical
726.212(b)(1)(B)
JCAR
Hyphenated “waste-derived”
726.212(b)(2)(A)
Board note
JCAR
Removed the section symbol “§”
726.212(b)(2)(B)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to “Appendix G of this
Part”
726.212(b)(2)(C)
JCAR
Hyphenated “24-hour” (twice)
726.App. H
USEPA,
JCAR,
IEPA
Added the missing entry for “2,4-toluene diisocyanate”;
corrected the spelling of “polychlorinated” (twice)
728.109(d)(1)(B)
Board
Removed the parentheses from the plural “groups”
728. Table of Contents
Board
Marked Section 728.133 as repealed as a segment of the
March 17, 2000 federal amendments; corrected
“HTMR” in the heading for Table G
728.133
Board
Repealed as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
728.Table T “K027”
JCAR
Deleted the unnecessary article “the”
728.Table T “K140”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
728.Table T “K142”
JCAR
Corrected the spelling of “indeno(1,2,3-cd)pyrene”
728.Table T “K171”
JCAR
Corrected “mg/L” to “mg/l” (three times)
728.Table T “K172”
JCAR
Corrected “mg/L” to “mg/l” (four times)
728.Table T “U408”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
728.Table T Board
note
Board
Added a reference to the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments to update the C.F.R. reference
48
728.Table U “2,4,6-
tribromophenol”
Board
Deleted as a segment of the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments
728.Table T Board
note
Board
Added a reference to the March 17, 2000 federal
amendments to update the C.F.R. reference
733.103(a)(1)(A)
JCAR
Removed the section symbol “§”
733.108(a)(2)
JCAR
Corrected the cross-reference to “Section 733.109”
733.109 “battery”
JCAR
Changed “which” to “that” for a restrictive relative
clause
733.113(a)(3)(B)
JCAR
Corrected “is” to “as”
733.113(c)(3)(B)
JCAR
Capitalized the word “State”
733.113(d)(3)
Spent
Lamp
Recycling,
Air Cycle,
Com Ed,
IMA
Retained the language of former subsection (d)(5)
relating to spent lamp volume reduction, altering the
usage to the federal “spent lamps”
733.113(d) Board
Note
Board
Restored the note, but deleted the reference to the Public
Act, since the amendment now appears in printed
versions of the Act
733.114(d)
JCAR
Removed the parentheses from the plural “pesticides”
(three times)
733.114(e)
JCAR
Removed the parentheses from the plural “lamps” (three
times); deleted Board note
733.113(d) Board
Note
Board
Restored the note, but deleted the reference to the Public
Act, since the amendment now appears in printed
versions of the Act
733.133(d)(3)
Spent
Lamp
Recycling,
Air Cycle,
Com Ed,
IMA
Retained the language of former subsection (d)(5)
relating to spent lamp volume reduction, altering the
usage to the federal “spent lamps”
733.134(d)
JCAR
Removed the parentheses from the plural “pesticides”
(three times)
Table 4:
Requested Revisions to the Text of the Proposed Amendments Not Made in Final
Adoption
Section Affected
Source(s) of Request:
Requested Revision(s)
Explanation
703.304(e)(2)
JCAR: Change “which”
to “that”
“Which” is preferred for subsequent
restrictive relative clauses
49
703.Appendix A ¶K.12.
JCAR: Change “soil-
pore” to “soil-poor”
“Soil-pore” is used in corresponding
Appendix I to 40 C.F.R. 270.42
703.Appendix A ¶L.1.
JCAR: Change
“feedstream” to “feed
stream”
“Feedstream” is used in corresponding
Appendix I to 40 C.F.R. 270.42, and is a
phrase of art
720.110 “military
munitions”
JCAR: Change “chemical
and riot control agents” to
“chemical riot control
agents”
“Chemical and riot control agents” is used
in corresponding 40 C.F.R. 260.10, and
it may have a different meaning than the
suggested language
720.110 “remediation
waste”
JCAR: Add a comma
after “wastes”
What follows is a restrictive relative
clause, so a comma would be
inappropriate
721.138(c)(8)(D)
JCAR: Change “which”
to “that” for a restrictive
relative clause
“Which” is more appropriate for a
subsequent restrictive relative clause
726.200(h)
JCAR: Change “which”
to “that” for a restrictive
relative clause
“Which” is more appropriate for a
subsequent restrictive relative clause
726.200(h)
JCAR: Add a comma
after “fired” in the phrase
“as fired and as provided .
. .”
