ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    July
    1.,
    1986
    IN THE MATTER OF:
    )
    )
    RCRA UPDATE,
    USEPA REGULATIONS
    )
    R86—l9
    (2/1/86 THROUGH 3/31/86)
    )
    PROPOSAL FOR PUBLIC COMMENT.
    PROPOSED ORDER OF THE BOARD
    (by
    3. Anderson):
    The Board hereby proposes, pursuant to Section 22.4(a) of
    the Environmental Protection Act (Act),
    to amend the RCRA rules
    to correspond with amendments
    to USEPA regulations adopted
    between February 1, 1986 and March 31,
    1986.
    Because
    this
    is
    an
    “identical
    in substance” rulemaking,
    neither Title VII of Act nor
    the Section
    5 of the Administrative Procedure Act apply.
    However, pursuant to 35 Ill. Adm. Code 102.202,
    the Board will
    publish the text of
    the proposal
    in the Ill. Reg. and receive
    public comment for
    a period of at least 45 days
    (R84—l0, Order
    of
    December
    20,
    1984).
    The Board
    has adopted
    a Proposed Opinion supporting these
    proposed rules.
    The complete text of the proposal
    is
    as follows.
    Striking
    and underlining refer
    to the text of the rules as amended in
    docket R86—l.
    TITLE
    35:
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    SUBTITLE G:
    WASTE DISPOSAL
    CHAPTER
    I:
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    SUBCHAPTER
    b:
    PERMITS
    PART 703
    RCRA
    PERMIT
    PROGRAM
    SUBPART
    A:
    GENERAL PROVISIONS
    Section
    703.100
    Scope
    and Relation to Other Parts
    703.101
    Purpose
    703.110
    References
    SUBPART B:
    PROHIBITIONS
    Section
    703.120
    Prohibitions in General
    703.121
    RCRA Permits
    71-294

    —2—
    703.122
    703.123
    703.124
    703.125
    703.126
    703.127
    Specific Inclusions in Permit Program
    Specific Exclusions from Permit Program
    Discharges of Hazardous Waste
    Reapplications
    Initial Applications
    Federal Permits
    (Repealed)
    SUBPART
    C:
    AUTHORIZATION BY RULE AND INTERIM STATUS
    Section
    703.140
    703.141
    703.150
    703.151
    703.152
    703.153
    703.154
    703.
    155
    703.156
    703.157
    703.158
    Section
    703.180
    703.181
    703.182
    703 .183
    703.184
    703.185
    703.186
    703.200
    703.201
    703.202
    703.203
    703.204
    703.205
    703.206
    703. 207
    Section
    703.221
    703.222
    703 .2 23
    703.224
    703.
    2 25
    703.230
    703. 231
    Purpose and Scope
    Permits by Rule
    Application by Existing UWN Facilities and Interim
    Status Qualifications
    Application by New
    HWM
    Facilities
    Amended Part A Application
    Qualifying
    for Interim Status
    Prohibitions During Interim Status
    Changes During Interim Status
    Interim Status Standards
    Grounds for Termination
    of Interim Status
    Permits for Less Than an Entire Facility
    SUBPART D:
    APPLICATIONS
    Applications
    in General
    Contents of Part A
    Contents
    of Part B
    General Information
    Facility Location Information
    Ground—water Protection Information
    Exposure Information
    Specific Information
    Containers
    Tanks
    Surface Impoundments
    Waste Piles
    Incinerators
    Land Treatment
    Landfills
    SUBPART
    E:
    SHORT TERM
    AND
    PHASED
    PERMITS
    Emergency Permits
    Incinerator Conditions Prior
    to Trial Burn
    Incinerator Conditions During Trial Burn
    Incinerator Conditions After Trial Burn
    Trial Burns
    for Existing Incinerators
    Land Treatment Demonstration
    Research, Development and Demonstration Permits
    71-295

    —3—
    SUBPART F:
    PERMIT CONDITIONS
    Section
    703.241
    Establishing Permit Conditions
    703.242
    Noncompliance Pursuant to Emergency Permit
    703.243
    Monitoring
    703.244
    Notice of Planned Changes
    703.245
    Release or Discharge Reports
    703.246
    Reporting Requirements
    AUTHORITY:
    Implementing Section 22.4 and authorized
    by Section
    27 of the Environmental Protection Act
    (Ill.
    Rev. Stat.
    1985,
    ch.
    111 1/2, pars. 1022.4
    and 1027).
    SOURCE:
    Adopted in R82—l9,
    53 PCB 131,
    at
    7
    Ill. Reg. 14289,
    effective October
    12, 1983;
    amended
    in R83—24
    at
    8
    Ill. Reg.
    206,
    effective December
    27,
    1983; amended
    in R84—9
    at
    9
    Ill. Reg.
    11899, effective July 24, 1985;
    amended
    in R85—23
    at 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    ;
    amended
    in
    R86—l
    at
    10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    ; amended
    in R86—19
    at 10 Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    SUBPART B:
    PROHIBITIONS
    Section 703.123
    Specific Exclusions from Permit Program
    The following persons are among
    those who are not required to
    obtain
    a RCRA permit:
    a)
    Generators who accumulate hazardous waste on—site for
    less than 90 d~ysy
    ~&
    the
    time periods provided
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    722.134;
    b)
    Farmers who dispose of hazardous waste pesticides from
    their own use as provided
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 722.151;
    c)
    Persons who own or operate facilities solely for the
    treatment, storage
    or disposal of hazardous waste
    excluded from regulations
    under
    this Part by 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code
    721.104
    or 721.105 (small generator
    exemption);
    d)
    Owners or operators of totally enclosed treatment
    facilities as defined
    in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 720.110;
    f)
    Owners and operators of elementary neutralization units
    or wastewater treatment units as defined
    in
    35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 720.110;
    g)
    Transporters storing manifested shipments of hazardous
    waste
    in containers meeting the requirements of 35 Ill.
    71-296

    —4—
    Ac3m.
    Code 722.130 at a transfer facility for a period of
    ten days or
    less;
    h)
    Persons adding absorbent material to waste
    in a
    container
    (as defined in 35 Ill. Adm
    Code 720.110) and
    persons adding waste
    to absorbent material
    in a
    container,
    provided that these actions occur
    at the time
    waste
    is first placed
    in the container;
    and 35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 724.117(b),
    724.271 and 724.272 are complied with.
    (Board Note:
    See 40 CFR ~22~~f2~
    270.l(c)(2))
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
    ,
    effective
    )
    SUBPART
    C:
    AUTHORIZATION BY RULE AND INTERIM STATUS
    Section 703.150
    Application by Existing HWM Facilities and
    Interim Status Qualifications
    a)
    The owner or operator of
    an existing HWM facility or of
    an
    HWM
    facility
    in existence on the effective date of
    statutory or regulatory amendments that render
    the
    facility subject to the requirement
    to have
    a RCRA
    permit must submit Part A of the permit application
    to
    the Agency
    no later
    than the following times, whichever
    comes first:
    1)
    Six months after
    the date of publication of
    regulations which first require the owner
    or
    operator to comply with standards
    in 35
    Ill. Adm.
    Code
    725;
    or
    2)
    Thirty
    days
    after
    the
    date
    the
    owner
    or
    operator
    first becomes subject to the standards in 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 725;
    3)
    For 9~eneratorswhich generate ~reater than 100
    ~ilogram~~
    1ess~thah
    1~00~kilo~ams
    6fThazardous
    wái~te
    iria calendar month and treat,
    store or
    dfsposeof
    ?~se wasEe~on—site, byMarch
    24T
    1987.
    b)
    The owner
    or operator of an existing HWM facility may be
    required
    to submit Part B of the permit application at
    any time after
    the effective date of standards
    in
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 724 applicable
    to any TSD unit at the
    facility.
    The Agency will notify the owner
    or operator
    that a Part B application
    is required, and set a date
    for receipt
    of the application, not less than six months
    after the date the notice
    is sent.
    The owner
    or
    operator may voluntarily submit
    a Part B application for
    all or part of the HWM facility at any time.
    71-297

    —5--
    C)
    The time for
    filing Part A of the permit application may
    be extended only by a Board Order entered pursuant to a
    variance petition.
    The Board will consider whether
    there has been substantial confusion as
    to whether the
    owner or operator of such facilities were required
    to
    file a Part A application and whether such confusion was
    attributable to ambiguities
    in
    35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 720,
    721
    or
    725.
    ci)
    Notwithstanding
    the above, any owner
    or operator of an
    existing HWM facility must submit a Part B permit
    application
    in accordance with the dates specified in
    Section 703.157.
    Any owner or operator of
    a land
    disposal facility
    in existence on the effective date of
    statutory or regulatory amendments which render
    the
    facility subject
    to the requirement
    to have a RCRA
    permit must submit
    a Part B application
    in accordance
    with the dates specified
    in Section 703.157.
    e)
    Interim status may be terminated as provided
    in Section
    703.157.
    (Board Note:
    See 40 CFR 270.10(e).~)
    (Source:
    Amended at
    10 Ill. Reg.
    effective
    71.298

    —6—
    TITLE
    35:
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    SUBTITLE G:
    WASTE DISPOSAL
    CHAPTER
    I:
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    SUBCHAPTER
    C:
    HAZARDOUS WASTE
    OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
    PART
    720
    HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT
    SYSTEM:
    GENERAL
    SUBPART
    A:
    GENERAL PROVISIONS
    Purpose, Scope and Applicability
    Availability of Information;
    Confidentiality of
    Information
    Use
    of
    Number
    and
    Gender
    SUBPART
    B:
    DEFINITIONS
    Section
    720.110
    720.111
    Definitions
    References
    SUBPART
    C:
    RULEMAKING PETITIONS AND OTHER PROCEDURES
    Section
    720.120
    720.121
    720.122
    720.130
    720.131
    720.132
    720. 133
    720.140
    720.141
    Appendix A
    Rulemaking
    Alternative Equivalent Testing Methods
    Waste Delisting
    Procedures for Solid Waste Determinations
    Solid Waste Determinations
    Boiler Determinations
    Procedures for Determinations
    Additional regulation of certain hazardous waste
    Recycling Activities on a case—by—case Basis
    Procedures for case—by—case regulation of hazardous
    waste Recycling Activities
    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. 1985,
    ch.
    111 1/2,
    pars. 1022.4 and 1027).
    SOURCE:
    Adopted
    in RSl—22,
    43 PCB 427, at
    5 Ill.
    Reg.
    9781,
    effective as noted
    in 35 Ill.
    Adin. Code 700.106; amended and
    codified
    in R8122,
    45
    PCB 317,
    at
    6 Ill.
    Reg.
    4828, effective as
    noted in
    35 111. Adm. code 700.106; amended
    in R82—l9 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
    Ill.
    Reg.
    968, effective January
    2,
    1986;
    amended in R86—1
    Section
    720 .101
    720.102
    720.103
    71-299

    —7—
    at 10 Ill. Reg.
    ,
    effective
    ; amended
    in
    R86—l9 at 10 Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    SUBPART B:
    DEFINITIONS
    Section 720.110
    Definitions
    When used
    in 35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 720 through 725 only,
    the
    following terms have the meanings given below:
    “Act”
    or
    “RCRA”
    means
    the Solid Waste Disposal Act,
    as
    amended by the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of
    1976,
    as amended
    (42 U.S.C. Section 6901 et
    seq.)
    “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 his designee.
    “Agency” means the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
    “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 equivalent responsibility.
    “Board” means the Illinois Pollution Control Board.
    “Boiler” means an enclosed device using controlled
    flame
    combustion and having the following characteristics:
    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 superheaters) must be
    physically formed into one manufactured or
    assembled
    unit.
    A unit
    in which the combustion chamber and the
    primary energy recovery section(s)
    are joined only by
    ducts or connections carrying flue gas
    is not integrally
    designed; however, secondary energy recovery equipment
    (such as economizers or air preheaters)
    need not be
    physically formed into the same unit as the combustion
    71-300

