ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    August
    9,
    1990
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    R89—13(A)
    IDENR SPECIAL WASTE
    )
    (Rulemaking)
    CATEGORIZATION
    ADOPTED RULE.
    FINAL ORDER.
    OPINION OF THE BOARD
    (by J.
    Anderson):
    This rulemaking creates 35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 808,
    Special Waste
    Categorizations,
    and amends 35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 809,
    Special Waste
    Hauling.
    It narrowly modifies the effect of
    35
    Ill.
    Adin.
    Code
    807,
    Solid Waste.
    The Board adopted Part 807 as “Chapter
    VII”
    in
    R72—5,
    8 PCB 575
    &
    695, July 19 and 31,
    1973.
    The Board adopted
    Part 809 as “Chapter IX”
    in R76—lO,
    33 PCB 131, March 15,
    1979.
    Part 807
    is the subject of a proposal
    in R88—7, Landfill
    Regulations,
    which is presently pending in Second Notice.
    The
    rules in this Docket do not assume that the Board will adopt
    certain features of the proposal in R88—7, but the present rules
    in this docket are flexible enough to accommodate the R88—7
    features should they be adopted.
    Due to the length of the rules and this Opinion, the Board
    incorporated the text of the amendments into a separate,
    accompanying Order of this same date.
    STATUTORY
    FR~.NEWORK
    This rulemaking
    implements Sections 22.01 and 22.9 of the
    Act, which were adopted at different times.
    Section 22.01 of the Act,
    as amended, requires the Board to
    review and consider the repeal of the manifesting requirement for
    non-hazardous special waste,
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 809.Subpart
    E,
    by
    December
    1,
    1989.
    However, this Section also requires the Board
    to adopt an annual report requirement for facilities receiving
    non—hazardous special wastes.
    Section 22.9(a)
    of the Act requires the Department of Energy
    and Natural Resources
    (DENR)
    to complete a study by July
    1,
    1985
    on the benefits and feasibility of establishing a system for
    classifying and regulating special wastes according to their
    degree of hazard.
    Section
    22.9(b) requires the Board to adopt,
    following completion of the DENR study,
    but no later than
    December
    1,
    1990,
    regulations that establish standards and
    criteria for classifying special wastes according to their degree
    of hazard or by an alternative method.
    The substantive provisions of Section 22.9 include further
    requirements
    and
    guidelines on special waste classification.
    Section 22.9(c)
    requires the I3oard to adopt regUlations
    11 4—3~O

    2
    establishing standards and criteria by which the Agency may
    determine that a waste or class of waste is not a special waste.
    Section 22.9(d)
    contains a temporary statutory standard by which
    the Agency makes this decision pending adoption of Board
    regulations.
    Section 22.9(e)
    provides that,
    if the Agency fails
    to act on a determination within
    60 days, the requestor may seek
    review before the Board as
    if the Agency had denied a permit.
    Finally, Section 22.9(f)
    provides that the determination that a
    waste
    is not a special waste does not apply to hazardous waste.
    This precludes the declassification of special wastes that are
    RCRA hazardous wastes
    (i.e., wastes that are hazardous under
    state regulations identical
    in substance to federal regulations
    adopted pursuant to the Resources Conservation and Recovery Act
    of 1976
    (RCRA),
    42 U.S.C.
    6901 et seq., pursuant to Section
    22.4(a))
    or waste deemed hazardous wastes under independent State
    law and regulations
    (pursuant to Section 22.4(b) and
    (c)).
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY AND RECORD OF THE PROCEEDING
    This proceeding grows out of two prior proceedings and
    includes the records of those proceedings.
    The Board closed
    docket R84—43, Non-Hazardous Special Waste Manifests, and
    incorporated its record into docket R85-27,
    Special Waste
    Categorization Study,
    on December 17,
    1987.
    The Board opened
    this proceeding when it closed docket R85—27 on August
    10,
    1989
    and incorporated its consolidated record into this docket.
    The
    present record includes approximately four years of exhibits,
    hearings and the draft regulatory proposal by STS from R85-27,
    including the record from Docket R84-43.
    The Board has since gained the further benefit of additional
    hearings,
    exhibits,
    and comments under the present docket number.
    The Board proposed the present rules for First Notice on August
    10,
    1989.
    The First Notices appeared at 13 Ill. Reg.
    13468,
    August 25,
    1989
    (Part
    808),
    and 13
    Ill.
    Reg.
    13699, September
    1,
    1989
    (Part 809).
    The Board proposed an Interim Request for
    Public Comment on October
    18,
    1989 relating to changes in the
    text of the proposed rules.
    On November
    15,
    1989, the Board
    proposed the rules for Second Notice,
    and the Joint Committee on
    Administrative Rules
    (JCAR) received the complete Second Notice
    package on June
    1,
    1990.
    JCAR submitted
    its Certificates
    of No
    Objection on July 26,
    1990.
    The history of developments regarding special wastes
    reflects the interconnection among diverse,
    independent concerns.
    These concerns include the perceived need for relief from
    regulatory requirements
    (e.g., manifesting)
    for a potentially
    significant proportion
    of the universe of “special waste”
    (as
    defined by Section 3.45 of the Act),
    the desire to classify
    special wastes to assure handling appropriate to their
    characteristics,
    the obligation to maintain a State system that
    is consistent with federal
    law,
    including RCRA,
    ~
    Section
    114—400

    3
    20(a) (7)—Ca) (9),
    and the pending efforts to update all solid
    waste rules in R84—l7/R88—7.
    Sections 22.01 and 22.9 of the Act reflect these diverse
    concerns.
    Section 22.01, added by Public Act 83-1461 and
    effective September 17,
    1984, was the culmination of
    compromises
    that altered the original proposal,
    H.B.
    3042.
    H.B.
    3042 would
    have immediately required the Board to drop all manifest
    requirements for non—hazardous special wastes.
    As enacted,
    Section 22.01 only requires the Board to “review and consider”
    such action by January
    1,
    1986.
    Section 22.9,
    traces its roots to
    a different enactment,
    Public Act 83—1268, effective January
    1,
    1985,
    and relates to
    regulation of special wastes based on their degree of hazard.
    This Section requires DENR to complete a study of the “benefits
    and feasibility”
    of establishing a degree of hazard
    classification system for special waste regulation by July
    1,
    1985.
    Section 22.9(a).
    It requires the Board to promulgate
    regulations for classifying and declassifying waste by September
    1,
    1988.
    Sections 22.9(b)
    &
    (c).
    The General Assembly
    subsequently changed this deadline to December 1,
    1989,
    in Public
    Act 85—1327,
    effective August 31,
    1988,
    and to December
    1,
    1990,
    in Public Act 86—958,
    effective December
    5,
    1989.
    In response to the mandate of Section 22.01, the Board
    opened R84—43 on December
    20,
    1984,
    for review and consideration
    of the manifest requirement.
    The Board held two inquiry hearings
    in March 1985.
    From the beginning of the R84-43 proceeding,
    the Board noted
    the DENR mandate imposed by Section
    22.9.
    The Board observed in
    its Order of December 20,
    1984 that the DENR study due July
    1,
    1985 would become the subject of other Board hearings and that
    this study “will undoubtedly provide a useful data base for
    consideration in this docket and will be made
    a part of the
    record in this proceeding.”
    December 20, 1984 Order
    at
    2.
    The Board received the Section 22.9 DENR report on November
    21,
    1985.1
    By its Order of the same date,
    the Board established
    Docket R85-27.
    One month
    later,
    on December 20,
    1985,
    the Board,
    having considered the testimony and exhibits submitted
    in R84-
    43, entered an order finding that “it would be imprudent to
    repeal the manifest requirement at this time and that further
    deliberation should proceed under
    a consolidated R84—43/R85-27
    Docket.”
    Order of December 20,
    1985 at
    1.
    It also proposed
    a
    rule for First Notice that would have required annual reports
    1
    K.
    Reddy,
    Special Waste Cateqorizatiqr~~d
    (DENR
    HWRiC
    RR 005 October
    1985).
    11 4--401

    4
    from all facilities accepting non—hazardous special wastes,
    effective July
    1,
    1987,
    without attempting to define the affected
    universe of facilities.
    Ironically, on the same day,
    Public Act 84-1108 became
    effective.
    That law directed DENR to prepare another report for
    the completion of a study on the degree of hazard of industrial
    wastes.
    a’he Board received this second DENR report on January
    22,
    1987.
    Upon receipt of this report, the Board scheduled and
    held two hearings in May 1987.
    After considering the testimony
    and comments produced in the consolidated R84-43/R85—27 docket,
    the Board dismissed its First Notice proposal on December 17,
    1987,
    and further formally dismissed and closed Docket R84-43
    On April
    7,
    1988, the Board entered an Interim Order
    directing the Board’s Scientific and Technical Section
    (STS)
    to
    prepare
    a regulatory proposal.
    The Board contemplated
    in the
    Order that the final installment of the DENR “degree of hazard”
    studies, which the Board expected to be delivered “shortly,”
    would aid the STS efforts.
    To serve as an independent proponent,
    the Interim Order established an arrangement consistent with RES
    86-1, whereby the STS became a separate entity,
    subjected to
    customary ex parte restrictions as a proponent.
    This arrangement
    has since prevailed throughout this proceeding.
    ~he Board received DENR’s third installment on October 27,
    1988.
    By its cover letter, the DENR’s Hazardous Waste Research
    and Information Center
    (HWRIC)
    indicated that it would likely
    submit one additional report,
    “The Characterization of Non-RCRA
    Special Waste”
    by William
    W.
    Frerichs, within two weeks.
    HWRIC
    published the Frerichs report in January 1989, but did
    not submit it to the Board for filing in Docket R85-27. The Board
    otherwise obtained a copy of that report on April 28,
    1989.
    The
    cover letter accompanying the report indicated that the Frerichs
    report was
    a product of DENR’s continuing research mission and
    that DENR
    did.
    not intend to file it as an exhibit in the R85-27
    proceeding.
    Working on the basis of selected preliminary drafts,
    STS
    staff prepared
    a rough draft regulatory proposal and “supporting
    document.”
    STS prepared
    a second draft of its proposal on June
    28,
    1989 and filed
    a third draft on July
    24,
    1989.
    STS filed an
    2
    M. Plewa
    & R. Minear, Assigning a Degree of Hazard Ranking
    to Illinois Waste Streams
    (DENR HWRIC RR 005 November 1986).
    J.
    Plewa,
    R.
    Minear,
    D.
    Ades—Mclnerney
    &
    E.
    Wagner,
    Refining
    the Degree
    of
    Hazard Ranking
    Methodology
    for
    Illinois
    Industrial Waste Streams
    (DENR HWRIC RR—029 September 1988).
    114—402