A comma would separate a simple two-
element series
728. Source note
JCAR: Remove reference
to “15 Ill. Reg. 11937”
A Notice of Adopted Amendments
actually appeared in the
Illinois Register
at that citation
728.Table T “K143”
JCAR: Change “wash oil”
to “waste oil”
“Waste oil” appears at the corresponding
table to 40 C.F.R. 268.40
728.Table T “P040”
JCAR: Change “diethyl-
O- . . .” to “diethyl-0-
. . .”
“
Diethyl-O- . . .
” appears at the
corresponding table to 40 C.F.R. 268.40
733. Table of Contents
JCAR: Capitalize “off-
site” in the heading for
Section 733.155
The heading in the table agrees with that
in the text, and Section 733.155 is not
open in this proceeding; the Board will
note the correction for a future rulemaking
733.103(d)(1)(B)
JCAR: Change
“including” to “included
in”
“Including” starts a parenthetical that
makes a specific inclusion to “pesticide,”
which it follows
733.108(a)(1)
JCAR: Change “which”
to “that” for a restrictive
relative clause
“Which” is more appropriate for a
subsequent restrictive relative clause
50
HISTORY OF RCRA SUBTITLE C AND UIC ADOPTION
ILLINOIS ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY OR BOARD ACTION
EDITORIAL CONVENTIONS
The Board appends the following three discussions to this opinion. The first is a
summary history of the Illinois RCRA Subtitle C and UIC programs. It lists all Board actions
taken to adopt and maintain these programs since their inception. It includes a listing of all site-
specific rulemaking and adjusted standards proceedings filed that relate to these programs. It
also lists all USEPA program authorizations issued to date. The second is a discussion of how
the Board codifies requirements that call for state determinations, such as exemptions or
exceptions. The third discussion relates to our use of language in the codification of identical-
in-substance rules. We intend these as reference aids for interested persons in the regulated
community.
The narrative history of the Illinois hazardous waste program has grown quite lengthy. At this
time, the historical summaries of the RCRA Subtitle C and UIC programs spans more than 18 years of
Board regulation of these areas. The Board’s practice has been to update the historical summaries and
bring them forward from one update docket to the next. These summaries now span 14 pages of this
opinion. That is nearly one third of the volume of this individual opinion.
The Board will continue our practice of updating the historical summaries in the opinion of each
successive update docket, since we perceive the summary to be a valuable research tool relating to
these two programs. However, in the interest of conservation of resources, the Board will stop its
practice of bringing forward the entire bulk of the summaries in each new opinion and order. Instead,
the Board will begin to refer to this opinion for the historical summaries up through the date of this
opinion. The opinions in future dockets will direct attention to this opinion for the history up to this date,
then a segment of that opinion will summarize the developments from this date to the date of the
particular opinion.
History of RCRA Subtitle C and State Hazardous Waste Rules Adoption
The Board has adopted and amended the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
Subtitle C hazardous waste rules in several dockets. The dockets captioned Proposed Regulations for
“RCRA” (Chapter 7 and Chapter 9) (September 16, 1981, and February 4, 1982), R81-22, and
Amendments to Phase I, RCRA Rules (January 13, 1983), R82-18, dealt with the Phase I RCRA
Subtitle C regulations. The Board adopted RCRA Subtitle C Phase II regulations in Parts 703 and 724
in dockets Phase II, RCRA Rules (July 26, 1983), R82-19, and Technical Correction to Phase II
RCRA Rules (December 15, 1983), R83-24. USEPA reviewed and authorized the Illinois Phase I and
Phase II regulations. The entire listing of all RCRA Subtitle C identical-in-substance rulemakings
follows. A listing of federal authorizations of the Illinois program to date, as noticed in the
Federal
Register
, appears at the end of this historical summary of the Illinois hazardous waste program.
51
R81-22
Proposed Regulations for “RCRA” (Chapter 7 and Chapter 9)
(September 16, 1981, and February 4, 1982), R81-22; published at 6 Ill. Reg.
4828 (April 23, 1982), effective May 17, 1982. (Federal rules and
amendments adopted by USEPA during the period May 18, 1980, through
October 1, 1981.)
R82-18
Amendments to Phase I, RCRA Rules (January 13, 1983), R82-18; published
at 7 Ill. Reg. 2518 (March 4, 1983), effective May 17, 1982. (Federal rules
and amendments adopted by USEPA during the period November 11, 1981,
through June 24, 1982.)
