ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    11,
    1994
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    )
    R94—17
    RCRA SUBTITLE C UPDATE, USEPA
    )
    (Identical in Substance Rules)
    (REGULATIONS 1-1-94 THROUGH
    )
    6—30—94)
    )
    Proposal for Public Comment.
    PROPOSED OPINION OF THE BOARD
    (by E. Dunham):
    Pursuant to Section 22.4(a)
    of the Environmental Protection
    Act
    (Act), the Board proposes amendments to the RCRA hazardous
    waste
    (RCRA)
    regulations.
    Section 22.4(a) provides for quick adoption of regulations
    that are “identical in substance”
    to federal regulations adopted
    by U.S. EPA to implement Sections 3001 through 3005 of the
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976
    (RCRA,
    42 U.S.C.
    SS
    6921—6925)
    and that Title VII of the Act and Section
    5 of the
    Administrative Procedure Act
    (APA)
    shall not apply.
    Because this
    rulemaking
    is not subject to Section
    5 of the APA,
    it is not
    subject to first notice or to second notice review by the Joint
    Committee on Administrative Rules
    (JCAR).
    The federal RCRA
    Subtitle C regulations are found at 40 CFR 260 through 268,
    270
    through 271, and, more recently,
    279.
    This opinion supports an opinion adopted on the same day.
    The Board will cause the proposed amendments to be
    published in
    the Illinois Rec~isterand will hold the docket open for 45 days
    after the date of publication to receive public comments.
    FEDERAL ACTIONS CONSIDERED IN THIS RULEMAKING
    This rulemaking updates the Illinois RCRA Subtitle C rules
    to correspond with federal amendments made in the period from
    January
    1 through June 30,
    1994.
    The USEPA actions during this
    period are as follows:
    Federal Action
    summary
    59 Fed. Reg. 458,
    Determination not to regulate wastes
    January 4,
    1994
    from wood surface protection as listed
    hazardous wastes; update of SW-846 to
    include a new method; addition of four
    chemicals to listing of hazardous
    constituents
    59 Fed. Reg.
    8362,
    Amendment of treatability study
    February 18,
    1994
    exclusion from definition of solid waste

    2
    59 Fed. Reg.
    10550,
    Clarification of used oil regulations to
    March
    4,
    1994
    clarify that used oil mixed with crude
    oil or natural gas liquids are exempted
    from the used oil regulations; exemption
    of crude oil mixed with small amounts of
    used oil that is destined for insertion
    into a refining process; exclusions for
    certain activities from regulation as
    used oil processing
    59 Fed. Reg.
    13891,
    Amendment of handling codes for periodic
    March 24,
    1994
    T/S/D facility reports
    59 Fed. Reg. 28484,
    Corrections to the wood surface
    June 2,
    1994
    protection determination amendments
    59 Fed.
    Reg.
    29372,
    Response to Supreme court remand in City
    June 7,
    1994
    of Chicago v. Environmental Defense
    Fund,
    Inc.,
    ——
    U.S.
    ——,
    114
    S.
    Ct.
    1588,
    128 L. Ed. 2d 302
    (1994):
    U.S. EPA
    granted an extension for facilities
    managing waste-to-energy facility ash to
    file a Part A permit application.
    59 Fed. Reg.
    29958,
    Amendment of references to the
    June 10,
    1994
    prescribed form for a letter of credit
    Used for RCRA Subtitle C, underground
    injection,
    and underground storage tanks
    to indicate copyright
    The June 7,
    1994 action did not result in federal regulatory
    amendments.
    Rather,
    it constituted a U.S. EPA determination that
    substantial confusion existed relating to the regulatory status
    of a waste, and it granted an extension of the time by which
    facilities managing the waste must file a Part A permit
    application.
    Although no Board action is required based on the
    June
    7 federal action, we undertake an amendment discussed in
    greater detail below.
    PUBLIC COMMENTS
    The Board will receive public comment on this proposal for a
    period of 45 days following its publication in the Illinois
    Register.
    The Board will delay filing any adopted rules with the
    Secretary of State for 30 days after adoption, particularly to
    allow U.S. EPA review.
    The complete text of the proposed
    amendments appears in a separate order adopted this day.
    During the pendency of the prior update docket, R94-7, the
    Board received a request from JCAR staff that the Board make
    certain minor corrections to the text of Part 739.
    We have added
    those corrections to this docket.
    Those minor corrections

    3
    involve Sections. 739.152(b) (1) (B)
    and
    (b) (6) (H) (iii)
    and
    739.171(a).
    The nature of the corrections is readily apparent on
    the face of the order,
    so the Board will discuss them no further.
    HISTORY OF RCRA SUBTITLE
    C, UST and UIC ADOPTION
    AGENCY OR BOARD ACTION?
    EDITORIAL CONVENTIONS
    The Board appended three routine discussions at the end of
    this opinion.
    The first is a summary history of the Illinois
    RCRA
    Subtitle C and UIC programs.
    It lists all actions taken to
    adopt and maintain these programs since their inceptions.
    It
    includes a listing of all site-specific rulemaking and adjusted
    standards proceedings filed that relate to these programs.
    It
    also lists all U.S. EPA program authorizations issued to date.
    The second is a discussion of how the Board codifies requirements
    that call for state determinations,
    such as for exemptions,
    exceptions,
    etc.
    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.
    DISCUSSION
    The federal actions that underlie this proceeding require
    amendment of the Illinois RCRA Subtitle C regulations.
    This
    discussion briefly focuses on each by subject matter, indicating
    the specific details of the actions taken by the Board where
    pertinent.
    Revised Reference for Letter of Credit Form—-Sections 704.240
    &
    724.251
    U.S. EPA revised references to the required form for using a
    letter of credit to provide financial assurance under the RCRA
    Subtitle C, underground injection control, and underground
    storage tank
    (RCRA Subtitle
    I)
    programs.
    U.S. EPA added that the
    form is copyrighted material.
    The amendments appeared at 59 Fed.
    Reg.
    29958, on June 10,
    1994.
    U.S. EPA amended 40 CFR 144.70(d)
    (UIC)
    (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 704.240),
    264.151(d)
    and
    (k)
    (RCRA
    Subtitle
    C)
    (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code
    724.251), and 280.99
    (UST).
    The Board has followed the federal amendments without
    deviation.
    We included the UIC amendment in this docket for the
    sake of expedience,
    since the amendment is simple and
    straightforward and it is easier to deal with it together with
    the parallel RCRA Subtitle C amendment.
    Since Section 22.4(d) (3)
    expressly excludes financial assurance regulation by the Board in
    the UST area, no amendments are necessary to Part 731.
    The Board
    invites comment on our approach to
    codification of these federal
    amendments.

