1. 111—552
      2. 111—554
      3. 111—558

ILLINOIS POLLUTION BOARD
May 24,
1990
IN THE MATTER OF:
)
RCRA UPDATE, USEPA REGULATIONS
)
R90-l0
TCLP (1-1-90 THROUGH 3—30—90)
)
(Rulemaking)
PROPOSAL FOR PUBLIC COMMENT
PROPOSED ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by J. Anderson):
Pursuant to Section
22.4(a) •of the Environmental Protection
Act
(Act),
the Board
is proposing
to amend the RCRA hazardous
waste regulations.
Section
22.4
of the Act governs adoption of regu1at~ons
establishing
the RCRA program
in Illinois.
Section
22.4(a)
provides
for quick adoption
of regulations which are “identical
in substance”
to federal
regulations; Section
22.4(a)
provides
that Title VII of
the Act and Section
5
of the Administrative
Procedure Act shall
not apply.
Because
this rulemaking
is not
subject
to Section
5 of
the Administrative Procedure Act,
it
is
not subject
to first notice or
to second
notice review by the
Joint Committee on Administrative Rules
(JCAR).
The federal RCRA
regulations are
found at 40 CFR 260 through 270.
This rulemaking
updates Illinois’
RCRA rules
to correspond with federal
amendments during the period January
1 through March
30,
1990.
This Proposed Order
is supported by
a Proposed Opinion
adopted
in
this day.
The text of the proposed amendments will
be attached
to this
Order and mailed
to persons on the mailing
list.
Because of
its
length,
the Proposal will not appear
in the Opinion volumes.
However,
the complete
text will appear
in the Illinois Register
in thenear
future.
The Board will
receive public
comment
on
the
proposal for
a period of
45 days after
the date of publication
in
the Illinois Register.
IT
IS SO ORDERED.
I,
Dorothy
M.
Gunn,
Clerk
of
the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that
the above Proposed Order was adopted
on the
~
day of
_____________
,
1990,
by
a vote
of
7-c
.
~
____
Dorothy
M.
~&inn, Clerk
Illinois Po~1utionControl Board
111—531

TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
C:
WASTE
DISPOSAL
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
C:
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS
PART
720
HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT
SYSTEM:
GENERAL
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Secti on
720. 101
Purpose, Scope and Applicability
720.102
Availability
of
Information;
Confidentiality
of
Information
720.103
Use
of
Number
and Gender
SUBPART
B:
DEFINITIONS
Secti on
720.110
Definitions
720.111
References
SUBPART C:
RULEMAKING PETITIONS
AND
OTHER
PROCEDURES
Section
720.120
Rulemaking
720.121
Alternative Equivalent Testing Methods
720.122
Waste Delisting
720.130
Procedures
for Solid Waste Determinations
720.131
Solid Waste Determinations
720.132
Boiler Determinations
720.133
Procedures
for Determinations
720.140
Additional
regulation
of certain hazardous
waste
Recycling
Activities
on
a case—by-case Basis
720.141
Procedures
for
case-by-case
regulation
of
hazardous
waste
Recycl
ing
Activities
Appendix A Overview of
40 CFR, Subtitle
C Regulations
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4
and authorized
by
Section
27
of the
Environmental
Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1988 Supp.,
ch. 111
1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R81-22,
43
PCB 427,
at
5 111.
Reg.
9781, effective
as
noted
in
35 Ill.
Adrn. Code 700.106; amended
and codified
in R81-22,
45 PCB
317,
at
6
Ill.
Reg.
4828,
effective as noted
in
35
Ill.
Adrn.
Code 700.106;
amended
in R82-19
at
7
Ill.
Reg.
14015, effective Oct.
12,
1983; amended
in
R84—9,
53 PCB
131
at
9
Ill. Reg. 11819,
effective July 24,
1985;
amended
in
R85—22
at
10 111.
Reg.
968,
effective January
2,
1986;
amended
in R86-1
at
10
Ill. Reg. 13998, effective August
12,
1986;
amended
in R86-19
at
10 111. Reg.
20630,
effective December-
2,
1986;
amended
in R86-28
at
11
111.
Reg.
6017,
effective March
24,
1987;
amended
in R86-46
at
11
111. Reg. 13435, effective
August
4,
1987;
amended
in R87-5
at
11 Ill. Reg. 19280, effective November
12,
1987;
amended
in
R87—26
at
12
Ill. Reg. 2450, effective January
15,
1988;
amended
in R87-39
at
12
111.
Reg.
12999,
effective July 29,
1988;
amended
in
R88-16
at
13
Ill. Reg.
362,
effective December 27,
1988;
amended
in
R89-I
at
13
111. Reg. 18278, effective November
13,
1989;
amended
in R89-2
at
14 111. Peg.
3075,
effective February 20,
1990;
amended
in R89—9
at
14
111—532

Ill.
Reg.
6225,
effective
April
16,
1990;
amended
in
R90—10
at
14 Ill.
tu~LL1VC
SUBPART
B:
DEFINITIONS
Section
720.110
Definitions
When used
in
35
111. Adm. Code 720 through 725 and 728 only,
the following
terms
have the meanings givenbelow:
“Aboveground
tank” means
a device meeting
the definition
of
“tank”
that
is situated
in such
a way
that
the entire surface area
of the
tank
is completely
above the plane
of the adjacent surrounding
surface and the
entire surface area of the tank (including the tank
bottom)
is able
to
be visually inspected.
“Act”
or
“RCRA” means
the Solid Waste Disposal Act,
as amended
by
the
Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act
of
1976,
as amended
(42 thS.C.
6901 et
seq.)
“Active life”
of
a facility means the period
from the
initial
receipt
of
hazardous waste
at
the facility
until
the Agency receives
certification of
final
closure.
“Active
portion”
means
that
portion
of
a
facility
where
treatment,
storage
or
disposal
operations
are
being
or have been conducted after
May
19,
1980,
and
which
is
not
a
closed
portion.
(See
also
“closed
portion”
and “inactive portion”.)
“Administrator”
means the Administrator of
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency or
the Administrator’s
designee.
“Agency” means
the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency.
“Ancillary equipment” means
any device
including,
but not limited to,
such devices
as
piping,
fittings, flanges, valves
and pumps,
that
is
used
to
distribute,
meter
or
control
the
flow
of
hazardous
waste
from
its
point
of
generation
to
storage
or
treatment
tank(s),
between
hazardous
waste
storage
and
treatment
tanks
to
a
point
of
disposal
onsite,
or
to
a
point
of
shipment
for disposal
off-site.
“Aquifer”
means
a
geologic
formation,
group
of
formations
or
part
of
a
formation
capable
of
yielding
a
significant
amount
of
groundwater
to wells
or springs.
“Authorized
representative”
means the
person responsible
for the
overall operation
of
a facility or
an operational
unit
(i.e.,
part of
a
facility),
e.g.,
the plant manager, superintendent
or person
of
equi val ent
responsi bi
1 ity.
“Board”
means
the
Illinois
Pollution Control
Board.
“Boiler”
means
an
enclosed
device
using
controlled
flame
combustion
and having the following characteristics:
111—533

The
unit must have physical
provisions
for
recovering
and
exporting
thermal
energy
in
the
form
of
steam,
heated
fluids
or
heated
gases;
and
the
unit’s
combustion
chamber
and
primary
energy
recovery
section(s)
must
be
of
integral
design.
To
be
of
integral
design,
the
combustion
chamber
and
the
primary
energy
recovery section(s)
(such
as waterwalls
and supQrheaters) must
be
physically
formed
into
one
manufactured
or
assembled
unit.
A
unit
in
which
the
combustion
chamber
and
the
primary
energy
recovery
section(s)
are joined only by ducts
or connections
carrying flue
gas
is not integrally designed;
however, secondary
energy
recovery equipment
(such
as
economizers
or air
preheaters)
need
not
be physically formed
into the same unit
as
the combustion chamber and the primary energy
recovery
section.
The
following
units
are
not
precluded
from
being
boilers
solely
because
they
are
not of
integral
design:
pocess
heaters
(units that transfer energy
directly to
a process
stream),
and fluidized bed combustion
units;
and
While
in
operation,
the
unit
must maintain
a thermal
energy
recovery
efficiency
of
at
least
60
percent,
calculated
in
terms
of
the
recovered
energy
compared
with
the
thermal
value
of
the
fuel;
and
The unit must
export
and utilize
at
least
75 percent
of
the
recovered
energy., calculated
on
an annual
basis.
In this
calculation,
no credit
shall
be given
for recovered heat used
internally
in
th’e same unit.
(Examples of internal
use are the
preheating
of
fuel
or combustion
air,
and the driving
of induced
or
forced
draft
fans
or
feedwater
pumps);
or
The
unit
is
one
which
the
Board
has
determined,
on
a
case—by—
case
basis,
to
be
a
boiler,
after
considering
the
standards
in
Section 720.132.
“Certification”
means
a statement
of professional
opinion
based upon
knowledge and
belief.
“Closed Portion” means that portion
of
a
facility which
an owner
or
operator has closed
in
accordance with
the
approved facility closure
plan
and
all
applicable
closure
requirements.
(See
also
“active
portion”
and
“inactive
portion’.)
“Component” means either the tank or ancillary equipment of
a tank
system.
“Confined aquifer” means
an aquifer bounded
above
and
below
by
impermeable beds or by
beds of distinctly
lower
permeability than
that
of the aquifer itself;
an aquifer containing confined
groundwater.
“Container”
means
any
portable device
in which
a
material
is stored,
transported,
treated,
disposed
of
or
otherwise
handled.
111—534

“Contingency plan” means
a
document setting out
an organized,
planned
and coordinated course
of action
to
be
followed in case of
a
fire,
explosion or
release
of hazardous waste
or hazardous waste
constituents which
could
threaten
human
health
or the environment.
“Corrosion
expert” means
a
person who,
by
reason
of knowledge of
the
physical
sciences and the principles of engineering ~ndmathematics,
acquired by
a
professional
education
and related
practical
experience,
is qualified to engage
in
the practice of corrosion
control
on
buried
or submerged metal
piping systems
and metal
tanks.
Such
a
person must be
certified
as being qualified by the
National Association
of Corrosion Enginee~-s(MACE)
or be
a
registered
professional
engineer who
has certification
or
licensing that
includes education and experience
in
corrosion control
on buried
or
submerged metal
piping
systems and metal
tanks.
“Designated
facility”.
“Designated
facility”
means
a
hazardous
waste treatment, storage
or
disposal
facilitY~—)
-w-Which:
Has
received
a
RCRA
permit
(or
interim
status)
pursuant
to
35
111.
Adm.
Code
702,
703
and
705;
Has
received
a
RCRA permit
from USEPA pursuant to
40
CFR
124
and
270
(1989);
Has
received
a RCRA permit
from
a state
authorized by
USEPA pursuant to 40 CFR
271
(1989);
or
Is regulated under
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
721.106(c)(2)
or
266;Subpart
F;
and
Which
has
been
designated
on
the
manifest
by
the
generator
pursuant
to
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
722.120.
If
.a waste
is destined
to
a facility
in
a
state,
other than
illinois, which
has
been autho’ized by USEPA
pursuant to
40 CFR
271, but which
has
not yet obtained authorization
to regulate
that
waste
as
hazardous,
then
the
designated
facility
must
be
a
facility
allowed
by the receiving
state
to accept
such waste.
“Dike” means
an embankment
or
ridge
of
either
natural
or
manmade
materials
used
to prevent
the movement
of
liquids, sludges, solids
or
other materials.
“Director”
means
the Director
of the Illinois Environmental
Protection Agency.
“Discharge”
or
“hazardous waste discharge” means
the accidental
or
intentional
spilling, leaking, pumping,
pouring, emitting, emptying
or dumping
of hazardous waste
into
or on
any land
or water.
111—535

-6—
“Disposal”
means
the
discharge,
deposit,
injection,
dumping,
spilling,
leaking
or placing
of
any solid waste
or hazardous waste
into
or
on
any
land
or
water
so
that
such
solid
waste
or
hazardous
waste
or any constituent thereof may enter the environment
or
be
emitted
into
the
air
or
discharged
into
any waters,
including
groundwaters.
“Disposal
facility” means
a facility
or part
of
a
facility
at
which
hazardous waste
is intentionally placed
into or
on
any
land or water
and
at which waste
will
remain afte~closure.
“Elementary neutralization
unit”
means
a
device which:
is
used for neutralizing wastes which
are hazardous
only because
they exhibit
the corrosivity
characteristic defined
in
35 ill.
Adm. Code 721.122
or are
listed
in
35
Ill.
Adrn.
Code 721.Subpart
D
only for this reason;
and
Meets
the defi nition
of
tank,
tank system, container, transport
vehicle
or vessel
in this Section.
“EPA”
or
‘USEPA
means United States
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
“EPA hazardous waste
number”
or
“USEPA hazardous waste numbe~”means
the number assigned
by EPA
to each hazardous waste
listed
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 721.Subpart
0 and
to each characteristic identified
in
35
ill.
Adm. Code 721.Subpart
C.
“EPA identification number”
or
“USEPA identification number” means
the
number assigned
by USEPA pursuant
to
35 Ill. Adm. Code
722
through 725 to
each generator, transporter
and treatment,
storage
or
disposal
facility.
“EPA region” means
the
states
and
territories
found
in
any
one
of
the
following ten regions:
Region
1:
Maine, Vermont, New Hampshire,
Massachusetts,
Connecticut
and Rhode Island
Region
11:
New York,
New Jersey, Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico
an~the U.S.
Virgin Islands
Region
III:
Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, West Virginia,
Virginia
and the District of
Columbia
Region
IV:
Kentucky, Tennessee,
North Carolina, Mississippi,
Alabama, Georgia, South
Carolina
and Florida
Region
V:
Minnesota, Wisconsin,
Illinois, Michigan,
Indiana and
Ohio
Region
VI:
New Mexico, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas
111—536

—7—
Region
VII:
Nebraska,
Kansas, Missouri
and Iowa
Region VIII:
Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota,
South Dakota,
Utah
and Colorado
Region
IX:
California,
Nevada, Arizona, Hawaiia Guam,
American
Samoa and Comonwealth
of
the Northern Mariana Islands
Region
X:
Washington,
Oregon,
Idaho
and
Alaska
“Equivalent
method”
means
any
testing
or
analytical
method
approved
by the Board pursuant
to Section 720.120.
“Existing hazardous waste management
(HWM) facility” or “existing
facility” means
a
facility which was
in
operation
or
for
which
construction
comenced
on
or before November
19,
1980.
A
facility
had commenced construction
if
the
owner
or
operator
had obtained
the
federal,
state
and
local
approvals
or permits necessary to begin
physical
construction
and
either
A continuous
on-site,
physical construction program
had
begun or
the
owner
or
operator
had
entered
into
contractual
obligations
-—
which
could
not be
cancelled or
modified without
substantial
loss
--
for physical
construction
of the facility
to
be
completed within
a
reasonable time.
“Existing portion”
means
that
land surface
area of
an
existing waste
management unit,
included
in the original
Part A permit
application,
on which wastes have been placed prior
to the issuance of
a permit.
“Existing tank
system”
or
“existing component” means
a
tank system or
component that
is
used
for the
storage
or
treatment of
hazardous
waste
and that
is
in operation,
or
for which
installation
has
commenced
on
or
prior
to
July
14,
1986.
installation
will
be
considered
to
have
comenced
if
the
owner
or
operator
has
obtained
all
federal, State
and
local
approvals or permits necessary to
begin
physical
construction
of
the
site
or
installation
of
the
tank
system
and
if either
A continuous on-site physical
construction
or
installation
program has begun;
or
The
owner
or
operator has entered
into contractual
obligations
—-
which cannot
be canceled or modified without
substantial
loss
——
for physical
construction
of the site
or
installation
of
the
tank system to
be completed within
a
reasonable
time.
“Facility” means
all
contiguous
land and structures,
other
appurtenances
and
improvements
on
the
land
used
for
treating,
storing
or disposing
of hazardous waste.
A facility may consist
of
several
treatment, storage
or disposal operational
units
(e.g.,
one or more
landfills, surface impoundments
or combinations
of them).
111—537