R82-19
Phase II, RCRA Rules (July 26, 1983), R82-19; published at 7 Ill. Reg. 13999
(October 28, 1983), effective October 2, 1983. (Federal rules and
amendments adopted by USEPA during the period November 23, 1981,
through October 29, 1982.)
R83-24
2
Technical Correction to Phase II RCRA Rules (December 15, 1983), R83-24;
published at 8 Ill. Reg. 200 (January 6, 1984), effective December 27, 1983.
(Corrections to the docket R82-19 rules.)
R84-9
RCRA and UIC Update (June 13 and 27, 1985), R84-9; published at 9 Ill.
Reg. 11964 (August 2, 1985), effective July 8 and 24, 1985. (Federal rules
and amendments adopted by USEPA during the period January 19, 1983,
through April 24, 1984.)
R85-22
RCRA Update (April 24, 1984, through June 30, 1985) (December 20, 1985,
and January 9, 1986), R85-22; published at 10 Ill. Reg. 968 (January 17,
1986), effective January 2, 1986.
R86-1
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1985, through December 31,
1985) (July 11, 1986), R86-1; published at 10 Ill. Reg. 13998 (August 22,
1986), effective August 12, 1986.
R86-19
RCRA Update (February 1, 1986, through March 31, 1986) (October 23,
1986), R86-19; published at 10 Ill. Reg. 20630 (December 12, 1986),
effective December 2, 1986.
R86-28
RCRA Update (April 1, 1986, through June 30, 1986) (February 5, 1987;
amended March 5, 1987; corrected April 16, 1987), R86-28; published at 11
2
On September 6, 1984, the Third District Appellate Court upheld the Board's actions in adopting
R82-19 and R83-24. Commonwealth Edison Co. v. PCB, 127 Ill. App. 3d 446; 468 N.E.2d 1339
(3d Dist. 1984).
52
Ill. Reg. 6017 (April 3, 1987), effective March 23, 1987; correction published
at 11 Ill. Reg. 8684 (May 1, 1987), effective April 21, 1987.
R86-46
RCRA Update (July 1, 1986, through September 30, 1986) (July 16, 1987),
R86-46; published at 11 Ill. Reg. 13435 (August 14, 1987), effective August 4,
1987.
R87-5
RCRA Update (October 1, 1986, through December 31, 1986) (October 15,
1987), R87-5; published at 11 Ill. Reg. 19280 (November 30, 1987), effective
November 10 and 12, 1987.
R87-26
RCRA Update (January 1, 1987, through June 30, 1987) (December 3, 1987),
R87-26; published at 12 Ill. Reg. 2450 (January 29, 1988), effective
January 15, 1988.
R87-32
Correction to R86-1 (September 4, 1987), R87-32; published at 11 Ill. Reg.
16698 (October 16, 1987), effective September 30, 1987.
R87-39
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1987, through December 31,
1987) (June 16, 1988), R87-39; published at 12 Ill. Reg. 12999 (August 12,
1988), effective July 29, 1988.
R88-16
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1988, through July 31, 1988)
(November 17, 1988), R88-16; published at 13 Ill. Reg. 447 (January 13,
1989), effective December 28, 1988.
R89-1
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (August 1, 1988, through December 31,
1988) (September 13, 1989), R89-1; published at 13 Ill. Reg. 18278
(November 27, 1989), effective November 13, 1989.
R89-9
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1989, through June 30, 1989)
(March 8, 1990), R89-9; published at 14 Ill. Reg. 6225 (April 27, 1990),
effective April 16, 1990.
R90-2
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1989, through December 31,
1989) (July 3, 1990), R90-2; published at 14 Ill. Reg. 14401 (September 7,
1990), effective August 22, 1990.
R90-11
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (April 1, 1990, through June 30, 1990)
(April 11, 1991; corrected May 23, 1991; corrected August 8, 1991;
uncorrected August 22, 1991), R90-11; published at 15 Ill. Reg. 9323
(June 28, 1991), effective June 17, 1991.
53
R90-17
RCRA Delistings (See below.)
R91-1
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1990, through December 31,
1990) (August 8, 1991), R91-1; published at 15 Ill. Reg. 14446 (October 11,
1991), effective September 30, 1991. (Wood Preserving Rules.)
R91-13
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1991, through June 30, 1991)
(April 9, 1992), R91-13; published at 16 Ill. Reg. 9489 (June 19, 1992),
effective June 9, 1992. (Boilers and Industrial Furnace (BIF) Rules.)