    4
    Decision Not to List Cholorophenolic Wood Surface Protection
    Wastes——Sections 720.111
    & 720.Appendix H
    U.S. EPA decided not to regulate certain wood surface
    protection wastes as listed hazardous wastes on January
    4,
    1994,
    at 59 Fed. Reg.
    458.
    U.S. EPA simultaneously announced its
    intent to reassess its determination if use of chlorophenolics
    for wood surface preservation resumes in the future.
    There is
    presently no active pesticide registration for chlorophenolics in
    the United States, and registration is required under the Federal
    Insecticide,
    Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act
    (FIFRA)
    for
    production and use of any pesticide in this country.
    Although it decided not to regulate the wastes as listed
    wastes, U.S. EPA amended “Test Methods for Evaluating Solid
    Waste,
    Physical/Chemical Methods”
    (SW—846)
    to add Method 4010,
    an
    immunoassay method for the presence of pentachiorophenol.
    Thus,
    U.S. EPA amended the reference to SW-846 at 40 CFR 260.11(a)
    (corresponding with 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 720.111(b))
    to include
    Update IIA.
    U.S. EPA corrected the reference
    ,
    at
    59 Fed.
    Reg.
    28484, on June 2,
    1994,
    to indicate that Updates II and hA to
    SW-846 are available from the Methods Information Communication
    Exchange (MICE)
    Service, rather than from the Government Printing
    Office.
    On January 4,
    1994, U.S. EPA also added four alkaline earth
    salts of chlorophenates to the list of hazardous constituents of
    40 CFR 261.Appendix VIII (corresponding with 35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    721.Appendix H).
    Added were potassium pentachlorophenate,
    sodium
    pentachiorophenate, and the sodium and potassium salts of
    2,3,4,6-Tetrachiorophenol.
    (U.S.
    EPA,
    in deciding to add these
    four compounds, decided not to similarly add two other related
    compounds:
    octachlorodibenzodioxin
    (OCDD)
    and octachlorodibenzo-
    furan
    (OCDF).)
    The Board has followed the federal amendments without
    deviation.
    The Board invites comment on our approach to
    codification of these federal amendments.
    Response to City of Chicago remand/Extension of Permit
    Application Deadline for Facilities Managing Ash from Waste-to-
    Ener~vFacilities——Section 721.104
    On June 7,
    1994,
    at 59 Fed. Reg.
    29372, U.S. EPA formally
    responded to the decision in Environmental Defense Fund.
    Inc.
    v.
    City of Chicago,
    ——
    U.S.
    ——,
    114 S.
    Ct.
    1588,
    128
    L.
    Ed.
    2d 302
    (1994).
    In that case, the Court determined that section 3001(1)
    of RCRA (42 U.S.C.
    § 6921(i)) does not exempt ash from the
    incineration of non—hazardous municipal waste from regulation as
    a hazardous waste.
    Rather, the incinerator must use the
    appropriate methods to determine whether its waste exhibits a
    characteristic of hazardous waste.
    If the waste exhibits a