    5
    accompanying “Supporting Document”
    on July 26,
    1989.
    Noting the
    imminent statutory deadline and the effort already underway to
    develop this Board proposal,
    STS filed
    a Statement Of The
    Scientific and Technical Section Regarding Submission of
    Documents on July 31,
    1989.
    STS indicated that additional
    efforts to develop
    a formal proposal appeared unnecessary
    in R85—
    27, since that Docket was soon to close.
    The STS draft proposal filed July 24,
    1989 became the
    cornerstone of the present proceeding.
    It is based on the STS
    review of the DENR/HWRIC studies, and has become the regulatory
    proposal
    in this docket.
    The following discussions of Board
    actions in this proceeding focus on the Board’s reception of this
    draft proposal.
    FIRST NOTICE PROPOSAL AND CREATION OF DOCKETS A AND B
    The August 10,
    1989 First Notice proposal did not address
    all the potential ramifications of
    a waste classification system,
    particularly those thorny issues related to creation of a “high
    hazard” non—RCRA special waste category
    (i.e., those special
    wastes assigned a score of
    3 pursuant to Section 808.245).
    As
    the foregoing history discloses,
    the legislature originally
    anticipated that the Board would have the benefit of
    38 months to
    deliberate and refine a proposal following receipt of the DENR
    study
    (July
    1,
    1985 to September
    1,
    1988); the Board had far less
    time than that to develop
    its First Notice proposal.
    Therefore,
    it was appropriate that the Board set aside a docket to consider
    possible further refinements of the degree of hazard ranking
    system,
    as well as to consider possible utilization of that
    system to impose heightened controls on waste treatment,
    storage
    and disposal of “high hazard” non-RCRA special wastes.
    The First
    Notice proposal had,
    as its limited primary purpose, utilization
    of the DENR’s hazard ranking system for determining which wastes
    may be declassified entirely and which of the remainder may have
    reduced manifest requirements.
    It was possible that further
    refinements would alter the hazard ranking system and related
    requirements, to increase the potential universe of declassified
    wastes,
    as well as to specify waste treatment,
    storage, and
    disposal modalities tailored to specific classes of wastes.
    To accommodate these purposes, the Board established two
    separate dockets in this proceeding.
    The August 10,
    1989 First
    Notice proposal, which culminated
    in today’s adopted rule,
    with
    its limited focus and timetable,
    was the subject of Docket
    A.
    Consideration of refinements to the hazard ranking system and the
    possible use of that system to prescribe requirements specific to
    special waste classes,
    including those non—RCRA wastes assignea
    the highest hazard ranking,
    is the subject of Docket
    B.

    6
    First Notice Statement of Reasons
    As the foregoing history indicates,
    the First Notice
    proposal followed almost
    5 years of efforts by the DENR,
    the
    Board, and STS.
    Unfortunately,
    those efforts only began to
    coalesce after long effort, and the Board found itself
    confronting an extremely short time frame in which to attempt to
    meet the statutory deadline for rulemaking.
    At that time the
    deadline for Board action was December
    1,
    1989.
    The First Notice proposal was based on the first three DENR
    studies as well as the STS draft proposal.
    There was
    insufficient time to allow STS to prepare and submit a formal
    final proposal,
    as originally contemplated by the Board
    in its
    Interim Order of April
    7,
    1989.
    The principal differences between the STS draft and the
    First Notice proposal Board proposal were the deletion of certain
    features of the STS draft.
    The Board rewrote very little of the
    draft STS proposal,
    except as necessary to elimination of those
    features.
    First Notice Departures from the STS—Proposed Draft Rule
    1.
    Deletion of Computer Program Certification “Loop”
    (Subpart
    I,
    Sections 808.500 through 808.511 of STS draft)
    The Board First Notice proposal did not retain this feature,
    although it specifically authorized the use of computers
    in
    making “degree of hazard” determinations
    (Section 808.301),
    applications
    (Section 808.430(a),
    Board Note),
    and requests for
    additional data
    (Section 808.430(b), Board Note).
    The Board
    draft also retained the essential elements of the “data base”
    provisions,
    from STS draft Section 808.511, at Section 808.302,
    but dropped the references to computer on-line data bases and
    computer operators.
    The STS draft provisions for Agency certification of
    computer programs were deleted as unnecessary and potentially
    beyond the authority of the Board and the Agency.
    The Board
    believed it unnecessary for the purposes of the Act to require
    use of a computer or to otherwise specifically purport to
    regulate such use.
    This was because an application for
    reclassification
    of
    a special waste does not need a computer to
    achieve correct results.
    Second,
    the Board felt that Agency
    certification of computer programs arguably amounts to
    a form of
    licensing not authorized by the Act.
    Finally, there
    is no
    suggestion that the Agency seeks such a role or possesses the
    resources to perform that role.
    1
    14—404

    7
    2.
    Deletion of
    a Separate Declassification “Loop”
    (Subpart D,
    Sections 808.280 through 808.282
    of STS draft)
    The First Notice proposal introduced
    a “seamless” process
    through which the base determination as to classification
    (under
    Section 808.245) may directly result in declassification.
    The
    STS draft would have required generators to file a second
    application for classification if their waste qualified as lowest
    degree of hazard special waste.
    The STS draft stated that
    “because the requirements for management of a Type A special
    waste are virtually the same as for waste which
    is not a special
    waste,
    the Subpart leaves the election of declassification to the
    generator.”
    The First Notice proposal simply eliminated these
    overlapping categories of wastes and redundant application
    processes.
    3.
    Deletion
    of
    a Hazardous Waste Category Outside RCRA
    (Sections 808.300, 808.302 and 808.307(b) (4))
    Although the “Board Note” following Section 808.302 of the
    STS draft would have suggested that
    a “hazardous waste” means a
    RCRA waste as defined in
    35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 721,
    it is clear from
    the operation of Section 808.307(b) (4)
    that some wastes not
    presently classified as hazardous under RCRA could fall into the
    Type D category under the STS proposal.
    This could cause
    controversy and confusion and is at odds with the evident intent
    of Sections 22.01 and 22.9:
    to provide regulatory relief from
    overly—onerous requirements for those wastestreams that do not
    warrant the full panoply of controls currently imposed on special
    wastes
    (e.g.,
    6-part manifests).
    However, the Board draft
    retains the DENR/STS scoring system intact,
    allowing for future
    rules adopted under Section 22.4(b)
    and
    (c),
    rather than under
    Sections 22.01 and 22.9.
    This scoring system could impose
    a
    “hazardous” classification on those special waste streams
    assigned a score of
    3.
    4.
    Elimination of Mandatory Application for Wastestreain
    Identification Number
    (Section 808.101(b)
    of STS draft)
    ~uic~,
    Agency Classification of Type D Wastes on Request (Section
    808.301 of STS draft)
    The First Notice proposal
    (Section 808.241) and STS draft
    (Section 808.303)
    shared the common feature that a special waste
    is a high—order special waste subject to the 6-part manifest and
    other more stringent requirements unless proven otherwise.
    However, the First Notice proposal eliminated the requirement
    that all special waste generators must apply
    for
    a wastestream
    identification number.
    It also eliminated the somewhat related
    provision
    (Section 808.301) that would have allowed the Agency to
    classify any waste as
    a hazardous waste at the request of the
    generator.
    Under the First Notice proposal,
    the generator of
    Class B special waste could choose to subject
    its wastes to the
    114—4 fl

    8
    Class A manifest requirement.
    If
    it so chose,
    its wastes were
    “deemed” Class A special wastes for all purposes of Part 808
    (Section 808.122(b)).
    The primary rationale for departing from the STS draft in
    this regard was to avoid placing the Agency
    in the potential role
    of
    a “rubber stamp” for generators seeking the higher-order
    classification for their wastes.
    There appeared no reason to
    needlessly involve the Agency in what is essentially a business
    decision, thereby creating a new administrative burden.
    5.
    Elimination of the “Informational Application”
    (Sections 808.100(c)
    and 808.121, Board Note)
    The STS draft would have entitled “any person” to apply to
    the Agency for a written determination as to the classification
    of “any waste,” presumably including RCRA hazardous wastes and
    ordinary household refuse.
    Such a requirement would potentially
    impose a burden on the Agency unrelated to the purposes of this
    rulemaking.
    It could potentially make the Agency an unwilling
    player in disputes between USEPA and generators seeking delisting
    of hazardous wastes,
    as well as
    in litigation involving attempts
    by third parties to have an unlisted waste added to the USEPA’s
    hazardous waste lists.
    6.
    Deletion of Agency Rulemaking Prescribing Additional
    Information Required
    in Classification Application
    (Section
    808.402(i)
    of the STS draft)
    The First Notice draft would have enabled the Agency to
    request additional information as needed on a case—by-case basis
    (as would the STS draft),
    but
    it did not allow the Agency to
    prescribe rules specifying such additional requirements.
    Such
    rulemaking appears the proper function of the Board.
    Further,
    the Act does not authorize such rulemaking by the Agency.
    7.
    Deletion of Provisions Allowing Description of the Waste
    Stream
    in question to be Modified and Different From The
    Chemical and Physical Analysis for that Wastestream
    (Section 808.413(b)
    of the STS draft)
    The First Notice draft would have avoided the implications
    inherent in allowing modification of a wastestream description
    notwithstanding the physical and chemical analysis submitted for
    that wastestream.
    In its place,
    the First Notice draft modified
    the language of STS Section 808.413(b)
    and the accompanying
    “Board Note.”
    A related change was the addition of a “Board
    Note” following 808.413(a).
    Under the First Notice draft, each
    variation of a wastestream need not have precisely matched the
    chemical and physical analysis provided for that wastestream,
    so
    long as the description of the wastestream was expressed as a
    range of properties associated with the particular generating
    114—406