-8-
“Final
closure” means the
closu’-e
of
all
hazardous waste management
units
at the facility
in accordance with
all
applicable closure
requirements
so that
hazardous waste management activities under
35
Ill.
Adrn.
Code 724 and
725 are no
longer conducted
at
the facility
unless subject
to the provisions
of
35 Ill. Adm. Code
722.134.
‘Fede’al
agency” means any department,,agency
or other
instrumentality
of
tne
federal
government,
any
independent
agency
o~
establishment
of the fede~al government including
any
government
co~porationand
the Government Printing Office.
“Fede~’al
,
state
and
local
app~ovalsor permits necessary to
begin
physical
construction’
means
permits
and
approvals
requied
under
federal
,
state
or
local
haza~douswaste control
statutes, regulations
or ordinances.
“Food—chain
crops” means
tobacco, crops
grown
for human consumption
and
crops g~ownfor feed fo~animals whose
products
are
consumed
by
humans.
“Freeboard’
means
the
vertical
distance between the
top of
a tank
or
surface impoundment
dike
and the surface
of the waste
contained
therein.
“Free
liquids”
means
liquids
which
readily
separate
from
the
solia
potion
of
a
waste
under
ambient
temperature
and
pressu~e.
‘Gene”ator”
means
any
person,
by
site,
whose
act
or
process
produce
hazardous waste identified
or listed
in
35 Ill.
Adm.
Code
721
or
whose
act
first
causes
a hazardous waste
to become subject
to
regul at
ion.
“Groundwater”
means
water
below
the
land
surface
in
a
zone
of
saturation.
“Hazardous
waste”
means
a
hazardous
waste
as
defined
in
35
111.
Adm.
Code
721.103.
“Hazardous
waste constituent” means
a
constituent which
caused
the
hazardous waste
to
be
listed
in
35 Ill.
Adm. Code
721.Subpart 0,
or
a
constituent
listed
in
of
35
111.
Admn.
Code
721.124.
“Hazardous waste management
unit”
is
a
contiguous
area of land
on
or
in which
hazardous waste
is
placed,
or the largest
area
in which
there
is
significant
likelihood
of mixing hazardous waste
constituents
in
the same area.
Examples
of
hazardous waste
management units. include
a
surface impou~ndment, a waste
pile,
a
land
treatment
area,
a
landfill
cell,
an
incinerator,
a
tank
and
its
associated
piping and underlying
containment system and
a container
storage area.
A container alone
does not constitute
a unit;
the
unit
includes
containers
and
the
land
or
pad
upon
which
they
are
placed.
111—538

“inactive portion” means
that portion
of
a
facility which
is
not
operated after November
19,
1980.
(See also “active portion” and
“closed portion”.)
“Incinerator” means
any enclosed device using controlled
flame
combustion which
is neither
a
“boiler”
nor an
“industrial
furnace”.
“Incompatible waste” means
a hazardous waste which
is
suitable
for:
Placement
in
a
particular device
or facility because
it may
cause
corrosion or decay
of containment materials
(e.g.,
container inner liners
or tank walls);
o”
Commingling
with
another
waste
or
material
under
uncontrolled
conditions
because
the
comnningling
might
produce
heat
or
pressure,
fire
or
explosion,
violent
reaction,
toxic
dusts,
mists,
fumes
or
gases
or
flarnabie
fumes
or
gases.
(See
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 725.Appendix
E
for examples.)
“Industrial
furnace” means
any of the following enclosed devices that
are
integral
components
of manufacturing processes and that use
controlled flame devices
to
accomplish
recovery
of materials
or
energy:
Cement kilns
Lime kilns
Aggregate kilns
Phosphate kilns
Coke
ovens
Blast
furnaces
Smelting, melting and refining furnaces (including
pyronetallurgical
devices
such as cupolas,
reverberator
furnaces,
sintering
machines,
roasters
and
foundry
furnaces)
Titanium dioxide chlo”ide process oxidation reactors
Methane
reforming
furnaces
Pulping liquor
recovery furnaces
Combustion
devices
used
in
the
recovery
of
sulfur
values
from
spent
sulfuric
acid
Any
other such device
as
the Agency determines
to
be an
“Industrial
Furnace”
on
the basis
of one or more of the
following factors:
111—539

-10-
The
design
and
use
of
the
device
p~imarilyto
accomplish
recovery
of material
products;
The use of the device
to burn
or reduce
raw materials
to
make
a material
product;
The
use
of the device
to burn or
reduce secondary mate~ials
as effect~vesubstitutes for, raw materials,
in
processes
using
raw materials
as principal
feedstocks;
The
use of the device
to
burn c~redude secondary materials
as ingedients
in
an
industrial
process
to make
a
material
product;
The
use of the device
in
common
industrial
practice to
produce
a material
poduct;
and
Othe~relevant factors.
‘incividual
generation site
means
the contiguous
site at o~on which
one
or more hazardous ~vastes
a~egene~ated.
An
individual
generation
site,
such
as
a la~gemanufacturing plant, nay have
one o~more
sou~-ces of
hazarcous waste
but
is consicered
a single
or
individual
generation site
if the
site
or property
is
contiguous.
“inground tank” means
a device meeting
the definition
of
“tank”
whereby
a
portion
of the tank
wail
is
situated
to any degree within
the
g-ound, thereby p-eventing
visual
inspection
of that external
surface area
of the tank that
is
in
the g~ound.
“In operation” refes
to
a facility which
is
treating, storing o~
disposing
of haza~douswaste.
“injection well” means
a well
into which
fluids
are being injected.
(See also “underground
injection”.)
“Inner
liner” means
a
continuous
layer
of material
placed
inside
a
tank
or container which protects the construction materials of
the
tank
or’ container from the contained waste
or
reagents
used
to
treat
the waste.
“Installation inspector”
means
a person who,
by reason
of knowledge
of the physical
sciences
and the principles of engineering,
acquired
by
a professional
education and
related practical
experience,
is
qualified to supervise
the installation
of
tank systems.
“International
shipment” means
the transportation of
hazardous waste
into or Out of the jurisdiction of the United
States.
“Land treatment facility’
means
a facility
or
part
of
a
facility
at
which hazardous waste
is applied onto or incorporated into the soil
surface;
such facilities are disposal
facilities
if the waste
will
remain after closure.
111—54fl

—11—
“Landfill” means
a disposal
facility or
part of
a
facility where
hazardous
waste
is
placed
in
or
on
land
and
which
is
not
a
pile,
a
land treatment facility,
a surface impoundment,
an underground
injection well,
a salt dome formation,
an underground mine or
a
cave.
“Landfill
cell”
means
a discrete volume of
a
hazardous waste
landfill
which uses
a liner to provide isolation of wastes
frem adjacent cells
or wastes.
Examples
of landfill
cells
are trenches and
pits.
“Leachate” means any
liquid, including
any suspended components
in
the
liquid,
that
has percolated
through
or
drained
from
hazardous
waste.
“Liner”
means
a
continuous
layer
of
natural
or
manmade
materials
beneath
or
or’
the
sides
of
a
surface
impoundment,
landfill
or
landfill
cell,
which
restricts the downward
or
lateral
escape
of
hazardous
waste,
hazardous
waste
constituents
or
leachate.
“Leak-detection
system” means
a system capable
of detecting
the
failure
of
either
the
primary
or
secondary containment
structure
or
the presence of
a
release
of hazardous waste
or accumulated
liquid
in
the secondary containment
structure.
Such
a
system must employ
operational
controls
(e.g., daily
visual
inspections
for
releases
into
the secondary containment system
of aboveground
tanks)
or
consist
of
an
interstitial monitoring
device designed
to detect
continuously and automatically the failure of the primary
or
secondary containment structure or
the presence
of
a release
of
hazardous
waste
into
the
secondary containment structure.
“Management”
or
“hazardous
waste
management”
means
the
systematic
control
of
the
collection,
source
separation,
storage,
transportation,
processing, treatment,
recovery and disposal
of
hazardous waste.
“Manifest” means
the shipping document originated
and
signed
by the
generator which
contains
the information required by
35 Ill. Adm.
Code 722.Subpart
B.
“Manifest document number”
means the USEPA twelve digit
identification number assigned
to the generator plus
a unique
five
digit
document
number
assigned
to
the
manifest
by
the
generator
for
recording
and
reporting
purposes.
“Mining overburden returned
to the
mine
site”
means
any
material
overlying
an
economic mineral
deposit which
is
removed
to gain access
to
that deposit and
is
then used for reclamation
of
a
surface nine.
“Miscellaneous unit”
means
a hazardous waste management
unit where
hazardous waste
is treated, stored
or
disposed of
and which
is not
a
cont.aine’~,tank,
tank
system,
surface
impoundment,
pile,
land
treatment
unit,
landfill,
incinerator,
boiler,
industrial
furnace,
underground
injection well with appropriate technical
standards under
35 ill.
Adm. Code
730,
or
a unit eligible
for
a
research, development
and demonstration permit under
35
Ill. Adm. Code
703.231.
111—541

—12—
“Movement” means
that hazardous waste transported
to
a
facility
in
an
individual
vehicle.
“New hazadous waste management
facility”
or
“new facility”
means
a
facility which began operation,
or for which construction
comrrner.ced,
after November 19,
1980.
(See also “Existing hazardous waste
management
facility”.
‘New tank
system’
or
“new tank component” means
a tank system
or
component
that will
be used
for the storage
or treatment
of hazardous
waste
ana for wnich installation cornenced
after July 14,
1986;
except,
noweve-, fo~pu’poses
of
35 111.
Adm. Code 724.293(g)(2)
anc
725.293(g)(2),
a new tank system
is
one fo
which construction
commences afte” July
14,
1986.
(See also “existing tank system.”)
“Ongroun’J
tank’
means
a device meeting the definition
of
“tank”
that
is situated
in
such
a way that
the bottom of the
tank
is
on
the
same
level
as
the adjacent
surrounding surfaces
so that
the external
tank
bottom cannot
be visually inspected.
“On-site” means
the
same or geog-aphically contiguous property which
may
be divided
by
public
or
p~’ivate ight-of-way,
provided the
ent—ance. and
exit between the properties
is
at
a crossoads
inte-section and
access
is
by crossing
as opposed
to
going
along the
right-of-way.
Noncontiguous properties
owned
by the same person
but
connected
by
a
ight-of—way which
he
controls
and to
which the
public
does
not
have access
is
also considered on-site property.
Open burning” means
the combustion
of
any material without the
following characteri stics:
Control
of combustion
ai
to maintain adequate
temperature for
efficient combustion;
Containment
of
the combustion
reaction
in
an
enclosed device
to
provide sufficient residence time
and mixing
for complete
combustion;
and
Control
of
emission
of
the
gaseous
combustion
products.
(See also “incineration”
and “thermal
treatment”.)
“Operator”
means
the
person
responsible
for the overall
operation of
a facility.
“Owner”
means
the
person
who
owns
a
facility
or
part
of
a
facility.
“Partial
closu—e”
means
the
closure
of
a
hazardous
waste
management
unit
in accordance with
the applicable closure
requirements
of
35
Ill.
Adm. Code
724 or
725
at
a
facility which contains other active
hazardous waste management units.
For example, partial
closure may
include the closure
of
a
tank
(including its associated
piping and
unde-lying
containment systems), landfill
cell,
surface impourdment,
111—542

—1
~—
waste
pile or other hazardous waste management unit,
while other
units
of the same facility continue to operate.
“Person” means
an
individual,
trust,
firm,
joint
stock company,
federal
agency, corporation
(including
a government corporation),
partnership,
association,
state,
municipality,
comission,
political
subdivision
of
a
state
or
any
interstate
body.
“Personnel”
or
“facility
personnel”
means
all
persons
who
work
at
or
oversee the operations
of
a hazardous waste facility
and whose
actions
or failure
to act may
result
in
noncompliance with the
requirements
of
35 Ill. Adm. Code
724 or 725.
“Pile”
means
any noncontainerized accumulation
of solid, non-flowing
hazardous waste that
is
used for treatment or storage.
“Point source’
means
any discernible,
confined
and discrete
conveyance
including,
but
not limited
to, any
pipe, ditch, channel,
tunnel,
conduit,
we-ll
,
discrete fissure, containe, rolling
stock,
concentrated animal feeding operation
or vessel
or other floating
craft
from which pollutants
are or may
be discharged.
This term does
not include
return
flows
from irrigated agriculture.
“Publicly owned
treatment works’
or
“POTW”
is
as defined
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 310.110.
“Regional Administrator” means
the Regional
Administrator for the EPA
Region
in which
the facility
is located
or the Regional
Administrator’s designee.
“Rep-esentative sample” means
a sample
of
a universe or whole
(e.g.,
waste
pile,
lagoon, g—oundwater) which
can
be expected to exhibit the
average properties. of
the universe or whole.
“Runoff” means any
rainwater,
leachate or other
liquid
that drains
over
land
from
any
part
of
a
facility.
“Runon” means any rairwate—,
leachate or other
liquid that drains
over
land
onto
any
part
of
a
facility.
“Saturated
zone”
or
“zone
of
saturation”
means
that
part
of
the
earth’s crust
in which
all
voids are
filled with water.
“SIC Code” means Standard
Industrial
Code
as
defined
in
Standard
Industrial Classification Manual,
incorporated
by reference
in
Section 720.111.
“Sludge” means any
solid, semi-solid
or liquid waste generated from
a
municipal,
cornercial
or
industrial. wastewater treatment plant, water
supply treatment
plant
or
air pollution contoi
facility exclusive of
the treated effluent from
a wastewater
treatment plant.
“Small Quantity Generator”
means
a
generato— which
generates less
than
1000
kg
of hazardous waste
in
a calendar month.
11 1—543

-14-
“Solid waste” means
a solid waste
as defined
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code
721.102.
“Sump” means
any pit
or reservoir that meets
the definition
of tank
and those
troughs or trenches connected to
it
that se—ye
to collect
hazardous
waste for transport to hazardous waste
storage, treatment
or disposal
facilities.
“State”
means any
of the
several
states, the District
of
Columbia,
the
Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico,
the Virgin
islands, Guam,
Ame’ican
Samoa
and the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands.
“Stoage’
means
the holding
of haza-dous waste
for
a tempo-ary
period,
at
the
end of
which
the hazardous waste
is
treated, disposed
of
or
stored
elsewhe~’e.
“Surface impoundment” or “impoundment” means
a facility o~part
of
a
facility which
is
a. natural
topographic
cep—ession, manmace
excavation o~diked aea formed p—imarily of
earthen materials
(although
it
may
be
lined
with
manmade
materials)
which
is
designed
to
hold an accumulation
of liquid
wastes
a— wastes
containing free
liquids and which
is
not
an injection well.
Examples
of suface
impoundments are holding, storage,
settling
and aeration
pits,
ponds
and
lagoons.
“Tank” means
a stationary
device, designed
to
contain
an
accumulation
of
hazardous waste which
is const—ucted
primarily of nonea~then
materials
(e.g.,
wood,
concrete,
steel,
plastic)
which
provice
structural
support.
“Tank system”
means
a
hazardous waste storage
o— treatment tank
and
its associated anciila-y equipment
and containment
system.
“Thermal
treatment”
means the treatment
of
hazardous waste
in
a
device which
uses elevated temperatu—es
as
the pima—y means
to
change the
chemical
,
physical
or
biological
character
or composition
of the hazardous waste.
Examples
of themal
treatment processes are
iricine-ation, molten
salt,
pyrolysis, calcination, wet
ai
oxidation
and microwave discharge.
(See also ‘incinerator”
and
“open
bu’~’ning”
.
)
“Totally enclosed treatment facility” means
a
facility
for the
treatment of
hazardous waste which
is directly connected
to
an
industrial
production
process
and
which
is
constructed
and
operated
in
a manner which prevents the release
of any hazardous waste
or any
constituent thereof
into
the envionment
during treatment.
An
example
is
a pipe
in
which waste
acid
is neutralized.
“Transfer facility”
means
any transportation related facility
including
loading
docks,
parking areas,
storage areas
and
othe’
similar areas where shipments
of hazardous
waste are
held during the
normal
course
of transportation.
111—544