    5
    characteristic, the generator must manage it as a hazardous
    waste.
    The history behind this is summarized in the Federal
    Register discussion of the extension.
    The Board repeats a few
    highlights here.
    In 1980,
    40 CFR 261.4(b) (1)
    (corresponding with
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 721.104(b) (1)) excluded municipal solid waste
    burned for energy recovery from regulation as hazardous waste if
    certain conditions are met.
    As part of the Hazardous and Solid
    Waste amendments of 1984
    (HSWA),
    Congress codified a
    clarification of the exclusion at section 3001(i), which U.S. EPA
    codified in 1985, announcing that it interpreted the exclusion to
    not include the ash from burning the wastes.
    Later,
    in the late
    80s,
    U.S. EPA took the position that the ash was exempted also.
    The Environmental Defense Fund filed two suits,
    one involving the
    City of Chicago,
    in the Northern District of Illinois, and
    another involving Wheelabrator Technologies,
    in the Southern
    District of New York,
    seeking enforcement of the 1985
    interpretation.
    The Second Circuit ultimately ruled in favor of
    the exemption in Environmental Defense Fund,
    Inc.
    v. Wheelabrator
    Technologies,
    Inc., 931 F.2d 211
    (2d Cir.),
    cert denied,
    112
    S.
    Ct.
    453
    (1991).
    The Seventh Circuit ultimately ruled that the
    ash was not included in the exemption in City of Chicago v.
    Environmental Defense Fund,
    Inc.,
    948 F.2d 345
    (7th Cir.
    1991).
    The Supreme Court affirmed the Seventh Circuit’s decision, and
    the City of Chicago appealed to the Supreme Court.
    The Supreme
    Court’s May 2,
    1994 affirmance of the Seventh Circuit’s decision
    resulted in the U.S. EPA action of June 7,
    1994.
    U.S. EPA determined that substantial confusion existed as to
    whether the ash was a hazardous waste,
    so, pursuant to 40 CFR
    270.10(e) (2),
    it is allowing persons managing the ash until
    December 7,
    1994 to file a Part A permit application.
    U.S. EPA
    will not require immediate RCRA § 3010 notification.
    This will
    allow those facilities that submit the application to continue
    managing the waste as they operate under interim status.
    However, the facilities must immediately comply with the
    appropriate hazardous waste management standards.
    From the
    perspective of the land disposal restrictions, U.S. EPA will
    consider the ash as a “newly—listed” waste.
    Land disposal
    restrictions will go into effect when U.S. EPA promulgates them--
    in about six months.
    The effect of the federal action varies from state to state,
    depending on the state’s authorization status and whether it has
    a codified ash exemption.
    Illinois does not have a codified ash
    exemption, so the Supreme Court’s decision went into effect in
    Illinois,
    as a matter of federal law, when handed down and no
    program revision is necessary to comply with the federal
    preemption requirements.
    Nevertheless, although this federal action does not

    6
    technically require any Board action,
    the Court’s decision
    amounts to a change of law.
    Since the construction of the
    Illinois
    RCRA
    Subtitle C regulations depends so heavily on the
    federal interpretation of the statute and U.S. EPA rules, the
    decision is tantamount to the expiration of an exemption.
    Despite the fact that U.S. EPA has not amended its rules based on
    the remand, the Board will undertake an amendment.
    To notify the
    regulated community of the change in
    law, the Board
    is adding an
    explanatory Board Note at the end of Section 721.104(b).
    This
    note explains that the Supreme Court has determined that the ash
    is not covered by the exclusion,
    and persons managing ash that
    meets the criteria for a characteristic waste,
    under Subpart C,
    must submit a Part A permit application by December 7,
    1994.
    The
    Board invites comment on its approach to the City of Chicago
    remand and U.S. EPA response.
    Expansion of Treatability Study Exclusion--Section 721.104
    U.S. EPA expanded an existing exclusion from the definition
    of solid waste for varying amounts of hazardous waste used for
    treatability study.
    The amendments to 40 CFR 261.4(e) (2),
    (e) (3), and
    (f) (3) through
    (f) (5)
    (corresponding with 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 721.104(e)(2),
    (e)(3), and
    (f)(3)
    through
    (f)(5))
    occurred at 59 Fed. Reg.
    8362, on February 18,
    1994.
    The amendments essentially changed the usage “soils, water
    or debris contaminated with hazardous waste” to “media
    contaminated with hazardous waste” and expanded the amounts of
    these materials that are exempted.
    Unaffected was the amount of
    hazardous waste itself that is exempted from regulation as
    hazardous waste.
    Thus,
    exempted for study are up to 10,000 kg
    (formerly 1,000 kg)
    of media contaminated with hazardous waste or
    up to 2,500 kg
    (formerly 250 kg)
    of media contaminated with acute
    hazardous waste.
    (The exemption remains for up to 1,000 kg of
    hazardous waste or up to 1 kg of acute hazardous waste.)
    Also,
    the generator or accumulator may ship in a single shipment up to
    10,000 kg (formerly 1,000 kg)
    of media contaminated with
    hazardous waste or 2,500 kg (formerly
    1 kg)
    of media contaminated
    with acute hazardous waste.
    (Unaffected was the shipment limit
    of 1,000 kg of hazardous waste or 1 kg of acute hazardous waste.)
    Finally, extensions of the time are available for
    treatability studies.
    An extension of time is available for up
    to an additional 5,000 kg (formerly 500 kg)
    of media contaminated
    with hazardous waste or 2,500 kg (formerly
    1 kg)
    of media
    contaminated with acute hazardous waste.
    (The extension limits
    of 500 kg and
    1 kg remain for hazardous waste and acute hazardous
    waste, respectively.)
    The amendments also allow up to an
    additional two years of study for bioremediation studies.
    The Board has followed the federal amendments without
    significant deviation.
    We have made minor clarifying revisions