    —8--
    chamber and
    the primary energy recovery section.
    The
    following units are not precluded from being boilers
    solely because they are not of integral design:
    process
    heaters
    (units that transfer energy directly
    to a
    process stream), and fluidized
    bed combustion units;
    and
    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 the same unit.
    (Examples of
    internal use are the preheating of fuel or combustion
    air, and
    the driving of induced or forced draft
    fans or
    feedwater pumps);
    or
    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”.)
    “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.
    “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.
    “Designated facility” means
    a hazardous waste treatment,
    storage or disposal facility which has received an EPA permit
    (or
    a facility with interim status)
    in accordance with the
    requirements of
    40 CFR 270 and 124 or a permit from
    a state
    authorized
    in accordance with 40 CFR 271,
    or that
    is
    regulated under
    40 CFR 261.6(c)(2)
    or
    40 CFR 266.Subpart F or
    71-301

    —9—
    35
    Ill. Adm.
    Code 72l.l06(c)(2) or 726.Subpart
    F and that has
    been designated
    on the manifest by the generator pursuant
    to
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 722.120.
    “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.
    “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 after closure.
    “Elementary neutralization unit” means
    a device which:
    Is used for neutralizing wastes which
    are hazardous
    wastes only because they exhibit the corrosivity
    characteristic defined
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 721.122 or
    are listed
    in
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 721.Subpart D
    only for
    this
    reason; and
    Meets
    the definition of tank, container,
    transport
    vehicle or vessel
    in Section 720.110.
    “EPA” means United States Environmental Protection Agency.
    “EPA hazardous waste number” means the number assigned by EPA
    to each hazardous waste listed in
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    721.Subpart D and
    to each characteristic identified in
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code 721.Subpart
    C.
    “EPA 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:
    71-302

    —10—
    Region
    I:
    Maine,
    Vermont,
    New
    Hampshire,
    Massachusetts,
    Connecticut
    and
    Rhode
    Island
    Region II:
    New York, New Jersey, Commonwealth
    of Puerto Rico and 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
    Region VII:
    Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri and Iowa
    Region VIII:
    Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota,
    South Dakota, Utah and Colorado
    Region IX:
    California, Nevada, Arizona,
    Hawaii,
    Guam,
    American Samoa
    and
    Commonwealth 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 commenced 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
    71-303

    —“-
    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.
    “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).
    “Federal agency” means any department, agency or other
    instrumentality of
    the federal government,
    any independent
    agency or establishment of the federal government including
    any government corporation and the Government Printing
    Office.
    “Federal,
    state
    and local approvals or permits necessary to
    begin physical construction” means permits and approvals
    required under federal,
    state or local hazardous waste
    control statutes, regulations or ordinances.
    “Food—chain crops” means tobacco,
    crops grown for human
    consumption and crops grown for
    feed for 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
    solid portion of
    a waste under ambient temperature and
    pressure.
    “Generator” 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 regulation.
    “Groundwater” means water below the
    land surface in a zone of
    saturation.
    “Hazar’dous waste” means
    a hazardous waste
    as defined
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 721.103.
    “Hazardous waste constituent” means
    a constituent which
    caused
    the hazardous waste
    to be listed
    in 35 Ill. Adm. Code
    72l.Subpart D,
    or
    a constituent listed
    in of
    35
    Ill. Adm.
    Code
    721.124.
    71-304

    —12—
    “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);
    or
    Commingling with another waste
    or material under
    uncontrolled conditions because the commingling might
    produce heat or pressure, fire or explosion, violent
    reaction, toxic dusts, mists,
    fumes or gases or
    flammable fumes or gases.
    (See 35
    Ill.
    Adrn. Code 725, Appendix B 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 kline
    Lime kilns
    Aggregate kilns
    Phosphate kline
    Coke ovens
    Blast furnaces
    Smelting, melting and refining furnaces
    (including
    pyrometallurgical devices such as cupolas, reverberator
    furnaces, sintering machines, roasters and foundry
    furnaces)
    Titanium
    dioxide
    chloride process oxidation reactors
    Methane
    reforming
    furnaces
    Pulping
    liquor
    recovery
    furnaces
    Combustion devices
    used
    in
    the
    recovery
    of
    sulfur
    values
    from spent sulfuric acid
    71.305

    —13—
    Any other such device
    as
    the Agency determines to be an
    “Industrial Furnace” on the basis of one or more of the
    following factors:
    The design and use of the device primarily to
    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
    materials
    as effective substitutes
    for raw
    materials,
    in processes using
    raw materials
    as
    principal
    feedstocks;
    The use
    of the device
    to burn or reduce secondary
    materials as ingredients
    in an industrial process
    to make
    a material product;
    The use of the device
    in common
    industrial practice
    to produce
    a material product;
    and
    Other relevant factors.
    “Individual
    generation site” means the contiguous
    site at
    or
    on which one or more hazardous wastes are generated.
    An
    individual generation
    site, such as
    a large manufacturing
    plant, may have one or more sources of hazardous waste but
    is
    considered
    a single
    or individual generation site
    if
    the site
    or property
    is contiguous.
    “In operation” refers
    to
    a facility which
    is treating,
    storing or disposing of hazardous waste.
    “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.
    “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.
    “Landfill” means a disposal facility or part of a facility
    where hazardous waste
    is placed in
    or on land and which
    is
    71-306

    —14—
    not a land treatment facility,
    a surface impoundment or
    an
    injection well.
    “Landfill cell” means a discrete volume of
    a hazardous waste
    landfill which uses a liner
    to provide
    isolation of wastes
    from 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 means
    a continuous layer
    of natural
    or manmade
    materials beneath or on the sides of a surface impoundment,
    landfill or landfill cell, which restricts the downward or
    lateral escape of hazardous waste, hazardous waste
    constituents or leachate.
    “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.
    Adrn.
    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 mine.
    “Movement” means
    that hazardous waste
    transported
    to a
    facility
    in an individual vehicle.
    “New hazardous waste management facility” or “new facility”
    means a facility which began operation,
    or for which
    construction commenced, after November 19,
    1980.
    (See also
    “Existing hazardous waste management facility”.)
    “On—site” means the same
    or geographically contiguous
    property which may
    be divided by public
    or private right—of—
    way, provided the entrance and exit between the properties is
    at a crossroads intersection 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 right—
    of-way which he controls and
    to which the public does not
    have access
    is also considered on—site property.
    71-307

    —15—
    “Open burning” means the combustion of any material without
    the following characteristics:
    Control of combustion air
    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 closure” means the closure of
    a discrete part of
    a
    facility
    in accordance with the applicable closure
    requirements of 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 724
    or
    725.
    For example,
    partial closure may include the closure of a trench,
    a unit
    operation,
    a landfill cell or
    a pit, while other parts
    of the
    same facility continue
    in operation or will
    be placed
    in
    operation
    in the future.
    “Person” means means an individual,
    trust,
    firm,
    joint stock
    company,
    federal agency, corporation (including
    a government
    corporation), partnership, association, state,
    municipality,commission, 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, well,
    discrete fissure, container,
    rolling stock, concentrated animal feeding operation or
    vessel
    or other floating craft from which pollutants are or
    may be discharged.
    This term does not include
    return flows
    from irrigated agriculture.
    71-308

    —16—
    “Publicly owned treatment works”
    or
    “POTW” means any device
    or system used
    in the treatment (including
    recycling and
    reclamation) of municipal sewage or industrial wastes of
    a
    liquid nature which
    is owned by
    a “state” or
    “municipality”
    (as defined by Section 502(4)
    of the Clean Water Act
    (33
    U.S.C.
    1362(4)).
    This definition includes sewers,
    pipes or other conveyances
    only
    if they convey wastewater
    to a POTW providing treatment.
    “Regional Administrator” means
    the Regional Administrator
    for
    the EPA Region
    in which the facility
    is located or his
    designee.
    “Representative sample” means
    a sample of
    a universe or whole
    (e.g., waste pile,
    lagoon,
    groundwater) 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 rainwater,
    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, commercial
    or industrial
    wastewater treatment plant,
    water supply treatment plant or
    air pollution control facility exclusive of the treated
    effluent from
    a wastewater treatment plant.
    “Small Quantity Generator” means_ a generator which generates
    less
    than
    I0~0 k9
    of
    hazardoiis
    waste Tñá
    dalendar mon?h~_
    “Solid waste” means a solid waste as defined in 35 Iii. Adm.
    Code 721.102.
    “State” means any of the several states,
    the District of
    Columbia,
    the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
    the Virgin
    Islands, Guam, American Samoa and the Commonwealth of the
    Northern Mariana Islands.
    “Storage” means the holding of hazardous waste
    for
    a
    temporary period,
    at the end of which the hazardous waste
    is
    treated, disposed of or stored elsewhere.
    71-309

    —17—
    “Surface impoundment” or “impoundment” means a facility or
    part of
    a facility which
    is a natural topographic depression,
    manmade excavation or diked
    area formed primarily of earthen
    materials (although it may be lined with manmade materials)
    which
    is designed
    to hold an accumulation of liquid wastes or
    wastes containing free liquids and which
    is not an injection
    well.
    Examples
    of surface impoundments are holding,
    storage,
    settling and aeration pits, ponds and lagoons.
    “Tank” means
    a stationary device, designed
    to contain an
    accumulation of hazardous waste which
    is constructed
    primarily of nonearthen materials
    (e.g.,
    wood,
    concrete,
    steel, plastic) which provide structural support.
    “Thermal treatment” means
    the treatment of hazardous waste in
    a device which uses elevated temperatures as
    the primary
    means
    to change
    the chemical, physical
    or biological
    character or composition of the hazardous waste.
    Examples of
    thermal
    treatment processes are incineration, molten salt,
    pyrolysis, calcination, wet air oxidation and microwave
    discharge.
    (See also “incinerator” and “open burning”.)
    “Totally enclosed treatment facility” means
    a facility for
    the treatment of hazardous waste which
    is directly connected
    to an industrial production process and which
    is constructed
    and operated
    in a manner which prevents the release
    of any
    hazardous waste or any constituent thereof into the
    environment during
    treatment.
    An example
    is
    a pipe
    in which
    waste acid is neutralized.
    “Transfer facility” means any transportation related facility
    including loading docks, parking areas, storage areas and
    other
    similar areas where shipments of hazardous waste
    are
    held during the normal course of transportation.
    “Transport vehicle” means
    a motor vehicle or
    rail car used
    for the transportation of cargo by any mode.
    Each cargo—
    carrying body (trailer,
    railroad freight car,
    etc.)
    is
    a
    separate transport vehicle.
    “Transportation” means the movement
    of hazardous waste by
    air, rail,
    highway or water.
    “Transporter” means
    a person engaged
    in the off—site
    transportation of hazardous waste by air, rail,
    highway or
    water
    i
    “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
    to transport,
    71-310

    —18—
    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
    or immobilized.
    “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”.)
    “Uppermost aquifer” 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 property boundary.
    “Unsaturated zone”
    or “zone of aeration” means
    the zone
    between the land surface and the water
    table.
    “United States” means
    the
    50 States, the District of
    Columbia,
    the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
    the U.S. Virgin
    Islands,
    Guam, American Samoa and the Commonwealth of the
    Northern Mariana Islands.
    “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 part of
    a wastewater treatment facility which is
    subject to regulation under either Section 402 or
    Section 307(b)
    of the Clean Water Act
    (33 U.S.C.
    1342 or
    1317(b)); and receives and treats
    or stores
    an influent
    wastewater which
    is a hazardous waste as defined in 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 721.103 or generates and accumulates a
    wastewater treatment sludge which
    is a hazardous waste
    as defined
    in 35
    Ill. 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
    in 35
    Ill.
    Adrn.
    Code
    720.110.
    “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
    or tubing
    to prevent the earth from caving
    in.
    71-3 11

    —19—
    “Well injection”
    (See “underground injection”).
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
    ,
    effective
    )
    312

    —20—
    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
    Section
    721.101
    721.102
    721.103
    721.104
    721.105
    721.106
    721. 107
    Purpose of Scope
    Definition of Solid Waste
    Definition of Hazardous Waste
    Exclusions
    Special Requirements For Hazardous Waste Generated
    by Small Quantity Generators
    Requirements for Recyclable Materials
    Residues of Hazardous Waste In Empty Containers
    SUPBART B:
    CRITERIA FOR IDENTIFYING THE CHARACTERISTICS
    OF HAZARDOUS WASTE AND FOR LISTING HAZARDOUS WASTES
    Section
    721.110
    Criteria for Identifying
    the Characteristics of
    Hazardous
    Waste
    721.111
    Criteria for Listing Hazardous Waste
    SUBPART C:
    CHARACTERISTICS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    General
    Hazardous Wastes From Nonspecific Sources
    Hazardous Waste From Specific Sources
    Discarded Commercial Chemical Products, Off—
    Specification Species, Container Residues and Spill
    Residues Thereof
    Appendix
    A
    Appendix
    B
    Appendix
    C
    Representative
    Sampling
    Methods
    EP Toxicity Test Procedures
    Chemical Analysis Test Methods
    Section
    721.120
    721.121
    721.122
    721.123
    721.124
    Section
    721.130
    721.131
    721.132
    721.133
    General
    Characteristics of Ignitability
    Characteristics of Corrosivity
    Characteristics of Reactivity
    Characteristics
    of EP Toxicity
    SUBPART
    D:
    LISTS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    71-313