“Transport vehicle” means
a motor vehicle
or
rail
car used
for the
transportation of
cargo
by any mode.
Each cargo-carrying body
(trailer,
railroad freight
Ca—, etc.)
is
a
separate transport
vehicle.
“Transportation” means the movement of hazardous waste
by
air,
rail,
highway
or water.
“Transporter” means
a person engaged
in
the off-site transportation
of
hazardous waste
by air,
rail,
highway
or water.
“Treatability
study”
means:
A
study
in
which
a
hazardous
waste
is
subjected
to
a
treatment
process
to determine:
Whether
the
waste
is
amenable
to
tne
treatment
process.
What
pret.—eatment
(if
any)
is
required.
The
optimal
process
conditions
needed
to
achieve
the
desi red
treatment.
The efficiency
of
a treatment process for
a specific waste
or wastes.
Or,
The characteristics
and volumes
of residuals from
a
particular treatment process.
Also included
in
this definition for the purpose
of
35
Ill. Adm.
Code
721.104(e)
and
(f)
exemptions
are
liner
compatibility,
corrosion and other
material
compatibility
studies
and
toxicological
and health
effects
studies.
A “treatability
study”
is
not
a means
to commercially treat
or dispose
of
hazardous
waste.
“Treatment” means
any method, technique
or process,
including
neutralization,
designed to change the physical, chemical
or
biological
character or composition
of
any hazardous waste
so
as
to
neutralize
such waste,
or
so
as
to
recover
energy
or
material
resources from the waste
or
so
as
to
render
such
waste
non-hazardous
or
less
hazardous;
safer
totranspo—t,
store
or
dispose
of;
or
amenable
for recovery, amenable
for
storage
or reduced
in
volume.
“Treatment
zone”
means
a
soil
area
of
the
unsaturated
zone
of
a
land
treatment
unit
within
which
hazardous
constituents
are
degraded,
transformed
o- imobilized.
“Underground
injection”
means
the
subsurface
emplacement
of
fluids
through
a
bored,
drilled
or
driven
well;
or
through
a
dug
well,
where
the depth
of
the dug well
is
greater than the
largest surface
dimension.
(See
also
“injection
well”.)
“Underground
tank”
means
a
device
meeting
the
definition
of
“tank”
111—545

—16—
whose entire
surface
area
is totally below the surface of
and covered
by the
ground.
“Unfit-for-use tank system” means
a tank system that has
been
determined through
an integrity assessment
or
other inspection
to. be
no
longer capable
of storing
or treating hazardous waste without
posing
a
threat
of
release
of hazardous waste
to the environment.
‘Uppermost
aquife’
means
the geologic
formation nearest
the natural
ground
surface
that
is
an
aquifer,
as
well
as
lower
aquifers
that
are
hydraulically
interconnected
with
this
aquifer
within
the
facility’s
poperty
bounda~”y.
“United
States”
means
the
50
States,
the
District
of
Columbia,
the
Commonwealth
of
Puerto
Rico,
the
U.S.
Virgin
islands,
Guam,
American
Samoa
and
tne
Commonwealth
of
tne
Northen
Mariana
Islands.
‘Unsatuated
zone”
or
“zone
of
aeration”
means
the
zone
betv~eenthe
land
surface
and
the
wate—
table.
“USEPA’
means
United
States
Environmental
Protection
Agency.
“Vessel’
includes
every
description
of
watercraft,
used
or
capable
of
being
used
as
a
means
of
transportation
on
the
water.
“Wastewater
treatment
unit”
means
a
device
which:
Is
pa—t
of
a
wastewater
treatment
facility which has
an NPDES
penit
pursuant
to
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
309
or
a
pretreatment
permit
o’
autho—ization
to
discharge
pursuant
to
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
310;
and
Receives
and
treats
or stores
an
influent wastewater which
is
a
hazardous waste
as defined
in
35 111. Adm. Code
721.103,
or
generates
and accumulates
a wastewate
treatment sludge which
is
a
hazardous
waste
as
defined
in
35
111.
Adm.
Code
721.103,
or
treats
or
stores
a
wastewater
treatment
sludge
which
is
a
hazardous waste
as defined
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code 721.103;
and
Meets
the definition
of tank or tank system
in
this Section.
“Water
(bulk shipment)” means
the bulk transportation of
hazardous
waste which
is
loaded
or carried
on
board
a
vessel without containers
or labels.
“Well”
means
any shaft
or
pit dug or
bored into the
earth, generally
of
a
cylindrical
form,
and
often walled with bricks
o’
tubing
to
prevent the earth from caving
in.
‘Well
injection”
(See
“underground
injection’).
“Zone
of
engineering
control”
means
an
area
under
the
control
of
the
owner
or operator that,
upon detection of
a
hazardous waste
release,
can be
readily cleaned
up
prior
to
the release
of hazardous waste or
111--546

1~
hazardous
constituents
to
groundwater
or
surface
water.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
Ill. Reg.
,
effective
Section
720.111
References
a)
The following publications are incorporated
by reference:
ANSI.
Available
from
the
American
National
Standards
Institute,
1430 Broath~ay,New York,
New
York
10013,
(212)
354-3300:
ANSI
B31.3
and 831.4.
See ASME/ANSI
831.3
and 831.4
APi.
Available from
the American Petroleum Institute, 1220
L
Street, H.W., Washington,
D.C.
20005,
(202)
632-8000:
“Guide
for inspection
of
Refinery Equipment,
Chapte— XIII,
Atmospheric
and Low Pressure Storage Tanks,” 4th Edition,
1981,
reaffirmed
December,
1987.
“Cathodic
Protection
of
Undergound
Petroleum
Storage
Tanks
and
Piping
Systems,”
API
Recommended
Practice
1632,
Second
Edition, December,
1987.
“installation of Underground
Petroleum Storage Systems,”
API Recornended Practice
1515,
Fourth Edition, November,
1987.
PSME.
Available
from
the
American
Society
of
Mechanical
Engineers,
345
East
47tn
Street,
New
York,
NY
10017,
(212)
705—
7722:
“Chemical
Plant
and
Petroleum
Refinery
Piping”,
ASME/ANSI
631.3
-
1937,
as
supplemented
by
B31.3a
-
1983
and
B31.3b
1983.
Also
available
from
ANSI.
“Liquid
Transportation
Systems
for
Hydrocarbons,
Liquid
Petroleum
Gas,
Anhydrous
Arnonia,
and
Alcohols”,
ASME/ANS1
B31.4
-
1986,
as
supplemented
by
B31.4a
-
1987.
Also
available from ANSI.
ASTM.
Available from American Society for Testiry
and
Materials, 1916 Race Street, Philadelphia, PA
19103,
(215)
299—
5400:
“ASTM Standard Test Methods
for Flash
Point
of Liquids
by
Setaflash Closed Tester,”
ASTM Standard D-3828-87.
“ASTM Standard Test Methods for Flash
Point Pensky-Martens
Closed Teste-,”
ASTM Standard 0-93-79 or 0-93-80.
GPO.
Available from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S.
Government Printing Office, Washington,
D.C.
2O4O—~-2, (202)
783-3238:
11 1—547

-18-
Standard
Industrial
Classification
Manual
(1972),
and
1977
Supplement,
republished
in
1983
“Test
Methods
for
Evaluating
Solid
Waste,
Physical/Chemical
Methods”,
EPA Publication SW—846
(November,
1986)
and
Revision
I
(Decembe,
1987),
Document Numbe”
955-001-00000-
@O@@@May
need to
specify submethods
NACE.
Available from the National
Association
of Corrosion
Engineers,
1400 South Creek D—., Houston,
TX
77084,
(713)
492—
0535:
“Contol
of
External
Co’rosion
on
Metallic
Bu’led,
Partially
Buied,
or
Submerged
Liquid
Storage
Systems”,
NACE Recommended Practice RP0285—85,
approved March,
1985.
NFPA.
Available from the National
Fire Protection Association,
Batterymarch Park,
Boston,
MA
02269,
(617)
770-3000 or
(800)
344-3555:
‘Fiarnriable
and
Combustible
Liquids
Code”
NFPA
30,
issued
July
17,
1987.
Also available from ANSI.
NTiS.
Available from the National
Technical
Information
Se-vice,
5285
Po’t
Royal
Road, Springfield,
VA
22161,
(703)
437-4600:
“Generic
Quality
Assuance
Project
Plan
for
Land
Disposal
Rest~ictionsProgram’, EPA/530-SW-87—011, Mach
15,
1987.
(Document number
PB 88-170766.
“Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes”, Third
Edition, March,
1983.
(Document number
PB 84-128677)
“Pocedures Manual
fo— Ground Water Monitoring
at
Solid
Waste
Disposal
Facilities”,
EPA—530/SW—611,
1977.
(Document
number
PB
84-174820)
“Test
Methods
for Evaluating
Solid Waste,
Physical/Chemical
Methods,” —EPA
P
ea~*e~
~
SW—84~4~e?eR~
E~*t~.e~
~98~as ~
~y Y~a~e
1~ ~
~984~ a~d~p~ate
14
~9B~44
ee~e~~
PB ~—~2Q29~
-See GPO.
~11. Available from the
Steel
Tank institute,
728 Anthony
Trail, Northbrook,
IL
60062,
(312)
498—1980:
“Standard for Dual
Wall
Underground
Steel
Storage Tanks”
(1986).
USEPA.
Available
f—on United
States Environmental Protection
Agency, Office
of Drinking Water,
State Programs Division, WH
111—548

t~
—~
j—
550 E, Washington,
D.C.
20460:
“Technical Assistance Document:
Corrosion,
Its Detection
and Control
in Injection Wells”, EPA 570/9—87—002, August,
1987.
b)
Code
of Federal Regulations.
Available from the Superintendent
of
Documents,
U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington,
D.C.
20401,
(202)
783-3238:
10 CFR 20, Appendix 8
(1989)
40
CFR
136
(1989)
40 CFR
142
(1989)
40
CFR
220
(1989)
40 CFR 260.20 p989)
40 CFR
264
(1989)
40 CFR
302.4,
302.5
and
302.6
(1989)
40 CFR 761
(1989)
c)
Federal Statutes
Section
3004
of
the
Resource
Conservation
and
Recovery
Act
(42
U.S.C.
6901
et
seq.),
as amended
through December
31,
1937.
d)
This Section
incorporates
no
later editions
or amendments.
(Source:
Amended
at
14 111.
Reg.
,
effective
111—549

-20-
Section
721.101
721. 102
721.103
721
.
104
721. 105
721 .106
721. 107
721.108
Secti on
721.110
721.111
Section
721
.
120
721.121
721. 122
721. 123
721. 124
Section
721. 130
721 .131
721.132
721 .133
Appendix A
Appendix
B
Appendix
C
Table
A
Table
B
Table
C
Appendix
G
Appendix H
Appendix
I
Table
A
Table
B
Table
C
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTiTLE
G:
WASTE
DiSPOSAL
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTiON CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
c:
HAZARDOUS WASTE OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
PART 721
IDENTiFICATION AND LISTING OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Purpose
of Scope
Definition
of Solid Waste
Definition
of Hazardous Waste
Exci usi ons
Special
Requirements
for Hazardous Waste Generated by
Small
Quantity Generators
Requi
rements
for
Recycl able
Matei
al
s
Residues
of
Hazardous
Waste
in
Empty
Containers
PCB
Wastes
ReQulated
unde
TSCA
SUPBART
B:
CRITERIA FOR IDENTIFYING THE CHARACTERISTICS
OF
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
AND FOR LISTING HAZARDOUS
WASTES
Criteria
for
identifying
the
Characteristics
of Hazardous Waste
Criteria
for
Listing
Hazardous
Waste
SUBPART
C:
CHARACTERISTICS
OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
General
Characteristic
of ignitability
Cnaracteristic
of
Corrosivity
Characteristic
of Reactivity
Characteristic of
EP Toxicity
SUBPART
D:
LiSTS
OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
Geneal
Hazardous
Wastes
From Nonspecific
Sources
Hazardous Waste from Specific Sources
Discarded Commercial
Chemical
Products, Off—Specification
Species, Container Residues
and Spill
Residues Thereof
Representative Sampling Methods
EP Toxicity Test Procedures
Chemical
Analysis
Test
Methods
Analytical Characteristics
of Organic Chemicals (Repealed)
Analytical
Characteristics
of
Inorganic
Species
(Repealed)
Sample Preparation/Sample Introduction Techniques
(Repealed)
Basis
for Listing Hazardous Wastes
Hazardous
Constituents
Wastes
Excluded under Section 720.120 and 720.122
Wastes Excluded from Non-Specific Sources
Wastes
Excluded from Specific
Sources
Wastes Excluded From Corr~ercial Chemical Products, Off-
111—550

_71
-
Sped
fi cation
Species,
Contai ncr
Residues,
and
Soil
Residues
Thereof
Appendix
J
Method
of
Analysis
for
Chlorinated
Dibenzo-p-Dioxins
and
Dibenzofu rans
Appendix
Z
Table
to Section 721.102
AUTHORITY:
Implementing
Section
22.4
and
authorized
by
Section
27
of
the
Environmental
Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat. 1~S8Supp.,
ch.
111
1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in P81-22,
43
PCB
427,
at
5
Ill.
Reg.
9781,
effective as
noted
in
35
Ill.
Adm. Code
700.106;
amended
and
codified
in R81-22,
45 PCB
317,
at
6
111.
Reg.
4828, effective
as
noted
in
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
700.106;
amended
in R82-18,
51
P08
31,
at
7 Ill.
Peg.
2518,
effective February
22,
1983;
amended
in P82-19,
53
PCB 131,
at
7
Ill.. Reg.
13999, effective October
12,
1983;
amended
in R84-34,
61
P08 247,
at
8 111. Peg. 24562,
effective
December
11,
1984;
amended
in P84-9,
at
9
111.
Peg.
11834, effective July 24,
1985;
amended
in R85—22
at
10
ill. Peg.
998, effective January
2,
1986;
amended
in P85—2
at
10 111. Req.
8112,
effective May
2,
1986;
amended
in
P86-i
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
14002,
effective
August
12,
1986;
amended
in
P86—19
at
10
Ill.
Peg.
20647, effective December
2,
1936;
amended
in P86-28
at
11
ill.
Peg.
6035,
effective
March
24,
1987;
amended
in P85—46
at
11
Ill.
Peg.
13466,
effective August
4,
1987;
amended
in P87-32
at
11
111.
Peg.
16698,
effective
September 30,
1987;
amended
in P87-5
at
11
Ill.
Reg.
19303,
effective
November
12,
1987;
amended
in
R87-26
at
12
Ill.
Reg.
2456, effective January
15,
1988;
amended
in
P87-30
at
12 Ill.
Reg.
12070,
effective
July
12,
1988;
amended
in R87-39
at
12 Ill.
Reg.
13006,
effective
July
29,
1988;
amended
in
P88-16
at
13
ill. Peg.
382,
effective December
27,
1988;
amended
in
R89-1
at
13 Ill. Peg. 18300, effective November
13,
1989;
amended
in P90-10
at
14 111.
Reg.
,
effective
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section
721.104
Exclusions
a)
Materials
which
are not
solid wastes.
The following materials
are
not solid wastes
for the purpose
of this Part:
1)
Sewage:
A)
Domestic
sewage;
and
B)
Any mixture
of domestic sewage and other waste that passes
through
a
sewer system to publicly-owned treatment works
for
treatment.
“Domestic
sewage”
means
untreated
sanitay
wastes that pass through
a sewer system.
2)
industrial
wastewater discharges that are
point
source
discharges with NPDES permits
issued
by
the Agency pursuant to
Section
12(f)
of
the Environmental Protection Act and
35
Ill.
Adrn.
Code 309.
BOARD NOTE:
This exclusion applies only
to the
actual
point
source discharge.
It does
not exclude
industrial wastewates
111—551