    7
    to the federal base text of Section 720.104(e) (3) (A).
    The Board
    invites comment on its approach to codification of these federal
    amendments.
    Revised
    TISID
    Facility Reporting Codes-—Sections 724.Appendix A
    &
    725.Appendix A
    U.S. EPA revised the codes used by hazardous waste
    treatment,
    storage, and disposal
    (T/S/D)
    facility reports in a
    set of technical amendments made on March 24,
    1994, at 59 Fed.
    Reg. 13891.
    Amended were 40 CFR 264, Appendix I and 265,
    Appendix I
    (corresponding with 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 724.Appendix A
    and 725.Appendix A).
    Both appendices,
    formerly only referenced
    in the Illinois RCRA Subtitle C regulations,
    are now formally
    incorporated by reference.
    The Board has followed the federal amendments without
    deviation by updating the existing incorporations by reference.
    The Board
    invites comment on its approach to codification of
    these federal amendments.
    Used Oil Mixed with Crude Oil or Natural Gas Liquids
    Exemptions——Sections 739.100, 739.110~.739.120,
    739.141. 739.144,
    739.146,
    739.153
    & 739.163
    On March
    4,
    1994,
    at 59
    Fed.
    Reg.
    10550, U.S. EPA amended
    the used oil regulations, primarily to revise a number of
    exemptions and exclusions.
    U.S. EPA amended 40 CFR 279.1
    (definitions of “petroleum refining facility” and “used oil
    transfer facility”)
    (corresponding with 35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    739.100), 279.10(b) (2) (iii) and
    (g)
    (corresponding with 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 739.110(b) (2) (C) and
    (g)),
    279.20(b)(2)
    (corresponding
    with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 739.120(b) (2)), 279.41(c)
    (corresponding
    with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 739.141(c)), 279.46(a) (5) and
    (b)(5)
    (corresponding with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 739.146(a) (5) and
    (b) (5)),
    279.53(c)
    (corresponding with 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 739.153(c)), and
    279.63(c)
    (corresponding with 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 739.163(c)).
    First, the amendments to sections 279.1 and 279.10(g)
    (739.100 and 739.110(g))
    expand an exemption for certain used oil
    mixtures from regulation.
    Now exempted from regulation are the
    transportation and storage of mixtures of small amounts
    (less
    than one percent)
    of used oil and crude oil that are inserted
    into a crude oil pipeline or petroleum refining process at a
    point before catalytic cracking or distillation.
    Expressly
    regulated, however,
    is all management of the used oil up to the
    point of insertion into the pipeline or refining process.
    Second, the amendments to sections 279.1,
    279.10(b) (2) (iii),
    and 279.20(b) (2)
    and 279.41(c)
    (739.100, 739.110(b) (2) (C), and
    739.120(b) (2) and 739.141(c))
    add two exemptions from the used
    oil processor and re—refiner requirements.
    The first added

    8
    exemption is that a transporter that filters used oil from oil-
    bearing transformers and turbines and returns it for its original
    use
    is not regulated as a processor or re—refiner.
    The second is
    that a certain generator activities are not subject to the used
    oil processor requirements.
    These activities include filtering,
    cleaning, or otherwise reconditioning before reuse by the
    generator; separating used oil from wastewater generated on-site
    to make the wastewater acceptable for discharge or reuse; using
    oil mist collectors to remove oil from in—plant air for continued
    recirculation; draining or otherwise removing excess used oil
    from materials containing or otherwise contaminated; and
    filtering, separating,
    or otherwise reconditioning used oil
    before burning it in a space heater.
    Third,
    U.S. EPA amended section 279.46(a) (5) and (b)(5)
    (739.146(a) (5) and (b)(5))
    so that an intermediate rail
    transporter is no longer required to sign records for loads of
    used oil.
    Generally, a used oil transporter is required to sign
    for acceptance and delivery of used oil and maintain certain
    records.
    An intermediate rail transporter must still maintain
    the records, but needs no longer sign for acceptance or delivery.
    Finally, the federal amendments to sections
    279.10(b) (1) (ii),
    279.53(c), and 279.63(c)
    (739.l10(b)(1)(B),
    739.153(c),
    and 739.163(c))
    remove the price for the third
    edition of “Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste,
    Physical/
    Chemical Methods”
    (SW-846)
    from the text of the rules.
    U.S. EPA
    noted that the price for that volume was $319.00, rather than the
    $110.00 formerly erroneously codified in the regulations.
    The Board has followed the federal amendments without
    significant deviation.
    We have made minor clarifying revisions
    to the federal base text of Sections 739.110(g) (4), 739.120(b),
    739.141(c),
    and 739.146(a) (5) (A) and (b)(5)(A).
    The Board
    invites comment on its approach to codification of these federal
    amendments.
    Corrected References to SPCC Regulations--Sections 724.152,
    724.156, 725.152. 725.156
    & 739.152
    40 CFR 264.52(b),
    264.56(d) (2), 265.52(b),
    265.56(d) (2), and
    279.52(b) (2) (ii) and
    (b) (6) (iv) (B)
    (corresponding with 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 724.52(b),
    724.56(d) (2), 725.52(b),
    725.56(d) (2), and
    739.52(b)(2)(B) and
    (b)(6)(D)(ii)) include references to the
    federal Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasures
    (SPCC)
    Plan
    regulations at 40 CFR 1510.
    Formerly codified at federal part
    1510, U.S. EPA redesignated those regulations as 40 CFR 300 on
    July 16,
    1982, at 47 Fed.
    Reg.
    31202.
    U.S. EPA never updated the
    references to the SPCC regulations contained in the hazardous
    waste rules.
    In fact, when U.S. EPA added part 279, on September
    10,
    1992,
    it used the invalid references to the SPCC rules.