    9
    process.
    This outcome appeared to meet the need for flexibility,
    which the STS draft attempted to address, without inviting or
    requiring the applicant to “modify” the description every time.
    For example,
    a generator of waste paint solvent could file a
    single analysis and description for its wastestream to
    accommodate changes
    in pigment color and concentration associated
    with different customers or finished product lines.
    8.
    Deletion of the “Preponderance” Standard for Agency
    Decisions
    (Section 808.503(c)
    of the STS draft)
    The enunciation of a “preponderance” standard appeared
    inappropriate for Agency determinations that are not made on a
    record review like Board decisions.
    The “preponderance” test
    relates to the relative weight that the evidence in a contested
    case record must bear to upset an agency judgment on review.
    Where there
    is no such contested case record, the “preponderance”
    test
    (or the “manifest weight” test that applies
    to Board
    decisions)
    is inapplicable.
    The appropriate “test” for Board
    review of a non—record Agency decision
    is simply whether the
    Agency decision was correct.
    Note that the “record” before the
    Agency in a permit matter is not a “record” in the same sense as
    is used in review of decisions
    in contested case proceedings.
    9.
    ~jJ~mination of Opportunity for Applicants to Introduce New
    Information
    in
    a Request for Reconsideration
    (Section
    808.541(a)
    of the STS draft)
    While the First Notice draft retained the “request for
    (Agency)
    reconsideration” mechanism,
    it would not have allowed
    such requests to include new information.
    The concern was that
    allowing new information on reconsideration could have created
    a
    never-ending application process,
    improperly relieving applicants
    of their responsibility to provide a complete application to the
    Agency at the outset of the process.
    Such an approach would also
    encourage submission of “minimalist” applications by applicants
    who are reluctant to divulge all relevant information
    in their
    possession.
    10.
    Omission of Provisions Governing Applications
    for
    Wastestream Identification Numbers
    (Subpart
    B,
    Sections
    808.200 through 808.220
    of the STS draft)
    The First Notice draft would have allowed for inclusion of
    STS proposal provisions governing wastestream I.D.
    numbers
    (by
    leaving
    a “gap”
    in the draft regulations at 808.200
    et seq.),
    but
    it did not expressly include these provisions.
    First, reliance
    on such wastestream I.D. numbers appeared predicated
    on adoption
    of R88—7’s proposed revisions to the solid waste regulations.
    The Board has not adopted the R88—7 rules as of the final action
    on this rulemaking.
    Second,
    the Board may choose to relocate the
    waste stream
    I.D.
    number application process provisions elsewhere
    11 4—40 7

    10
    than in Part 808,
    since such applications would not necessarily
    involve the waste classification process.
    Il.
    Elimination of Distinctions Between “Waste” and
    “Wastestream” and Associated Requirements
    (Section 808.110
    and following Board Note of the STS draft)
    The STS proposal would have required a wastestream I.D.
    number only for “wastestreams”
    (i.e., wastes routinely or
    periodically produced by a given process);
    individual
    (non—
    repetitive)
    waste
    loads are tracked pursuant to an “unmanifested
    waste report”
    from the waste receiving facility
    (per Section
    808.411, page
    52
    of the STS draft, recommended for adoption in
    R88—7).
    The First Notice draft retained verbatim the
    “unmanifested waste report” feature at Section 809.502 but
    eliminated the distinction between “wastes” and “wastestreams”
    as
    outside the scope of this rulemaking,
    as potentially confusing,
    and as inconsistent with the Act.
    Conclusion re Proposed First Notice and the STS—Proposed Draft
    The Board emphasizes that the rationale set forth in the
    draft STS for specific recommendations filed July 26,
    1989 with
    the Board
    in R85-27 were endorsed by neither STS
    (since such
    recommendations were
    in draft form only)
    nor the Board.
    However,
    for purposes of eliciting comment during the First Notice period,
    and to the extent the Board retained specific provisions
    in the
    First Notice draft, The Board offered the STS rationale as
    explanation and justification.
    RESPONSES TO INTERIM REQUEST FOR PUBLIC COMMENT
    After adoption of the proposal for First Notice,
    the Board
    scheduled and held two public hearings, the first in Springfield
    on September
    1,
    1989, and the second in Chicago on September
    14.
    The Board cancelled a third hearing, scheduled for September
    15,
    after no one appeared to present testimony or examine witnesses.
    The Department of Energy and Natural Resources
    (DENR),
    including
    its Hazardous Waste Resource and Information Center
    (HWRIC); the
    Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
    (Agency); Mr. John
    Andrae,
    of the DuPage County Health Department; the Board’s
    Hearing Officer
    (in his capacity as a principal draftsman of the
    Board’s proposal); and Dr. Harish Rao,
    head of the Board’s
    Scientific/Technical
    Section
    (STS), which prepared the STS draft
    regulatory proposal upon which the Board based many features of
    the First Notice proposal,
    each presented testimony.
    The Board
    received prefiled comments and questions from the National
    Renderer’s Association and Waste Management
    of
    Illinois.
    By its Interim Request for Public Comment dated October 18,
    1989, the Board sought public comment regarding changes to the
    proposed rules.
    The Board effected those changes
    in response to
    114—408

    11
    comments received during this First Notice period.
    The Board
    thereby gave interested persons an opportunity to comment on
    those changes prior to adopting a Second Notice Opinion and
    Order.
    The draft Opinion and Order accompanying the October 18,
    1989 Interim Request contained a number of modifications based on
    the hearing testimony and public comments received as of that
    date.
    Generally,
    the Board re-crafted its draft for the
    following reasons:
    1.
    to clarify that the Board intended the toxicity ranking
    methodology developed by DENR/HWRIC to supplement the
    present Agency system of evaluation,
    not to replace it;
    2.
    to include other considerations derived from the Agency’s
    present policy paper;
    3.
    to utilize the DENR/HWRIC degree of hazard categories
    for
    which
    a developed scientific rationale existed
    (i.e.,
    toxicity), but to rely on the existing Agency evaluation
    system rather than the DENR/HWRIC rankings based on a
    “legal” rationale
    (e.g.,
    pH);
    4.
    to provide for a four-part manifest system plus quarterly or
    annual reports;
    5.
    to remove amendatory language not directly related to the
    DENR/HWRIC classification system,
    including leaving intact
    the Board’s existing hazardous
    (infectious)
    hospital waste
    regulations; and
    6.
    to provide for a re—evaluation within two years for those
    wastes that the Agency earlier determined were not special
    wastes.
    The Hazard Ranking System
    Testimony provided by DENR and HWRIC focused on the three
    scientific studies and proposals for creating
    a system to rank
    special wastes according to their relative degree of hazard to
    human health and the environment.
    Witnesses for DENR and HWRIC
    were generally supportive of the Board’s First Notice proposal.
    See,
    e.g.,
    R.
    19—21
    (testimony of Dr. David Miller).
    These
    witnesses also defended the HWRIC studies’ choice of methodology,
    the “break points”
    for hazard ranking chosen by HWRIC,
    and the
    toxicological data and reference compound selected by HWRIC and
    proposed by the Board
    (i.e., copper sulfate).
    ~
    ~
    R.
    21-
    27
    (testimony of
    Dr. Michael Plewa).
    The witnesses for IWRIC
    and
    DENR stated that the computerized system was then presently
    “up
    and running” and available for use on all wastes,
    so long as the
    applicant provided adequate information on the waste components
    114—409

    12
    to the Agency or if such information was already part of the data
    base.
    R.
    42—44.
    The DENR and HWRIC witnesses felt that the system was
    conservative enough to avoid error
    for declassification purposes.
    Further,
    DENR/HWRIC stated that because the system was
    conservative,
    it is possible that more specific information on
    constituents and toxicities would lower the toxicity level
    classification
    of a waste given a high—hazard ranking.
    P.C.
    #
    4.
    Therefore,
    the conservatism of the system would cause uncertainty
    and error to fall in favor of higher toxicity rankings.
    The DENR and HWRIC witnesses also made clear that the degree
    of hazard system should be viewed as a potential degree of hazard
    system.
    It should act as only one element within the overall
    evaluation by which the Agency would make a determination, and
    that the ranking could adjust up or down,
    depending on the
    appropriate modes of treatment or disposal of special wastes.
    E.g.,
    R.
    57—59.
    The DENR and HWRIC witnesses also acknowledged that they did
    not base a number of their rankings on the scientific rationale
    they developed.
    Rather,
    the witnesses utilized a “legal”
    rationale:
    they borrowed a regulatory standard applicable to
    some potential characteristic of those wastes from an unrelated
    federal
    or state regulatory program, such as the federal RCRA
    standard for pH, and established
    a “break point” without
    refinement or incremental adjustment based on the degree of
    hazard system.
    R.
    61,
    68
    & 71—73.
    The DENR and HWRIC witnesses also testified that the
    system’s database and application program is potentially useful
    as a planning device.
    Members of the regulated community could
    calculate the effects of process substitutions and system changes
    on the waste stream’s degree of hazard.
    R.
    40—52.
    The witnesses
    noted that the system could be applied manually.
    In any event, DENR/HWRIC argued for a universal state data
    base system
    (presumably maintained by the Agency), thus letting
    all interested persons know the ground rules.
    R.
    47
    & 52
    & P.C.
    #4.
    They also noted that experts should screen new data in order
    to maintain a standardized system and thus avoid delisting
    evaluations by those lacking expertise or access to literature.
    P.C.
    #4.
    Dr. David Miller, Assistant Director and Research Program
    Manager of HWRIC, estimated that
    a computer and software
    appropriate for the purpose would cost the Agency about $3000.00.
    R.
    31.
    Several questions arose from the Agency at hearing
    concerning the HWRIC ranking methodology and proposal.
    Mr. James
    11 4
    -~
    1~
    1 0