-22-
while they
are being
collected,
sto~’edor
treated
before
discharge,
nor does
it exclude sludges that
are generated by
industrial wastewater treatment.
3)
irrigation
return flows.
4)
Source,
special
nuclear
or by—product material
as defined
by the
Atomic Energy
Act of
1954,
as amepoed
(42 U.S.C.
2011
et
seq.)
5)
Materials
subjected
to
in—situ
mining
techniques
which
are
not
removed from the
ground
as
part of
the extraction
process.
6)
Pulping liquors
(i.e.,
black
liquor) that are reclaimed
in
a
pulping liquor
recove—y furnace and then
reused
in the
pulping
process,
unless accumulated speculatively as defined
in Section
721. 101
(C);
7)
Spent
sulfuric acid used to poduce
virgin
sulfuric acid,
unless
it
is accumula~easpeculatively as defined
in Section
721.101(c).
8)
Secondary materials that
are reclaimed and
returned to the
original
p—ocess
or p—ocesses
in
which they wee generated where
they are
reused
in
the production
process, provided:
A)
Only tank sto-age
is
involved,
and the
entire process
through completion
of
reclamation
is
closed
by being
entirely
connected
with
pipes
or
othe-
comparable
enclosed
means
of
conveyance;
B)
Reclamation does
not
involve controlled flame combustion
(such
as
occurs
in
boilers,
industrial
furnaces
or
incinerators);
C)
The secondary materials are never accumulated
in
such tanks
for over twelve months without being
reclaimed;
and
0)
The
eclaimed mate’~ial is
not used
to
produce
a
fuel,
or
used
to
proauce poducts
that
are
used
in
a
manner
constituting disposal.
b)
Solid wastes which are not hazardous wastes.
The following
solid
wastes are not hazardous wastes:
1)
Household waste,
including household waste that
has been
collected,
transported,
stored, treated, disposed,
recovered
(e.g.,
refuse-deived
fuel)
or
reused.
“Household
waste”
means
any waste material
(including garbage, trash and sanitary wastes
in
septic tanks)
der’ved
from households
(including single and
multiple residences,
hotels and motels, bunkhouses,
ranger
stations,
crew quarters, campgrounds,
picnic grounds
and day-use
recreation
areas).
A
resource recovery facility managing
municipal
solid waste
shall
not
be deemed
to
be treating,
storing, disposing
of
or otherwise managing hazardous .wastes
for
111—552

-23-
the purposes
of regulation under this
Part,
if such facility:
A)
Receives and burns
only:
i)
Household waste
(from single and multiple dwellings,
hotels, motels
and
other residential
sources) and
ii)
S~iidwaste from cornercial
or industrial
sources that
does
not contain hazadous waste;
and
B)
Such facility does
not accept hazardous waste
and
the owner
or operator of
such facility has established contractural
requirements
or other
approp-iate notification
or
inspection procedures
to
assure that hazardous wastes are
not received at
or
burned
in
such facility.
2)
Solid wastes
generated by
any of
the following and which
are
returned
to
the
soil
as
fertilizers:
A)
The growing and harvesting
of agricultural
crops.
B)
The raising
of animals,
including animal manures.
3)
Mining overburden returned
to
the mine site.
4)
Fly
ash waste,
bottom ash waste,
slag waste,
and flue gas
emission control
waste geneated primarily from the combustion
of coal
or other fossil
fuels.
5)
Drilling
fluids, produced waters,
and other wastes associated
with the exploration,
development,
or
production
of
crude
oil,
natural
gas
or geothermal
energy.
6)
Chromium wastes:
A)
Wastes which
fail
the test for the toxicity characteristic
—ef EP tex~e4ty—(Section 721.124 and Appendix B) because
chromium
is
present
or are
listed
in Subpart
0 due to the
presence
of chromium, which
do
not
fail
the test
for the
toxicity
characte~’istic —ef
EP
te~4e~y
—for
any
othe
constituent
or
are
not
listed
due
to the presence
of any
other constituent,
and which
do
not
fail
the
test for any
other characteristic,
if
it
is
shown
by
a waste
generator
or
by waste generators
that:
i)
The chromium
in the waste
is exclusively
(or nearly
exclusively)
trivalent
chromium;
and
ii)
The waste
is generated from an
indust—ial
process
which
uses trivalent chromium exclusively
(or nearly
exclusively)
and the process
does
not generate
hexavalent chromium; and
iii)
The waste
is typically and frequently managed
in non-
111—553

-24-
oxidizing environments.
B)
Specific
wastes which meet the standard
in
subsections
(b)(6)(A)(i),
(ii) and
(iii)
(so
long
as
they
do
not
fail
the test for the cha-acteristic of EP toxicity,
and do
not
fail
the test
for
any other
characteristic)
are
1)
Chrome
(blue)
trimings generated
by the following
subcategories
of the leather tanninc
and finishing
industry; hair pulp/chrome tan/retan/wet finish;
hai
save/chrome tanj’retan/wet
finish;
retan/wet finish;
no
beamhouse; through—the-blue; ~ndshearling.
ii)
Chrome
(blue)
shavings generated
by the following
subcatego—ies
of
the
leathe
tanning
and
finishing
industry; hair pulp/chrome tan/retan/wet
finish;
hair
save/chrome tan/retan/wet finish;
—etan/wet finish;
no
beamhouse; through—the-blue;
and
shearling.
iii)
Buffing dust generated
by the following subcategories
of
the leatner tanning
and finishing industry:
hair
pulp/cnrome tan/retan/wet finish;
hair save/chrome
tan/retan/wet
finish;
retan/wet
finish;
no
beamhouse;
through-the-blue.
iv)
Sewer
screenings
generated
by
the
following
subcategories
of the leather
tanning and finishing
industry:
hai— pulp/chrome tan/retan/wet finish;
hai
save/chrome tan/retan/wet
finish;
retan,’wet finish;
no
beamnouse;
through-the—blue;
and
shearling.
v)
Wastewater treatment sludges generated
by the
following subcategories
of the leather tanning
and
finishing industry:
hair pulp/chrome tan/etan/wet
finish;
hai— save/chrome tan/retan/wet
finish;
retan/wet
finish;
no
beamhouse;
through-the-blue;
and
shearl ing.
vi)
Wastewater treatment
sludges generated by the
following subcategories
of the leather tanning
and
finishing industry:
hair pulp/chrome
tan/retan/wet
finish;
hair save/chrome tan/retan/wet finish;
and
through—the-bl ue.
vii)
Waste
scrap
leather from the leather tanning
industry,
the shoe manufacturing industry, and other leather
product manufacturing industries.
viii)
Wastewater t-eatment sludges from the p-oduction
of
titanium dioxide pigment
using chromium-bearing ores
by the chloide process.
7)
Solid waste from the extraction, beneficiation and processing of
ores
and minerals
(including coal),
including phosphate
rock and
111—554

-
.)c~
-
overburden
from the mining of uranium ore.
For purposes
of
this
subsection, beneficiation of
ores and minerals
is
restricted
to
the following activities:
crushing, grinding, washing,
dissolution,
crystallization, filtration,
sorting,
sizing,
drying,
sintering,
pelletizing,
briquetting,
calcining to
remove
water
or carbon
dioxide,
roasting, autoclaving
or chlorination
in preparation
for leaching
(except
where the reasting
(or
autoclaving
or
chlorination)/leaching
sequence
produces
a
final
or intermediate
product that doesnot
undergo further
beneficiation or processing),
gravity concentration, magnetic
separation,
electrostatic
separation,
floatation,
ion exchange,
solvent
extraction, electrowinning,
precipitation, amalgamation,
and heap,
dump,
vat
tank and
in
situ leaching.
For the purposes
of this subsection,
solid waste from the p~ocessingof ores
and
minerals —~ees~et4~Re1.~e—willinclude
only the following
wastes:
A~
Ae~~
~ew~ew~ s~~Fy
eF sl~~e~es~~g
~FeF ~e
~
ef
e~ew~s~r~FFy~‘e~ ~
?eppe~
pFe~et+eP~
B~
S~Ffaee~
se~~see~ta~~e~
4.~a~~Fe~ed fFe~
s~~faee ~
~
pF+~aFy~
s~el.t4~~
~ae~es~
G~
~Afte~
J~p.e~
~99~ s~dge~Fe~tFea~e~
ef ~eeess
was~ewateFe~acid ~ap.t~ewdewRf~e~p~~a~y
~4~e
p Fed
e
~
Speflt
pet14~e~s
fFe~1p~aFy ~
~ee~iei~
E~
E~i.ss4e~eeR~e~r
dust e~sd~ef~e~
~
~
aPd
~4
E~iss4epee~~e~
dust
e~s~d~e
fFe~~
A)
Slag
from
primary
copper
processing:
~J
Slag from primary
lead processing
~çJ
Red and brown muds from bauxite refining
P1
Phosphogypsum from phosphoic acid production
E)
Slag from elemental
phosphorus production
,~j
Gasifier
ash from coal gasification
~J
Process wastewater from coal gasification
~J
Calcium sulfate wastewater treatment
plant
sludge from
primary
copper
processing
I)
Slag tailings
from primary copper processing:
111—555

-26—
~j
Fluorogypsum
from hydrofluoric acid poduction
~
Process wastewater from hydrofluoric acid production
~_
Air pollution control
dust/sludge
from i—on blast funaces
~j)_ Iron blast furnace slag
~J_
Teated residue f-om roasting/leaching
of
chrome ore
0)
Process wastewater from primary magnesium processing
by the
anhydous
process
~j
Process wastewater
from phospho~icacid procuction
~
Basic oxyge’~furnace
and
open hearth
furnace
ai
pollution
control
dust/sludge
from cabon
steel
productior
~J
Basic
oxygen
furnace
and
open hearth
furnace
slag from
carbon
steel
production
5)
Chloride
processing waste solids
from titanium
tetnachloride production;
and,
fl
Slag from p-imary zinc smelting.
8)
Cement
kiln dust waste.
9)
Solid waste which consists
of
discarded wood
or
wood poducts
which fails
the test for the toxicity characteistic -e~EP
te~ieity—anc which
is
not
a
hazardous waste for
any
othe
reason
or
reasons
if
the waste
is generated by persons
who
utilize the ar~senical-treated wooc and wood products
for these
materials’
intended
end
use.
~9J
Pet~-oleum-contaminatedmedia
and
debris that
fail
the test for
the toxicity chaacteristic
of Section
721.124 and
are
subject
to
corrective
action
regulations
under
35
111.
Adm.
Code
731.
c)
Haza—dous wastes which
are exempted from dertain regulations.
A
hazardous waste which
is generated
in
a product
or
raw mate~’ial
storage tank,
a product
or
raw material
transport vehicle
or
vessel,
a
product
or
raw mate-ial
pipeli ne,
or
in
a manufacturing process
unit or
an
associated non-waste—treatment manufacturing unit,
is not
subject
to
regulation under
35 111. Adm. Code
702,
703,
705
and 722
through 725 and
728 or
to the notification requirements
of
Section
3010 of PCRA until
it
exits the
unit in~whichit was
generated,
unless the unit
is
a surface impoundment,
or
unless the hazaraous
waste
remains
in the unit more than 90 days after the
unit ceases
to
be
operated for manufacturing,
or
for storage
or transportation of
product
or
raw materials.
d)
Samples
111—5
SE1

-27-
1)
Except
as provided
in
subsection
(d)(2),
a
sample
of
solid waste
or
a sample
of water,
soil
or
air, which
is collected
for the
sole purpose of
testing
to determine
its characteristics
or
composition,
is
not
subject
to any requirements
of this Part or
35 Ill. Adm. Code
702,
703,
705
and 722 through
728.
The sample
qualifies
when:
A)
The sample
is
being transported
to
a
laboratory for the
purpose
of
testing;
or
B)
The sample
is
being transported
back to the
sample
collector after
testing;
or
C)
The
sample
is
being stored
by the sample
collector before
transport
to
a
laboratory
for
testing;
or
D)
The
sample
is being stored
in
a laboratory before
testing;
or
E)
The
sample
is
being stored
in
a
laboratory for testing but
before
it
is
returned
to the
sample collector;
or
F)
The
sample
is
being
stored temporarily
in
the laboratory
after
testing
for
a
specific purpose
(for example,
until
conclusion
of
a
court
case
or
enforcement
action
where
further testing of the sample may be necessary).
2)
in order to
qualify
for the exemption
in subsection
(d)(1)(A)
and
(B),
a
sample collector shipping samples
to
a
laboratory and
a
laboratory
returning samples
to
a sample
collector must:
A)
Comply with U.S. Department
of Transportation
(DOT), U.S.
Postal
Service
(USPS)
or
any
other applicable shipping
requirements;
or
B)
Comply with the following requirements
if the
sample
collector determines
that DOT, USPS
or other shipping
requirements
do
not apply to
the shipment of the sample:
1)
Assure that
the following information
accompanies the
sample:
The sample collector’s
name,
mailing address
and telephone number;
the laboatory’s
name, mailing
address
and
telephone
number;
the
quantity
of
the
sample;
the date of
the shipment;
and
a description
of
the
sample.
ii)
Package
the sample
so that
it
does not
leak,
spill
or
vaporize from its packaging.
3)
This exemption does
not apply
if
the laboratory determines that
the waste
is
hazardous but the laborato-y
is
no longer meeting
any of the conditions stated
in subsection
(d)(1).
111—557

-28-
e)
Treatability
study samples.
1)
Except
as
is
provided
in subsection
(e)(2),
persons who generate
or collect
samples
for the purpose
of conducting treatability
studies,
as defined
in
35 ill. Adm. Code 720.110, are
not
subject
to
any
requirement
of
35 Ill. Adm. Code 721 through 723
or to
the notification requirements
of Section
3010 of the
Resource
Conse-vation
and Recovery Act.
Nor
are
such samples
included
in the quantity determinations
of Section
721.105 and
35 Ill. Adm. Code 722.134(d)
when:
A)
The
sample
is
being
collected
and
prepared
for
transportation by the generator or
sample collector;
or,
B)
The sample
is being
accumulated
or
stored
by the ger’eator
or
sample
collector p—icr
to transportation to
a
laboratory
o
testing facility;
or
C)
The
sample
is being
t-ansported
to
the laboratory
o
testing facility for
the purpose
of conducting
a
t’-eatability
study.
2)
The exemption
in subsection
(e)(1)
is applicable
to
samples
of
hazardous waste
being
collected
and shipped
for the purpose
of
conducing treatability studies provided that:
A)
The generator
o— sample
collecto— uses
(in “treatability
studies’)
no moe than 1000 kg
of
any non-acute hazardous
waste,
1
kg
of
acute hazardous waste
or 250 kg
of
soils,
wate
or
debris
contaminated
with
acute
hazardous
waste
for
each process being evaluated
foe’ each generated
wastesteam;
and
B)
The mass
of
each shipment does
not exceed 1000 kg
of
non-
acute hazardous waste,
1
kg
of
acute hazardous waste
or 250
kg
of soils,
water
or
debris
contaminated
with
acute
hazardous waste;
and
C)
The sample must
be packaged
so that
it
does
not
leak,
spill
or vapo-ize from its packaging during
shipment and
the
requirements
of subsections
(i
)
or
(ii)
are met.
i)
The transportation of
each sample
shipment complies
with U.S. Department
of Transportation
(DOT),
U.S.
Postal
Service
(USPS)
or
any other applicable shipping
requirements;
or
ii)
If the DOT, USPS or
other’ shipping requirements
do
not
apply
to the shipment
of the
sample,
the following
information must accompany the
sample:
The name,
mailing address
and telephone number
of the originator
of
the sample;
the name,
address
and telephone number
of
the facility that will perform the treatability
study;
the quantity
of the sample;
the date of the
111—558