    9
    Prompted by public inquiries regarding the intent of the
    regulations, the Board is correcting all six references to the
    SPCC rules to correctly refer to 40 CFR 300.
    We undertake this
    action without regard to the fact that U.S. EPA has not moved to
    make this correction.
    We invite public comment on these
    corrections.
    General Revisions
    The Board will continue to change its method of referring to
    the United States Environmental Protection Agency in this present
    rulemaking that we began in update docket R93-16 and continued in
    R94—7.
    We now refer to “U.S.
    EPA”, which we believe is a more
    conventional and clearly understood in the context of the
    Illinois regulations than either “USEPA” or “EPA”.
    We further
    began to refer to the “U.S.
    EPA hazardous waste number” and “U.S.
    EPA document number” for similar clarity.
    This changed usage
    occurs only in the Sections opened in this proceeding,
    and we
    will continue this conversion in future rulemakings as additional
    Sections otherwise become open to amendment.
    The Board also continues its move toward presentation of
    equations and expressions in standard scientific notation.
    Thus,
    in Section 721.Appendix H, we have used the appropriate chemical
    notation.
    For example, we replaced “H3A5O4” with “H3A5O4”, as
    formerly used for arsenic acid.
    We believe that any person
    sophisticated enough to understand the chemical equations will
    more readily recognize them in the standard mathematical
    notation,
    as they appear in the federal original.
    In that
    Section we also corrected the chemical name in the entry for
    aldrin by adding a missing parentheses.
    The Board also
    substituted “or” for
    “I”
    in Section 720.104
    (b) (7) (L)
    and
    (b) (7)
    (Q)
    and “and”
    for
    “I”
    in Section 720.104(b) (7) and
    (b) (7) (N)
    The Board also used this opportunity to make a number of
    corrections to punctuation, grammar, and cross—reference format
    throughout the opened text.
    Where the cross—references within
    the text to other segments of the Illinois Administrative Code
    did not formerly comport with the standard format, the Board made
    the necessary changes.
    We also changed “who” to “that” and “he”
    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.
    HISTORY OF RCRA Subtitle
    C, UST and UIC ADOPTION
    The Illinois UIC (Underground Injection Control), RCRA

    10
    (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act)
    Subtitle C, and UST
    (Underground Storage Tank)
    regulations, together with more
    stringent state regulations particularly applicable to hazardous
    waste,
    include the following Parts of Title
    35 of the Illinois
    Administrative Code:
    700
    Outline of Waste Disposal Regulations
    702
    RCRA Subtitle C and UIC Permit Programs
    703
    RCRA
    Subtitle C Permit Program
    704
    UIC Permit Program
    705
    Procedures for Permit Issuance
    709
    Wastestream Authorizations
    720
    General
    721
    Identification and Listing
    722
    Generator Standards
    723
    Transporter Standards
    724
    Final TSD Standards
    725
    Interim Status TSD Standards
    726
    Specific Wastes and Management Facilities
    728
    USEPA Land Disposal Restrictions
    729
    Landfills:
    Prohibited Wastes
    730
    UIC Operating Requirements
    731
    Underground Storage Tanks
    732
    Petroleum Underground Storage Tanks
    738
    Hazardous Waste Injection Restrictions
    739
    Standards for the Management of Used Oil
    Special provisions for
    RCRA
    Subtitle C cases are included in
    Parts
    102,
    103,
    104 and 106 of the Board’s procedural rules.
    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.
    Dockets R81-22 and R82-18 dockets dealt with
    the Phase I
    RCRA
    Subtitle C regulations.
    U.S. EPA granted
    Illinois Phase
    I authorization on May 17,
    1982, at 47 Fed. Reg.
    21043.
    The Board adopted
    RCRA
    Subtitle C Phase II regulations in
    Parts 703 and 724 in dockets R82-19 and R83-24.
    U.S. EPA granted
    final authorization of the Illinois
    RCRA
    Subtitle C “base
    program” on January 31,
    1986,
    at 51 Fed.
    Reg. 3778
    (January 30,
    1986).
    U.S. EPA granted authorization to “Cluster
    I revisions”
    to the Illinois program and granted partial Hazardous and Solid
    Waste Amendments
    (HSWA)
    (Pub.
    L.
    98—616, Nov.
    8,
    1984)
    authorization effective March
    5,
    1988, at 53
    Fed.
    Reg.
    126
    (January
    5,
    1988).
    U.S. EPA authorized certain subsequent
    amendments and granted further partial HSWA authorizations
    effective April
    30,
    1990, at 55 Fed.
    Reg. 7320
    (March
    1,
    1990),
    and June 3,
    1991,
    at 56 Fed. Reg.
    13595
    (April
    3,
    1991); and
    August 14,
    1994,
    at 59 Fed. Reg. 30525
    (June 14,
    1994).
    U.S. EPA
    codified its approvals of the Illinois program at 40 CFR 272.700

    11
    and 272.701 on November 13,
    1989,
    at 54
    Fed.
    Reg.
    37649
    (Sep.
    12,
    1989), and on March 31,
    1992,
    at
    57
    Fed. Reg.
    3731
    (Jan.
    31,
    1992).
    The entire listing of all RCRA Subtitle C identical in
    substance rulemakings follows
    (with the period of corresponding
    federal revisions indicated in parentheses):
    R81—22
    45 PCB 317,
    September
    16, 1981
    & February
    4,
    1982;
    6 Ill. Reg.
    4828, April 23,
    1982, effective May
    17,
    1982.
    (5/19/80 through 10/1/81)
    R82—18
    51 PCB 31, January 13,
    1983;
    7
    Ill. Reg.
    2518,
    March
    4,
    1983, effective May 17,
    1982.
    (11/11/81
    through 6/24/82)
    R82—19
    53 PCB 131, July 26,
    1983,
    7
    Ill.
    Reg.
    13999,
    October 28,
    1983,
    effective October
    2,
    1983.
    (11/23/81 through 10/29/82)
    R83—24
    55 PCB 31, December 15,
    1983,
    8
    Ill.
    Reg.
    200,
    January
    6,
    1984, effective December 27,
    1983.
    (Corrections to R82-19)
    R84—9
    64 PCB 427 & 521,
    June 13
    &
    27,
    1985;
    9 Ill. Reg.
    11964, August
    2,
    1985, effective July
    8
    & 24,
    1985.
    (1/19/83 through 4/24/84)
    R85—22
    67 PCB 175,
    479, December 20,
    1985 and January 9,
    1986;
    10
    Ill. Reg.
    968, January 17,
    1986,
    effective January
    2,
    1986.
    (4/25/84 through
    6/30/85)
    R86—1
    71 PCB 110, July 11,
    1986;
    10 Ill.
    Reg.
    13998,
    August 22,
    1986, effective August
    12,
    1986.
    (7/1/85 through 1/31/86)
    R86—19
    73 PCB 467, October 23,
    1986;
    10 Ill. Reg.
    20630,
    December
    12,
    1986,
    effective December
    2,
    1986.
    (2/1/86 through 3/31/86)
    R86—28
    75 PCB 306, February 5,
    1987;
    and 76 PCB 195,
    March
    5,
    1987;
    11 Ill.
    Reg.
    6017, April
    3,
    1987,
    effective March 23,
    1987.
    Correction at 77 PCB
    235,
    April
    16,
    1987;
    11 Ill. Reg.
    8684, May
    1,
    1987,
    effective April
    21,
    1987.
    (4/1/86 through
    6/30/86)
    R86—46
    79 PCB 676,
    July 16,
    1987;
    11
    Ill. Reg.
    13435,
    August 14,
    1987,
    effective August 4,
    1987.
    (7/1/86 through 9/30/86)
    R87—5
    82 PCB 391, October 15,
    1987;
    11 Ill. Reg.
    19280,
    November 30,
    1987,
    effective November 10
    &
    12,