    —21—
    Table A
    Analytical Characteristics of Organic Chemicals
    (Repealed)
    Table B
    Analytical Characteristics of Inorganic Species
    (Repealed)
    Table C
    Sample Preparation/Sample Introduction Techniques
    (Repealed)
    Appendix
    G
    Basis
    for Listing Hazardous Wastes
    Appendix
    H
    Hazardous
    Constituents
    Appendix
    I
    Wastes
    Excluded
    under
    Section
    720.120
    and
    720.122
    Table A
    Wastes Excluded from Non—Specific Sources
    Table B
    Wastes Excluded from Specific Sources
    Table C
    Wastes Excluded from Commercial Chemical Products,
    Off—Specification Species, Container Residues, and
    Soil Residues Thereof
    Appendix 3
    Method of Analysis for Chlorinated Dibenzo—p—
    Djoxjns and Dibenzofurans
    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.
    1985,
    ch.
    ill
    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.
    Adni.
    Code 700.106; amended and
    codified
    in R8l—22, 45 PCB 317, at
    6 Ill. Reg.
    4828, effective
    as
    noted
    in
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended
    in R82—18,
    51 PCB 31,
    at
    7
    Ill. Reg.
    2518, effective February 22, 1983; amended
    in R82—
    19,
    53 PCB 131, at
    7
    Ill. Reg.
    13999, effective October 12, 1983;
    amended
    in R84—34,
    61 PCB 247,
    at
    B
    Ill.
    Reg.
    24562, effective
    December
    11, 1984;
    amended in R84—9, at
    9
    Ill. Reg. 11834,
    effective July 24,
    1985;
    amended
    in R85—22
    at 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    998,
    effective January 2,
    1986; amended
    in R85—2
    at 10 Ill. Reg.
    8112,
    effective May 2,
    1986; amended
    in R86—l at
    10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    ; amended in R86—l9 at 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    -
    SUBPART
    A:
    GENERAL PROVISIONS
    Section 721.101
    Purpose and Scope
    a)
    This part identifies those solid wastes which are
    subject to regulation as hazardous wastes under
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 702,
    703, 705 and 722 through 725 and which
    are subject to the notification requirements of Section
    3010 of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
    (42
    U.S.C.
    6901 et seq.).
    In this part:
    1)
    Subpart A defines the terms “solid waste” and
    “hazardous waste,” identifies
    those wastes which
    are excluded from regulation under
    35 Ill.
    Adm.
    71.314

    —22—
    Code 702, 703,
    705 and 722 through ~5
    726
    and
    establishes special management requirements for
    hazardous waste produced by conditionally exe~p~
    small quantity generators an~dhazardous waste~hich
    is used~ret~eedyrecycled or ree~i~ined.
    2)
    Subpart B sets forth
    the criteria used
    to identify
    characteristics of hazardous waste and
    to list
    particular hazardous wastes.
    3)
    Subpart C identifies characteristics of hazardous
    wastes.
    4)
    Subpart D lists particular hazardous wastes.
    b)
    1)
    The definition of solid waste contained
    in this
    Part applies only to wastes that also are hazardous
    for purposes of the regulations implementing
    Subtitle
    C of the Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act.
    For example,
    it does not apply
    to
    materials (such as non—hazardous scrap, paper,
    textiles, or rubber
    that are not otherwise
    hazardous wastes and that are recycled.
    2)
    This Part identifies only some of
    the materials
    which are solid wastes and hazardous wastes under
    Sections 1004(5), 1004(27)
    and 7003
    of
    RCRA.
    A
    material which
    is not defined
    as
    a solid waste
    in
    this Part,
    or
    is not a hazardous waste identified
    or listed
    in this Part
    is
    still a hazardous waste
    for purposes of those Sections
    if, in the case of
    Section 7003 of RCRA,
    the statutory elements are
    established.
    C)
    For
    the purposes
    of
    Sections
    721.102
    and
    721.106:
    1)
    A “spent material” is any material that has been
    used and as
    a result of contamination can no longer
    serve
    the purpose for which
    it was produced without
    processing;
    2)
    “Sludge” has the same meaning used
    in
    35 Ill. Adm.
    Code
    720.110;
    3)
    A “by—product”
    is
    a material that is not one of the
    primary products of a production process and
    is not
    solely or separately produced by the production
    process.
    Examples are process residues such as
    eJags or distillation column bottoms.
    The term
    does not include
    a co—product that
    is produced for
    the general public’s use and
    is ordinarily used
    in
    the form it
    is produced by the process.
    71-315

    —23—
    4)
    A material
    is
    “reclaimed”
    if it
    is processed to
    recover
    a usable product,
    or
    if
    it is
    regenerated.
    Examples are recovery of lead values
    from spent batteries and regeneration of spent
    solvents.
    5)
    A material
    is
    “used or
    reused”
    if
    it
    is either:
    A)
    Employed as an ingredient
    (including use as an
    intermediate)
    in an industrial process to make
    a product
    (for example, distillation bottoms
    from one process used as
    feedstock in another
    process).
    However,
    a material will not
    satisfy this condition
    if distinct components
    of the material are recovered as separate end
    products
    (as when metals are
    recovered from
    metal—containing secondary materials);
    or
    B)
    Employed
    in
    a particular function or
    application as an effective substitute
    for
    a
    commercial product (for example,
    spent pickle
    liquor used as phosphorus precipitant and
    sludge conditioner
    in wastewater treatment).
    6)
    “Scrap metal”
    is bits and pieces of metal
    parts
    (e.g.,
    bars,
    turnings,
    rods, sheets, wire)
    or metal
    pieces that may be combined together with bolts or
    soldering
    (e.g.,
    radiators,
    scrap automobiles,
    railroad box cars) which when worn or superfluous
    can be
    recycled.
    7)
    A material
    is
    “recycled”
    if
    it
    is used,
    reused or
    reclaimed.
    8)
    A material
    is
    “accumulated speculatively” if
    it
    is
    accumulated before being recycled.
    A material is
    not accumulated speculatively, however,
    if the
    person accumulating
    it can show that the material
    is potentially recyclable and has a feasible means
    of being recycled; and that
    ——
    during the calendar
    year
    (commencing on January
    1)
    ——
    the amount of
    material that is recycled, or transferred to a
    different site for
    recycling, equals
    at least
    75
    percent by weight or volume of the amount of that
    material accumulated
    at the beginning
    of the
    period.
    In calculating the percentage of turnover,
    the
    75 percent requirement
    is
    to
    be applied
    to each
    material of the same type
    (e.g., slags from a
    single smelting process) that
    is recycled
    in the
    same way
    (i.e., from which the same material
    is
    recovered or that
    is used
    in the
    same way).
    Materials accumulating
    in units
    that would be
    exempt from regulation under Section 721.104(c) are
    71-316

    —24—
    not to be included in making
    the calculation.
    (Materials that are already defined
    as solid wastes
    also
    are
    not
    to
    be
    included
    in
    making
    the
    calculation).
    Materials are no longer
    in this
    category
    once
    they
    are
    removed
    from
    accumulation
    for recycling,
    however.
    d)
    The Agency has inspection authority pursuant to Section
    3007
    of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act and
    Section
    4 of the Environmental Protection Act.
    (Source:
    Amended
    at
    10
    Ill
    Reg.
    effective
    Section
    721.105
    Special Requirements
    for Hazardous Waste
    Generated by Small Quantity Generators
    a)
    A generator is
    a
    conditionally
    exem~small quantity
    generator
    in a calendar m5ñth
    1f
    fE generates ieee then
    ~e9eno more than 100 kilograms of hazardous waste in
    that
    inthith.
    3~II1~
    Adrn.
    Code 700 explains the relation
    of
    this to the 100 kg/mo exception of
    35 Ill. Adm. Code
    809.
    b)
    Except for those wastes identified
    in subsections
    (e),
    (f),(g)7 +1~end ~-k3-
    and
    (j)
    a conditional1~exempt
    small quantity generator’s hazardous wastes ar& not
    subject
    to regulation
    under
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 702, 703,
    705 and
    722 through
    726,
    and
    the notification
    requirements of Section 3010 of
    the Resource
    Conservation and Recovery Act, provided the generator
    complies with the requirements of subsections
    (f), (g)~-
    fI~-end ~k-~and (j).
    c)
    Hazardous waste
    that
    is reeye3ed end thee ~e
    e~e~ctided
    from regti~e on
    by
    Seet~on
    ~O6~~(-?~
    end
    fB37fe)-f-3~7or 35 ~
    Adm~?ode ~26-~36not subject
    to
    re~u1ationor that
    is subject only to 35
    Ill.Adm~ode
    722.lfl, 722.112, 72~.I40(~
    a~d
    722.1T1
    is no?~cluded
    in the qüi~ititydeteiEiidnitions o~thfs Seet~on7Partand
    35
    Ill.
    Adm.
    Code
    722 through
    726 and
    is not su5jè~tto
    an~requfremeñ~iof
    ~ie~ióithose
    Parts.
    Hazardous
    waste that is subject
    to the req~T~emenEsof Section
    721.106(b)
    and
    (c)
    and
    35 Ill.
    Adni.
    Code 726.Subparts C,
    D, and F is included in the quantity determinations of
    this See~onPartand
    is subject to the requirements of
    th5~Seet~on~fhiiPart and
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 722 through
    726.
    -—_____
    d)
    In determining
    the quantity of hazardous waste
    it
    generates,
    a generator need not include:
    71-317

    —25—
    1)
    ~te 1~Hazardouswaste when
    it
    is removed from on—
    site storage; or
    2)
    Hazardous waste produced by on—site treatment
    (including
    reclamation)
    of its hazardous wasteso
    long as the há~árddus_wastethat is treated was
    counted once;
    or,
    3)
    ~pent materials that are generated, reclaimed and
    subse~ue~iyreu~edon—site,
    so long as
    such spent
    rnaterialsh~vebeen counted once.
    e)
    If
    a 5me33 quen~4~y
    generator generates acute~y
    hazardous waste in a calendar month
    in quantities
    greater
    than set
    forth below, all quantities
    of that
    acute3y hazardous waste are subject to regulation under
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 702,
    703,
    705 and 722 through ~25726,
    and the notification requirements of Section 3010 oFEhe
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act:
    1)
    A total of one kilogram of acute hazardous wastes
    listed
    in Sections 721.131, 721.132,
    or 721.133(e);
    or
    2)
    A
    total
    of 100 kilograms of any residue
    or
    contaminated soil, waste
    or other debris resulting
    from the clean—up of
    a spill,
    into or on any land
    or water,
    of any acute hazardous wastes listed
    in
    Sections 721.131, 721.132,
    or 721.133(e).
    f)
    In order
    for acute hazardous wastes generated by a emeH
    en~tygenerator
    of acute3y hazardous wastes
    in
    quantities equal
    to or less than those set forth
    in
    subsection
    (e)(l)
    or
    (e)(2)
    to be excluded from full
    regulation under
    this Section,
    the generator must comply
    with the following requirements:
    1)
    35 Ill.
    Adm. Code
    722.111.
    2)
    The 5me3~~eent~y
    generator may accumulate acute3y
    hazardous waste on—site.
    If
    it accumulates at any
    time acute3~yhazardous wastes
    in quantities greater
    than set forth in subsections
    (e)(l)
    or
    (e)(2), all
    of those accumulated wastes for whieb the
    eeet~mtHet±on~n~t
    wee
    exceeded are subject
    to
    regulation under
    35 111. Adm. Code 702,
    703, 705
    and 722 through ~2S726, and the applicable
    notification requiri~ntsof Section 3010 of the
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.
    The time
    period of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 722.134(d) for
    accumulation of wastes on—site begins when the
    accumulated wastes exceed the applicable exclusion
    limit.
    71-318