-29—
shipment;
and,
a description
of
the sample,
including
its
USEPA hazardous waste number.
D)
The sample
is
shipped
to
a
laboratory
or testing facility
which
is
exempt under subsection
(f)
or has an appropriate
RCRA permit
or interim
status.
E)
The generator or
sample collector maintains
the following
records
for
a
period ending
3 years
after completion of the
treatability
study:
I)
Copies
of the shipping documents;
ii)
A
copy
of
the
contract
with
the
facility
conducting
the treatability
study;
iii) Documentation showing:
The amount
of waste
shipped
under this exemption;
the name,
address
and
USEPA
identification number
of
the laboratory
or testing
facility
that
received
tne
waste;
the
date
the
shipment was
made;
and, whether
or
not unused
samples
and
residues were returned
to the
generator.
F)
The generato-
reports the information required
in
subsection
(e)(2)(E)(iii) in
its
report under 35
Ill. Adm.
Code
722.141.
3)
The Agency may grant
requests,
on
a case-by-case basis, for
quantity
limits
in
excess
of
those
specified
in
subsection
(e)(2)(A),
for
up
to
an additional
500 kg
of any non-acute
hazardous waste,
1
kg
of
acute
hazardous waste
and 250
kg of
soils, water
or debris contaminated with acute hazardous waste,
to conduct
further treatability study
evaluation
when:
There
has been an equipment
or mechanical
failure during the conduct
of the treatability
study;
there
is
need to verify
the results
of
a previously conducted treatability
study;
there
is
a need
to
study
and analyze alternative
techniques within
a previously
evaluated
treatment
process;
or,
there
is
a
need
to
do
further
evaluation
of
an ongoing
treatability
study
to
determine
final
specifications
for
treatment.
The
additional
quantities
allowed
are subject
to
all
the provisions
in
subsections
(e)(1) and
(e)(2)(B) through
(F).
The generator or sample
collector must
apply
to the Agency
and provide
in writing the following
information:
A)
The
reason why
the generator or
sample collector requires
additional
quantity of sample
for the treatability
study
evaluation and
the additional .quantity needed;
B)
Documentation
accounting
for
all
samples
of hazardous waste
from the wastestream which
have been sent for
or
undergone
treatability studies,
including the date each previous
sample was shipped,
the quantity of
each previous shipment,
the laboratory
or testing facility
to which
it was shipped,
111—559

-30-
what
treatability
study
processes
were
conducted
on
each
sample
shipped, and the available results
of each
treatability study;
C)
A description
of the technical
modifications or change
in
specifications which will
be evaluated and the expected
results;
D)
If
such
further
study
is
being
required
due
to
equipment
or
mechanical
failure,
the applicant must include information
regarding the
reason for the failure
or breakdown and also
include
what
procedures
or
equipment
have
been
made
to
protect
against further breakdowns;
and,
E)
Such
other
information
as
the
Agency determines
is
necessary.
4)
Final
Agency determinations pursuant
to
this subsection may be
appealed
to the Board.
f)
Samples undergoing treatability studies
at laboratories or testing
facilities.
Samples undergoing treatability studies
and the
laboratory
or testing
facility conducting such treatability studies
(to
the
extent
such
facilities
are
not
otherwise
subject
to
RCRA
requirements)
are not subject
to
any requirement
of this
Part,
or of
35 Ill. Adm. Code 702,
703,
705,
722 through
726,
and 728,
or to the
notification
requirements
of Section 3010 of the Resource
Conservation
and Recovery Act, provided that the requirements
of
subsections
(f)(1)
through
(f)(11)
are
met.
A
mobile
treatment
unit
may qualify
as
a testing facility subject
to
subsections
(f)(1)
through
(f)(11).
Where
a group
of mobile treatment
units
are located
at
the same
site, the limitations specified
in
subsections
(f)(1)
through
(f)(11) apply
to the entire group
of mobile treatment
units
collectively
as
if the
group were
one
mobile
treatment
unit.
1)
No
less than 45 days before conducting treatability studies, the
facility notifies the Agency
in writing that
it
intends
to
conduct treatability
studies under this subsection.
2)
The laboratory
or testing facility conducting the treatability
study has
a USEPA identification number.
3)
No more than
a
total
of
250 kg
of
“as received” hazardous waste
is
subjected to
initiation of treatability studies
in
any single
day.
“As
received” waste refers
to the waste
as
received
in
the
shipment from the generator or sample collector.
4)
The quantity of
“as
received” hazardous waste stored
at the
facility
for the purpose
of evaluation
in treatability studies
does
not exceed
1000 kg,
the total
of which
can include 500 kg
of
soils, water or debris contaminated with acute
hazardous
waste or
1
kg
of acute
hazardous waste.
This quantity
limitation does
not
include:
111—5E0

-31—
A)
Treatability
study
residues;
and,
B)
Treatment materials
(including nonhazardous
solid waste)
added
to
“as
received” hazardous waste.
5)
No more than 90 days have elapsed since the treatability study
for the sample was completed,
or
no more than one year has
elapsed since
the generator
or
sample collector shipped the
sample
to the laboratory
or testing
facility, whichever date
first
occurs.
6)
The treatability study does
not involve ~theplacement of
hazardous waste
on
the land
or open burning of hazardous waste.
7)
The facility maintains records for
3 years following completion
of each study that show compliance with the treatment
rate
limits and
the storage time and quantity limits.
The following
specific information mus be
included for each treatability study
conducted:
A)
The name,
address
and USEPA identification umber
of the
generator or sample collector of each waste sample;
B)
The date the shipment was
received;
C)
The quantity of waste
accepted;
D)
The quantity of
“as
received” waste
in
storage each day;
E)
The date the treatment
study was
initiated and the amount
of
“as received” waste
introduced
to treatment each day;
F)
The date the treatability study was concluded;
G)
The date any
unused sample
or residues generated from the
treatability study were returned to the generator o~
sample
collector or,
if
sent
to adesignated facility,
the name of
the facility and the USEPA
identification number.
8)
The facility keeps,
on—Site,
a copy of the treatability study
contract and
all
shipping papers associated with the transport
of treatability study samples
to
and from the facility
for
a
period ending
3 years from the completion date of
each
treatability
study.
9)
The facility prepares and submits
a
report
to
the Agency
by
March
15
of each year that estimates
the number of studies and
the amount
of waste expected
to beijsed
in treatability studies
during the current year,
and
includes
the following information
for the previous calendar year:
A)
The name. address and USEPA identification number
of the
facility conducting the treatability studies;
111—561

-32-
B)
The types
(by process) of treatability studies conducted;
C)
The names
and addresses
of parsons
for whom studies have
been conducted (including their USEPA identification
numbers);
D)
The total
quantity
of waste
in storage each day;
E)
The quantity
and types of waste
subjected to treatability
studies;
F)
When each treatability study was conducted;
G)
The final
disposition
of
residues
and unused sample
from
each treatability study;
10)
The
facility determines whether any unused sample
or residues
generated by the treatability
study are hazardous waste under
Section 721.103 and,
if
so,
are
subject
to
35
111. Adm. Code
702,
703 and
721 through 728, unless
the residues and
unused
samples are
returned to the
sample
originator under the
subsection
(e) exemption.
11)
The
facility notifies the Agency
by letter when the facility
is
no longer planning
to conduct
any treatability studies
at the
site.
(Source:
Amended
at
14 111. Reg.
,
effective
Section 721.108
PCB Wastes Regulated under TSCA
The disposal
of polychlorinatedbiphenyl—(PCB-)containing dielectric
fluid
and
electric equipment containing such fluid, which
are authorized for
use
and
regulated
under
40 CFR 761,
incorporated
by
reference
in
35
Ill.
Adin. Code
720.111,
and which
are hazardous only because they
fail
the test
for toxicity
characteristic
(hazardous waste codes
0018 through D043 only),
is
exempt from
regulation under
35
111.
Adrn. Code
702,
703,
705,
721 through 725,
and
726,
and from the notification
requirements
of Section 3010
of the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act.
(Source:
Added
at
14 Ill.
Reg.
,
effective
)
SUBPART
C:
CHARACTERISTiCS OF
HAZARDOUS WASTE
Section
721.124
Characteristic of EP Toxicity
a)
A
solid waste exhibits
the characteristic of texie4ty—~PTexieity—
if,
using the test methods described
in Appendix —14—B
or equivalent
methods
-
~2Qr~21~-approved
by the Agency under
the procedures set
forth
in Sections 720.120 and
720.121,
the extract from
a
representative sample
of
the waste contains
any of the contaminants
listed
in —Ta~e1-—the table
in subsection
(b)
at
a concentration
equal
to
or greater than the
respective value given
in that table.
111—56
2

—ii—
Where
the waste
contains less than 0.5 percent filterable solids, the
waste
itself, after filtering
using the methodology outlined
in
Appendix
B,
is
considered
to
be the extract
for the purpose—s- of
this
Section.
b)
A solid waste that exhibits the characteristic
of —EP ~e~4ty—
toxicity, but
is
not listed
as
a hazardous waste
in $ubpart D,
has
the
USEPA
Hazardous
Waste Number specified
in —Ta~e1-—the following
table which
corresponds
to the toxic
contaminant causing
it
to
be
hazardous.
-Ta~l-e
~T
--
G
E’I4SAT~GW~
ANA~4T~
~
GkA~A ~R-ST~GS~
~P ~X1-G14~
£PA
Ge~ta~~a~t
Ge~eeP~Fat~eP
~aaa~e~sWaste
Ga4~
kead
MeF?~Fy
Se~e~4~
S~4ve~
~
~
~
eRde—STS—
~4~et~a~e~apht~a~e~e
~
~2~3~4
—~exae~eFeeye~-ehexaPe;
ga~a
~se~eF
Met~e~yeh~eF T~—T~+e~eFe—2T2—~s
~—
1~G~G
~
~exap~e~e~
~ee~i-ea4
e
e~i-~ate~
ea~~e~e~
G~S
6~—?9peceeP? e~leF~Pe4T
2~4;-~
~2~4—~4eH~-eFephePeKyaeeti-e
aei~~
2T45T4P
S~veM
~
ae+~3~—
MAXIMUM CONCENTRATION
OF CONTAMINANTS
FOR THE TOXICITY CHARACTERiSTiC
USEPA
Contaminant
Note
Regula
Hazardous
Waste
tory
Number
Level
(mg/L)
0004
_______
7440-38-2
5.0
0005
_______
7440-39-3
100.0
0018
_______
71-43-2
0.5
0006
________
7440-43-9
T~i
D019
______________________
56—23-5
0020
__________
57-74-9
0d3
0021
______________
108-90-7
100.0
0022
__________
67-66-3
6.0
0007
_________
7440-47-3
5.0
g
9G~2
D
G4 4
5
rG
GT~2
1-~9
~ T9
CAS
No.
Arsenic
Ban
urn
Benzene
Cadmium
Carbon tetachloide
Chlordane
Chlorobenzene
Chloroform
Chromium
111—563

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c-i-
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r~C)C)C)0101~JC)C)C)C)CDC)N)4C)C)c14-~C)C)5-’J0101C)C)C)CDC)
(1)
:3
CT)

1)
Hazard Codes:
A)
Ignitable Waste.......................~........(I)
B)
Corrosive Waste
.........•.......................
(C)
C)
Reactive Waste.................................. (R)
0)
—~PTe~-e—ToxicityCharacteristic Waste......... (E)
E)
Acute Hazardous Waste
....•......................
(H)
F)
Toxic Waste
..................•..................
(T)
2)
Appendix
G identifies
the constituent which caused the
Administrator
to
list
the
waste
as
an
—EP
e~*e—Toxicity
Characteristic Waste
(E)
or
Toxic
Waste
(T)
in
Sections
721.131
and
721.132.
c)
Each hazardous waste
listed
in
this
Subpart
is
assigned
an
EPA
Hazardous
Waste
Number
which
precedes the
name of
the waste.
This
number
must
be
used
in
complying
with
the
notification
requirements
of
Section
3010
of
the
Act
and
certain
recordkeeping
and
reporting
requirements
unde—
35
ill.
Adm.
Code
702,
703,
722
through
725
and
728
and
40
C-FR
122.
d)
The following hazardous wastes
listed
in Section 721.131
or
721.132
are subject
to the exclusion limits for
acute hazardous wastes
established
in
Section
721.105:
hazardous wastes
numbers
F020,
F021,
F022,
F023,
F026
and
F027.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
111.
Reg.
,
effective
Section
721.131
Hazardous Wastes From Nonspecific Sources
The following solid
wastes are listed hazardous wastes
from
non-specific
sources
unless
they are excluded under
35 111. Adm. Code 720.120 and 720.122
and
listed
in Appendix
I.
EPA Hazardous
Industry
and
Waste No.
Hazardous Waste
Hazard Code
FOOl
The following spent
halogenated
solvents
(T)
used
in degreasing:
tetrachloroethylene,
trichloroethylene,
methylene chloride, 1,1,1-trichloroethane, carbon tetrachloride
and chlorinated fluorocarbons;
all
spent
solvent mixtures
and
blends
used
in
degreasing containing,
before
use,
a total
of
ten percent
or more
(by volumej
of one or more of the
above
halogenated
solvents or those
solvents
listed
in F002,
F004
or
F005;
and
still
bottoms
from
the
recovery
of
these
spent
solvents
and spent
solvent mixtures.
F002
The
following
spent
halogenated
solvents:
(T)
tetrachloroethylene,
methylene
chloride,
trichloroethylene,
111—565

1,1 ,1-trichloroethane, chlorobenzene,
1,1 ,2—trichloro-l,2,2-
tn
fl
uoroethane,
orthodi chlorobenzene,
tn
chlorofluoromethane
and 1,1,2-trichioroethane;
all
spent solvent mixtures and
blends containing,
before
use,
a total
of ten percent
or more
(by
volume)
of
one
or
more
of
the
above halogenated
solvents or
those
solvents
listed
in
FOOl,
F004 or FOOS;
and still
bottoms
from the recovery of these
spent solvents
and spent solvent
mixtures.
F003
The following
spent
non—haloçenated solvents:
(I)
xylene,
acetone, ethyl
acetate,
ethyl
berzene,
ethyl
ethe’,
methyl
isobutyl
ketone,
n-butyl
alcohol, cyclohexanone
and
methanol;
all
spent
solvent mixtures and
blends
containing,
before use, only the above spent
non—halogenated
solvents; and
all
spent
solvent mixtures
and blends
containing,
before
use,
one or mo-c of the
above non-halogenated solvents
and
a
total
of
ten pecent
or more
(by
volume)
of
one or more
of those
solvents
listed
in FOOl,
F002,
F004 or FOOS;
and still
bottoms
from the
recovery of
these spent
solvents and spent
solvent
mi x tu res.
F004
The follo~~ingspent non—halogenated
solvents:
(T)
cresols
and cresylic acid
and
nitrobenzene;
all
spent
solvent
mixtures
and
blends containing,
before
use,
a
total
of
ten
percent
o— more (by
volume)
of one
o— more
of the above non-
halogenated solvents
or
those solvents listed
in FOOl,
F002 or
F005;
and
still
bottoms from the recovery of these
spent
solvents
and spent
solvent mixtures.
F005
The following spent
non-halogenated
solvents:
(I,
T)
toluene, methyl
ethyl
ketone,
carbon disulfide,
isohutanol
pyridine,
benzene,
2-ethoxvethanol
and
2-nitropropane;
all
spent
solvent
mixtures
and
blends,
containing,
before
use,
a
total
of ten percent
or more
(by volume)
of
one
o
more of the
above non-halogenated solvents
or those
solv-ents listed
in
FOOl,
F002
or
F004;
and
still
bottoms
from
the
recovery
of
these spent
solvents
and spent
solvent mixtures.
F006
Wastewater treatment sludges from
(T)
electroplating
operations
except
from
the
following
processes:
(1)
sulfuric
acid
anodizing
of
aluminum;
(2)
tin plating
on
carbon
steel;
(3)
zinc
plating
(segregated
basis)
on
carbon
steel;
(4)
aluminum or zinc—aluminum plating
on cabon
steel;
(5)
cleaning/stripping associated with
tin, zinc
and
aluminum
plating
on carbon
steel;
and
(6)
chemical
etching
and
milling
of aluminum.
F019
~Was~ewa~eFtFeat~e~s~~ges~
t~ee~e~+eal-
eeP~eFs~ePeeat~~ee~
~~-See
Below
F007
Spent
cyanide
plating bath solutions from
(R,
T)
electroplating
operations.
F008
Plating bath residues from the bottom
of
(R,
T)
plating baths
from electroplating operations where
cyanides
are
used
in the process.
F009
Spent
st—ipping and cleanin~bath solutions
(R,
T)
111—5~’6