R91-26
RCRA Wood Preserving compliance Dates (Identical in Substance Rules)
(January 9, 1992), R91-26; published at 16 Ill. Reg. 2600 (February 14,
1992), effective February 3, 1992. (Wood Preserving Rules Compliance
Dates.)
R92-1
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1991, through December 31,
1991) (September 17, 1992), R92-1; published at 16 Ill. Reg. 17636
(November 20, 1992), effective November 6, 1992.
R92-10
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1992, through June 30, 1992)
(January 21, 1993), R92-10; published at 17 Ill. Reg. 5625 (April 9, 1993),
effective March 26, 1993. (Leak Detection System (LDS) Rules.)
R93-4
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1992, through December 31,
1992) (September 23, 1993), R93-4; published at 17 Ill. Reg. 20545
(December 3, 1993), effective November 22, 1993. (Used Oil Rules.)
R93-16
RCRA Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1993, through June 30, 1993)
(March 17, 1994, supplemental opinion and order on April 21, 1994), R93-16;
published at 18 Ill. Reg. 6720 (May 6, 1994), effective April 26, 1994.
R94-7
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1993, through
December 31, 1993) (June 23, 1994), R94-7; published at 18 Ill. Reg. 12160
(August 12, 1994), effective July 29, 1994.
R94-17
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1994, through
June 30, 1994) (October 20, 1994), R94-17; published at 18 Ill. Reg. 17480
(December 9, 1994), effective November 23, 1994.
R95-6
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1994, through
December 31, 1994, January 3, 1995 and May 19, 1995) (Consolidated with
R95-4) (June 1 and 15, 1995), R95-6; published at 19 Ill. Reg. 9501 (July 14,
1995), effective June 27, 1995.
54
R95-20
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1995, through
June 30, 1995; July 7, 1995; September 29, 1995; November 13, 1995;
June 6, 1996) (June 20, 1996), R95-20; published at 20 Ill. Reg. 10929
(August 16, 1996), effective August 1, 1996.
R96-10
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1995, through
December 31, 1995) (Consolidated with R97-3 and R97-5) (November 6,
1997), R96-10; published at 22 Ill. Reg. 256 (January 2, 1998), effective
December 16, 1997.
R97-5
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1996, through
June 30, 1996) (Consolidated with R96-10 and R97-3) (November 6, 1997),
R97-5; published at 22 Ill. Reg. 256 (January 2, 1998), effective December 16,
1997.
R97-21
RCRA Subtitle C (HW) Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1996, through
December 31, 1996) (Consolidated with R98-3 and R98-5) (August 20,
1998), R97-21; published at 22 Ill. Reg. 17930 (October 9, 1998), effective
September 28, 1998.
R98-5
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1997, through
June 30, 1997) (Consolidated with R97-21 and R98-3) (August 20, 1998),
R98-5; published at 22 Ill. Reg. 17930 (October 9, 1998), effective
September 28, 1998.
R98-21
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1997, through
December 31, 1997) (Consolidated with R99-2 and R99-7) (December 17,
1998), R98-21; published at 23 Ill. Reg. 1695 (February 5, 1999), effective
January 19, 1999.
R99-2
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1998, through
June 30, 1998) (Consolidated with R98-21 and R99-7) (December 17, 1998),
R99-2; published at 23 Ill. Reg. 1695 (February 5, 1999), effective January 19,
1999.
R99-15
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1998, through
December 31, 1998) (June 17, 1999), R99-15; published at
23 Ill. Reg.
9094 (August 13, 1999), effective July 26, 1999
.
R00-5
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1999, through
June 30, 1999) (December
2, 1999
), R00-5; published at 24 Ill. Reg. 1063
(January 21, 2000), effective January 6, 2000.
55
R00-13
RCRA Subtitle C Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1999, through
June 30, 1999) (this Docket.)
The Board added to the federal listings of hazardous waste by listing dioxins pursuant to Section
22.4(d) of the Act:
R84-34
Hazardous Waste Listings and Test Methods for Identification of
Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-Dioxins (November 21, 1984), R84-34; published at 8
Ill. Reg. 24562 (December 21, 1984), effective December 11, 1984.
This was repealed by R85-22, which included adoption of USEPA’s dioxin listings. Section
22.4(d) was repealed by Pub. Act 85-1048, effective January 1, 1989.
The Board has adopted USEPA delistings at the request of Amoco Oil Company, Envirite
Corporation, USX Corporation, and
Conversion Systems, Inc. (CSI)
:
R85-2
Petition of Amoco Oil Company Amendment to 35 Ill. Adm. Code Part 721,
Appendix I (April 24, 1986), R85-2; published at 10 Ill. Reg. 8112 (May 16,
1986), effective May 2, 1986.