    13
    O’Brien, Manager of the Agency’s Office of Chemical Safety
    (OCS),
    questioned the exclusive use of equivalent oral doses, when the
    inhalation or dermal exposure route might be more appropriate.
    DENR/HWRIC responded that the toxicity weighting table on Page 11
    in the Plewa 1988 report takes this into account.
    Responding to
    Mr. O’Brien’s concerns about lack of consideration of sub—acute
    or systemic chronic toxicity,
    DENR/HWRIC stated that relatively
    little data exists in this regard.
    Further DENR/HWRIC felt that
    such values would have little effect anyway because the system is
    conservative.
    Regarding Mr. O’Brien’s comments on the
    appropriateness
    of test methods, DENR/HWRIC responded that the
    questioned parameters, such as pH for solid samples,
    are
    difficult to measure; the generator could either leave these
    parameters blank or analyze a water slurry.
    DENR/HWRIC asserted
    that the Agency needs to consider the use of these values
    in its
    final determination of waste stream status.
    R.
    112—119
    & Ex.
    4.
    Others present at hearing also asked questions.
    Mr. Andrae
    of DuPage County took particular note of the fact that toxicity
    appears to increase with volume using the DENR/HWRIC toxic hazard
    methodology,
    see Section 808.App.
    B(b),
    and asserted that this
    might render the methodology suspect as
    a means of classifying or
    declassifying certain wastestreains.
    R.
    391—395.
    DENR/HWRIC
    responded that the system focused on landfills,
    rather than
    effluents going into water and,
    as such,
    seeks to avoid a large
    volume of toxins where total mass may present a threat.
    P.C.
    #
    4.
    In a somewhat related vein,
    IERG also noted some problems
    posed by a volume—dependent measure of toxicity,
    including
    examples of how the system could yield absurd results.
    P.C.
    #
    11, pp.
    6—8.
    Mr. Andrae also stated the county’s concern
    regarding the exemption from the manifesting requirements for
    septic pumpings and grease trap pumpings.
    R.
    398-401.
    Other Questions and Comments at Hearing
    The National Renderers Association argued in its pre-filed
    questions that licensed renderers,
    who are currently exempted
    from the manifest system pursuant to 35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 809.331,
    should be similarly exempted from the “Unmanifested Waste Report”
    requirements
    of proposed Section 809.502.
    R.
    256-257.
    The Agency generally indicated that the proposed system was
    overly complicated,
    time consuming and unnecessary.
    R.
    220 &
    237.
    The Agency proposed
    in its stead,
    P.
    220,
    that the Board
    adopt a system of classification derived from the Agency’s
    present guidance document.
    Ex.
    7.
    Several commenters endorsed
    this view.
    P.C.
    #
    10,
    11
    & 14.
    The Agency also acknowledged
    that
    it rarely,
    and then only informally, utilizes the OCS to
    assist in the toxicity evaluation components of
    its guidance
    document.
    R.
    102,
    147,
    163
    & 169—170.
    One questioner,
    and two commenters representing the Illinois
    ii i,—_4 11

    14
    Steel Group and the Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group
    (IERG), P.C. # 10,
    11
    &
    14, suggested that DENR had failed to
    provide
    a copy of the computer program developed by DENR/HWRIC on
    request.
    They contended that this refusal had denied them access
    to data in order to meaningfully testify on or evaluate that
    system.
    Accordingly,
    they urged the Board to take no action
    based on the DENR system.
    DENR/HWRIC responded that they had
    offered those with specifics on their waste stream “to come to
    our offices” to run the degree of hazard,
    P.C.
    #4,
    p.
    5.
    DENR/HWRIC did not release the system because they didn’t want
    others modifying the program, especially during its developmental
    phase.
    Download of the program onto a diskette was possible as
    of the date of the Interim Requester.
    DENR and HWRIC want to
    assure that there is only one state system,
    so they want to
    assure that the presently—existing system is secure.
    R.
    215-216
    & P.C.
    #
    4.
    Public Comments
    The
    Board received post—hearing comments from the
    Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago
    (P.C.
    #3);
    DENR
    (P.C.
    # 4); the National Slag Association
    (P.C.
    #
    5);
    International Mill Service Inc.
    (P.C.
    #
    6); the St. Louis Slag
    Products Company
    (P.C.
    #
    7); the Steel Manufacturer’s Association
    (P.C.
    #
    8); BFI Waste Systems
    (P.C.
    #
    9); the Illinois Steel
    Group
    (P.C.
    #
    10
    & 14);
    the IERG
    (P.C.
    #
    11); the Edward
    C. Levy
    Co.,
    Inc.
    (P.C.
    #
    12); the U.S.
    Department of Interior,
    Bureau of
    Mines
    (P.C.
    #
    13);
    Dr. David
    J.
    Schaeffer,
    Department of
    Veterinary Biosciences,
    University
    of Illinois
    (P.C.
    #
    15); and
    the Agency
    (P.C.
    #
    16)
    .~
    Comments 4 and 16 were responses
    to two sets of questions
    propounded in Orders issued by the Hearing Officer.
    (“Further
    Questions for DENR/HWRIC Witnesses,” September 12,
    1989,
    and
    “Additional Questions for IEPA and DENR/HWRIC Witnesses,”
    September
    13,
    1989).
    The Agency and DENR advised the Hearing
    Officer that they were coordinating to provide at least a partial
    response to the fourth question raised by the Hearing Officer in
    his September
    12,
    1989 order.
    That was a request that DENR run
    its degree of hazard
    (DOH)
    analysis on the requests that the
    Agency has already received and handled under its interim
    guidance policies over the past
    2½ years.
    Such a “cross check”
    could serve to either confirm or deny claims relating to whether
    the system is practicable.
    It could provide a comparison of
    results from use of the DENR system alone with results from use
    of the Agency’s policy guidance alone.
    Comments of a technical nature relating to the form of the
    rules
    for purposes
    of
    publication
    in the Illinois Register
    were
    also received from Mimi
    Griffiths,
    Administrative Code Division,
    Office of the Secretary of State
    (P.C.
    #2).
    1
    14--412

    15
    Mr. Frank
    E. Dalton, General Superintendent of the
    Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago,
    P.C.
    #3, suggested that the Board add a Section 808.247 that would
    exempt municipal wastewater treatment plant sludge from
    classification as a special waste.
    He also urged that the Board
    revise Section 809.255 to clarify that washings from a special
    waste hauling vehicle may not be discharged to a POTW,
    except in
    compliance with all applicable local limits on discharges to that
    POTW.
    BFI Waste Systems, P.C.
    #
    9,
    pp.
    3
    &
    4,
    and Waste
    Management of
    Illinoi,s
    (WMI), P.C.
    #
    1,
    p.
    13, made somewhat
    similar suggestions.
    In addition to faulting various aspects of the DENR/HWRIC
    proposal and the Board’s draft rules,
    the Agency proposed that
    all special non-RCRA waste be manifested by using a four-part
    manifest, augmented by an annual reporting requirement,
    R.
    92-97
    & 218-219;
    P.C.
    #
    16,
    in lieu of the currently-required six-part
    manifest which the Agency characterized as imposing an
    unreasonable
    “paperwork burden” on both the Agency and the
    regulated community without commensurate benefit in terms of
    increased Agency oversight.
    Id.
    Other cominenters agreed with
    the Agency on this point.
    P.C.
    #
    8,
    9
    &
    11.
    The Agency typed
    this burden on its resources as growing rapidly and quantified
    it
    as consisting
    of approximately 350,000 pieces of paper annually.
    P.
    92—93.
    The Agency also suggested that the Board’s rules
    should set forth minimum requirements for the annual reports with
    which it suggests augmenting the four-part manifest requirement.
    WNI
    submitted the greatest number of pre-hearing comments
    and questions relating to the proposal.
    P.C.
    #
    1.
    Many of these
    questions and comments related to typographical errors and
    omissions,
    all of which the Board duly noted.
    Substantively,
    WMI
    suggested that waste treaters and
    disposers should have a role in the classification process as of
    right,
    in light of their obvious stake
    in classification
    determinations,
    as well as their knowledge of actual conditions.
    P.C.
    #
    1,
    pp.
    1-2.
    WHI
    recommended that the Agency provide
    notice of pending classification requests to such receiving
    sites,
    and that the rules entitle such sites to participate
    in
    Agency classification proceedings.
    ~
    e.g.,
    P.
    259—260
    & P.C.
    #1,
    p.
    5.
    WMI
    also noted that numerous sections of the proposal
    (e.g.,
    proposed section 808.l2l(c)(1))
    reference concepts embodied in
    sections or Parts not
    yet
    in existence,
    most notably Part 811.
    See P.
    264—266,
    326,
    329—330
    & 345—348.
    As noted
    by the Hearing
    Officer
    at hearing,
    R.
    264—266, the Board drafted these sections,
    as well as those of proposed Part 809 that would establish
    substantive requirements for waste haulers,
    including haulers of
    wastes other than special wastes
    (e.g., Sections 809.221 through
    ii4—413

    16
    809.227), with the expectation that the Board would earlier adopt
    the proposed landfill rules in P88-7.
    Such prior adoption has
    not occurred.
    Finally,
    WMI
    noted several problems with the Infectious
    Hospital Waste rules as recodified from Subpart
    I of Part 809 to
    proposed Section 808.601,
    R.
    322-329, with the addition of
    several new substantive requirements
    in Part 809 for waste
    haulers.
    These included requirements for overnight parking and
    covers on waste trucks.
    Persons concerned that the proposal would somehow have the
    effect of expanding the universe of materials considered to be
    “wastes,” particularly with respect to slags generated in the
    production of iron and steel, submitted the largest number of
    post—hearing comments.
    P.C.
    #
    5,
    6,
    7,
    8,
    10,
    12,
    13
    & 14.
    All
    these cominenters stated that such slags are fully utilized as
    products,
    such as railroad ballast,
    as concrete aggregate,
    or as
    raw material in the manufacture of glass and mineral wool.
    The Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group and the Agency
    expressed concern lest the new rules overturn prior Agency
    determinations under Section 22.9(d)
    of the Act or otherwise
    create needless confusion.
    P.C.
    #
    13.
    &
    16.
    Some commenters also
    observed that the DOH methodology may not always be applicable or
    practicable.
    P.C.
    #
    11,
    15
    & 16.
    These urged the Board to
    introduce sufficient flexibility
    in the rules to allow use of
    alternative modes of determining the nominal toxicity hazard
    posed by a given waste-stream.
    P.C.
    #
    15
    &
    16.
    Dr. Schaeffer
    recommended a bioassay-based approach that he has developed
    in a
    study undertaken for DENR which he asserts
    is easily implemented
    and made capable of gauging the synergistic and/or antagonistic
    effects of individual constituents in
    a waste stream,
    so as to
    assess the toxicity of complex mixtures.
    P.C.
    #
    15.
    BFI Waste Systems
    (BFI)
    joined in WNI’s criticisms of the
    substantive requirements proposed
    in Part 809 to regulate waste
    haulers,
    including proposed requirements for overnight parking,
    maintenance and odor control.
    P.C.
    #
    9.
    BFI suggested that the
    Board define “cover,” although at hearing two participants
    suggested that covers might be impractical, unnecessary,
    or even
    detrimental in some cases.
    P.
    345—353
    & 388—389.
    Board Conclusions and Responses to First Notice Public Comment~
    In its October
    18,
    1989 Interim Request, and again in the
    November
    15,
    1989 Second Notice order, the Board emphasized that
    the purpose and effect of the proposed rulemaking did
    not include
    expansion of the universe of wastes.
    “Wastes” and “Industrial
    Process Wastes” are defined
    by the Act.
    Judging from the several
    comments received regarding steel slags, ~
    P.C.
    #
    7,
    it
    appeared that such slags are properly defined as products unless
    114--414