—.~7—
from electroplating operations where cyanides
are used
in the
process.
FOlO
Quenching bath residues from
oil
baths
(R,
T)
from metal
heat treating operations where cyanides
are used
in
the process.
FOil
Spent
cyanide
solutions
from
salt
bath
(R,
T)
pot
cleaning f’om metal
heat t—eating operations.
F012
Quenching wastewater treatment sludges fom
(T)
metal
heat treating operations where cyanides are used
in the
process.
F019
Wastewater treatment
sludges
from the chemical
conversion
coating
of
aluminum
except
from
zirconium
phosphating
in
aluminum
can
washing
when
such
phosphating
is
an
exclusive conversion coating
process.
FO2O
Wastes
(except
wastewater
anc
spent
carbon
(H)
from
hydrogen
chloride
purification)
from
the production
or
manufacturing
use
(as
a
reactant,
chemical
intermediate
or
component
in
a
formulating
process)
of
tn-
or
tetrachiorophenol,
or of
intermediates
used to produce their
pesticide
derivatives.
(This
listing
does
not
include
wastes
from
the
production
of
hexachiorophene
from
highly
purified
2,4,5—trichlorophenol
.
)
F021
Wastes
(except wastewater and spent
carbon.
(H)
from hydrogen chloride purification) from the production
or
manufacturing
use
(as
a
reactant,
chemical
intermediate
or
component
in
a
forniulating
process)
of
pentachlorophenol,
or
of
intermediates
used
to
produce
its
derivatives.
F022
Wastes
(except
wastewater
and
spent
carbon
(H)
from
hydrogen
chloride
purification)
from
the
manufacturing
use
(as
a
reactant,
chemical
intermediate
or
component
in
a
formulating
process)
of
tetra-,
penta-
or
hexachlorobenzenes
under
alkaline cohditions.
F023
Wastes
(except
wastewater
and
spent
carbon
(H)
from
hydrogen
chloride
purification)
from
the
production
of
materials
on
equipment previously used for the production
or
manufacturing
use
(as
a
reactant,
chemical
intermediate
or
component
in
a
formulating
process)
of
tn-
and
tetrachlorophenols.
(This
listing
does
not
include
wastes
from
equipment
used
only
for
the production
or use of
hexachlorophene
from
highly
purified
2,4,5-
trichlorophenol.
FO24
Process
wWastes
including
but
not
limited
(T)
to, distillation residues,
heavy ends,
tars,
and reactor
cleanout
wastes,
from
the
production
of
certain
chlorinated
aliphatic
hydrocarbons—i
hav*~ea~e~
eeRte~4f~e~i
e~ete
~
bt42~—~ free radical
catalyzed processes.
These
chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons
are
those having carbon
chain
lengths
ranging
from
one
to
and
including
five,
with
varying
amounts
and
positions
of
chloine
substitution.
(This
listing does not include —~g~t
eP~s;~
~~-I-te~s
~
~-teF
a4-~s~
speflt dess4ea~s~
—wastewaters, wastewater
treatment
sludges,
spent
catalysts
and
wastes
listed
in
this
Section
or
Section
721.132.)
111—567

-36-
FO25
Condensed light
ends,
spent
filters
and filter aids,
and
jfl
spent dessicant wastes
from the production
of certain
chlorinated
aliphatic hydrocarbons
by free
radical catalyzed
processes.
These chlorinated aliphatic hydrocarbons
are those
having
carbon
chain
lengths
ranging
from
one
to
and
including
five, with varying amounts and positions of chlorine’
substi tution.
F026
Wastes
(except
wastewater
and
spent
carbon
(H)
from
hydrogen
chloride
purification)
from
the
production
of
materials
on
equipment
previously
used
for
the
manufacturing
use
(as
a
reactant,
chemical
intermediate
on
component
in
a
formulating process)
of
tetna-, penta-
or hexachlorobenzene
under alkaline conditions.
F027
Discarded unused
formulations containing
(H)
tn—,
tetra—
on
pentachlorophenol
o~’discarded
unused
formulations
containing
compounds
derived
from
these
chiorophenols.
(Th-is
listing
does
not
include
formulations
containing
hexachlorophene synthesized
from prepunified
2,4,5-
trichlorophenol
as
the
sole
component).
F028
Residues resulting from the incineration
(T)
or
thermal
treatment
of
soil
contaminated
with
hazardous
waste
numbers
FD2O,
F021,
F022,
F023,
F026
and
F027.
(Board
Note:
The
primary
hazardous
properties
of
these
materials
have
been
indicated
by
the
letters
T
(Toxicity),
R
(Reactivity),
I
(Ignitability),
and
C
(Corrosivity).
The letter
H
indicates Acute Hazardous Waste.)
(Source:
Amended
at
14
111.
Reg.
,
effective
Section
721.Appendix
B
-EP
Tex*e~ty‘est
PFeee~ces_Method1311 T~jjt
Characteristic
Leaching
Procedure
(TCLP)
-See Appe~~x
fl. ~e 4G G~R2~—TheBoard
incorporates
by
reference 40
CFP
261, Appendix
11,
as
amended
at
55 Fed.
Reg.
1179S,
March
29,
1990.
This
Section
incorporates
no
future
editions
or
modifications
(Source:
Amended
at
14
Ill.
Reg.
,
effective
Section
721.Appendix
C
Chemical
Analysis
Test
Methods
The
Board incorporates by
reference 40 CFR
261, Appendix
III —~98~as
a~e~ded
at
~
~
RegT
3~32~
Oete~e~
24T
986-(1989),
as amended
at
54
Fed.
Reg. 41407,
October
6,
1989,
and
as amended
at
55 Fed.
Reg. 8948,
March
9,
1990.
This
Section
incorporates
no
future
editions
or
modifications.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
Ill.
Reg.
,
effectiVe
111—5(S

-39-
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL
PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
G:
WASTE
DISPOSAL
CHAPTER
1:
POLLUTION
CONTROL
BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
C:
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS
PART
722
STANDARDS
APPLICABLE
TO
GENERATORS
OF
HAZARDOUS
~AST.E
SUBPART A:
GENERAL
Section
722.110
Purpose,
Scope
and
Applicability
722.111
Hazardous
Waste
Determination
722.112
USEPA Identification Numbers
SUBPART
B:
THE MANIFEST
Section
722.120
General
Requi-enents
722.121
Acquisition
of Manifests
722.122
Number of Copies-
722.123
Use
of the Manifest
SUBPART
C:
PRE-TRANSPORT REQUIREMENTS
Section
722.130
Packaging
722.131
Labeling
722.132
Marking
722.133
Placarding
722.134
Accumulation Ttme
SUBPART
D:
RECORDKEEPING
AND
REPORTiNG
Secti on
722.140
Recordkeeping
722.141
Annual
Reporting
722.142
Exception
Repoting
722.143
Additional
Reporting
722.144
Special
Requirements
for
Generators
of
between
100
and
1000
kilograms
per
month
SUBPART
E:
EXPORTS
OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
Section
722.150
Applicability
722.151
Definitions
722.152
General Requirements
722.153
Notification
of
Intent
to
Export
722.154
Special
Manifest
Requirements
722.155
Exception
Report
722.156
Annual Reports
722.157
Recordkeeping
SUBPART
F:
IMPORTS OF
HAZARDOUS WASTE
Sect ion
722.160
Imports
of
Hazardous
Waste
SUBPART G:
FARMERS
111—569

-40-
Section
722.170
Farmers
Appendix
A
Hazardous
Waste
Manifest
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4 and authorized
by Section
27
of the
Environmental
Protection
Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1988
Supp.,
ch.•
111
1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in
R81-22,
43
PCB
427,
at
5
Ill.
Reg.
9781,
effective
as
noted
in
35 Ill. Adm. Code
700.106;
amended
and
codified
in
R81-22,
45
PCB
317,
at
6
Ill.
Reg.
4828, effective
as
noted
in
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
700.106;
amended
in
R32-18,
51
PCB
31,
at
7 ill.
Reg.
2518,
effective
February
22,
1983;
amended
in
R84—9
at
9 Ill. Reg. 11950, effective July 24,
1985;
amended
in
R85-22
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
1131,
effective
January
2,
1986;
amended
in
R86-1
at
10 Ill.
Reg. 14112,
effective August
12,
1986;
amended
in R86—19
at
10 Ill.
Reg.
20709,
effective December
2,
1966; amended
in R85-46
at
11
Ill. Reg.
13555, effective August
4,
1987;
amended
in R87-5
at
11
Ill. Reg.
19392,
effective Movembe’-
12,
1987;-
amended
in R87-39
at
12 Ill. Reg.
13129,
effective July 29,
1988;
amended
in R88-15
at
13
Ill.
Reg. 452, effective
December
27,
1988;
amended
in R89-1
at
13 111. Reg.
18523, effective November
13,
1989;
amended
in. R90-10
at
14 111. Reg.
effective
SUBPART
B:
THE MANIFEST
Section 722.123
Use
of the Manifest
a)
The
generator
—~s~—shall:
1)
Sign the manifest certification by
hand;
and
2)
Obtain the handwritten
signature
of the
initial
transporter and
date
of
acceptance
on the manifest;
and
3)
Retain
ore copy,
in
accordance
with
-s—Section_722.140(a);
and
4)
Send
one copy
of
the manifest
to the Agency within two working
days.
b)
The generator -~st-shafl give the transporter the remaining copies
of
the
manifest.
c)
For
shipments
of
hazardous
waste
within
the
United
States
solely
by
water
(bulk
shipments only),
the generator —~st—sha1lsend three
copies
of
the manifest dated
and signed
in accordance with this
Section
to
the
owner
or
operator
of
the
designated
facility
of
the
last
water
(bulk
shipment)
transporter
to
handle
the
waste
in
the
United
States
if
exported
by
water.
Copies
of
the
manifest
are
not
required
for
each
transporter.
d)
For rail
shipments of hazardous
waste within the United States which
originate
at
the
site
of
generation,
the
generator
—~st—shall
send
at
least
three
copies
of
the
manifest
dated
and
signed
in
accordance
111—570

-41-
with
this
section
to:
1)
The
next non—rail
transporter,
if any;
or
2)
The designated facility
if
transported solely
by
rail;
or
3)
The
last
rail
transporter
to
handle
the
waste i~the
United
States
if
exported
by
rail.
-4ete~
——
See
i—BOARD
NOTE:
See
Section
723.120(e)
and
(f)
for
special
provisions
for
rail
or
water
(bulk
shipment)
transporters.
!J
For shipments
of hazardous waste to
a designated facility
in
an
authorized
state
which
has
not
yet obtained authorization to
regulate
that particular waste
as
hazardous,
the generator
shall
assure that
the designated
facility agrees
to sign
and
return
the manifest
to the
generator,
and
that
any
out—of—state
transporte-
signs
and
forwards
the
manifest
to
the designated
facility.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
111. Reg.
,
effective
111—571

-‘i’
-
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
G:
WASTE
DISPOSAL
CHAPTER
I:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
c:
HAZARDOUS WASTE OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
PART
724
STANDARDS
FOR OWNERS AND OPERATORS
OF
HAZARDOUS
~‘MSTE
TREATMENT,
STORAGE
AND
DISPOSAL
FACILITIES
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Section
724.101
Purpose, Scope and Applicability
724.103
Relationship
to
interim
Status
Standards
SUBPART
B:
GENERAL FACILITY STANDARDS
Section
724.110
Applicability
724.111
Identification Number
724.112
Required
Notices
724.113
General Waste Analysis
724.114
Security
724.115
General
inspection Requirements
724.116
Personnel Training
724.117
Gene-al Requirements
for Ignitable,
Reactive
or Incompatible
Wastes
724.118
Location
Standards
SUBPART
C:
PREPAREDNESS AND PREVENTION
Section
724.130
Applicability
724.131
Design and Operation
of Facility
724.132
Required
Equipment
724.133
Testing
and Maintenance
of Equipment
724.134
Access
to
Communications
or
Alarm
System
724.135
Required Aisle Space
724.137
Arrangements with Local
Authorities
SUBPART
D:
CONTINGENCY
PLAN
AND
EMERGENCY
PROCEDURES
Secti
on
724.150
Applicability
724.151
Purpose
and
Implementation
of
Contingency
Plan
724.152
Content
of Contingency Plan
724.153
Copies
of
Contingency
Plan
724.154
Amendment of Contingency Plan
724.155
Emergency
Coordinator
724.156
Emergency Procedures
SUBPART
E:
MANIFEST
SYSTEM, RECOROKEEPING
AND
REPORTING
Section
724.170
Applicability
724.171
Use
of
Manifest
System
724.172
Manifest
Discrepancies
724.173
Operating Record
724.174
Availability, Retention and
Disposition
of Records
111’.—572

Secti on
724.240
724. 241
724.242
724. 243
724. 244
724.245
724. 246
724.247
724.248
724.251
SUBPART
F:
RELEASES FROM SOLiD WASTE MANAGEMENT UNITS
Applicability
Required Programs
Groundwater
Protection Standard
Hazardous
Constituents
Concentration Limits
Point
of Compliance
Compliance Period
General Groundwater Monitoring Requirements
Detection Monitoring Program
Compliance Monitoring
Program
Corrective Action
Program
Corrective
Action
for
Solid
Waste
tianagement
Units
SUBPART
0:
CLOSURE AND POST-CLOSURE
Applicability
Closure
Pe~formanceStandard
Closure Plan;
Amendment of Plan
Closure; Time Allowed For Closure
Disposal
or Decontamination
of Equipment, Structures and Soils
Certification of Closure
Survey
Plat
Post-closure
Care
and
Use
of
Property
Post-closure Plan; Amendment of Plan
Post—closure Notices
Certification of Completion
of Post—closure Care
Applicability
Condition of Containers
Compatibility of Waste
With
Management
of
Containers
Annual
Report
Unrnanifested Waste Report
Additional
Reports
724. 175
724. 176
724. 177
Section
724. 190
724.191
724. 192
724.193
724.
194
724. 195
724. 196
724.197
-724. 198
724. 199
724.200
724. 201
Section
724. 210
724.211
724.212
724.213
724. 214
724.215
724.216
724.217
724. 218
724. 219
724. 220
SUBPART
H:
FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS
Applicability
Definitions
of Terms
As Used in This Subpart
Cost Estimate for Closure
Financial
Assurance for Closure
Cost Estimate for Post—closure Care
Financial
Assurance
for
Post-closure
Care
Use of
a Mechanism for Financial Assurance of Both Closure and
Post-closure
Care
Liability Requirements
Incapacity
of
Owners
or
Operators,
Guarantors
or
Financial
Institutions
Wording of the instruments
SUBPART
I:
USE AND MANAGEMENT
OF CONTAINERS
Section
724.27(1
724.271
724.272
724. 273
Contai ner
111—573