    —26—
    3)
    A conditionall
    exemt small quantity generator may
    either treat or dispose of its acute hazardous
    waste
    in an on—site facility,
    or ensure delivery to
    an off—site storage, treatment or disposal
    facility,
    either of which
    is:
    A)
    Permitted under 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 703;
    B)
    In interim status under
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 703
    and 725;
    C)
    Authorized
    to manage hazardous waste by
    a
    State with
    a hazardous waste management
    program approved by USEPA;
    D)
    Permitted,
    licensed or registered by a State
    to manage municipal
    or industrial
    solid waste;
    or
    E)
    A facility which:
    1)
    Beneficially uses or reuses or
    legitimately recycles or reclaims its
    waste;
    or
    ii)
    Treats
    its waste prior
    to beneficial use
    or reuse,
    or legitimate recycling or
    reclamation.
    g)
    In order
    for hazardous waste generated by a
    conditionally_exe~~small quantity generator
    in
    ~uán~tisofIi~s
    than 100 kilograms of hazardous waste
    during
    a calendar month
    to be excluded from full
    regulation under
    this Section,
    the generator must comply
    with the following requirements:
    1)
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 722.111;
    2)
    The co~J_tionall~
    exem~ptsmall quantity generator
    may accumula
    ia~i~douswaste on—site.
    If
    it
    accumulates at any time more than a total of 1000
    kilograms of thiethe generator’s hazardous waste,
    all of those accumu1at~dwastesfor which the
    aceumt~e~ion~fmit
    wee
    exceeded are subject
    to
    regulation under the special Lrovisionsof 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 72
    .app~cab1eto~eneratorsofThetween
    Tb0k~i
    0O~k95fhazardo~is~isEe
    in ~calendar
    ii~nth_aswell ~ii the ré~uirè~entCof 35 111. Adm.
    ~5de
    -
    70Z
    7~77~
    añ~~
    th~~~57
    23
    -
    th rou~
    726,
    and the applicable notification requirements
    of Section 3010 of the Resource Conservation and
    Recovery Act.
    The time period of 35 I1.
    Adin. Code
    722.134(d)
    for accumulation of wastes on—site
    71-319

    —27—
    begins
    for
    a small quantity generator when the
    accumulated wastes exceed 1000 kilograms;
    3)
    A conditionally exempt small quantity generator may
    eitfièr treaE or ~disposeof
    its hazardous waste
    in
    an on—site facility,
    or ensure delivery to an off—
    site storage, treatment or disposal facility,
    either
    of which
    is:
    A)
    Permitted under
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code 702 and 703;
    B)
    In interim status under
    35 Ill. Adm. Code 703
    and 725;
    C)
    Authorized
    to manage hazardous waste by a
    State with a hazardous waste management
    program approved under
    40 CFR 271
    (1985);
    D)
    Permitted,
    licensed or registered by a State
    to manage
    municipal
    or industrial solid
    waste;
    or
    E)
    A facility which:
    i)
    Beneficially uses or re—uses,
    or
    legitimately recycles or reclaims the
    small quantity generator’s waste;
    or
    ii)
    Treats its waste prior
    to beneficial use
    or re—use,
    or legitimate recycling or
    reclamation.
    h~
    ~n order for hazardoue weete generated by a emafl
    g~entitygenerator
    in a qt~entitygreeter then ~6$
    hi3ogreme bt~t3eee then ~689 ki~ogremedt~rtnga ee3ender
    month to be exc~t~dedfrom ft,fl regt~et~on
    tinder this
    Seetion~the generator
    nttiet eom~3ywith the fo33owing
    reguiremente~
    ~
    35
    H3~ AdM7
    eode
    ~22~33~t
    ~3-
    A ema~guantity generator may aectimti~atehazardous
    waste on—eite-
    ~f it eeeurnti~atesat any time more
    then a tota3
    of ~808 ki3ogrems of its hazardous
    weste~a3~those eecumu3eted wastes for which the
    eecumti~et4on3imft wee exceeded are eub~eetto
    regu3at4on under
    35 ~
    Adm~?ode ~O~T ~637 ~O5
    end ~22 through ~57
    end the app3ieeb~e
    notification requirements of Section 3O~0of the
    Resource eonservet±onand Recovery Aet7
    The time
    ~er4od of 35 ~
    Adm- eode 122-~34for
    eccumti~ationof hazardous waste on—site begins for
    71-320

    —28—
    a small quantity generator when the accumulated
    wastes
    exceed
    lOGO
    kilograms~
    3+
    Beginning August 57 19657 for any hazardous waste
    shipped off—site7 the generator must ensure that
    such waste is accompanied by
    a copy of the manifest
    f35 13l
    Adm~?ode
    ~
    signed by him end
    containing the following informetion~
    A+
    The name end address of the generator of the
    west~e~
    8+
    The United States Bepertment of ~ransportet4on
    description of the
    waete7
    including
    the proper
    shipping name7 hazard class end identification
    number
    ~UN7’NA~
    O~
    The number and type of eontainerst
    B~
    The
    quantity of waste being transportedt and
    E+
    The name and address of the facility
    designated to receive the waste~
    4~-
    A smell quantity generator may either treat or
    dispose of its hazardous waste in an on—site
    facility7 or ensure delivery to an off—site
    etorage~treatment or disposal faeil4ty~either of
    which
    is~
    A+
    Permitted under
    35 lll- AdTh7 ?ode ~7O3i
    8+
    In interim stattis under
    35 lll~Adm~eoae ~O3
    end ~5i~
    e+
    Authorized to manage hazardous waste by a
    State with
    a hazardous waste management
    program approved by USEPAt
    8+
    Permftted~licensed or registered by a State
    to manage municipal or industrial solid wastei~
    or
    A
    facility
    wh*chi~
    *~-
    Beneficially uses or reuses or
    legitimately recycles or reclaims its
    wastet or
    ii)~ Preats its waste prior to beneficial use
    or reuse7 or legitimate recycling or
    reelamation~
    71-321

    —29—
    fh)
    Hazardous waste subject to the reduced requirements of
    this Section may be mixed with non—hazardous waste and
    remain subject to these reduced requirements even though
    the resultant mixture exceeds the quantity limitations
    identified
    in this Section,
    unless the mixture meets any
    of
    the characteristics of hazardous wastes identified in
    Subpart
    C.
    ~j)
    If
    a small quantity generator mixes a solid waste with
    a
    hazardous waste that exceeds a quantity exclusion level
    of
    this Section,
    the mixture
    is subject to full
    regulation.
    If
    a small quantity generator’s hazardous wastes
    are
    mixed with used oil,
    the mixture
    is subject to 35 Ill.
    Adm. Code 726.Subpart E,
    if
    it
    is destined
    to be burned
    for energy recovery.
    Any material produced from such a
    mixture by processing,
    blending or other treatment
    is
    also
    so regulated if
    it is destined
    to be burned for
    energy recovery.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill.
    Reg.
    effective
    )
    SUBPART D:
    LISTS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    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 Ill. Adm. Code
    720.120 and 720.122 and listed in Appendix I.
    Industry and
    EPA Hazardous Hazardous WasteHazard Code Waste No.
    Generic:
    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/blends used
    in degreasing 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 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, l,l,l—trichloroethane,
    71.322

    —30—
    chlorobenzene,
    1,l,2—trichloro—1,2,2—
    trifluoroethane, orthodichlorobenzene and
    trichiorofluoromethane and 1,1,2—
    trichloroethane; all spent solvent
    mixtures/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
    F005; and still bottoms from the recovery of
    these spent solvents and spent solvent
    mixtures.
    F003
    The following spent non—halogenated solvents:(I)
    xylene,
    acetone, ethyl acetate,
    ethyl
    benzene,
    ethyl ether, methyl
    isobutyl ketone, n—butyl
    alcohol, cyclohexanone and methanol; all spent
    solvent mixtures/blends containing, before
    use,
    a
    total
    of ten percent or more
    (by
    volume)
    of one
    or more of the above non-
    halogenated solvents or
    those solvents listed
    in
    FOOl,
    F002, F004 or FOOS;
    and still bottoms
    from the recovery of these spent solvents and
    spent solvent mixtures.
    F004......
    The following spent non—halogenated solvents:(T)
    cresols and cresylic acid and nitrobenzene;
    all spent solvent mixtures/blends containing,
    before use,
    a total of ten percent or more
    (by
    volume) of one or 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
    arid spent
    solvent mixtures.
    F005
    The following spent non—halogenated solvents:(I, T)
    toluene, methyl ethyl ketone,
    carbon
    disulfide,
    isobutanol,,end pyridine,benzene,
    2—ethoxyethanol and 2—nitropro~ane all spent
    so1~,en?mixture~/b1ends,c~ntainTng, before
    use,
    a total of
    ten percent
    or more
    (by
    volume) of one or more of the above non—
    halogenated solvents
    or those solvents 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 electroplating(T)
    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
    carbon steel;
    (5)
    cleaning/stripping associated
    with tin, zinc and aluminum
    plating on carbon
    steel;
    and
    (6) chemical etching and milling of
    aluminum.
    71-323

    —31—
    F0l9
    Wastewater treatment sludges from the chemical(T)
    conversion coating of aluminum.
    F007
    Spent cyanide plating bath solutions from
    (R, T)
    electroplating operations.
    F008
    .
    Plating bath residues from the
    (R,
    T)
    bottom of plating baths from electroplating
    operations where cyanides are used
    in the
    process.
    FOO9
    Spent stripping and cleaning bath solutions
    (R,
    T)
    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.
    FOll
    Spent cyanide solutions from salt bath
    (R, T)
    pot cleaning from metal heat treating
    operations.
    FO12
    Quenching wastewater
    treatment sludges from
    (T)
    metal heat treating operations where cyanides
    are used
    in the process.
    F020
    .
    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 formulating process) of tn— or
    tetrachlorophenol, or of intermediates used to
    produce their pesticide derivatives.
    (This
    listing does not include wastes from the
    production of hexachlorophene from highly
    purified 2,4,5—trichlorophenol.)
    F02l......
    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 formulating 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 conditions.
    FO23
    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
    71-324

    —32—
    of hexachlorophene from highly purified 2,4,5-
    trichiorophenol.
    F024
    Wastes including but not limited
    (T)
    to, distillation residues, heavy ends,
    tars,
    and reactor cleanout wastes from the
    production of chlorinated aliphatic
    hydrocarbons, having carbon content from one
    to five,
    utilizing free radical catalyzed
    processes.
    (This
    listing does not include
    light ends, spent filters and filter
    aids,
    spent dessicants, wastewater, wastewater
    treatment sludges, spent catalysts and wastes
    listed
    in Section 721.132.)
    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
    or component
    in a formulating process)
    of tetra—, penta— or
    hexachioroberizene under alkaline conditions.
    F027
    Discarded unused formulations containing
    (H)
    tn—,
    tetra— or pentachlorophenol or discarded
    unused formulations containing compounds
    derived from these chlorophenols.
    (This
    listing does not include
    formulations
    containing Hexachlorophene synthesized from
    prepurified 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 F020, F02l,
    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 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    effective
    Section 721.132
    Hazardous Waste from Specific Sources
    The
    following solid wastes are listed hazardous wastes from
    specific sources unless
    they are excluded under
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    720.120 and 720.122 and listed in Appendix I.
    Wood Preservation:
    KOOl
    Bottom sediment sludge from the treatment
    CT)
    of wastewaters from wood preserving processes
    that use creosote and/or pentachlorophenol.
    71-325