    12
    1987.
    (10/1/86 through 12/31/86)
    R87—26
    84 PCB 491, December
    3,
    1987;
    12
    Ill.
    Reg.
    2450,
    January 29,
    1988,
    effective January 15,
    1988.
    (1/1/87 through 6/30/87)
    R87—32
    Correction to R86—1;
    81 PCB 163, September
    4,
    1987;
    11 Ill. Reg.
    16698, October
    16,
    1987,
    effective September 30,
    1987.
    R87—39
    90 PCB 267,
    June 16,
    1988;
    12 Ill.
    Reg.
    12999,
    August 12,
    1988, effective July 29,
    1988.
    (7/1/87
    through 12/31/87)
    R88—16
    93 PCB 513, November 17,
    1988;
    13
    Ill. Reg.
    447,
    January 13,
    1989,
    effective December 28,
    1988.
    (1/1/88 through 7/31/88)
    R89—1
    103 PCB 179, September 13,
    1989;
    13 Ill. Reg.
    18278, November 27,
    1989,
    effective November 13,
    1989.
    (8/1/88 through 12/31/88)
    R89—9
    109 PCB 343, March
    8,
    1990;
    14
    Ill. Reg.
    6225,
    April 27,
    1990,
    effective April 16,
    1990.
    (1/1/89
    through 6/30/89)
    R90—2
    113 PCB 131,
    July
    3,
    1990;
    14
    111. Reg.
    14401,
    September
    7,
    1990,
    effective August 22,
    1990.
    (7/1/89 through 12/31/89)
    R90-11
    121 PCB 97, April 11,
    1991;
    corrected at 122 PCB
    305, May 23,
    1991; corrected at 125 PCB 117,
    August
    8,
    1991; uncorrected at 125 PCB 435, August
    22,
    1991;
    15 Ill.
    Reg.
    9323, effective June 17,
    1991.
    (Third Third Land Disposal Restrictions)
    (4/1/90 through 6/30/90)
    R90-17
    Delisting Procedures
    (See below)
    R91—1
    125 PCB 119, August
    8,
    1991;
    15
    Ill.
    Reg.
    14446,
    effective September 30,
    1991.
    (Wood Preserving
    Rules)
    (7/1/90 through 12/30/90)
    R91—13
    132 PCB 263, April
    9,
    1992;
    16 Ill.
    Reg. 9489,
    effective June 9,
    1992.
    (Boilers and Industrial
    Furnaces
    (BIF5) Rules)
    (1/1/91 through 6/30/91)
    R91—26
    129 PCB 235, January
    9,
    1992;
    16 Ill.
    Reg.
    2600,
    effective February
    3,
    1992.
    (Wood Preserving
    Rules Compliance Dates)
    R92—1
    136 PCB 121, September 17,
    1992;
    16 Ill. Reg.

    13
    17636, effective November
    6,
    1992.
    (7/1/91
    through 12/31/91)
    R92—10
    138 PCB 549,
    January 21,
    1993;
    17 Ill. Reg.
    5625,
    effective March 26,
    1993.
    (Leak Detection Systems
    (LDS) Rules)
    (1/1/92 through 6/30/92)
    R93—4
    ——
    PCB
    ——,
    September
    23,
    1993;
    17 Ill. Reg. 20545,
    effective November 22,
    1993.
    (Used Oil Rules)
    (7/1/92 through 12/31/92)
    R93-16
    --
    PCB
    —-,
    March 17,
    1994,
    Supplemental opinion
    and order on April 21,
    1994.
    (1/1/93 through
    6/30/93)
    R94—7
    ——
    PCB
    ——,
    June 23,
    1994,
    18 Ill.
    Reg.
    ——,
    effective July 29,
    1994.
    (7/1/93 through
    12/31/93)
    R94—17
    This docket.
    (1/1/94 through 6/30/94)
    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).)
    The Board added to the federal listings of hazardous waste
    by listing dioxins pursuant to Section 22.4(d)
    of the Act:
    R84—34
    61 PCB 247, November 21,
    1984;
    8 Ill. Reg.
    24562,
    December 21,
    1984,
    effective December 11,
    1984.
    This was repealed by R85—22, which included adoption of U.S.
    EPA’S dioxin listings.
    Section 22.4(d) was repealed by P.A.
    85—
    1048,
    effective January 1,
    1989.
    The Board has adopted U.S. EPA delistings at the request of
    Amoco and Envirite
    (the date of the corresponding federal action
    is included in parentheses):
    R85—2
    69 PCB 314, April
    24,
    1986;
    10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    8112, May
    16,
    1986,
    effective May 2,
    1986.
    (9/13/85)
    R87—30
    90 PCB 665, June
    30,
    1988;
    12
    Ill. Reg.
    12070,
    July 22,
    1988,
    effective July
    12,
    1988.
    (11/14/86)
    R91—12
    128 PCB 369, December
    19,
    1991;
    16 Ill. Reg.
    2155,
    effective January 27,
    1992.
    (USX Corp.)
    Subsequently, upon the April
    30, 1990 federal authorization
    of Illinois granting waste delistings,
    U.S. EPA transferred