    17
    abandoned or discarded, and to that extent they are unaffected by
    the proposed rules.
    In light of the several comments suggesting
    that some persons misunderstood this fact,
    the Board inserted a
    clarifying sentence
    in Section 808.100(a).
    After consideration of the several comments and questions
    and the testimony at hearing,
    the Board made several substantive
    changes
    in the proposed rule.
    It was clear,
    as many participants
    had noted, that the Board must drop references to certain
    provisions and concepts from this rulemaking
    in view of the fact
    that the proposed rules in R88-7 will not become effective prior
    to this proceeding.
    In consequence of this reality, the Board
    deleted all present references to Part 811 and all substantive
    requirements in the proposed amendments to Part 809 that are not
    directly related to special waste classification
    (e.g., proposed
    Sections 809.221 through 809.227).
    Similarly,
    the Board deferred the First Notice-proposed
    relocation of the hazardous
    (infectious)
    hospital waste rules
    from Part 809 to Part 808,
    together with the attendant changes to
    the text of those rules.
    These wastes were not newly evaluated
    by DENR’S methodology.
    This deferral also accommodated the need
    for separate consideration of the hazardous
    (infectious)
    hospital
    waste rules.
    Finally, the ongoing legislative initiatives
    regarding “medical waste” would affect infectious wastes
    generally,
    and the Board believed that this militated against
    taking any new actions
    in this proceeding.
    As for the DENR/HWRIC classification system, the Board
    concluded that this should serve as a component of
    a system for
    classification
    of special waste wastestreams.
    The Board clearly
    did not intend this as a means of classifying wastestreams
    in and
    of itself.
    It was also clearly a system that is to some extent
    volume—dependent.
    Moreover,
    the Board did not utilize that part
    of the HWRIC ranking system not justified by its science-based
    methodology.
    Rather,
    the Board relied on other standards
    (statutory or regulatory)
    adopted and in place for other
    wastestreams.
    The trouble with using such standards,
    such as the
    pH standard of RCRA,
    for example,
    is that they are not
    necessarily appropriate for or pertinent to the toxicity-based
    ranking in this rulemaking.
    Accordingly,
    the Board discarded
    Appendices C and D of Part 808 for the time being.
    Although,
    as of the date
    of the Interim Request the Board
    awaited the results of
    a spot check of DENR’s methodology on
    wastestreams previously submitted to the Agency for
    declassification under Section 22.9(d)
    of the Act,
    it was not
    persuaded by the concerns about adopting the rules before the
    commentors could test the computerized degree of hazard system on
    their own computers on wastes of their choosing.
    DENR/HWRIC have
    tested the computer system extensively; the DENI~/HWRICapproach
    has been available for testing at HWRIC’s offices for
    sonic time.
    I
    14—4
    1 5

    18
    The commentors could have otherwise tested the system manually.
    In any event,
    the Board did not believe that
    it should hold these
    rules in abeyance for these reasons.
    Moreover, the Board found that the concepts embodied in the
    Agency’s current policy guidance document provide some basis for
    a comprehensive system,
    although they lack the discipline imposed
    by use of a formal ranking system,
    such as that proposed by the
    DENR/HWRIC toxic hazard ranking system.
    The testimony of Agency
    witnesses makes clear that the present system for determining
    declassification requests lacks a consistent approach for
    determining toxicity and utilizing the resources of its own OCS.
    Without regular use of a central body of information,
    such as
    OCS, there
    is little assurance that determinations are consistent
    and based on current data.
    The Board did not find persuasive the
    Agency’s assertions that inclusion of the proposed formal system
    of evaluation
    is unnecessary and that the computerized system
    envisioned by HWRIC would prove too onerous to use.
    On the other hand,
    as to the concerns over the applicability
    and volume—dependent measure of toxicity provided by Appendix
    B,
    the Board intended that the proposed Section 808.245 language
    would clarify that an applicant may demonstrate the system
    inapplicable, and use another equivalent or comparable approach.
    No regulatory procedure or standard works
    in every conceivable
    circumstance.
    The same remedies are available here as are
    available without an articulated degree of hazard system,
    except
    that an articulated system provides a benchmark for evaluating
    disputes.
    Further, where waste volume
    is
    a factor
    in
    a lowered
    toxic score or classification, new Section 808.245(f)
    requires
    that the Agency specify such factor in its determination
    (also
    see the new language in subsection
    (b)
    of Appendix B).
    The Board was not convinced of the propriety of requiring
    that waste treaters or disposers be brought into the
    classification process as active participants.
    In the Board’s
    opinion, the proper role of operators of such facilities
    is to
    assure that wastes received are as described,
    not to participate
    at the Agency level
    in the classification process.
    Moreover,
    practical considerations render involving the entire universe of
    potential destinations
    of a given wastestrearn infeasible.
    The Board partially agreed with the comments from the
    Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago.
    While the Board did not agree that all water or wastewater
    treatment sludges should be exempt from the definition of
    “special wastes,”
    it did agree that such sludges already
    regulated under an Agency—approved sludge management plan should
    be exempt from the special waste manufacturing and hauling
    requirements.
    The Board added Section 808.121(b) (4)
    to this
    effect.
    ii 4—416

    19
    The record persuaded the Board that the Agency is correct
    in
    asserting that information gathering by way of required reports
    based on a four-part manifest, rather than keeping the Agency
    in
    the six—part manifest loop,
    is warranted for non—PCRA special
    wastes.
    USEPA requires only
    a four—part manifest for RCRA
    hazardous wastes.
    In neither the record of this docket nor
    in
    its predecessor dockets, P84-43 and R85-27, neither the Agency
    nor any member of the regulated community has ever suggested that
    burying the Agency under an avalanche of manifest forms serves a
    necessary function.
    Ultimately, the Agency seldom,
    if ever,
    timely uses the manifests due to their sheer volume.
    The Board
    agrees with the concerns of DENR and others that if the Agency
    were taken out of the loop, the required reports should include
    the same type of information, albeit reported on a less frequent
    basis.
    To this end, the Board added subsections
    (h) and
    (i)
    to
    Section 809.501.
    However, the Board did not believe that annual reporting
    provides an adequate measure of control over those wastes ranked
    as having a high degree of potential hazard.
    Hence, the proposed
    Interim Request rules required quarterly reporting for Class A
    wastes.
    The rules required annual reporting for all Class B
    wastes.
    Consequently, the Board continued to distinguish between
    special wastes that pose a high degree of hazard and those that
    do not.
    One related change was that the proposed rules group
    together wastes posing a “moderate” degree of hazard
    (i.e., those
    which achieve a score of
    2 under the system) with those pos~inga
    low degree of hazard as Class B special wastes.
    The Board made
    this revision rather than considering those posing a “Moderate”
    degree of hazard as Class A special wastes,
    as previously
    proposed.
    Incorporation of Agency Policy
    The Board altered the language of Part 808
    in an effort to
    “marry” the breadth and flexibility of the Agency’s policy
    guidance memorandum with the HWPIC system for ranking relative
    toxic hazards.
    However, the casual reader would have had
    difficulty finding the Agency’s existing guidance policy
    in the
    Interim Request proposal because the Board attempted to distill
    that policy into basic elements before blending
    it into the
    rules.
    The Agency’s guidance policy was set forth
    in the November
    1986 memorandum to solid waste generators entitled “Special Waste
    Determinations,
    Criteria and Procedures.”
    Ex.
    7,
    Att.
    A.
    That
    policy requires applicants
    for declassifying special wastes to
    provide information on:
    1.
    Aspects of the waste or waste stream;
    114
    417

    20
    2.
    Health and Environmental Aspects;
    and
    3.
    Disposal Site Aspects.
    Close examination reveals that several
    of the subcategories
    of major divisions of this policy document are either unrelated
    to the major division
    (e.g.,
    item A.l relates to the identity of
    the applicant, not to the aspects of the waste or waste stream)
    or overlap with other subcategories,
    including subcategories of
    other major divisions
    (e.g.,
    item A.5,
    which requires a “physical
    description and analysis,
    including contaminant components of the
    waste,” appears to replicate item B.l.c., which requires a
    “physical description and components of the waste”).
    For these
    reasons,
    the Board attempted to more clearly “sort out” the
    concerns addressed by the Agency’s policy.
    Procedural matters
    aside, the Board perceived the Agency’s concerns and addressed
    these concerns as follows:
    1.
    Wastes whose physical form renders them difficult to manage
    in a landfill or in storage or transit, such as wastes
    containing free liquids or consisting of finely divided
    particles.
    (Items A.3,
    A.4,
    A.5,
    B.l.c.,
    C.l,
    C.2.a and
    C.2.b.
    appeared at least partly directed to this concern.)
    The Board’s proposal embodies this concern in Section
    808.245(C) (1)
    2.
    Wastes whose chemical properties render them difficult to
    manage in a landfill or
    in storage
    or transit in the event
    of a leak or spill.
    (Items A.4,
    A.5, B.7.a,
    B.1.b.,
    C.1,
    and C.2.b appear at least partly directed to this concern.)
    The Board’s proposal embodies this concern in Section
    808.245(c) (2)
    3.
    Wastes whose chemical properties threaten the integrity of
    containment devices and structures.
    (Items A.5,
    B.1.b.,
    B.l.d., B.l.e and C.2.b appear at least partly directed to
    this concern.)
    The Board’s proposal embodies this concern
    in Section 808.245(c) (3).
    All three areas of concern are somewhat interrelated,
    particularly areas
    2 and
    3.
    For the purposes of the Interim
    Request proposal,
    the chemical properties of concern in item
    2
    were those which would pose a problem
    in
    the event of
    a loss of
    containment,
    such as
    a. spill,
    leak,
    or rupture.
    The chemical
    properties
    of concern
    in item
    2 are those properties that promote
    the creation of a spill,
    leak,
    or rupture due to the unstable
    nature of the waste.
    The same chemical property may exhibit both
    characteristics
    (e.g.,
    a wastestream containing a high
    concentration of hydrochloric acid may tend both to threaten the
    integrity of containment due to its corrosivity and to make
    difficult the management of the waste
    in the event of
    a leak or
    11 4—418