    —33—
    Inorganic Pigments:
    K002
    Wastewater
    treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of chrome yellow and orange
    pigments.
    K003
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of molybdate orange pigments.
    KOO4
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of zinc yellow pigments.
    K005
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of chrome green pigments.
    K006
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of chrome oxide green pigments
    (anhydrous
    and hydrated).
    K007
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of iron blue pigments.
    K008
    Oven residue
    from the production of chrome
    (T)
    oxide green pigments.
    Organic Chemicals:
    KOO9
    Distillation bottoms from the production of
    (T)
    acetaldehyde from ethylene.
    KOlO
    Distillation side cuts from the production of
    (T)
    acetaldehyde from ethylene.
    KOll
    Bottom stream from the wastewater stripper
    in
    (R,T)
    the production of acrylonitnile.
    K0l3
    Bottom stream from the acetrontrile column
    (T)
    in the production of acrylontrile.
    K014
    Bottoms from the acetontnile purification
    (T)
    column
    in the production of acrylonitnile.
    K0l5
    Still bottoms from the distillation of benzyl
    (T)
    chloride.
    KO16
    Heavy ends or distillation residues
    from the
    (T)
    production of carbon tetrachioride.
    K017
    Heavy ends (still bottoms) from the
    (T)
    purification column
    in the production of
    epichlorohydrin.
    K0l8
    Heavy ends from the fractionation column
    in
    (T)
    ethyl chloride production.
    K0l9
    Heavy ends from the distillation of ethylene
    (T)
    dichloride in ethylene dichloride production.
    K020
    Heavy ends from the distillation of vinyl
    (T)
    chloride
    in vinyl chloride monomer production.
    K02l
    Aqueous spent antimony catalyst waste from
    (T)
    fluoromethanes production.
    K022
    Distillation bottom tars from the production
    (T)
    of phenol/acetone from cumene.
    K023
    Distillation
    light ends from the production
    (T)
    of phthalic anhydnide from naphthalene.
    KO24
    Distillation bottoms from the production of
    (T)
    phthalic anhydnide
    from naphthalene.
    71-326

    —34—
    1(093
    Distillation light ends from the production
    (T)
    of phthalic anhydride from ortho—xylene.
    1(094
    Distillation bottoms from the production
    (T)
    of phthalic anhydride from ortho—xylene.
    1(025
    Distillation bottoms from the production
    (T)
    of nitrobenzene by the nitration of benzene.
    1(026
    Stripping still tails from the production of
    (T)
    methyl ethyl pyridines.
    1(027
    Centrifuge and distillation residues from
    (R,P)
    toluene diisocyanate production.
    K028
    Spent catalyst from the hydrochlorinator
    (T)
    reactor
    in the production of 1,1,
    1—trich.oroethane.
    1(029
    Waste from the product stream stripper
    in
    (T)
    the production of l,1,l—trichloroethane~.
    1(095
    Distillation bottoms from the production of
    (T)
    1,1 ,1—trichioroethane.
    1(096
    Heavy ends from the heavy ends column from
    (I)
    the production of l,1,l—trichloroethane.
    1(030
    Column bottoms or heavy ends from the
    (T)
    combined production of
    trichioroethylene
    and perchloroethylene.
    1(083
    Distillation bottoms from aniline production.
    (T)
    K103
    Process residues
    from aniline extraction
    (T)
    from the production of aniline.
    1(104
    Combined wastewater streams generated from
    (T)
    nitrobenzene/aniline production.
    1(085
    Distillation or fractionation column bottoms
    from the production of chlorobenzenes.
    1(105
    Separated aqueous stream from the reactor
    (T)
    product washing step in the production of
    chlorobenzenes.
    Klll
    Product wastewaters from the production of
    (C,T)
    dinitrotoluene via nitration of toluene.
    K112
    Reaction by—product water from the drying
    (T)
    column in the production of toluene—
    diamine
    via hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene.
    1(113
    Condensed liquid light ends from the
    (T)
    purification of toluenediamine in the
    production of toluenediamine via hydro-
    genation of dinitroluene.
    1(114
    Vicinals from the purification of toluene—
    (T)
    diamine
    in the production of toluenediamine
    via hydrogenation of dinitrotolune.
    1(115
    Heavy ends from the purification of
    (T)
    toluenediamine in the production
    of toluenediamine via hydrogenation of
    dinitrotoluene.
    1(116
    Organic condensate from the solvent recovery
    (T)
    column
    in the production of toluene
    diisocyanate via phosgenation of toluene—
    diamine.
    71-327

    —35—
    K1l7
    Wastewater from the
    reactor vent ~as scrubber(T)
    Tn the ~jodu~Eion of e?h~lene dib~ràñiIdeTvii
    ~f~ti~nRf
    e?hene.
    1(118
    !~éi~t~
    adsorbén? ioITd~ from purification of
    ___
    ethylene dfb~oif~l~e
    in ihé~roduc?ion of
    ethylene dI~omi~evia bi~ominationof ethene.
    Kl36
    Still bott~sfrom th
    purift~ationof
    (T)
    eh~lenedth~T~e
    Th
    Ehe
    ~
    ethylene dibromide via bromination of ethene.
    Inorganic Chemicals:
    K071
    Brine purification muds from the mercury
    (T)
    cell process in chlorine production,
    where
    separately prepurified
    brine
    is not used.
    1(073
    Chlorinated hydrocarbon waste from the
    (T)
    purification step of the diaphragm cell
    process using graphite anodes
    in chlorine
    production.
    Kl06
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the mercury
    (T)
    cell process
    in chlorine production.
    Pesticides:
    1(031
    By—product
    salts generated
    in the production
    (T)
    of MSMA and cacodylic acid.
    1(032
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of chiordane.
    K033
    Wastewater and scrub water from the
    (T)
    chlorination of cyclopentadiene in the
    production of chiordane.
    K034
    Filter solids from the filtration of
    (T)
    hexachlorocyclopentadiene
    in the production
    of
    chlordane.
    1(097
    Vacuum stripper discharge from the chlordane
    (T)
    chlorinator
    in the production of chiordane.
    1(035
    Wastewater treatment sludges generated
    in the
    (T)
    production of creosote.
    1(036
    Still
    bottoms from toluene reclamation
    (T)
    distillation in
    the production of disulfoton.
    K037
    Wastewater treatment sludges from the
    production of disulfoton.
    1(038
    Wastewater from the washing and stripping of
    phorate production.
    1(039
    Filter cake from the filtration of
    (T)
    diethylphosphorodithioic acid
    in the
    production of phorate.
    1(040
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of phorate.
    1(041
    Wastewater treatment sludge from the
    (T)
    production of toxaphene.
    1(098
    Untreated process wastewater from the
    (T)
    production of toxaphene.
    71-328

    —36—
    1(042
    Heavy ends or distillation residues from the
    (T)
    distillation of tetrachlorobenzene in the
    production of 2,4,5—T.
    K043
    2,6—Dichiorophenol waste from the production
    of 2,4—D.
    1(099
    Untreated wastewater from the production
    (T)
    of 2,4—D.
    Explosives:
    K044
    Wastewater treatment sludges from the
    (R)
    manufacturing and
    processing of explosives.
    1(045
    Spent carbon from the treatment of wastewater
    (R)
    containing explosives.
    K046
    Wastewater treatment sludges from the
    (T)
    manufacturing, formulation and loading of
    lead—based initiating compounds.
    1(047
    Pink/red water from TNT operations.
    (R)
    Petroleum Refining:
    K048
    Dissolved air flotation
    (DAF)
    float from the
    (T)
    petroleum refining industry.
    K049
    Slop oil emulsion solids from the petroleum
    (T)
    refining industry.
    1(050
    Heat exchanger bundle cleaning sludge from
    (T)
    the petroleum
    refining industry.
    1(051
    API separator sludge from the petroleum
    (T)
    refining industry.
    1(052
    Tank bottoms (leaded) from the petroleum
    (T)
    refining industry.
    Iron and Steel:
    1(061
    Emission control dust/sludge from the primary
    (T)
    production of steel
    in electric furnaces.
    1(062
    Spent pickle liquor from steel finishing
    (C,T)
    operations.
    Secondary Lead:
    1(069
    Emission control dust/sludge from secondary
    (T)
    lead smelting.
    1(100
    Waste leaching solution from acid leaching
    (T)
    of emission control dust/sludge from
    secondary lead smelting.
    Veterinary Pharmaceuticals:
    K084
    Wastewater treatment sludges generated
    (T)
    during the production
    of veterinary
    pharmaceuticals from arsenic
    or organo—arsenic
    compounds.
    71-329

    —37—
    KlOl
    Distillation
    tar residues from the distillation(T)
    of aniline—based compounds in the production
    of veterinary pharmaceuticals from arsenic or
    organo—arsenic compounds.
    Kl02
    Residue from use of activated carbon for
    (T)
    decolorization in the production of veterinary
    pharmaceuticals from arsenic or
    organo—arsenic
    compounds.
    Ink Formulation:
    K086
    Solvent washes and sludges,
    casutic washes
    (T)
    and sludges,
    or water washes and sludges from
    cleaning tubs and equipment used
    in the
    formulation of ink from pigments, driers,
    soaps and stabilizers containing chromium and lead.
    Coking:
    K060
    Ammonia still lime sludge from cooking
    (T)
    operations.
    1(087
    Decanter tank tar
    sludge from cooking
    (T)
    operations.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10
    Ill. Reg.
    ,
    effective
    )
    Section 721.133
    Discarded Commercial Chemical Products, Off—
    Specification Species, Container Residues and
    Spill Residues Thereof.
    The following materials or
    items are hazardous wastes
    if and when
    they are discarded or intended
    to
    be discarded, when they are
    mixed with waste oil or
    used oil
    or other material and applied
    to
    the land for dust suppression or
    road treatment,
    or when,
    in lieu
    of their original
    intended use, they are produced for use as
    (or
    as
    a component of)
    a fuel, distributed
    for use as a fuel,
    or
    burned as a fuel.
    a)
    Any commercial chemical product, or manufacturing
    chemical
    intermediate having the generic name listed in
    subsections
    (e)
    or
    (f).
    b)
    Any off—specification commercial chemical product or
    manufacturing chemical intermediate which,
    if
    it met
    specifications, would have the generic name listed
    in
    subsections
    (e)
    or
    (f).
    c)
    Any container
    or inner liner removed from a container
    that has been used
    to hold any commercial chemical
    product or manufacturing chemical intermediate having
    the generic names listed in subsection
    (e),
    or any
    71-330

    —38—
    container
    or
    inner
    liner removed from
    a container that
    has been used
    to hold any off—specification chemical
    product and manufacturing chemical
    intermediate which,
    if
    it met specifications, would have the generic name
    listed
    in subsection
    (e)
    unless:
    1)
    The container or inner liner has been triple rinsed
    using a solvent capable of removing the commercial
    chemical product or manufacturing chemical
    intermediate;
    2)
    The container or inner liner has been cleansed by
    another method that has been shown in the scientific
    literature,
    or by tests conducted by the generator,
    to achieve equivalent removal; or
    3)
    In the case of a container,
    the inner liner that
    prevented contact of the commercial chemical product
    or manufacturing chemical intermediate with the
    container, has been removed.
    d)
    Any residue or contaminated soil, water or other debris
    resulting from the cleanup of
    a spill,
    into or on any
    land or water of any cOmmercial chemical product or
    manufacturing chemical intermediate having the generic
    name listed
    in subsection
    (e)
    or
    (f), or any residue or
    contaminated soil, water or other debris resulting from
    the cleanup of a spill,
    into or on any land or water, of
    any off—specification chemical product or manufacturing
    chemical intermediate which,
    if
    it met specifications,
    would have the generic name listed
    in subsection
    (e) or
    (f).
    (Board Note:
    The phrase
    “commercial chemical product or
    manufacturing chemical intermediate having the generic
    name listed
    in
    ...“
    refers to a chemical substance which
    is manufactured or formulated for commercial or
    manufacturing use which consists of the commercially
    pure grade of the chemical, any technical grades of the
    chemical that are produced or marketed,
    and all
    formulations in which the chemical is the sole active
    ingredient.
    It does not refer
    to a material, such as
    a
    manufacturing process waste, that contains any of the
    substances listed
    in subsections
    (e)
    or
    (f).
    Where
    a
    manufacturing process waste
    is deemed to be a hazardous
    waste because
    it contains
    a substance listed in
    subsections
    (e)
    or
    (f), such waste will be listed in
    either
    Sections
    721.131
    or
    721.132
    or
    will
    be
    identified
    as
    a
    hazardous
    waste
    by
    the
    characteristics
    set
    forth
    in
    Subpart.)
    e)
    The commercial chemical products, manufacturing chemical
    intermediates or off—specification commercial chemical
    71-331