R87-30
Petition for Rulemaking to Adopt Regulations Identical in Substance to federal
RCRA Requirements filed by the Envirite Corporation (June 30, 1988), R87-
30; published at 12 Ill. Reg. 12070 (July 22, 1988), effective July 12, 1988.
R91-12
Delisting Petition for USX Corporation (Identical in Substance Rule)
(December 19, 1991), R91-12; published at 16 Ill. Reg. 2155 (February 7,
1992), effective January 27, 1992.
R95-20
RCRA Subtitle C, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1995, through June 30,
1995, July 7, 1995, September 29, 1995, November 13, 1995, and June 6,
1996) (June 20, 1996), R95-20; published at 20 Ill. Reg. 10929 (August 16,
1996), effective August 1, 1996.
On April 30, 1990, USEPA authorized Illinois to grant waste delistings. Upon this
authorization, USEPA transferred pending delisting petitions to the Board. The Board docketed these
as site-specific rulemaking proceedings:
R90-18
USX Corporation, Southworks Delisting (Site-Specific) (June 6, 1991), R90-
18. (Dismissed.)
R90-19
Woodward Governor Company Delisting (Site-Specific) (November 8, 1990),
R90-19. (Dismissed.)
56
R90-23
General Motors Corporation Site-Specific Exception to 35 Ill. Adm. Code
216.381 for Ferrous Foundries in Vermilion County (July 11, 1991), R90-23.
(Dismissed.)
The Board has modified the delisting procedures to allow the use of adjusted standards in lieu of
site-specific rulemakings:
R90-17
RCRA Delistings (February 28, 1991), R90-17; published at 15 Ill. Reg. 7934
(May 24, 1991), effective May 9, 1991.
Waste generators have filed Part 106 adjusted standard petitions for solid waste determinations
with the Board pursuant to Section 720.130:
AS 89-4
In re
Safety-Kleen Corporation, Petition for an Adjusted Standard
(November 15, 1989), AS 89-4. (Dismissed.)
AS 89-5
In re
Safety-Kleen Corporation, Petition for an Adjusted Standard (July 3,
1990), AS 89-5. (Dismissed.)
AS 90-7
In re
Petition of Quantum Chemical Company, USI Division, for an Adjusted
Standard (July 11, 1991), AS 90-7. (Dismissed.)
AS 96-11
In re
Petition of Chemetco, Inc. for an Adjusted Standard (August 1, 1996),
AS 96-11. (Dismissed.)
AS 97-2
In re
Petition of Chemetco, Inc. for an Adjusted Standard (March 19, 1998),
AS 97-2. (Denied.)
AS 97-9
In re
Petition of Recycle Technologies, Inc. for an Adjusted Standard
(September 3, 1998), AS 97-9. (Granted.)
AS 99-3
In re
Petition of Big River Zinc Corporation for an Adjusted Standard
(April 15, 1999), AS 99-3. (Granted.)
AS 00-1
In re
Petition of Horsehead Resource Development Company, Inc. for an
Adjusted Standard (August 5, 1999), AS 00-1. (Dismissed.)
AS 00-2
In re
Petition of Horsehead Resource Development Company, Inc. for an
Adjusted Standard, (February 17, 2000), AS 00-2. (Granted.)
Waste generators have filed Part 106 adjusted standard petitions for hazardous waste delistings
with the Board pursuant to Section 720.122:
57
AS 91-1
In re
Petition of Keystone Steel & Wire Co. for Hazardous Waste Delisting
(February 6, 1992), AS 91-1. (Granted.)
AS 91-3
In re
Petition of Peoria Disposal Company for an Adjusted Standard
(February 4, 1993), AS 91-3. (Granted.)
AS 93-7
In re
Petition of Keystone Steel & Wire Company for an Adjusted Standard
(February 17, 1994), AS 93-7. (Granted.)
AS 94-10
In re
Petition of Envirite Corporation for an Adjusted Standard (December 14,
1994), AS 94-10. (Granted.)
The Board has procedures to be followed in cases before it involving the RCRA Subtitle C
regulations:
R84-10
RCRA and UIC Procedural Rules (December 20, 1984, and January 10,
1985), R84-10; published at 9 Ill. Reg. 1383 (February 1, 1985), effective
January 16, 1985.