    21
    spill due to its creation of toxic fumes and its mobility.
    As for the specific manner of incorporating the Agency’s
    policies, the Board reasoned that the potential toxicity of a
    waste, represented by its “toxic score” as determined according
    to Appendix B or an equivalent means,
    should represent the “first
    cut” means of classifying a waste.
    Hence,
    a waste stream’s toxic
    score will determine its classification unless
    (in the case of
    wastes receiving a toxic score of
    1 or
    2)
    its physical, chemical,
    or “unstable” properties dictate the higher classification,
    or
    (in the use of wastes receiving
    a score of
    1,
    2 or
    3)
    its mode of
    containment or treatment warrants assigning the waste to a lower
    classification
    (including declassification)
    in the form of
    a
    conditioned wastestream classification determination.
    Under this
    provision,
    finely divided waste dusts or powders might qualify
    for a reduced classification or for declassification based
    on the
    requirement that the generator deliver them for transport or
    disposal
    in bags, barrels or other containment that precludes air
    dispersal.
    One would normally expect declassification of wastes whose
    “toxic score”
    is zero.
    However, the Board retained the concept
    of “special handling wastes”
    to address those situations where
    the waste presents a hazard to persons handling it
    in the course
    of transport,
    storage,
    or disposal operations notwithstanding its
    relative lack of toxicity.
    At hearing, discussions concerning
    talcum powder and similar types of non—toxic “fines,” which can,
    nevertheless, present a potent threat to handlers
    if
    significantly inhaled, illustrated the need for this type
    o.f
    mechanism to allow the Agency to keep tabs on shipment and
    disposal of such wastes.
    Finally, the rules as proposed in the Interim Request did
    not define the “dangerous characteristics” alluded to
    in Section
    808.245(e),
    nor did they itemize which characteristics apply to
    “special handling wastes,”
    as defined in Section 808.110 and used
    in Section 808.242.
    One may assume that characteristics
    in the
    nature of those listed under 808.245(c)(l),
    (c)(2),
    and
    (c)(3)
    would tend to constitute
    “dangerous characteristics” which could
    render an otherwise declassifiable waste
    a “special handling
    waste.”
    However, the Board refrained from explicitly limiting
    the Agency’s discretion
    in this regard.
    This was to allow
    the
    Agency to consider other types of
    “dangerous properties”
    or other
    types of circumstances that could warrant labelling a waste
    as
    a
    “special handling waste.”
    PROPOSED SECOND NOTICE
    The Second Notice Opinion and Order of November 15,
    1989
    contained further clarification and changes, primarily
    in
    response to comments received after
    the
    October 18 Interim
    Request
    (P.C.
    #14—21).
    This included the preliminary review
    11 ‘+—4
    I
    9

    22
    questions submitted by the Joint Committee on Administrative
    Rules
    (JCAR).
    The Board accepted all comments submitted,
    including those
    filed
    late; the Interim Request comment period was short, and
    certain commenters stated that they received that document late.
    The Board received comments from the Department of Energy and
    Natural Resources and its Hazardous Waste Research and
    Information Center
    (DENR/HWRIC)
    (P.C.
    #19 and 21),
    the Illinois
    Environmental Protection Agency
    (Agency)
    (P.C.
    #20),
    and the
    Illinois Environmental Regulatory Group
    (IERG)
    (P.C.
    #17).
    Also,
    the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules filed preliminary
    review questions at the Board’s request, and the Illinois
    Department
    of Commerce and Community Affairs, Small Business
    Assistance Bureau filed its review
    (P.C.
    #18).
    The Board also
    accepted the motion to substitute comments from the Illinois
    Steel Group
    (P.C.
    #22, substituted for P.C.
    #10 and 14)
    by its
    Order of November
    2,
    1989.
    In certain respects,
    the comments received in response to
    the Interim Request contain information or arguments already
    considered by the Board and addressed
    in the October
    18,
    1989
    Interim Request order (recounted
    in the above discussion).
    The
    November
    15,
    1989 Second Notice opinion
    (recounted below)
    concentrated on the Board’s responses to those portions of the
    comments not previously addressed.
    The Board further revised the
    proposed rule in its Second Notice order
    in response to the
    comments received and the JCAR questions submitted prior to
    Second Notice.
    The Second Notice opinion explained the basis for
    the changes made to the Interim Request order text of the
    proposed rules.
    Responses to the Interim Request
    DENR/HWRIC supported the Interim Request proposal, but
    expressed concern
    in certain areas.
    DENR/HWRIC believed that the
    pH and flashpoint criteria should be used
    in evaluating waste
    hazard.
    The Board believed that the Agency wouldevaluate these
    criteria pursuant to Section 808.410, Physical and Chemical
    Analysis,
    as well as Section 808.245, Classification of Wastes.
    In essence,
    the Board intended that the Agency evaluate such
    parameters
    in addition to DENP/HWPIC’s toxicological hazard based
    system.
    DENR also believed that IERG’s “absurd results” example,
    set forth in an earlier comment
    (P.C.#ll),
    overlooked the
    definition of
    innocuous substances.
    DENR/HWRIC suggested that
    a
    reference to this definition be included
    in Appendix
    B for
    clarity.
    The Board
    included
    a paraphrase of DENR/HWRIC’s
    recommended language.
    See Section 808.Appendix B(a) (6).
    DENP/HWP.IC then summarized the status of its degree
    of
    hazard analyses of wastes reviewed by the Agency under
    its
    interim guidance policies.
    Of the
    14 wastestream records the
    114-420

    23
    Agency sent to DENR/HWRIC
    as samples, DENR/HWRIC could make a
    degree of hazard determination on eight.
    DENR/HWRIC could not
    evaluate five wastestreanis:
    one because the Agency deemed
    it was
    not a waste, one because the Agency deemed it was not a special
    waste, two
    (that the Agency did not declassify)
    because of
    insufficient information, and one
    (that the Agency did
    declassify)
    because the information the Agency provided to
    DENR/HWRIC did not identify the waste constituents.
    In the
    latter case,
    DENR/HWRIC noted:
    Essentially no data on the waste were provided in the
    letter of application for delisting to IEPA.
    Only
    a
    sample was provided.
    The Agency reviewed the special
    waste stream application in making its determination
    but without specific criteria or standards.
    If the
    Agency would have had the use of the degree of hazard
    system when
    (sic)
    then they could have had a
    scientifically defensible basis for making their
    determination.
    P.C.
    #21, p.2.
    The waste at issue was thermosetting plastic.
    In a supplemental filing
    (P.C. #l9)~, HWRIC performed
    preliminary degree of hazard evaluations based on the information
    available for two of the eight delisting applications noted
    in
    their earlier comments.
    The first evaluation,
    of a molding
    sand,
    supported the Agency’s decision to declassify.
    The second
    evaluation,
    of one of 80 items listed (called “Resolve”)
    also
    posed a negligible degree of hazard.
    The Agency had not made a
    final determination on the latter application.
    IERG
    (P.C.
    #17)
    asked a series of questions aimed at showing
    that the regulations would place a greater burden on the
    generator than that the Agency presently requires.
    IERG asked
    if
    anyone had complained about the present system of using Agency
    guidelines.
    In response,
    the Board noted in its Second Notice
    opinion that a scientifically-based system for ranking the
    toxicology hazard component obviously places
    a greater burden on
    the generator wishing to obtain relief.
    However, the Board
    stated that the conclusion did not follow that this burden
    therefore lacked merit.
    While the Board was uncertain as to what
    “complaints” IERG might have referred to, the Board did note:
    1.
    Based on the record,
    the Board had crafted regulatory
    language that meshes the Agency’s guidelines and
    DENR/HWRIC’s system;
    and
    The P.C.
    numbers are out of sequence because of inadvertent
    delay
    in giving a number to P.C.
    #21.
    114-421

    24
    2.
    The Board had provided a considerably firmer footing
    for
    Board review of an Agency decision on appeal.
    IERG also asserted its belief that, while recognizing that
    the system
    is voluntary,
    generators will seldom use the system
    because of the increased costs of the informational requirements
    under the new system as compared to that required by the Agency
    pursuant to its guidelines.
    As an example, IERG used scrap
    polystyrene plastic that the Agency “delisted” based on an
    application to “delist,” a copy of the supplemental permit, and a
    sample of the special waste.
    The Board noted that this waste
    appeared the same as or similar to the thermosetting plastic
    wastestreani that DENR/HWRIC complained of for having
    informational deficiencies.
    The Board believed that the record
    in this proceeding supported the need for a methodology,
    including the underlying information,
    to assess the potential
    degree of toxicological hazard,
    and that DENR/HWRIC had justified
    the use of its system.
    In its comments,
    the Agency strongly opposed the
    transitional requirement that
    it re—review the wastestreams on
    which it has already acted.
    The Agency asserted that this would
    strain its resources and provide no environmental benefit.
    In
    the Second Notice opinion, the Board disagreed.
    It is hardly
    unreasonable to require compliance with a regulation requiring a
    systematized toxicological review.
    The Board noted that the
    manifesting relief provided
    in these regulations would free up
    considerable Agency resources.
    The Board also suggested that the
    Agency’s stated intent of not utilizing
    its authority in the
    transitional rules to phase—in 58 applications
    (at the most)
    would seem to aggravate the strain on resources of which the
    Agency complains.
    The Agency raised other issues in its comments.
    In the
    Second Notice opinion, the Board further questioned the basis for
    the Agency assertion that its decisions are appropriately based
    on the fact that “the material did not pose an environmental or
    public health threat greater than that proposed by normal
    municipal waste.”
    P.C.
    #20,
    p.
    2.
    The Agency also disagreed
    with use of dual special waste classes (Classes A and B),
    asserting that the quarterly versus annual reporting system for
    Class A and Class B wastes,
    respectively, would cause confusion
    among generators,
    haulers, and receiving facilities and confer
    little environmental benefit.
    The Board disagreed.
    The Board
    decided that the four part manifest should continue and found
    it
    difficult to believe that
    a generator of a Class B special waste
    would suffer confusion over only having to file an annual report.
    The Agency next questioned the use of terms like negligible,
    low,
    or moderate degree of hazard in Section 808.240(a)
    and
    (b),
    which the Agency suggests implies that refuse or municipal waste
    114—422