    —39—
    products or manufacturing chemical intermediates
    referred to
    in subsections
    (a) through
    (d) of this
    Section,
    are identified as acute hazardous waste
    (H)
    and
    are subject
    to the small quantity exclusion defined in
    Section 721.105(e).
    (Board Note:
    For the convenience
    of the regulated
    community the primary hazardous properties of these
    materials have been indicated by the letters T
    (Toxicity), and R (Reactivity).
    Absence of a letter
    indicates that the compound only is listed
    for acute
    toxicity.)
    These wastes and their corresponding EPA Hazardous Waste
    Numbers are:
    Hazardous
    Waste No.
    Substance
    P023
    Acetaldehyde, chloro—
    P002
    Acetaniide,
    N—(aminothioxomethyl)—
    P057
    Acetamide,
    2—fluoro—
    P058
    Acetic acid,
    fluoro—, sodium salt
    P066
    Acetimedic acid, N—(methylcarbamoyl)oxythio—
    methyl ester
    POOl
    3—(alpha—acetonylbenzyl)—4—hydroxycoumarin and
    salts, when present at concentrations greater
    than 0.3
    P002
    l—Acetyl—2—thiourea
    P003
    Acrolein
    P070
    Aldicarb
    P004
    Aldrin
    P005
    Ally?
    alcohol
    P006
    Aluminum phosphide
    P007
    5—(Aminomethyl
    )—3—isoxazolol
    P008
    4—Aminopyridine
    P009
    Ammonium picrate
    (R)
    P119
    Ammonium vanadate
    POlO
    Arsenic acid
    P012
    Arsenic
    (III)
    oxide
    POll
    Arsenic
    (V)
    oxide
    POll
    Arsenic pentoxide
    P012
    Arsenic trioxide
    P038
    Arsine, diethyl—
    P054
    Aziridine
    P013
    Barium cyanide
    P024
    Benzenamine, 4—chloro—
    P077
    Benzenamine, 4—nitro—
    P028
    Benzene,
    (chloroniethyl)—
    P042
    l,2—Benzenediol, 4—(l—hydroxy—2—(methyl—
    amino)ethyl—
    71-332

    —40—
    P014
    Benzenethiol
    P028
    Benzyl chloride
    P015
    Beryllium dust
    P016
    Bis(chloromethyl) ether
    P017
    Bromoacetone
    P018
    Brucine
    P021
    Calcium cyanide
    P123
    Caxnphene, octachloro—
    P103
    Carbamidoselensoic acid
    P022
    Carbon bisulfide
    P022
    Carbon disulfide
    P095
    Carbonyl chloride
    P033
    Chlorine cyanide
    P023
    Chloroacetaldehyde
    P024
    p—Chloroaniline
    P026
    l—(o—Chlorophenyl)thiourea
    P027
    3—Chloropropionitrile
    P029
    Copper cyanides
    P030
    Cyanides
    (soluble cyanide salts),
    not
    elsewhere specified
    P031
    Cyariogen
    P033
    Cyanogen chloride
    P036
    Dichlorophenylarsine
    P037
    Dieldrin
    P038
    Diethylarsine
    P039
    0,0—Diethyl S—2—(ethylthio)ethyl
    phosphoro—
    dithioate
    P041
    Diethyl—p—nitrophenyl phosphate
    P040
    O,O—Diethyi. 0—pyrazinyl phosphorothioate
    P043
    Diisopropyl fluorophosphate
    P044
    Dimethoate
    P045
    3,3—Dimethyl—l—(methylthio)—2—butanone, 0—
    ((methylamino) carbonyll
    oxime
    P071
    0,0—Dimethyl O—p—nitrophenyl phosphorothioate
    P082
    Dimethylnitrosamine
    P046
    alpha,
    alpha—Dixnethylphenethylamine
    P047
    4,6—Dinitro—o--cresoi. and salts
    P034
    4,6—Dinitro—o—cyclohexylphenol
    P048
    2,4-Dinitrophenol
    P020
    Dinoseb
    P085
    Diphosphoramide,
    octamethyl—
    P039
    Disulfoton
    P049
    2,4—Dithiobiuret
    P109
    Dithiopyrophosphoric acid,
    tetraethyl
    ester
    P050
    Endosulfan
    P088
    Endothall
    P051
    Endrin
    P042
    Epinephrine
    P046
    Ethanamine,
    1 ,l—dimethyl—2—phenyl—
    P084
    Ethenainine, N—methyl—N—nitroso—
    P101
    Ethyl cyanide
    P054
    Ethylenimine
    P097
    Famphur
    71-333

    —41—
    P056
    Fluorine
    P057
    Fluoroacetamide
    P058
    Fluoroacetic acid, sodium salt
    P065
    Fulminic acid, mercury
    (II) salt (R,T)
    P059
    Heptachlor
    P051
    l,2,3,4,lO,lO—Hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—
    1,4 ,4a,5,6,7,8,8a—octahydro—endo, endo—l, 4:5,
    8—dimethanonaphthalene
    P037
    1,2,3,4,lO,lO—Hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—
    1,4,4a,5,6,7,8, 8a—octahydro—endo, exo—l,
    4:5,
    8—dimethanonaphthalene
    P060
    1,2,3,4,l0,lO—Hexachloro—l,4,4a,5,8,8a—
    hexahydro—l ,4:5,8—endo, endo—
    dimethanonaphthalene
    P004
    1,2,3,4,lO,10,—Hexachloro—1,4,4a,5,8,8a—
    hexahydro—l
    ,
    4
    :
    5,8—endo, exo—
    dimethanonaphthalene
    P060
    Hexachlorohexahydro—exo,exo—
    dimethanonaphthalene
    P062
    Hexaethyl tetraphosphate
    P116
    Hydrazinecarbothicamide
    P068
    Hydrazine, methyl—
    P063
    Hydrocyanic acid
    P063
    Hydrogen cyanide
    P096
    Hydrogen phosphide
    P064
    Isocyanic acid,
    methyl ester
    P007
    3(2H)—Isoxazolone, 5—(aminomethyl)—
    P092
    Mercury, phenyl—,
    acetate
    P065
    Mercury fulminate
    (R,T)
    P016
    Methane, oxybis(chloro—
    P112
    Methane,
    tetranitro—
    (R)
    P118
    Methanethiol, trichloro—
    P059
    4,7—Methano—1H—indene,1,4,5,6,7,8,8—
    heptachloro—3a,4 ,7,7a—tetrahydro—
    P066
    Methomyl
    P067
    2—Methylaziridine
    P068
    Methyl hydrazine
    P064
    Methyl isocyanate
    P069
    2—Methyllactonitrile
    P071
    Methyl parathion
    P072
    alpha—Naphthylthiourea
    P073
    Nickel carbonyl
    P074
    Nickel cyanide
    P074
    Nickel
    (II) cyanide
    P073
    Nickel
    tetracarbonyl
    P075
    Nicotine and salts
    1~O76
    Nitric oxide
    P077
    p—Nitroaniline
    P078
    Nitrogen dioxide
    P076
    Nitrogen
    (II) oxide
    P078
    Nitrogen (IV) oxide
    P081
    Nitroglycerine
    (R)
    P082
    N—Nitrosodimethylamine
    71-334

    —42—
    P084
    N—Nitrosomethylvinylamine
    P050
    5—Norbornene--2,3—dimethanol, 1,4,5,6,7,7—
    hexachloro,
    cyclic sulfite
    P085
    Octamethylpyrophosphoramide
    P087
    Osmium oxide
    P087
    Osmium tetroxide
    P088
    7—Oxabicyclo2.2.1heptane—2,3—dicarboxylic
    acid
    P089
    Parathion
    P034
    Phenol,
    2—cyclohexyl—4
    ,
    6-dinitro—
    P048
    Phenol,
    2,4—dinitro—
    P047
    Phenol,
    2,4 ,—dinitro—6—methyl—
    P020
    Phenol,
    2,4—dinitro—6—(1—methylpropyl)—
    P009
    Phenol, 2,4,6—trinitro—,
    anunonium salt
    (R)
    P036
    Phenyl dichioroarsine
    P092
    Phenylmercuric acetate
    P093
    N—Pheriylthiourea
    P094
    Phorate
    P095
    Phosgene
    P096
    Phosphine
    P041
    Phosphoric acid,
    diethyl p—nitropheriyl ester
    P044
    Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O-dimethyl S—2-
    (methylamino )—2—oxoethyl)ester
    P043
    Phosphorofluoric acid,
    bis(1—methyi.ethyl)ester
    P094
    Phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—diethyl S—
    (ethylthio)methyl ester
    P089
    Phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—diethyl O—(p—
    nitrophenyl) ester
    P040
    Phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—diethyl 0—pyrazinyl
    ester
    P097
    Phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—dimethyl O—(p—
    ((climethylamino)—sulfonyl)phenyljester
    P110
    Plumbane, tetraethyl—
    P098
    Potassium cyanide
    P099
    Potassium silver cyanide
    P070
    Propanal, 2—methyl—2—(methylthio)—, 0—
    ((methylamino)carbonylloxime
    P101
    Propanenitrile
    P027
    Propanentrile, 3—chloro--
    P069
    Propanenitrile, 2—hydroxy—2—methyl—
    P081
    1,2,3—Propanetriol, trinitrate—
    (R)
    P017
    2—Proparione,
    l—bromo—
    P102
    Propargyl
    alcohol
    P003
    2—Propenal
    P005
    2—Propen—l—ol
    P067
    1,2—Propylenimine
    P102
    2—Propyn—1—ol
    P008
    4-Pyridinamine
    P075
    Pyridine,
    (S)—3--(1—xnethy—2—pyrrolidinyl)—,
    and
    salts
    Pill
    Pyrophosphoric acid, tetraethyl ester
    P103
    Selenourea
    P104
    Silver
    cyanide
    71-335

    —43—
    P105
    Sodium azide
    P106
    Sodium cyanide
    P107
    Strontium sulfide
    P108
    Strychnidin—lO—one, and salts
    P018
    Strychnidin—lO—one, 2,3—dimethoxy—
    P108
    Strychnine and salts
    P115
    Sulfuric acid,
    thallium(I) salt
    P109
    Tetraethyldithiopyrophosphate
    P110
    Tetraethyl lead
    P111
    Tetraethylpyrophosphate
    P112
    Tetranitromethane
    (R)
    P062
    Tetraphosphoric acid, hexaethyl ester
    P113
    Thallic oxide
    P113
    Thallium
    (III)
    oxide
    P114
    Thallium
    (I) selenite
    P115
    Thallium
    (I) sulfate
    P045
    Thiofanox
    P049
    Thjoimidodicarbonic diamide
    P014
    Thiophenol
    P116
    Thiosemicarbazide
    P026
    Thiourea,
    (2—chlorophenyl)—
    P072
    Thiourea, l—naphthalenyl—
    P093
    Thiourea, phenyl—
    P123
    Toxaphene
    P118
    Trichloromethanethiol
    P119
    Vanadic acid,
    amrnonium salt
    P120
    Vanadium pentoxide
    P120
    Vanadium(V)
    oxide
    POOl
    Warfarin, when present at concentration
    greater than 0.3.
    P121
    Zinc cyanide
    P122
    Zinc phosphide,when present at concentrations
    greater than 10
    (R,T)
    f)
    The commercial chemical products, manufacturing chemical
    intermediates or off—specification commercial chemical
    products referred
    to in subsections
    (a)
    through
    (d), are
    identified as
    toxic wastes
    (T) unless otherwise
    designated and are subject to the small quantity
    exclusion defined
    in Section 721.105(a) and
    (f1).
    (Board Note:
    For the convenience of the regulated
    community,
    the primary hazardous properties of these
    materials have been indicated by the letters T
    (Toxicity), R(Reactivity),
    I
    (Ignitability) and C
    (Corrosivity).
    Absence of a letter indicates that the
    compound
    is only listed
    for toxicity.)
    These wastes and their corresponding EPA Hazardous Waste
    Numbers are:
    71-336