Section
724. 290
724.291
724.292
724.293
724.294
724.295
724. 296
724. 297
724. 298
724. 299
724. 300
Section
724.320
724.321
724. 322
724. 326
724.327
724.328
724. 329
724. 330
724. 331
Inspections
Containment
Special Requiements for Ignitable or Reactive Waste
Special
Requirements
for
Incompatible
Wastes
Closure
SUBPART
3:
TANK SYSTEMS
Applicability
Design. and Operating Requirements
Double-lined Piles:
Exemption from Subpart
F:
Ground-water
Protection
Requirements
(Repealed)
Inspection
of Liners:
Exemption from Subpart
F:
Ground—water
Protection Requirements
(Repealed)
Monitoring
and
Inspection
Special
Requirements
for
Ignitable
or
Reactive
Waste
Special
Requirements
for
Incompatible
Wastes
Closure
and
Post—closure
Care
Special
Requirements
for
Hazardous
Wastes
FO2O,
FO21,
F022,
F023,
F026 and F027
Section
724.370
Applicability
SUBPART M:
LAND TREATMENT
724.274
724.275
724. 276
724. 277
724.278
Applicability
Assessment
of
Existing
Tank
System’s
Integrity
Design
and
installation
of
New
Tank
Systems
or
Components
Containment
and Detection of Releases
General Operating Requirements
Inspections
Response to Leaks
or
Spills
and
Disposition
of
Leaking
or
unfit-
for-use Tank Systems
Closure
and
Post-Closure
Care
Special
Requi rements
for
Ignitable
or
Reactive
Waste
Special Requirements
for Incompatible Wastes
Special Requirements
for Hazardous Wastes FO2O,
FO21,
F022,
FO23,
FO26 and F027
SUBPART
K:
SURFACE IMPOUNDMENTS
Applicability
Design
and Operating Requirements
Double-lined Surface Impoundments:
Exemption from Subpart
F:
Ground-water Protection Requirements (Repealed)
Monitoring
and
Inspection
Emergency Repairs; Contingency Plans
Closure
and
Post—closure
Care
Special Requirements
for Ignitable
or Reactive Waste
Special Requirements
for Incompatible Wastes
Special Requirements
for Hazardous Wastes
F020, FO21,
F022,
F023,
F026 and FO27
SUBPART
L:
WASTE
PILES
Section
724. 350
724.351
724. 352
724.353
724.354
724. 356
724. 357
724. 358
724.359
111—574

724.371
Treatment
Program
724.372
Treatment
Demonstration
724.373
Design and Operating Requirements
724.376
Food—chain Crops
724.378
Unsaturated
Zone
Monitoring
724.379
Recordkeeping
724.380
Closure
and
Post-closure
Care
724.381
Special
Requirements
for Ignitable.or Reactive Waste
724.382
Special
Requirements for Incompatible Wastes
724.383
Special Requirements
for Hazardous Wastes FO2O,
F021, F022,
FO23,
F026
and
F027
SUBPART N:
LANDFILLS
Secti on
724.400
Applicability
724.401
Design and Operating Requirements
724.402
Double—lined Landfills:
Exemption from Subpart
F:
Ground-water
Protection Requirements
(Repealed)
724.403
Monitoring
and Inspection
724.409
Surveying
and Recordkeeping
724.410
Closure
and Post-closure Care
724.412
Special
Requirements for Ignitable or Reactive Waste
724.413
Special Requirements
for Incompatible Wastes
724.414
Special
Requirements
for
Bulk
and
Containerized
Liquids
724.415
Special
Requirements
for
Containers
724.416
Disposal
of
Small
Containers
of
Hazardous
Waste
in
Overpacked
Drums
(Lab
Packs)
724.417
Special Requirements
for Hazardous Wastes
FO2D,
FO21, FO22,
FO23,
FO26
and
F027
SUBPART
0:
INCINERATORS
Section
724.440
Applicability
724.441
Waste
Analysis
724.442
Principal
Organic
Hazardous
Constituents
(POHCs)
724.443
Performance
Standards
724.444
Hazardous Waste
incinerator Permits
724.445
Operating Requirements
724.447
Monitoring and Inspections
724.451
Closure
SUBPART
X:
MISCELLANEOUS
UNITS
Section
724.701
Applicability
724.701
Environmental
Performance Standards
724.702
Monitoring,
Analysis, Inspection, Response, Reporting and
Corrective Action
724.703
Post-closure
Care
Appendix
A
RECORDKEEPING
INSTRUCTIONS
Appendix
B
EPA REPORT
FORtI
AND
INSTRUCTIONS
(Repealed)
Appendix D
COCHRAN’S APPROXIMATION
TO THE BEHRENS-FISHER STUDENT’S T-TEST
.~ppendixE
EXAMPLES OF
POTENTIALLY INCOMPATIBLE WASTE
Appendix
I
Groundwater Monitoring List
111—575

AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4 and autho~izedby Section
27 of the
Environmental Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev. Stat.
1988 Supp.,
ch.
111
1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R82-19,
53 PCB
131,
at
7 Ill. Reg.
14059., effective
October
12,
1983; amended
in R84—9
at
9 111.
Reg.
11964, effective July 24,
1985;
amended
in
R85-22
at
10
111.
Reg.
1136, effective January 2,
1986;
amended
in R86-1
at
10 Ill. Reg.
14119, effective August
12,
1986; amended
in
R86-28
at
11
Ill. Reg.
6138,
effective March
24,
1987;
amended
in R86-28
at
11
Ill. Reg. 8684,
effective April
21,
1987;
amended
in R86—46
at
11
Ill.
Peg.
13577,
effective
August
4,
1987;
amended
in
R87-5
at
11
111.
Reg.
19397,
effective November
12,
1987;
amended
in R87—39
at
12 Ill. Reg.
13135,
effective
July
29,
1988;
amended
in
R88—16
at
13
Ill.
Reg. 458, effective
December 28,
1983;
amended
in R89-1
at
13 Ill. Peg.
18527,
effective November
13,
1989;
amended
in R90-10
at
14
Ill.
Reg.
effective
SUBPART N:
LANDFILLS
Section 724.401
Design and Operating Requirements
a)
Any
landfill
that
is
not
covered
by
subsection
(c)
or
35
ill.
Adm.
Code
725.401(a)
must
have
a
liner
system
for
all
portions
of
the
landfill
(except
for existing portions
of
such landfill).
The
liner
system must have:
1)
A liner that
is designed,
constructed and
installed to prevent
any
migration
of
wastes
out
of
the
landfill
to
the
adjacent
subsurface
soil
or
—e~—wa~e~—groundwater
or surface
wate’-
at
any time during
the active
life (including the closure
period)
of the landfill.
The liner must
be constructed
of materials
that
prevent
wastes
from
passing
into
the
liner
duing
the
active
life
of
the
facility.
The
liner
must
be:
A)
Constructed
of materials that have appropriate
chemical
properties
and sufficient strength and thickness
to prevent
failure due to pressure g~-adients(including
static
head
and
external
hydrogeologic forces), physical
contact with
the
waste
or
leachate
to
which
they
are
exposed,
climatic
conditions,
the
stress
of
installation
and
the
stress
of
daily operation;
B)
Placed
upon
a
foundation
or
base
capable
of
providing
support
to
the
liner
and
resistance
to
pressure
gradients
above
and below the
liner to prevent
failure
of the liner
due
to
settlement,
compression
or
uplift;
and
C)
Installed to cover
all
surrounding earth
likely to
be
in
contact with the waste
or
leachate;
and
2)
A leachate collection and
removal
system imediately
above the
liner that
is designed,
constructed,
maintained
and operated
to
collect
and
remove leachate from the landfill.
The Agency will
11 1—576

-4)-
specify
design
and
operating
conditions
in
the
permit
to
ensure
that
the
leachate
depth
over
the
liner
does
not
exceed
30
cm
(one
foot).
The
leachate
collection
and
removal
system
must
be:
A)
Constructed
of materials that
are:
i)
Chemically resistant
to the waste mar~agedin
the
landfill
and the leachate expected to
be generated;
and
ii)
Of sufficient strength
and thickness
to
prevent
collapse
under
the
pressures
exerted
by
overlying
wastes, waste cover materials
and
by any equipment
used
at
the landfill; and
B)
Designed and operated to
function without clogging through
the scheduled closure
of the landfill.
b)
The owner
or operator will
be exempted from the requirements
of
subsection
(a)
if
the
Board
finds,
based
on
a
demonstration by the
owner
or operator,
in
a
variance and/or
site-specific rulemaking,
that alternative design
and operating practices,
together with
location characteristics,
will prevent the migration of any hazardous
constituents
(see
Section
724.193)
into
the
-~Fe~~—wateF—groundwater
or
surface
water
at
any
future
time.
In’
deciding whether
to grant
an
exemption,
the Board will consider:
1)
The nature
and quantity of the wastes;
2)
The proposed alternate design
and operation;
3)
The
hydrogeologic
setting
of
the
facility,
including
the
attenuative capacity and thickness of.the liners
and soils
present between the landfill
and
e~R~-wa~eF—,groundwater
or
surface water;
and
4)
All
other
factors which would
influence the quality
and mobility
of
the leachate produced and
the potential for
it
to migrate
to
—g~e~Pd—wa~eF-groundwater
or surface water.
c)
The
owner
or
oprator
of
each
new
landfill,
each
new landfill
unit
at
an
existing
facility,
each
replacement
of
an
existing
landfill
unit
and each lateral expansion of
an existing
landfill
unit,
must
install
two
or
more
liners
and
a
leachate
collection
system
above
and
between
the
liners.
The
liners
and
leachate
collection
systems
must
protect
human
health
and
the
environment.
The
requirement
for
the
installation
of
two
or more liners
in this subsection may be
satisfied
by the installation
of
a
top liner
designed, operated
and
constructed
of
materials
to
prevent
the
migration
of
any
constituent
into
such
liner
during
the
period
such
facility
remains
in
operation
(including
any post-closure monitoring
period),
and
a
lower liner
designed, operated
and constructed
to prevent
the migration of any
constituent
through
such
liner
during
such
period.
For
the
purpose
of the preceding
sentence,,
a lower
liner
shall
be deemed
to
satisfy
111—577

no
such
requirement
if
it
is
constructed
of
at
least
a
3—foot
thick
layer
of
recompacted
clay
or
other
natural
material
with
a
permeability
of
no
more
than
1
x
io-~
centimeter
per
second.
d)
Subsection
(c)
will
not
apply
if
the
owner
or
operator
demonstrates
to the Agency,
and the Agency
finds for such landfill, that
alternative design
and operating practices, together with location
characteristics,
will
prevent
the
migr~ationof
any
hazardous
constituent
into
the
e~-wa’~eF—,groundwater
or
surface
water
at
least
as
effectively
as
such
liners
and
leachate
collection
systems.
e)
The double
liner requi—ernent
set
forth
in subsection
(c)
be waived
by
the Agency
for any monofill,
if:
1)
The monofill
contains only hazardous
wastes’ from foundry furnace
emission controls
or metal
casting molding
sand,
and such wastes
do
not
contain, constituents which would
render the wastes
hazardous
for
reasons
other
than
the
—~P
—toxicity
characteristic—s-
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 721.124, with USEPA
hazardous waste numbers DOO4 through 0017;
anc
2)
No.migration demonstration.
A)
Design.
and location requi~ements.
i)
The monofill
has
at
least
one
liner
for which there
is
no evidence that such liner
is
leaking.
ii)
The monofill
is
located more than one-quarter mile
from
an
undergound
source
of
drinking water
(as that
term
is defined
in
3E. ill. Adm. Code 702.110.
iii)
The monofill
is
in
compliance
with
generally
applicable
-g~e~Pd-wateF—groundwater
monitoring
requirements
for
facilities
with
RORA
permits;
or
B)
The
owner
or
operator
demonstrates
to
the
Board
that
the
mor,ofill
is
located,
designed
and
operated
so
as
to
assure
that there will
be
no migration of any hazardous
constituent
into -gFe~P~—wa~eF—9oundwater
or surface water
at
any
future time.
f)
The
owner
or operator must design, construct, operate
and maintain
a
run-on
control
system
capable
of
preventing
flow
onto
the
active
portion
of
the
landfill
during
peak
discharge
from
at
least
a
25-year
storm.
g)
The
owner
or
operator
must
design,
construct,
operate
and
maintain
a
run-off management
system to
collect
and control
at
least
the water
volume
resulting from
a
24
hour,
25-year storm.
h)
Collection and holding ‘facilities
(e.g.,
tanks
or basins)
associated
with
run-on
and
run-off
control
systems
must
be
emptied
o-
otherwise
ii
1—578

-49-
managed expeditiously after storms
to maintain design capacity ~f the
system.
i)
If
the
landfill
contains
any
particulate
matter
which
may
be
subject
to wind dispersal, the owner or operator must cover
or otherwise
manage the landfill
to control
wind dispersal.
j)
The Agency will
specify
in
the permit-all
design
and
operating
practices
that
a-e necessary to
ensure that
the requirements
of this
Section
are
satisfied.
(source:
Amended
at
14 Ill. Reg.
,
effective
111—579

-50-
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTITLE
G:
WASTE
DISPOSAL
CHAPTER
1:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
c:
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
OPERATING
REQUIREMENTS
PART
725
INTERIM STATUS
STANDARDS FOR OWNERS AND OPERATORS OF
HAZARDOUS
WASTE
TREATMENT,
STORAGE AND DISPOSAL FACILITIES
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sect
on
725.101
Purpose,
Scope
and Applicability
725.10-~
Iminent Hazad Action
SUBPART
B:
GENERAL FACILITY STANDARDS
Section
725.110
Applicability
725.111
USEPA Identification Number
725.112
Required Notices
725. 113
General
Waste
Analysis
725.114
Security
725.115
General
Inspection Requiements
725.116
Personnel
Training
725.117
General
Requirements
for Ignitable, Reactive
o
Incompatible
Wastes
725.118
Location
Standards
SUBPART
C:
PREPAREDNESS AND
PREVENTION
Secti on
725.130
Applicability
725.131
Maintenance and Operation
of Facility
725.132
Required Equipment
725.133
Testing
and Maintenance
of Equipment
725.134
Access
to
Con’~nunicationsor
Alarm
System
725.135
Required Aisle Space
725.137
Arrangements with Local
Authorities
SUBPART
0:
CONTINGENCY
PLAN
AND EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
Section
725.150
Applicability
725.151
Purpose and Implementation of Contingency Plan
725.152
Content
of Contingency Plan
725.153
Copies
of
Contingency
Plan
725.154
Amendment
of Contingency Plan
725.155
Emergency
Coordinator
725.156
Emergency
Procedures
SUBPART
E:
MANIFEST SYSTEM,
RECORDKEEPING
AND REPORTiNG
Sect ion
725.170
Applicability
725.171
Use
of
Manifest
System
725.172
Manifest Discrepancies
725.173
Operatir-~Record
72~.174
Availability, ~tention and Disposition of Records
1 11-580