    25
    poses
    a negligible degree of hazard.
    The Board noted that these
    regulations relate to special waste and do not address the
    municipal waste issue.
    However, the Board simplified Section
    808.240(a)
    to succinctly state that there are Class A and Class B
    special wastes and declassified wastes.
    The Board believed that
    the use of low or moderate degree of hazard in Section 808.240(b)
    is appropriate to the ranking system.
    The Board added Section
    808.100(c)
    to clarify that declassified wastes remain subject to
    Board regulations governing non—special wastes.
    The Board responded
    in the Second Notice discussion to
    Agency concerns over the public availability of submitted
    information.
    The Board did not see how Section 808.302(b) (5)
    orders the release of confidential
    or trade-secret material any
    more than is the case,
    for example,
    in a permit setting.
    The
    Board also clarified that
    it intended maintenance of a publicly
    available list of data sources,
    required in Section 808.302, to
    include sources of data and bioassay procedures previously
    utilized by the Agency, thus removing the implication that these
    are of
    a rulemaking nature.
    The Board further addressed Agency concerns over required
    reports under the proposed rules.
    In response to the Agency’s
    recommendation that the Board require generators to submit
    discrepancy reports on an annual basis and annual reports
    in all
    cases, the Board notes that shifting such a requirement would
    impose a new burden on the regulated community beyond what the
    manifest regulations presently require.
    This
    is therefore
    a
    subject more appropriate to another proceeding.
    The Board also
    noted that the quarterly reports would enable the Agency to more
    timely oversee compliance
    for potentially high hazard special
    wastes.
    As to concerns over any perceived added burden imposed by
    the system,
    the Board did not believe that the Interim Request
    Opinion and Order was unclear about the fact that the Board
    intended the toxic score as the first declassification screen
    which the waste must pass through for ultimate declassification.
    The Board determined that DENR/HWRIC system potential
    is
    a
    component
    of first concern.
    Also,
    the DENP/HWRIC system did
    indeed anticipate the availability of more information than
    is
    available
    in wastestream requests,
    a point DENR/HWPIC made
    in its
    own comments.
    The Agency also recommended definitions for “Carcinogen” and
    “Mutagen.”
    The Board did not feel that this was necessary in
    this particular regulation,
    and noted that the Agency stated that
    there are many and various definitions for these terms.
    The
    Board also
    rioted that
    if
    a definition
    is necessary,
    there is
    merit to using the same definition
    as
    is used by USEPA.
    However,
    in deference to the Agency’s stated concern, the Board inserted
    the proffered definitions
    in Section 808.110.
    The Board also
    1
    1-’+-
    ~

    26
    included the Agency’s recommended definitions for pH and
    flashpoint
    in Section 808.410(b) (2)
    and
    (b)(3),
    for consistency
    with the clarification in the Board’s October 18,
    1989 Interim
    Request.
    In response to the Agency’s proposed changes regarding the
    oral versus inhalation rat issue, the Board declined to make the
    changes for reasons expressed by DENR/HWRIC and noted earlier
    in
    this Opinion.
    Also, while there was dispute over which test
    methodology should take precedence,
    the rules provide for
    flexibility.
    Paragraph
    (i)
    of Appendix B provides conversion
    factors for moving to an equivalent oral toxicity from other
    measures of toxicity based on exposure route,
    including
    inhalation and dermal routes.
    Finally, the Agency expressed strong support for the Board’s
    proposal to shift from the six part to a four part manifest and
    affirmed that the Board’s regulatory format accurately reflected
    the Agency policy paper.
    The Board also made other Agency-recommended changes when
    adopting the Second Notice version of the proposed rules:
    1.
    The Board changed Section 808.402, so that
    it would require
    the generator to describe the current disposal processes
    applicable to the wastestream.
    2.
    The Board changed Section 808.520,
    to delete the unnecessary
    30 day “more information” limit.
    3.
    The Board added “if any” after the words “expiration date”
    in Section 808.521(f).
    4.
    The Board changed the annual Class B reporting date in
    Subsection 809.501(g)
    to October 1st rather than March 1st,
    as requested by the Agency.
    5.
    As to Section 808.541, the Agency was correct that the Board
    had earlier acknowledged that the rules should not contain
    any language referring to motions for reconsideration before
    the Agency; the failure to earlier correct this section was
    inadvertent.
    6.
    Regarding Agency-recommended changes to Section 808.430, the
    Board made the clarification in Section 808.402.
    7.
    The Board added language to Subsection 808.430(a)
    to clarify
    that the applicant is to submit the underlying information
    or data used
    in the degree of hazard calculation.
    8.
    The Board corrected a typographical error,
    “190 days,” to
    “180 days”
    in Section 808.123.
    114—424

    27
    The Board also made a number of changes to the proposal in
    the Second Notice order on its own initiative.
    Most of these
    were in the nature of corrections of typographical errors.
    The
    Board made some changes to promote internal parallelism in
    sentence structure or to eliminate redundancies
    (e.g., deletion
    of Sections 808.246 and 808.503).
    One change was to delete a
    reference to non—existent Part 810
    (i.e.,
    the former definition
    of “waste”
    in Section 808.110),
    consistent with the Board’s First
    Notice Opinion, page
    7.
    Changes of note include the following:
    1.
    addition of subsection 808.240(e),
    to include a
    specific reference to Subpart H;
    2.
    amendment of the definition of “special handling waste”
    in Section 808.110 and the provisions of Section
    808.242, to make clear that the Agency can impose
    conditions on wastes in storage as well as in
    transport;
    3.
    amendment of the title and text of Sections 808.243 and
    808.244, for clarity;
    4.
    amendment of Section 808.245(a),
    to clarify the
    standards for determining whether a test methodology. is
    “equivalent or comparable”
    (and eliminating the use of
    these terms upon which the Agency and IERG negatively
    commented)
    and to provide for a binary alternative
    means of showing entitlement to a toxic score of
    0
    (zero) where Appendix B or its equivalent under 808.431
    is inapplicable or unavailable
    (e.g., waste for which
    there
    is no toxicological data or testing protocol);
    5.
    expansion of the “reasonably reliable” factors set
    forth in Section 808.302,
    to include bioassay
    procedures
    (necessitated by the previously-described
    amendments to Section 808.245);
    6.
    restoration of Subsection
    (b)
    of Appendix B to its
    correct text as set forth in the Board’s First Notice
    proposal;
    (The text of the Board’s order of October
    18,
    1989,
    erroneously omitted the introductory portion
    of this subsection, rendering it meaningless,
    and
    further erroneously included text as a subparagraph
    (b) (1) that related to off—specification,
    surplus,
    or
    spoiled food products.
    This text was among several
    alternatives considered and rejected by the Board as
    overly broad and was never intended to be inserted
    in
    the proposal.
    Since no commentor made note either of
    this subsection’s garbled text or its incongruous
    reference to food products,
    the Board assumes that no
    harm or prejudice occurred as a result of this error.)
    114-425

    28
    and
    7.
    changing of the reporting deadlines
    in Subsections
    809.501(f)
    and
    (g)
    to “as mailed” rather than “as
    received,” because of the relatively short time frame
    particularly for the quarterly reports.
    The Board also made certain changes in response to JCAR’s
    preliminary questions filed October
    3,
    1989.
    1.
    In Section 808.123, the Board added a sentence to
    articulate that small quantity generators can record
    and maintain quantities and rates of waste generated
    and accumulated to establish compliance with the time
    limit on accumulation.
    2.
    In Section 808.402(b),
    the Board deleted the second
    sentence.
    Appendix B
    is always used if a toxic score
    is to be calculated.
    Section 808.245(a)
    is the
    controlling language for alternative toxicity test
    methods.
    ~
    JCAR question 10.
    3.
    In Subpart H, the Board primarily created Section
    808.600
    to mesh the Board’s Hazardous
    (infectious)
    Hospital Waste regulations from Part 809 into Part 808.
    The Board believes that
    it should preserve this
    Subpart.
    However,
    the Board modified the language of
    subsections 808.600(a)
    and
    (b) for greater clarity.
    ~
    JCAR question 22.
    4.
    In Section 808.110, the definition of “special waste”
    makes clear that the definition derives from the Act.
    ~
    JCAR question
    4.
    5.
    In Section 808.412,
    the Board added
    a phrase from the
    Board Note to clarify when common names are to be used.
    ~
    JCAR question
    16.
    6.
    In Section 808.520, the Board inadvertently omitted the
    statutory phrase
    in 22.9(e)
    regarding Agency denial of
    a request.
    ~
    JCAR question 19.
    7.
    In Section 808.545, the Board did not intend the
    requirement as
    a Board Note and has corrected
    this.
    Other JCAP questions required only non-substantive edits.
    The Board made these without elaboration.
    The Board directly
    responded to JCAR during the Second Notice period on the rest of
    its questions.
    The Board also noted in its Second Notice Opinion that DCCA
    deferred to the “Illinois Environmental Group” for its comments.
    IlL,—426