    —44—
    Hazardous
    Waste No.
    Substance
    uOOl
    Acetaldehyde
    (I)
    U034
    Acetaldehyde, trichloro—
    Ul87
    Acetamide, N—(4—ethoxyphenyl)—
    tJOO5
    Acetamide, N—9H—fluoren—2—yl—
    Ul12
    Acetic acid, ethyl
    ester
    (I)
    Ul44
    Acetic acid,
    lead salt
    U214
    Acetic acid,
    thallium(I)
    salt
    UOO2
    Acetone
    (I)
    U003
    Acetonitrile
    (I,T)
    U248
    3—(alpha—Acetonylbenzyl)—4—hydroxycoumarin
    and salts, when present at concentrations of
    0.3
    or less
    U004
    Acetophenone
    U005
    2—Acetylaminofluorene
    U006
    Acetyl chloride
    (C,R,T)
    UOO7
    Acrylamide
    U008
    Acrylic acid
    (I)
    U009
    Acrylontrile
    Ul50
    Alanine,
    3—p—bis(2—chloroethyl)amino
    Ahenyl-, L—
    U328
    2—Amino—l—methylbenzene
    U353
    4—Amino—l—methylbenzene
    UOll
    Amitrole
    U012
    Aniline (I,T)
    U0l4
    Auramine
    U015
    Azaserine
    UOlO
    Azirino(2’,3’:3,4)pyrrolo(1,2—a)indole—4,7—
    dione, 6—amino—8—
    ((aminocarbonyl)oxy)methyl)—l,la,2,8,8a,8b—
    hexahydro—8a—xnethoxy—5—methy?—,
    U157
    Benz jiaceanthrylene,
    l,2—dihydro—3—methyl—
    U016
    Benz(c)acridine
    U016
    3,4—Benzacridine
    U0l7
    Benzal chloride
    U0l8
    Benzaanthracene
    U0l8
    1,2—Benzanthracene
    U094
    1,2—Benzanthracene, 7,12—dimethyl—
    U012
    Benzenamine
    (I,T)
    U0l4
    Benzenamine, 4,4’—carbonimidoylbis(N,N-
    dimethyl—
    U049
    Benzenamine, 4—chloro—2—methyl—
    U093
    Benzenamine, N,N’—dimethyl—4—phenylazo-
    Ul58
    Benzenamine, 4,4’—methylenebis(2—chloro—
    U222
    Benzenamine,
    2—methyl—,
    hydrochloride
    Ul8l
    Benzenamine,
    2—inethyl—5—nitro
    U019
    Benzene (I,T)
    U038
    Benzeneacetic acid, 4—chloro—alpha—(4—
    chlorophenyl
    )
    —alpha—hydroxy,
    ethyl ester
    tJO3O
    Benzene, 1—bromo—4—phenoxy—
    U037
    Benzene, chloro—
    71.337

    —45—
    0190
    1,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid anhydride
    0028
    l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid,
    bis(2—ethyl—
    hexyl)
    ester
    0069
    l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid,
    dibutyl ester
    0088
    l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid, diethyl ester
    0102
    l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid, dimethyl ester
    0107
    1,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid, di—n—octyl
    ester
    0070
    Benzene, l,2—dichloro—
    0071
    Benzene, 1,3—dichloro—
    U072
    Benzene, 1,4—dichloro—
    0017
    Benzene,
    (dichloromethyl)—
    0223
    Benzene, l,3—diisocyanatomethyl—
    (R,T)
    U239
    Benzene, dimethyl—
    (I,T)
    0201
    1,3—Benzenediol
    0127
    Benzene, hexachioro—
    0056
    Benzene, hexahydro—(I)
    0188
    Benzene, hydroxy—
    0220
    Benzene, methyl—
    0105
    Benzene, 1—methyl—l—2,4—dinitro—
    0106
    Benzene, l—xnethyl—2,6—dinitro—
    0203
    Benzene,
    l,2—methylenedioxy—4—allyl—
    0141
    Benzene,
    1 ,2—xnethylenedioxy—4—propenyl—
    0090
    Benzene,
    1 ,2—methylenedioxy—4—propyl—
    0055
    Benzene,
    (1—methylethyl)—
    (I)
    Ul69
    Benzene, nitro—
    (I,T)
    0183
    Benzene, pentachloro—
    0185
    Benzene, pentachloronitro—
    0020
    Benzenesulfonic acid chloride
    (C,R)
    0020
    Benzenesulfonyl chloride
    (C,R)
    0207
    Benzene,
    l,2,4,5—tetrachloro—
    U023
    Benzene, (trichloromethyl)—(C,R,T)
    0234
    Benzene,
    1,3,5—trinitro—
    (R,T)
    0021
    Benzidine
    0202
    1,2—Benzisothiazolin—3—one, l,l—dixoide
    0120
    Benzotj ,k fluorene
    0022
    Benzoapyrene
    0022
    3,4—Benzopyrene
    0197
    3—Benzoquinone
    0023
    Benzotrichloride
    (C,R,T)
    0050
    1,2—Benzphenanthrene
    0085
    2,2’—Bioxirane (I,T)
    U02l
    (l,l’—Biphenyl)—4,4’—diamine
    0073
    (l,l’—Biphenyl)—4,4’--diamine, 3,3’—dichloro—
    U091
    (1,1 ‘—Biphenyl)—4,4 ‘—dianiine, 3,3’—
    dixnethoxy—
    0095
    (l,l’—Biphenyl)—4,4’—djamine,
    3,3’—diinethyl—
    0024
    Bis(2—chloroethoxy) methane
    0027
    Bis(2—chloroisopropyl) ether
    0244
    Bis(dimethylthiocarbamoyl) disulfide
    0028
    Bis(2—ethylhexyl)
    phthalate
    0246
    Bromine cyanide
    0225
    Bromoform
    71-338

    —46—
    13030
    4—Bromophenyl phenyl ether
    0128
    l,3—Butadiene, 1,,1,2,3,4,4—hexachloro—
    0172
    1—Butanamine, N—butyl—N—nitroso—
    0035
    Butanoic acid, 4—Bis(2—chloroethyl)amino
    benzene—
    0031
    1—Butane?
    (I)
    0159
    Butanone
    (I,T)
    0160
    2—Butanone peroxide (R,T)
    0053
    2—Butenal
    0074
    2—Butene,
    l,4—dichloro—
    (I,T)
    0031
    n—Butyl alcohol
    (I)
    13136
    Cacodylic
    acid
    0032
    Calcium
    chromate
    U238
    Carbamic acid, ethyl ester
    0178
    Carbamic acid, methylnitroso—,
    ethyl ester
    13176
    Carbamide, N—ethyl—N—nitroso—
    0177
    Carbamide, N—methyl—N—nitroso—
    0219
    Carbamide,
    thio—
    0097
    Carbamoyl chloride, dimethyl
    0215
    Carbonic acid,
    dithallium
    (I) salt
    0156
    Carbonochloridic acid, methyl ester
    (I,T)
    0033
    Carbon oxyfluoride (R,T)
    0211
    Carbon tetrachloride
    0033
    Carbonyl fluoride
    (R,T)
    0034
    Chloral
    0035
    Chlorambucil
    0036
    Chlordane,
    technical
    13026
    Chlornaphazine
    13037
    Chlorobenzene
    0039
    4—Chloro—m—cresol
    13041
    1—chloro—2, 3—epoxypropane
    0042
    2—Chloroethyl. vinyl
    ether
    0044
    Chloroform
    0046
    Chloromethyl methyl ether
    0047
    beta—Chloronapthalene
    0048
    o—Chloropheriol
    0049
    4—chloro—o—toluidine, hydrochloride
    0032
    Chromic acid, calcium salt
    U050
    Chryserie
    13051
    Creosote
    0052
    Cresols
    0052
    Cresylic acid
    0053
    Crotonaldehyde
    13055
    Cumeme
    (I)
    13246
    Cyanogen
    bromide
    0197
    1,4—Cyclohexadienedione
    13056
    Cyclohexarie
    (I)
    0057
    Cyclohexanone
    (I)
    13130
    1,3—Cyclopentadiene,
    1,2,3,4,5,5—hexachloro—
    0058
    Cyclophosphamide
    0240
    2,4—D,
    salts
    and
    esters
    0059
    Daunomycin
    0060
    DDD
    71-339

    —47—
    13061
    DDT
    U142
    Decachlorooctahydro—1,3,4—metheno—2H—
    cyclobuta c,d—pentalen—2—one
    13062
    Diallate
    0133
    Diamine
    (R,T)
    13221
    Diaminotoluene
    13063
    Dibenza,hanthracene
    0063
    1,2:5,6—Dibenzanthracene
    13064
    l,2:7,8—Dibenzopyrene
    0064
    Dibenz a,ipyrene
    U066
    1, 2—Dibromo—3—chloropropane
    13069
    Dibutyl phthalate
    13062
    S—(2,3—Dichloroallyl)
    diisopropylthiocarbamate
    13070
    o—Dichlorobenzene
    U07l
    m—Dichlorobenzene
    13072
    p—Dichlorobenzene
    U073
    3,3’—Dichlorobenzidine
    U074
    1,4—Dichloro—2—butene
    (I,T)
    13075
    Dichiorodifluoromethane
    13192
    3,5—Dichloro—N—(1,1—dirnethyl—2—propynyl)
    benzamide
    0060
    Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane
    13061
    Dichlorodiphenyltr ichloroethane
    13078
    l,l—Dichloroethylene
    0079
    l,2—Dichloroethylene
    U025
    Dichloroethyl ether
    U081
    2,4—Dichiorophenol
    13082
    2,6—Dichlorophenol
    13240
    2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid,
    salts and
    esters
    U083
    1,2-Dichloropropane
    13084
    1,3—Dichloropropene
    13085
    1,2:3,4—Diepoxybutane
    (I,T)
    0108
    1,4—Diethylene dioxide
    0086
    N,N-Diethylhydrazine
    0087
    O,0—Diethyl—S—methyl—dithiophosphate
    0088
    Diethyl phthalate
    0089
    Diethylstilbestrol
    0148
    1, 2—Dihydro—3,6—pyradizinedione
    13090
    Dihydrosafrole
    13091
    3,3’—Dimethoxybenzidine
    13092
    Dimethylamine
    (I)
    0093
    Dimethylaminoazobenzene
    13094
    7,l2—Dimethylbenz aanthracene
    13095
    3,3’—Dimethylbenzidine
    Ud96
    alpha, alpha—Diniethylbenzylhydroperoxide (R)
    13097
    Diniethylcarbamoyl chloride
    0098
    l,1—Dimethylhydrazine
    13099
    1,2—Dimethylhydrazine
    0101
    2,4—Dimethylphenol
    0102
    Dimethyl phthalate
    0103
    Dimethyl sulfate
    71-340

    —48—
    13105
    2,4—Dinitrotoluene
    13106
    2,6—Dinitrotoluene
    13107
    Di—n—octyl phthalate
    13108
    1,4—Dioxane
    0109
    1,2—Diphenylhydrazine
    13110
    Dipropylamine
    (I)
    0111
    Di—N—propylnitrosoainine
    0001
    Ethanal
    (I)
    0174
    Ethanamine, N—ethyl—N—nitroso—
    13067
    Ethane, 1,2—dibronio—
    13076
    Ethane, l,1—dichloro—
    0077
    Ethane, l,2—dichloro—
    13114
    1,2—Ethanediylbiscarbamodithioic acid
    13131
    Ethane, ),1,1,2,2,2—hexachloro—
    13024
    Ethane, 1,1’—methylenebis(oxy)bis(2-
    ch1oro
    13247
    Ethane, 1,1,l—trichloro—2,2—bis(p—
    methoxyphenol
    )
    13003
    Ethanenitrile
    (I,T)
    13117
    Ethane, 1,1’—oxybis—
    (I)
    13025
    Ethane, 1,1‘—oxybis(2—chloro-
    13184
    Ethane, pentachloro—
    0208
    Ethane, 1,l,1,2—tetrachloro—
    0209
    Ethane, 1,1,2,2—tetrachloro—
    0218
    Ethanethioamide
    0227
    Ethane, 1,1,2—trichioro—
    1)043
    Ethene, chloro—
    0042
    Ethene, 2—chloroethoxy—
    13078
    Ethene, 1,1—dichioro—
    13079
    Ethene, trans—l,2—dichloro—
    13210
    Ethene, 1,1,2,2—tetrachioro—
    13173
    Ethanol, 2,2’—(nitrosoimino)bis—
    13004
    Ethanone, l—phenyl—
    0006
    Ethanoyl chloride
    (C,R,T)
    13359
    2—Ethoxjrethanol
    t1112
    ~myr
    acetate
    (I)
    13113
    Ethyl acrylate
    (I)
    13238
    Ethyl carbamate (urethan)
    0038
    Ethyl 4,4’—dichlorobenzilate
    13114
    Ethylenebis(dithiocarbamic acid)
    0067
    Ethylene
    dibromide
    13077
    Ethylene dichloride
    0359
    Ethylene gl~colmonoethyl
    ether
    0115
    E~thy1eneoxi~e(1,T)
    0116
    Ethylene
    thiourea
    13117
    Ethyl
    ether
    (I)
    13076
    Ethylidene
    dichioride
    0118
    Ethylmethacrylate
    13119
    Ethyl
    methanesulfonate
    13139
    Ferric
    dextran
    0120
    Fluoranthene
    0122
    Formaldehyde
    13123
    Formic
    acid
    (C,T)
    71-341