The Board also adopted special procedures to be followed in certain determinations under Part
106. The Board adopted these Part 106 special procedures in RCRA Update (April 24, 1984,
through June 30, 1985) (December 20, 1985, and January 9, 1986), R85-22, and amended them in
RCRA Update (July 1, 1986, through September 30, 1986) (July 16, 1987), R86-46, listed above.
One Part 106 adjusted standard proceeding filed pursuant to 728.106 sought relief from a
prohibition against land disposal:
AS 90-6
In re
Petition of Marathon Petroleum Company for an Adjusted Standard to
Allow Land Disposal of a Waste Prohibited (September 17, 1992), AS 90-6.
(Dismissed.)
Other adjusted standard proceedings sought relief from aspects of the land disposal unit closure
and post-closure care requirements:
AS 90-8
In re
Petition of Olin Corporation for an Adjusted Standard (Related to
Closure and Post Closure of RCRA Regulated Surface Impoundments)
(February 27, 1992), AS 90-8. (Granted.)
AS 91-4
In re
Petition of Amoco Oil Company for an Adjusted Standard (March 11,
1992), AS 91-4. (Granted.)
58
One adjusted standard proceeding sought relief from a RCRA Subtitle C land disposal
restriction:
AS 90-6
In re
Petition of Marathon Petroleum Company for an Adjusted Standard to
Allow Land Disposal of a Waste Prohibited (September 17, 1992), AS 90-6.
(Dismissed.)
Still another adjusted standard proceeding relates to substantive treatment, storage, and
disposal facility requirements of the RCRA Subtitle C regulations:
AS 91-10
In re
Petition of Cabot Corporation for an Adjusted Standard (May 19, 1994),
AS 91-10. (Dismissed; secondary containment for tanks.)
One adjusted standard proceeding related to the requirements applicable to the contents of the
application for a facility permit under the RCRA Subtitle C regulations:
AS 97-11
In re
Petition of Ensign-Bickford Company for an Adjusted Standard (June 19,
1997), AS 97-11. (Denied; topographic facility map requirement.)
A final adjusted standard filed under 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.213(e) allowed the continued
operation of a lagoon that had formerly received hazardous waste but which did not comply with the
liner and leachate collection system requirements of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.321:
AS 97-3
In re
Shell Wood River Refining Company for an Adjusted Standard (May 15,
1997), AS 97-3. (Granted.)
AS 98-6
In re
Wood River Refining Co., a Division of Equilon Enterprises LLC, f/k/a
Shell Wood River Refining Co., for an Adjusted Standard (March 18, 1999),
AS 98-6. (Granted.)
In another regulatory proceeding, the Board has considered granting temporary relief from the
termination of a hazardous waste listing in the form of an emergency rule:
R91-11
Certain Hazardous Wastes from Primary Zinc Smelting and Refining, 35 Ill.
Adm. Code 721.104(b)(7)(U) (August 8, 1991), R91-11. (Filed by Big River
Zinc Corp.)
The Board has also adopted requirements limiting and restricting the landfilling of liquid
hazardous wastes, hazardous wastes containing halogenated compounds, and hazardous wastes
generally:
R81-25
Proposal for Adoption of Sanitary landfill Regulation, Rule 310: Special
Wastes; Prohibition of Landfilling of Halogenated Solvents filed by Citizens for
59
a Better Environment (October 25, 1984), R81-25; published at 8 Ill. Reg.
24124 (December 14, 1984), effective December 4, 1984.
R83-28
Definition of Liquid Hazardous Waste (February 26, 1986), R83-28; published
at 10 Ill. Reg. 4875 (March 21, 1986), effective March 7, 1986.
R86-9
Hazardous Waste Prohibitions (Emergency Rule) (October 23, 1986), R86-9;
published at 10 Ill. Reg. 19787 (November 21, 1986), effective November 5,
1986.
The Board’s action in adopting emergency regulations in R86-9 was reversed by the First
District Court of Appeals. Citizens for a Better Environment v. PCB, 152 Ill. App. 3d 105, 504
N.E.2d 166 (1st Dist. 1987).
Pub. Act 90-502, effective August 19, 1997, amended Section 22.23a of the Act to require the
Board to designate high intensity discharge lamps and fluorescent lamps as a category of universal waste
based on a proposal to be filed by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency (IEPA). The Board
adopted such amendments to the Illinois hazardous waste rules on April 2, 1998, effective April 15,
1998. Amendments of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 703, 720, 721, 724, 725, 728, and 733 (Standards For
Universal Waste Management) (April 2, 1998), R98-12.