    14
    pending delisting petitions to the Board.
    The Board docketed
    these as site—specific rulemaking proceedings
    (the name of the
    petitioner waste generator appears in parentheses):
    R90—18
    Dismissed at 123 PCB 65, June
    6,
    1991.
    (USX
    Corp., South Works)
    R90—19
    Dismissed at 116 PCB 199, November
    8,
    1990.
    (Woodward Governor Co.)
    R90—23
    Dismissed at 124 PCB 149, July 11,
    1991.
    (Keystone Steel & Wire Co.)
    The Board has modified the delisting procedures to allow the
    use of adjusted standards in lieu of site—specific rulemakings:
    R90—l7
    119 PCB 181, February 28,
    1991;
    15
    Ill.
    Reg. 7934,
    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
    (generator name
    in parentheses):
    AS89—4
    Dismissed at 105 PCB 269, November 15,
    1989.
    (Safety—Kleen Corp.)
    AS89—5
    Dismissed at 113 PCB 111, July 3,
    1990.
    (Safety—
    Kleen Corp.)
    AS9O-7
    Dismissed at 124 PCB 125, July 11,
    1991.
    (Quantum
    Chemical Co.)
    Waste generators have filed Part 106 adjusted standard
    petitions for hazardous waste delistings with the Board pursuant
    to Section 720.122
    (generator name in parentheses):
    AS91-1
    Granted at 130 PCB 113, February
    6,
    1992,
    and
    modified at 133 PCB 189, April 23,
    1992.
    (Keystone Steel
    & Wire Co.)
    AS91-3
    Granted at 139 PCB 121, February 4,
    1993;
    opinion
    issued at 140 PCB
    --,
    March 11,
    1993.
    (Peoria
    Disposal Co.)
    AS93-7
    Granted at
    --
    PCB
    --,
    February 17,
    1994.
    (Keystone Steel
    & Wire Co.)
    AS94-10
    Presently pending.
    The Board has procedures to be followed in cases before it
    involving the RCRA Subtitle C regulations:

    15
    R84—10
    62 PCB 87,
    349, December 20,
    1984 and January 10,
    1985;
    9 Ill.
    Reg.
    1383, 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 R85-22 and amended them in R86-46,
    listed above.
    One Part 106 adjusted standard proceeding filed pursuant to
    728.106 sought relief from a prohibition against land disposal
    (petitioner’s name in parentheses):
    AS9O—6
    Dismissed at 136 PCB 93, September 17,
    1992.
    (Marathon Petroleum Co.)
    Other adjusted standard proceedings sought relief from
    aspects of the land disposal unit closure and post—closure care
    requirements
    (petitioners’ names in parentheses):
    AS9O—8
    130 PCB 349, February 27,
    1992.
    (Olin Corp.)
    AS91—4
    131 PCB 43, March 11,
    1992.
    (Amoco Oil Co.)
    One adjusted standard proceeding sought relief from a RCRA
    Subtitle C land disposal restriction
    (petitioner’s name in
    parentheses):
    AS9O—6
    136 PCB 6, September 17,
    1992.
    (Marathon
    Petroleum Co.)
    Still another adjusted standard proceeding relates to
    substantive treatment,
    storage, and disposal facility
    requirements of the RCRA Subtitle C regulations
    (petitioner’s
    name and requirements involved in parentheses):
    AS91—10
    Dismissed at
    ——
    PCB
    ——,
    May
    19,
    1994.
    (Cabot
    Corp.; secondary containment for tanks)
    In another regulatory proceeding,
    the Board has considered
    granting temporary relief from the termination of an exclusion of
    a hazardous waste listing in the form of an emergency rule (Peti-
    tioner’s name in parentheses):
    R91—11
    Dismissed at 125 PCB 295, August
    8,
    1991.
    (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:

    16
    R81—25
    60 PCB 381, October 25,
    1984;
    8
    Ill.
    Reg. 24124,
    December 14,
    1984,
    effective December 4,
    1984.
    R83—28
    68 PCB 295, February 26,
    1986;
    10 Ill. Reg.
    4875,
    March 21,
    1986, effective March
    7,
    1986.
    R86-9
    Emergency regulations adopted at 73 PCB 427,
    October 23,
    1986;
    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).)
    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, R82-18, was a RCRA
    Subtitle C docket.
    U.S. EPA authorized the Illinois UIC program
    on March
    3,
    1984,
    at 49 Fed. Reg. 3991
    (Feb.
    1,
    1984); codified
    that approval as 40 CFR 147,
    Subpart 0, at 49 Fed. Reg. 20197
    (May 11,
    1984); and amended the authorization at 53 Fed. Reg.
    43087
    (Oct.
    25,
    1988).
    The entire listing of all UIC rulemakings
    follows
    (with the period of corresponding federal revisions
    indicated in parentheses):
    R81—32
    47 PCB 93, May 13,
    1982;
    6 Ill. Reg.
    12479,
    October 15,
    1982,
    effective February
    1,
    1984.
    (7/7/81 through 11/23/81)
    R82—18
    51 PCB 31, January 13,
    1983;
    7
    Ill. Reg.
    2518,
    March
    4,
    1983, effective May 17,
    1982.
    (11/11/81
    through 6/24/82)
    R83—39
    55 PCB 319, December 15,
    1983;
    7 Ill. Reg.
    17338,
    December 20,
    1983, effective December 19,
    1983.
    (4/1/83)
    R85—23
    70 PCB 311
    & 71 PCB 108, June 20
    & July 11,
    1986;
    10
    Ill. Reg.
    13274, August
    8,
    1986, effective July
    28
    & 29,
    1986.
    (5/11/84 through 11/15/84)
    R86—27
    Dismissed at 77 PCB 234, April
    16,
    1987.
    (No U.S.
    EPA amendments through 12/31/86).
    R87—29
    85 PCB 307, January 21,
    1988;
    12 Ill. Reg.
    6673,
    April
    8,
    1988, effective March 28,
    1988.
    (1/1/87
    through 6/30/87)

    17
    R88—2
    90 PCB 679, June 30,
    1988;
    12
    Ill.
    Reg.
    13700,
    August 26,
    1988,
    effective August 16,
    1988.
    (7/1/87 through 12/31/87)
    R88—17
    94 PCB 227, December 15,
    1988;
    13 Ill. Reg.
    478,
    January 13,
    1989,
    effective December 30,
    1988.
    (1/1/88 through 6/30/88)
    R89—2
    107 PCB 369, January 25,
    1990;
    14 Ill. Reg.
    3059,
    March
    2,
    1990, effective February 20,
    1990.
    (7/1/88 through 12/31/88)
    R89—11
    111 PCB 489, May 24,
    1990;
    14 Ill.
    Reg.
    11948,
    July 20,
    1990,
    effective July 9,
    1990.
    (1/1/89
    through 11/30/89)
    R90—5
    Dismissed at 109 PCB 627, March 22,
    1990.
    (No
    U.S. EPA amendments 12/1/89 through 12/31/89)
    R90—14
    122 PCB 335, May 23,
    1991;
    15
    Ill.
    Reg.
    11425,
    effective July 24,
    1991.
    (1/1/90 through 6/30/90)
    R91—4
    Dismissed at 119 PCB 219, February 28,
    1991.
    (No
    U.S. EPA amendments 9/1/90 through 12/31/90)
    R91—16
    Dismissed at 128 PCB 229, December 6,
    1991.
    (No
    U.S. EPA amendments 1/1/90 through 6/30/91)
    R92—4
    Dismissed at 133 PCB 107,
    April
    9,
    1992.
    (No U.S.
    EPA amendments 7/1/91 through 12/31/91)
    R92—13
    139 PCB 361, February 4,
    1993;
    17
    Ill. Reg.
    6190,
    effective April
    5,
    1993.
    (1/1/92 through 6/30/92)
    R93—6
    ——
    PCB
    ——,
    August 5,
    1993;
    17 Ill. Reg.
    15641,
    effective September
    14, 1993.
    (7/1/92
    through
    12/31/92)
    R93—17
    Dismissed at
    —-
    PCB
    -—,
    September 23,
    1993.
    (No
    U.S. EPA amendments 1/1/93 through 6/30/93)
    R94-5
    Present docket.
    (7/1/93 through 12/31/93)
    In one proceeding filed, the Board granted an adjusted
    standard from
    a UIC land disposal restriction, pursuant to the
    procedures outlined above with respect to the RCRA Subtitle C
    program
    (petitioner name in parentheses):
    AS92-8
    Granted at
    --
    PCB
    --,
    February 17,
    1994.
    (Cabot
    Corp.; no migration exception)

    18
    AGENCY OR BOARD ACTION?
    Section 7.2(a)(5)
    of the Act requires the Board to specify
    which decisions USEPA will retain.
    In addition, the Board is to
    specify which State agency
    is to make decisions, based on the
    general division of functions within the Act and other Illinois
    statutes.
    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 a few instances in identical in substance rules,
    decisions are not appropriate for Agency action pursuant to a
    permit application.
    Among the considerations in determining the
    general division of authority between the Agency and the Board
    are:
    1.
    Is the person making the decision 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.
    Is there a clear standard for action such that the
    Board can give meaningful review to an Agency decision?
    3.
    Does the action result in exemption from the permit
    requirement itself?
    If so, Board action is generally
    required.
    4.
    Does the decision amount 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 decision:
    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).
    Note
    that there often are differences in the nomenclature for these
    decisions between the USEPA and Board regulations.
    EDITORIAL CONVENTIONS
    As a final note,
    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 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

    19
    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”.
    IT
    IS
    SO
    ORDERED.
    I,
    Dorothy
    N.
    Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board, do hereby
    c~t,ify
    that the above order was adopted by the
    Board on the
    7”
    ~—
    day of
    ~_-‘yt’----V
    ,
    1994, by a vote
    of
    &—C~
    .
    ~
    ~‘
    /L~
    Dorothy N. Gu~n, Clerk
    Illinois Pol’ution Control Board

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