—51-
725.175
Annual
Report
725.176
Unmanifested Waste Report
725.177
Additional
Reports
SUBPART
F:
GROUNDWATER MONiTORING
Section
725.190
Applicability
725.191
Ground.~aterMonito~ingSystem
725.192
Sampling
and Analysis
725.193
Prepa~atior, Evaluation
and Response
725.194
Reco-dKeeping
and Reporting
SUBPART
C:
CLOSURE AND POST-CLOSURE
Sect i on
725.210
Applicability
725.211
Closure Pe~fo~mance
Standard
725.212
Closure
Plan;
Anerdment
of Plan
725.213
Closu.e; Time Allowed
for Closure
725.214
Disposal
or Decontamination
of Equipment, Structu~esand
Soils
725.215
Certification of Closure
725.215
Survey Plat
725.217
Post-ciosu~eCare and
Use
of
Property
725.218
Post-closure
Plan; Amendment
of Plan
725.219
Post-Closure Notices
725.220
Certification
of
Completion
of
Post-Closure
Care
SUBPART
H:
FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS
Section
725.240
Applicability
725.241
Definitions
of Terms
as
Used
in this Subpart
725.242
Cost Estimate
fo-
Closure
725.243
Financial Assurance for Closure
725.244
Cost Estimate fo~Post-closure Care
725.245
Financial
Assurance
for
Post-closure
Monitoring
and
Maintenance
725.246
Use
of
a
Mechanism
for
Financial
Assurance
of
Both Closure and
Post-closue
Care
725.247
Liability
Requirements
725.248
Incapacity
of
Owners
or
Operators,
Guarantors
or
Financial
institutions
725.251
Promulgation
of
Forms
(Repealed)
SUBPART
I:
USE AND MANAGEMENT
OF
CONTAINERS
Secti on
725.270
Applicability
725.271
Condition
of
Containers
725.272
Compatibility
of Waste with Container
725.273
Management
of
Containers
725.274
Inspections
725.276
Special
Requirements
for
Ignitable
or
Reactive
Waste
725.277
Special Requirements
for incompatible Wastes
SUBPART
J:
TANK SYSTEMS
Sect i on
725.290
Applicability
111 —581

-52—
725. 291
725.292
7’~C
)O~
~
725.294
725. 295
725. 296
725.297
725. 298
725. 293
725. 300
725. 301
Care
Ignitable or Reactive Waste
incompatible
Wastes
SUBPART
L:
WASTE
PILES
Applicability
Protection from Wind
Waste Analysis
Containment
Design
Requl
enents
Special
Requirer~ents for Ignitable
or Reactive Waste
Special
Requi~ementsfor
Incompatible
Wastes
Closure
and
Post—Closure Care
SUBPART
N:
LAND TREATMENT
Applicability
General
Operating
Requirements
Waste Analysis
Food Chain Crops
Unsaturated
Zone (Zone
of Aeration) Monitoring
Recordkeepi ny
Closure
and Post-closue
Special
Requirements
for
Ignitable
or
Reactive
Waste
Special
Requirements
for
incompatible
Wastes
SUBPART N:
LANDFILLS
Assessment
of
Existing
Tank
System’s
Integrity
Design
and Installation of New Tank Systems
or Components
Containment
and
Detection
of
Releases
General Operating Requirements
Inspections
Response to
leaks
or spills
and disposition
of Tank Systems
Closure and Post-Closure Care
Special
Requirements
for
ignitab~eor
Reactive
Waste
Special
Requirements
for Incompatible Wastes
Waste
Analysis
and
Trial
Tests
Generators
of
100 to
1000 kg/mo.
SUBPART
K:
SURFACE IMPOUNDMENTS
Applicability
Design Requirements
General Operating Requirements
Containment
System
Waste Analysis
and
•Trial
Tests
Inspections
Closure
and
Post-Closure
Special
Requirements
for
Special Requirements
for
Section
725. 320
725. 321
725. 322
725. 323
725.325
725. 326
725.328
725.329
725. 330
Section
725. 350
725.351
725. 352
725. 353
725. 354
725.356
725. 357
725.358
Section
725.370
725.372
725. 373
725. 376
725.378
725. 3 79
725.380
725.381
725.382
Secti on
725.400
725.401
725.402
725.409
725. 4 10
Applicability
Design Requirements
General
Operating
Requirements
Surveying and Recordkeeping
Closure and Post-Closure
111—582

725.412
Special
Requi
rements
for
Ignitable
or
Reactive
Waste
725.413
Special Requirements for Incompatible Wastes
725.414
Special
Requirements
for
Liquid
Wastes
725.415
Special
Requirements for Containers
725.416
Disposal
of Small
Containers
of Hazardous Waste
in Overpacked
Drums
(Lab Packs)
SUBPART
0:
INCINERATORS
Section
725.440
Applicability
725.441
Waste Analysis
725.445
General Operating Requi-enents
725.447
Monitoring
and Inspection
725.451
Closure
725.452
Interim
Status
incinerators
Burning
Particular
Hazardous
Wastes
SUBPART
P:
THERMAL TREATMENT
Section
725.470
Other Thermal -Treatment
725.473
General
Operating
Requirements
725.475
Waste
Analysis
725.477
Monitoring and Inspections
725.481
Closure
725.482
Open Burning; Waste Explosives
725.483
Interim Status Thermal Treatment Devices Burning Particular
Hazardous Waste
SUBPART
Q:
CHEMICAL,
PHYSICAL AND BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT
Section
725.500
Applicability
725.501
General Operating Requirements
725.502
Waste
Analysis and Trial
Tests
725.503
Inspections
725.504
Closure
725.505
Special Requirements for Ignitable or Reactive Waste
725.506
Special Requirements
for Incompatible Wastes
SUBPART
R:
1J’IDERGROUt4D INJECTION
Section
725.530
Applicability
Appendix
A
Recordkeeping
instructions
Appendix
B
EPA Report Form and
Instructions
(Repealed)
Appendix
C
EPA Interim Primary Drinking Water Standards
Appendix D
Tests
for Significance
Appendix
E
Examples
of Potentially
incompatible Waste
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4 and authorfzed
by Section
27
of
the
Environmental
Protection Act
(Ill.
Rev.
Stat.
1988 Supp.,
ch.
111-1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in
R81-22,
43
PCB
427,
at
5
111.
Reg.
9781,
effective
as
noted
in
.35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
700.106;
amended
and
codified
in
R81-22,
45
PCB
317,
at
6 Ill. Reg. 4828, effective
as
noted
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 700.106;
111—583

amended
in
P82-18,
51
PCB
831,
at
7
111.
Reg.
2518,
effective
February
22,
1963;
amended
in. R82-19,
53 PCB
131,
at
7 111. Reg.
14034, effective October
12,
1983;
amended
in R84—9,
at
9 Ill. Peg.
11869, effective July 24,
1985;
amended
in R85—22
at
10 Ill.
Reg.
1085,
effective January
2,
1986;
amended
in
R86-1
at
10
111.
Reg.
14069, effective August
12,
1986;
amended
in R86—28
at
11
Ill. Reg. 6044, effective March
24,
1987; amended
in R86—46
at
11
Ill. Peg.
13489, effective August
4,
1987;
amended
in R87-5
at
11
Ill.. Reg. 19338,
effective
November
10,
1987;
amended
in
P87-26
at
12
Ill.
Reg.
2485,
effective January
15,
1988;
amended
in R87—39
at
12 111. Reg. 13027,
effective July 29,
1988;
amended
in R88—16
at
13
Ill.
Reg. 437, effective
December 28,
1988;
amended
in R89-1
at
13 Ill. Reg.
18354,
effective November
13,
1989;
amended
in R90-IO
at
14
Ill. Reg.
effective
SUBPART
K:
SURFACE IMPOUNDMENTS
Section 725.321
Design Requirements
a)
The owner
or operator of
a
surface
impoundment
must install
two or
more
liners
and
leachate
collection
system
in
accordance with
35 ill.
Adm. Code 724.321(c),
with respect
to
each new unit,
replacement
of
an
existing unit,
or lateral
expansion of
an existing unit that
is
within the area
identified
in the Part
A permit
application, and with
respect
to waste
received beginning May
8,
1985.
b)
The
owner
or
operator
of
each
unit
referred
to
in
subsection
(a)
must
notify
the
Agency
at
least
sixty
days
prior
to
receiving
waste.
The
owner
or
operator
of
each
facility
submitting
‘notice
must
file
a
Part
B
application
within
six
months
of
the receipt
of
such notice.
c)
Subsection
(a)
will
not
apply
if the
owner
or operator demonstrates
to the Agency and
the Agency
finds
for such surface impoundment,
that
alternative design
and operating practices, together with location
characteristics,
will prevent
the migration of
any hazardous
constituent into the groundwater
or surface water at least
as
effectively
as
such liners
and leachate collection systems.
d)
The double
liner
requirement
set forth
in ‘subsection
(a) may be
waived
by the Agency
for any monofill,
if:
1)
The
monofill
contains only hazardous wastes from foundry furnace
emission controls or metal
casting molding sand,
and such wastes
do
not contain constituents which would
render the wastes
hazardous for
reasons other than the —~P—toxicity
characteristic—s—
in
35 Ill.
Adn. Code 721.124, with USEPA
hazardous waste numbers 0004 through 0017 and
2)
No
migration demonstration.
A)
Design
and location requirements.
i)
The
monofill
has
at
least
one
liner
for
which
there
is
no evidence that
such liner
—4R-is
leaking.
For the
purposes of
this subsection the term “liner” means
a
111—584

—55-
liner designed, constructed,
installed and operated
to
prevent
hazardous
waste
from
passing
into
the
liner
at
any time during the
active
life of the
facility, or
a
liner designed, constructed,
installed and operated
to
prevent
hazardous waste from migrating beyond
the
liner to
adjacent subsurface soil, —~~e~~—watec—
groundwater
or
surface water
at any
time
during
the
active life
of
the
faci.lity.
In the case
of any
surface
impoundment which
has been exempted from the
requirements
of
subsection
(a)
of
a
liner designed,
constructed,
installed and operated to prevent
hazardous
waste
from
passing
beyond
tne
liner,
at
the
closure of
such impoundment the owner
or
operator
must
remove or
decontaminate all
waste
residues,
all
contaminated liner
mate’-ial
and contaminated
soil
to
the extent
practicable.
If
all contaminated
soil
—*t—
is
not
removed
or
decontaminated,
the owner
or
operator
of
such
impoundment
must
comply
with
appropriate
post-closure requirements,
including but
not
limited
to —~Fe~.d—wate~-~roundwater
monitoring
and corrective
action
ii)
The monofill
is
located more than one-quarter mile
from an
underground source
of drinking water
(as that
term
is defined
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 702.110);
and
iii) The monofill
is
in
compliance with generally
applicable —~Fe~~-wateF-groundwater
monitoring
requirements
for
facilities with RCRA
permi;ts;
O~,
B)
The owner
or operator demonstrates
to the
Board that the
rnonofill
is
located, designed and operated so
as
to assure
that there will
be
no migration of any hazardous
constituent
into groundwater
or
surface water
at any
future
time.
e)
In
the
case
of
any
unit
in
which
the
liner
and leachate collection.
system
has
been
installed pursuant
to the requirements
of
subsection
(a)
and
in
good
faith
compliance
with
subsection
(a)
and
with
guidance
documents
governing
liners
and leachate collection Systems
under subsection
(a)
no
liner
or leachate collection system which
is
different
from
that
which
was
so
installed
pursuant
to
subsection
(a)
will
be
required
for
such
unit
by
the
Agency
when
issuing
the
first
permit
to
such facility,
except that the Agency will
not be precluded
from
requiring
installation
of
a
new
liner
when
the
Agency
finds
that
any
liner
installed
pursuant
to
the
requirements
of
subsection
(a)
is
leaking.
f)
Refusal
to
grant
an exemption
or waiver,
or grant with conditions,
maybe appealed
to the Board.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
Ill.
Peg.
,
effective
SUBPART
M:
LAND TREATMENT
111—585

-56-
Section 725.373
Waste Analysis
In addition to the waste analyses
required by —4—Section
725.113, before
placing
a
hazardous waste
in
or
on
a land treatment facility, the owner
or
operator
—~st—shal
1
a)
Determine the concentrations
in the waste
of
any substances which
~qual
or exceed
the maximum concentrat~onscontained
in —Tab~e~
4—35
I’ll. Adm. Code 721.124 that cause
a waste to exhibit the
—EP-
toxicity characteristic;
b)
For any waste listed
in —Past ~
—35 Ill. Adm.
Code’~721.Subpart D,
determine
the concentrations
of any substances whic~-~caused
the waste
to
be listed
as
a hazardous waste;
and
c)
If food chain
crops are
grown, determine the concentrations
in the
waste
of
each
of
the
following
constituents:
arsenic1
cadmium,
lead
and mercury,
unless
the owner or operator
has writ.t~n, documented
data that show that
the constituent
is
not present.
—Ge~eRt~PaFt_BOARD
NOTE:
35
Ill.
Adm. Code
721 specifies the
substances
for
which
a
waste
is
listed
as
a
hazardous..waste.
As
required
by
—4—Section725.113 the waste analysis plan..~must include
analyses needed
to comply with -54—Sections
725.381
and
725.382.
As
requi red
by
—4-Section
725.173,
the
owner
or
operator
—~st—shall
place the results from each waste
analysis, or th~-toc~umented
information,
in
the
operating
record
of
the
facility.
(Source:
Amended
at
14
111.
Reg.
,
effective
ii 1—586

-57-
TITLE
35:
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
SUBTiTLE
6:
WASTE DISPOSAL
CHAPTER
1:
POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
SUBCHAPTER
C:
HAZARDOUS WASTE OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
PART 728
LAND DISPOSAL RESTRICTIONS
SUBPART
A:
GENERAL
Section
728.101
Purpose,
Scope
and Applicability
728.102
Definitions
728.103
Di~lutionProhibited
as
a Substitute for Treatment
728.104
Treatment
Surface
Impoundment
Exemption
728.105
Procedures for case—by-case Extensions
to
an Effective Date
728.106
Petitions to Allow Land Disposal
of
a Waste Prohibited under
Subpart
C
728. 107
Waste Analysis
728.108
Landfill
and
Surface
Impoundment
Disposal
Restrictions
SUBPART
C:
PROHIBITION
ON LAND DISPOSAL
Section
728.130
Waste Specific Prohibitions
-_
Solvent Wastes
728.131
Waste Specific Prohibitions
-—
Dioxin-Containing Wastes
728.132
Waste Specific Prohibitions
-—
California List Wastes
728.133
Waste Specific Prohibitions
—-
First Third Wastes
728.134
Waste Specific Prohibitions
—-
Second Thi~rdWastes
728.139
Statutory Prohibitions
SUBPART
0:
TREATMENT
STANDARDS
Secti on
728.140
Applicability
of Treatment Standards
728.141
Treatment Standards expressed
as Concentrations
in Waste Extract
728.142
Treatment Sta~dardsexpressed
as
Specified Technologies
728.143
Treatment Standards expressed
as Waste Concentrations
728.144
Adjustment
of Treatment Standard
SUBPART
E:
PROHIBITIONS
ON
STORAGE
Section
728.150
Prohibitions
on Storage of
Restricted Wastes
Table A
Constituent Concentrations
in Waste Extract
(CCWE)
Table
B
Constituent Concentrations
in Waste
(CCW)
Appendix A
Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP)
Appendix
B
Treatment Standards
(As concentrations
in
the Treatment Residual
Extract)
Appendix C
List of Halogenated Organic Compounds
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4
and authorized
by Section
27
of the
Environmental
Protection Act
(ill. Rev.
Stat.
1968 Supp.,
ch.
111
1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and
1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R87-5 at
11
111. Peg. 19354, effective November
12,
1987;
amended
in k87—39
at
12
Ill.
Peg.
13046, effective July 29,
1988;
111—587

r
C,
amended
in R89-1
at
13 Iii.
Reg.
18403, effective November 1~,1989;
amended
in R89-9
at
14 Ill. Reg.
6232,
effective April
16,
1990;
amended
in P90-10
at
14
111. Peg.
,
effective
Appendix A
Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure (TCLP)
—The BeaF~~P.ee~pe~ates
by
FefeFeAee 49 GF~268w Appe~d~x
~..•.
449&8~ir
T~S
eeppe~at+e~
~~e1~~es~e ~
ed4t*eRs
ep
aReRd~eRtsT— The’ ‘ICLP
is
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 721.Appendix 8,
which incorporates by
reference
.40.. CFR
261,
Appendix
11.
(Source:
Amended
at
14 111. Peg.
,
effective
)
111—

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