USEPA periodically reviews the Illinois hazardous waste program. As a result of these reviews,
USEPA has granted Illinois a number of authorizations. The
Federal Register
citations for the
authorizations are listed as follows:
47 Fed. Reg. 21043 (May 17, 1982) (Phase I authorization)
51 Fed. Reg. 3778 (January 30, 1986) (Phase II authorization), effective January 31, 1986
53 Fed. Reg. 126 (January 5, 1988) (partial HSWA authorization), effective March 5, 1988
54 Fed. Reg. 37649 (September 12, 1989) (approvals codified as 40 C.F.R. 272.700 and
272.701), effective November 13, 1989
55 Fed. Reg. 7320 (March 1, 1990), effective April 30, 1990
56 Fed. Reg. 13595 (April 3, 1991), effective June 3, 1991
57 Fed. Reg. 3731 (January 31, 1992), effective March 31, 1992
59 Fed. Reg. 30525 (June 14, 1994), effective August 14, 1994
61 Fed. Reg. 10684 (March 15, 1996), effective May 14, 1996
60
61 Fed, Reg. 40520 (August 5, 1996), effective October 4, 1996
History of UIC Rules Adoption
The Board has adopted and amended Underground Injection Control (UIC) regulations in
several dockets to correspond with the federal regulations. One such docket, Amendments to Phase I,
RCRA Rules (January 13, 1983), R82-18, was a RCRA Subtitle C docket. The entire listing of all
UIC rulemakings follows:
R81-32
Underground Injection Control Regulations, Waste Disposal (May 13, 1982),
R81-32; published at 6 Ill. Reg. 12479 (October 15, 1982), effective
February 1, 1984.
R82-18
Amendments to Phase I, RCRA Rules (January 13, 1983), R82-18; published
at 7 Ill. Reg. 2518 (March 4, 1983), effective May 17, 1982.
R83-39
Amendment of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 704.122, Underground Injection Control
(December 15, 1983), R83-39; published at 7 Ill. Reg. 17338 (December 20,
1983), effective December 19, 1983. (Amendments adopted by USEPA on
April 1, 1983.)
R85-23
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (through June 30, 1985) (June 20 and
July 11, 1986), R85-23; published at 10 Ill. Reg. 13274 (August 8, 1986),
effective July 28 and 29, 1986.
R86-27
UIC Update (July 1, 1986, through December 31, 1986) (April 16, 1987),
R86-27. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the update period.)
R87-29
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1987, through June 30, 1987)
(January 21, 1988), R87-29; published at 12 Ill. Reg. 6673 (April 8, 1988),
effective March 28, 1988.
R88-2
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1987, through December 31, 1987)
(June 30, 1988), R88-2; published at 12 Ill. Reg. 13700 (August 26, 1988),
effective August 16, 1988.
R88-17
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1988, through June 30, 1988)
(December 15, 1988), R88-17; published at 13 Ill. Reg. 478 (January 13,
1989), effective December 30, 1988.
61
R89-2
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1988, through December 31, 1988,
(January 25, 1990), R89-2; published at 14 Ill. Reg. 3059 (March 2, 1990),
effective February 20, 1990.
R89-11
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1989, through June 30, 1989)
(May 24, 1990), R89-11; published at 14 Ill. Reg. 11948 (July 20, 1990),
effective July 9, 1990.
R90-5
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1989, through December 31, 1989)
(March 22, 1990), R90-5. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the update
period.)
R90-14
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1990, through June 30, 1990)
(May 23, 1991), R90-14; published at 15 Ill. Reg. 11425 (August 9, 1991),
effective July 24, 1991.
R91-4
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1990, through December 31, 1990)
(February 28, 1991), R91-4. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R91-16
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1991, through June 30, 1991)
(December 6, 1991), R91-16. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R92-4
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1990, through December 31, 1990)
(April 9, 1992), R92-4. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the update
period.)
R92-13
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1992, through June 30, 1992)
(February 4, 1993), R92-13; published at 17 Ill. Reg. 6190 (April 16, 199),
effective April 5, 1993.
R93-6
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1992, through December 31, 1992)
(August 5, 1993), R93-6; published at 17 Ill. Reg. 15641 (September 24,
1993), effective September 14, 1993.
R93-17
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1993, through June 30, 1993)
(September 23, 1993), R93-17. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R94-5
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1993, through December 31, 1993)
(November 3, 1994), R94-5; published at 18 Ill. Reg. 18244 (December 23,
1994), effective December 20, 1994.