    29
    As a final observation
    in its Second Notice opinion, the
    Board noted that some of the concerns relating to potential
    problems with using the degree of hazard system were by and large
    speculative in nature.
    The Board also noted that,
    at hearing,
    DENR/HWRIC offered to supply diskettes for testing the system or
    for other purposes to anyone who requested them.
    However, the
    record since that time contains no challenges to the system.
    In
    any event, the Board was persuaded that further problems,
    if any,
    will not be identified until the regulations are effective and
    generators have submitted some of the data on which the system
    depends.
    If difficulties arise, the Board can later address them
    as demonstrated in another proceeding.
    FINAL ADOPTION
    The Board adopts the November
    15,
    1989 Second Notice text,
    and the enunciated rationale underlying that text,
    with no
    substantive revisions.
    However, the Board has effected a number
    of non—substantive changes to that text.
    These are limited to
    corrections to citation format,
    clarifying changes, grammatical
    corrections,
    etc.
    The Board effected these changes in two
    stages:
    prior to submission of the package to JCAR for review
    (on June
    1,
    3.990) and during the course of dialogue with JCAR
    staff
    (up to July
    9,
    1990).
    The Board outlines those revisions
    in the following discussions.
    Citation Format
    The Board has revised the format of all citations to federal
    and state statutes,
    to the Administrative Code, and to other
    documents and corrected codification format where necessary to
    comport with current Administrative Code Unit requirements and
    present Board usage:
    1.
    The simple reformatted citations are located at Sections
    808.100(c),
    808.101, 808.110
    (definition of “Act”),
    808.302(a),
    808.431(a),
    808.542(a),
    808.542(b)(2),
    808.545(b),
    808.App. B(a)(3), 808.App. B(a)(5), 808.App.
    B(b)(2),
    808.App. B(d)(2), 808.App. B(e)(3),
    808.App.
    B(h) (3) (A),
    808.App. B(j) (3),
    809.103
    (definitions of “Act,”
    “Hazardous waste,” “Manifest,”
    “Refuse, and “Waste”),
    809.211(a),
    809.211(b),
    809.211(c),
    809.211(d),
    809.211(e),
    and 809.211(f);
    2.
    The corrected citations to the wrong Section are located at
    Section 808.110
    (definitions of “Degree of hazard” and
    “Special handling waste” Board Note)
    ;
    3.
    The previously-absent, newly—added name and citation to the
    relevant statutes are located at Sections 808.100(a)
    and
    809.103
    (definitions
    of
    “Refuse”
    and “Waste”) ;
    11
    4—427

    30
    4.
    The previously-absent,
    newly-added statutory citations and
    proper format to the rule provisions that are merely
    quotations from the Illinois Revised Statutes are located at
    Section 808.110
    (definition of
    “Special waste”)
    ,
    808.121(c),
    and Section 809.103
    (definitions of “Disposal,”
    Garbage,”
    “Hazardous waste,” “Industrial process waste,” “Person,”
    “Pollution control waste,”
    “Site,” “Treatment,” and
    “Waste”);
    5.
    The incorporations by reference,
    formerly at Sections
    808.110
    (definitions of “Carcinogen” and “Mutageri”) and
    808.410(b) (3) are now centrally located at Section 808.111,
    in the single format that the Board has begun to use for all
    incorporations by reference in Board rules
    (e.g.,
    at Section
    720.111 of the Board’s PCRA rules);
    and
    7.
    The Code-reformatted text appears at Section 809.501(j).
    Grammatical,
    Punctuation,
    Clarifying,
    Etc. Revisions
    The Board also revised the text of several sections to
    correct typographic, punctuation,
    and grammatical errors;
    to
    restore misplaced text; and to enhance clarity.
    The Board will
    not specify very minor typographic,
    punctuation, and grammatical
    corrections
    in this Opinion,
    but the other corrections of these
    types are as follows:
    1.
    The restored text appears at Sections 808.110
    (definition of
    “Hazardous waste”), 808.111
    (ASTM Standard D—93—79
    or D—93—
    80),
    808.245(e),
    808.App.
    B(a),
    808.App.
    8(b),
    808.App.
    8(c)
    (Board Note)
    (from 808.App. B(a)(4)),
    808.App.
    B(e),
    808.App.
    8(i),
    and 808.App.
    B(k)(2); and
    2.
    The rewording for enhanced clarity appears at Sections
    808.101,
    808.110
    (definitions of “Degree of hazard,”
    “Hazardous waste,” and “Special
    (non—RCRA)
    waste”), 808.122,
    808.123, 808.240(b), 808.241,
    808.243(b),
    808.244(a),
    808.244(b), 808.245
    (all subsections except
    (b)),
    808.300,
    808.301(b),
    808.302(b),
    808.302(c),
    808.400(a),
    808.402 (a) (4),
    808.402(a) (6),
    808.410, 808.410(c) (3),
    808.410(c) (4),
    808.410(d),
    808.411
    (both subsections),
    808.412
    (Board Note),
    808.413
    (all subsections except
    (a)(3),
    808.420,
    (all,
    including second Board Note,
    except
    subsection
    (a)),
    808.430
    (all subsections,
    including second
    Board Note),
    808.431
    (both subsections), 808.501(a),
    808.502
    (both subsections),
    808.521(e),
    808.521(f),
    808.541,
    808.542(a),
    808.542
    (b)(l)
    (including Board Note),
    808.543,
    808.544, 808.545
    (both subsections), 808.600
    (both
    subsections),
    808.App. A (reformatted),
    808.App.
    B
    (preamble
    added),
    808.App. B(a)(4)
    (Board Note), 808.App.
    B(b)(5),
    808.App. B(d)(1), 808.App.
    B(g),
    808.App.
    13(h)(2),
    808.App.
    1
    I 4-42 ~

    31
    B(h)(3)
    (all subsections except
    (A)),
    808.App.
    8(j)
    (all
    subsections), and 808.App. 8(k)
    (both subsections).
    Other Revisions
    Finally, the Board made a few corrections in consultation
    with JCAR staff that are worthy of individual note and
    discussion.
    These revisions are as follows:
    1.
    New definitions of terms,
    “LC50,”
    “LD50,” and “TC59” appear
    at Section 808.110.
    These terms are used at Sections
    808.431(c),
    808.App.
    B(h), and 808.App. 8(i).
    The Board
    felt that adding the definitions would add clarity to the
    rules.
    Further, the Board changed the format of these terms
    to use the subscript,
    as is commonly used by toxicologists,
    rather than the prior format
    (e.g. LC5O now appears as
    LC50).
    The Board believes that this will help avoid
    possible confusion as to the meaning of the terms.
    2.
    A new Board note appears at Section 808.110
    (definition of
    “Special waste”)
    to highlight the fact that two definitions
    of “hazardous waste appear
    in the Solid Waste rules and the
    Act.
    The Board Note highlights that the definition of
    Section 3.15 of the Act applies to his definition, whereas
    the operative definition of “Hazardous waste” that appears
    at Section 808.110 applies throughout the rest of this Part.
    3.
    New language at Section 808.240(c)
    clarifies the use of the
    Section 808.App. A flow chart for ascertaining waste
    categories.
    This language also makes clear that it
    is the
    order of appearance of the Part 808 queries on that chart,
    and not the order of appearance of the various sections
    in
    the main body of Part 808,
    which ultimately dictates the
    waste category.
    4.
    Section 808.301(e)
    is now clear that the output of a
    computer-generated degree of hazard determination must
    display the data and data sources used.
    5.
    Added language at Section 808.302(c)
    clarifies that only
    information protected under Sections
    7 or 7.1 of the Act or
    Parts 101 or 120 of the Board’s rules are exempt from Agency
    disclosure.
    6.
    Language formerly at Section 808.502(b)
    relating to waivers
    of Agency decision deadlines no longer appears
    in the rules.
    The Board removed that “however” clause in response to
    a
    JCAR request that the Board include additional language
    specifically outlining the criteria whereby the Agency could
    hold an application.
    It is sufficient that members of the
    regulated community can deal directly with the Agency on
    I 14--429

    32
    these waivers.
    The Board does not need to include language
    that explicitly outlines this inherent right.
    7.
    The Board reformatted the flow chart of Section 808.App. A.
    This new format does not affect the decision branching of
    the chart
    in any way.
    8.
    The effective date of the quarterly and annual report
    requirements, at Section 808.501(f)
    and
    (g),
    erroneously
    appeared as “January 1,
    1990” in the Second Notice order.
    That date
    is past due.
    The Board revised those subsections
    to reflect the correct date of January
    1,
    1991.
    CLARIFICATION
    The Board has become aware that clarification of the
    applicability of this proceeding on the oil and gas exploration
    industry
    is necessary.
    The issue relates to the interpretation
    of the Section 809.211(e)
    exception for haulers of oil and gas
    extraction wastes.
    Section 809.211 lists a number of exclusions from the
    special waste hauling and manifest requirements for persons
    engaged in specified activities.
    Subsection
    (e) excepts those
    described as follows:
    Any person operating under rules and regulations
    adopted pursuant to “An Act in relation to Oil,
    Gas,
    Coal and Other Surface and Underground Resources”
    (Ill.
    Rev.
    Stat.
    1989,
    ch. 96!~, par.
    5401 et seq.)
    and who
    hauls only oil and gas extraction wastes as defined in
    that Act.
    Section
    1 of the Oil and Gas Act,
    Ill. Rev.
    Stat.
    1989,
    ch
    111½,
    par.
    5401, defines “person,”
    “oil,” “gas,” and “waste.”
    The
    Board intends that the Section 809.211(e)
    phrase “as defined
    in
    that Act” apply only to that statute’s definitions of “oil” and
    “gas.”
    Part 809 already includes the operative Environmental
    Protection Act definitions of “person” and “waste.”
    ~
    Section
    809.103;
    see also Ill.
    Rev.
    Stat.
    1989,
    ch.
    111½,
    par.
    3.26
    &
    3.53.
    Since the definitions of the Oil and Gas Act are not
    identical to those of the Environmental Protection Act,
    use of
    those terms “as defined in that Act” could lead to anomalous
    results.
    For example,
    the Oil and Gas Act definition of “waste”
    outlines a concept akin to
    a doctrine of equity
    in which “waste”
    is an activity rather than
    a thing.
    Therefore,
    the Board intends
    use of only “oil”
    and “gas”
    as defined
    in the Oil and Gas Act.
    CONCLUSION
    The Board has discussed the rationale for each revision made
    to the evolving text of the proposed rules at each stage of this
    114—430

    33
    proceeding.
    To the extent the Board has,
    in this Opinion,
    reiterated the discussions from earlier opinions without a shift
    in position, the Board hereby adopts that matter as the present
    rationale for the adopted rule.
    For the foregoing reasons the Board proceeds to adopt the
    special waste categorization rules as embodied in the separate
    Order of this same date.
    The Board will immediately file these
    rules with the Secretary of State and submit the Notice of
    Adopted Amendments for Part 809 and the Notice of Adopted Rules
    for Part 808 for publication in the Illinois Register.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    J.
    Durnelle and M.
    Nardulli dissented.
    I, Dorothy M. Gunn,
    Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
    Board,
    do hereby c~jify that th~above Opinion of the Board was
    adopted on the
    ‘7’-~
    day of
    ~‘f~~7
    ,
    1990,
    by a vote of
    __
    CI
    ~.
    ~
    Dorothy N. ~unn,
    Clerk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    114—431

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