62
R94-24
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1994, through June 30, 1994)
(October 6, 1994), R94-24. (Dismissed; the Board included the USEPA
amendments that occurred in the update period in RCRA Subtitle C Update,
USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1994, through June 30, 1994) (October 20,
1994), R94-17.
R95-4
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1994, through December 31, 1994)
(Consolidated with R95-6) (June 1 and 15, 1995), R95-4; published at 19 Ill.
Reg. 9501 (July 14, 1995), effective June 27, 1995.
R95-18
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1995, through June 30, 1995)
(October 5, 1995), R95-18. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R96-8
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1995, through December 31, 1995)
(February 15, 1996, R96-8). (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R97-3
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1996, through June 30, 1996)
(Consolidated with R96-10 and R97-5) (November 6, 1997), R97-3;
published at 22 Ill. Reg. 256 (January 2, 1998), effective December 16, 1997.
R97-19
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1996, through December 31, 1996)
(May 1, 1997), R97-19. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the update
period.)
R98-3
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1997, through June 30, 1997)
(Consolidated R97-21 and R98-5) (August 20, 1998), R98-3; published at 22
Ill. Reg. 17930 (October 9, 1998), effective September 18, 1998.
R98-19
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1997, through December 31, 1997)
(February 19, 1998), R98-19. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
R99-7
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1998, through June 3, 1998)
(Consolidated with R98-21 and R99-2) (December 17, 1998), R99-7;
published at 23 Ill. Reg. 1695 (February 5, 1999), effective January 19, 1999.
R99-13
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1998, through December 31, 1998)
(February 18, 1999), R99-13. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the
update period.)
63
R00-3
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (January 1, 1999, through June 3, 1999)
(August 19, 1999), R00-3. (Dismissed; no USEPA amendments in the update
period.)
R00-11
UIC Update, USEPA Regulations (July 1, 1999, through December 31, 1999),
R00-11. (Reserved docket.)
The Board has twice considered an adjusted standard from a UIC land disposal restriction,
pursuant to the procedures outlined above with respect to the RCRA Subtitle C program:
AS 92-8
In re
Petition of Cabot Corporation for Adjusted Standard (February 17,
1994), AS 92-8. (Granted; no migration exception.)
AS 96-3
In re
Petition of Cabot Corporation for Adjusted Standard (March 7, 1996),
AS 92-8. (Granted modification of
In re
Petition of Cabot Corporation for
Adjusted Standard (February 17, 1994), AS 92-8. (No migration exception.))
USEPA authorized the Illinois UIC program on March 3, 1984, at 49 Fed. Reg. 3991
(February 1, 1984); codified that approval as 40 C.F.R. 147, Subpart O, at 49 Fed. Reg. 20197
(May 11, 1984); and amended the authorization at 53 Fed. Reg. 43087 (October 25, 1988) and 56
Fed. Reg. 9414 (March 6, 1991).
Illinois Environmental Protection IEPA or Board Action
Section 7.2(a)(5) of the Act requires the Board to specify for which portions of the program
USEPA will retain decision making authority. Based on the general division of functions within the Act
and other Illinois statutes, the Board is also to specify which State agency is to make decisions.
In situations in which the Board has determined that USEPA will retain decision-making
authority, the Board has replaced “Regional Administrator” with USEPA, so as to avoid specifying
which office within USEPA is to make a decision.
In some identical-in-substance rules, certain decisions pertaining to a permit application are not
appropriate for IEPA to consider. In determining the general division of authority between IEPA and
the Board, the following factors should be considered:
1.
Whether the person making the decision is applying a Board regulation, or taking action
contrary to (“waiving”) a Board regulation. It generally takes some form of Board
action to “waive” a Board regulation.
2.
Whether there is a clear standard for action such that the Board can give meaningful
review to an IEPA decision.
64
3.
Whether the action would result in exemption from the permit requirement itself. If so,
Board action is generally required.
4.
Whether the decision amounts to “determining, defining or implementing environmental
control standards” within the meaning of Section 5(b) of the Act. If so, it must be made
by the Board.
There are four common classes of Board decisions: variance, adjusted standard, site-specific
rulemaking, and enforcement. The first three are methods by which a regulation can be temporarily
postponed (variance) or adjusted to meet specific situations (adjusted standard or site-specific
rulemaking). There often are differences in the nomenclature for these decisions between the USEPA
and Board regulations.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
I, Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control Board, do hereby certify
that the above opinion was adopted on the 18th day of May 2000 by a vote of 6-0.
Dorothy M. Gunn, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board