    —49—
    0124
    Furan
    (I)
    13125
    2—Furancarboxaldehyde
    (I)
    0147
    2,5—Furandione
    13213
    Furan,
    tetrahydro—
    (I)
    13125
    Furfural
    (I)
    13124
    Furfuran
    (I)
    1)206
    D—Glucopyranose, 2—deoxy—2—(3—methyl—3—
    nitrosoureido)—
    0126
    Glycidylaldehyde
    0163
    Guanidine, N—nitroso—N—methyl—N’—nitro
    13127
    Hexachlorobenzene
    13128
    Hexachlorobutadiene
    Ul29
    Hexachlorocyclohexane
    (gamma isomer)
    13130
    Hexachlorocyclopentadiene
    13131
    Hexabhloroethane
    13132
    Hexachlorophene
    0243
    Hexachloropropene
    13133
    Hydrazine
    (R,T)
    1)086
    Hydrazine, 1,2—diethyl—
    13098
    Hydrazine,
    1,1—dimethyl—
    0099
    Hydrazine, l,2—dimethyl—
    0109
    Hydrazine, 1,2—Diphenyl—
    13134
    Hydrofluoric acid
    (C,T)
    13134
    Hydrogen fluoride
    (C,T)
    0135
    Hydrogen sulfide
    0096
    Hydroperoxide, 1—methyl—1—phenylethyl—
    (R)
    13136
    Hydroxydimethylarsine oxide
    13116
    2—linidazolidinethione
    1)137
    Indenol,2,3—cdpyrene
    13139
    Iron dextran
    U140
    Isobutyl alcohol
    (I,T)
    13141
    Isosafrole
    Ul42
    Kepone
    13143
    Lasiocarpene
    0144
    Lead acetate
    13145
    Lead phosphate
    0146
    Lead subacetate
    13129
    Lindane
    0147
    Maleic anhydride
    13148
    Maleic hydrazide
    13149
    Malononitrij.e
    13150
    Melphalan
    0151
    Mercury
    13152
    Methacrylonitrile (I,T)
    0092
    Methanamine, N—methyl—
    (I)
    0029
    Methane, bromo
    13045
    Methane, chioro—
    (I,T)
    0046
    Methane, chioromethoxy—
    13068
    Methane, dibromo—
    0080
    Methane, dichloro—
    13075
    Methane, dichlorodjfluoro—
    13138
    Methane,
    iodo—
    13119
    Methanesulfonic acid, ethyl ester
    71-342

    —50—
    0211
    Methane, tetrachloro—
    0121
    Methane, trichiorofluoro—
    13153
    Methanethiol
    (I,T)
    13225
    Methane, tribromo—
    13044
    Methane, trichloro—
    13121
    Methane,
    trichlorofluoro—
    0123
    Methanoic acid
    (C,T)
    13036
    4,7—Methanoindan, 1,2,4,5,6,7,8,8—
    octachloro— 3a,4,7,7a—tetrahydro—
    13154
    Methanol
    (I)
    13155
    Methapyrilene
    0154
    Methyl alcohol
    (I)
    0029
    Methyl bromide
    13186
    l—Methylbutadiene
    (I)
    13045
    Methyl chloride
    (I,T)
    0156
    Methyl chlorocarbonate
    (I,T)
    0226
    Methylchloroform
    13157
    3—Methylcholanthrene
    13158
    4,4 ‘—Methylenebis(2—chloroaniline)
    0132
    2,2’—Methylenebis(3,4,6—trichlorophenol)
    U068
    Methylene bromide
    13080
    Methylene chloride
    13122
    Methylene oxide
    0159
    Methyl ethyl ketone
    (I,T)
    0160
    Methyl ethyl ketone peroxide
    (R,T)
    13138
    Methyl iodide
    0161
    Methyl isobutyl ketone
    (I)
    13162
    Methyl methacrylate
    (I,T)
    0163
    N—Methyl—N’ —nitro—N—nitrosoguanidine
    13161
    4—Methyl—2—pentanone
    (I)
    13164
    Methylthiouracil
    U247
    Methoxychlor
    13010
    Mitomycin C
    13059
    5,12—Naphthacenedione,
    (8S—cis)—8--acetyl—10--
    (3— amino—2
    ,
    3, 6—trideoxy—alpha—L—lyxo—
    hexapyranosyl )oxyl —7,8,9,1O—tetrahydro—
    6,8, 11—trihydroxy—1—methoxy—
    0165
    Naphthalene
    13047
    Naphthalene, 2—chioro—
    13166
    1,4—Naphthalenedione
    13236
    2,7—Naphthalenedisulforijc
    acid,
    3,3’—(3,3’—
    dimethyl—(l,l‘—biphenyl)—4,4’—diyl)—
    bis(azo)bis(5—amino—4--hyoroxy)—,
    tetrasodium
    salt
    13166
    1,4—Naphthaquinone
    13167
    1—Naphthylamine
    13168
    2—Naphthylamine
    13167
    alpha—Naphthylamine
    0168
    beta—Naphthylainirie
    0026
    2—Naphthylamine, N,N’—bis(2—chlorornethyl)-
    0169
    Nitrobenzene
    (I,T)
    U170
    p—Nitropheriol
    0171
    2—Nitropropane
    (I,T)
    71-343

    —51—
    Ul72
    N—Nitrosodi—n—butylamine
    0173
    N—Nitrosodiethanolamine
    13174
    N—Nitrosodiethylamine
    Ulll
    N—Nitroso—N—propylarnine
    13176
    N—Nitroso—N—ethylurea
    0177
    N—Nitroso—N—methylurea
    13178
    N—Nitroso—N—methylurethane
    0179
    N—Nitrosopiperidine
    0180
    N—Nitrosopyrrolidine
    0181
    5—Nitro—o—toluidine
    0193
    l,2—Oxathiolane, 2,2—dioxide
    13058
    2H—1,3,2—Oxazaphosphorine,
    2—bis(2—chloro—
    ethyl)aminotetrahydro—,
    oxide 2—
    13115
    Oxirane
    (I,T)
    0041
    Oxarane, 2—(chloroniethyl)—
    0182
    Paraldehyde
    13183
    Pentachlorobenzene
    0184
    Pentachloroethane
    0185
    Pentachloronitrobenzene
    See F027
    Pentachlorophenol
    0186
    1,3—pentadiene
    (I)
    0187
    Phenacetin
    0188
    Phenol
    0048
    Phenol,
    2—chloro—
    13039
    Phenol, 4—chloro—3—methyl—
    0081
    Phenol, 2,4—dichloro—
    0082
    Phenol, 2,6—dichloro—
    0101
    Phenol, 2,4-dimethyl—
    0170
    Phenol, 4—nitro—
    See F027
    Phenol, pentachloro—
    See F027
    Phenol, 2,3,4,6—tetrachloro—
    See F027
    Phenol, 2,4,5—trichloro—
    See F027
    Phenol, 2,4,6—trichioro—
    0137
    l,lO—(1,2—phenylene)pyrene
    13145
    Phosphoric acid,
    lead salt
    13087
    Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O—diethyl—,
    S
    methyl—ester
    0189
    Phosphorous sulfide
    (R)
    0190
    Phthalic anhydride
    13191
    2—Picoline
    13192
    Pronamide
    13194
    1—Propanainine (I,T)
    UllO
    l—Propanamine, N—propyl—(I)
    13066
    Propane, l,2—dibromo—3—chloro—
    0149
    Propanedinitrile
    13171
    Propane, 2—nitro— (I,T)
    13027
    Propane,
    2,2’—oxybis 2—chloro—
    Ul93
    1,3—Propane sultone
    0235
    l—Propanol,
    2,3—dibroino—, phosphate (3:1)
    0126
    l—Propanol, 2,3—epoxy—
    13140
    l—Propanol, 2—methyl—
    (I,T)
    0002
    2—Propanone
    (I)
    0007
    2—Propenamide
    71-344

    —52—
    0084
    Propene, l,3—dichloro—
    13243
    1—Propene,
    l,l,2,3,3,3—hexachloro—
    0009
    2—Propenenitrile
    13152
    2—Propenenitrile, 2—methyl— (I,T)
    0008
    2—Propenoic acid
    (I)
    0113
    2-Propenoic
    acid, ethyl ester
    (I)
    13118
    2—Propenoic
    acid,
    2—methyl—,
    ethyl
    ester
    13162
    2—Propenoic
    acid,
    2—methyl—,
    methyl
    ester
    (I,T)
    See F027
    Propionic acid,2—(2,4,5—trichlorophenoxy)—
    1)194
    n—Propylamine
    (I,T)
    0083
    Propylene dichloride
    0196
    Pyridine
    13155
    Pyridine, 2—(2—(dimethylamino)—2-
    thenylamino—
    13179
    Pyridine, hexahydro—N—nitroso—
    0191
    Pryidine, 2—methyl—
    0164
    4(lH)—Pyrimidinone, 2,3—dihydro—6—methyl—2—
    thioxo-
    0180
    Pyrrole,
    tetrahydro—N—nitroso—
    0200
    Reserpine
    13201
    Resorcinol
    0202
    Saccharin and salts
    0203
    Safrole
    13204
    Selenious acid
    13204
    Selenium dioxide
    13205
    Selenium disulfide
    (R,T)
    0015
    L—Serine, diazoacetate (ester)
    See F027
    Silvex
    0089
    4,4’—Stilbenediol, alpha,
    alpha’—diethyl—
    13206
    Streptozotocin
    0135
    Sulfur hydride
    1)103
    Sulfuric acid,
    diinethyl ester
    0189
    Sulfur phosphide
    (R)
    1)205
    Sulfur selenjde (R,T)
    See F027
    2,4,5—T
    0207
    l,2,4,5—Tetrachlorobenzene
    0208
    1,l,l,2—Tetrachloroethane
    13209
    l,l,212—Tetrachloroethane
    13210
    Tetrachloroethylene
    See F027
    2,314,6—Tetrachloropheno.
    0213
    Tetrahydrofuran
    (I)
    0214
    Thallium
    (I) acetate
    0215
    Thallium (I) carbonate
    0216
    Thallium
    (I) chloride
    13217
    Thallium (I) nitrate
    0218
    Thioacetautjde
    (3153
    Thiomethanol
    (I,T)
    0219
    Thiourea
    13244
    Thiram
    0220
    Toluene
    13221
    Toluenediamine
    1)223
    Toluene diisocyanate
    (R,T)
    71-345

    —53—
    U328
    o—Toluidine
    U353
    p—Toluidine
    13222
    o—Toluidine hydrochloride
    13011
    1H—l,2,4—Triazol—3—amine
    0226
    l,l,1—Trichloroethane
    13227
    l,1,2—Trichloroethane
    13228
    Trichloroethene
    0228
    Trichloroethylene
    13121
    Trichloronionofluoromethane
    See F027
    2,4,5—Trichlorophenol
    See FO27
    2,4,6—Trichlorophenol
    See F027
    2,4,5—Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid
    U234
    syrn-Trinitrobenzene
    (R,T)
    0182
    1,3,5—Trioxane,
    2,4,5—trimethyl—
    U235
    Tris(2,3—dibrornopropyl) phosphate
    13236
    Trypan blue
    13237
    Uracil,
    5(bis(2—chloromethyl)aminol—
    13237
    Uracil mustard
    13043
    Vinyl chloride
    U248
    Warfarin, when present at concentrations of
    0.3
    or less
    J239
    Xylene
    (I)
    0249
    Zinc phosphide, when present at
    concentrations of 10
    or less
    13200
    Yohimban—l6—carboxylic acid,
    ll,l7—di—
    methoxy—l8—
    (3,4,5—trimethoxy—benzoyl)oxy—
    methyl ester
    Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    Appendix C
    Chemical Analysis Test Methods
    The Board
    incorporates by reference 40 CFR 261, Appendix III
    (1985),
    as amended at 50 Fed. Reg.
    42942, October
    23,
    1985,
    at 51
    Fed.
    Re9.
    5330,
    February
    13,
    1986 and at 51 Fed.
    Re9. 654l7~
    ~5iàiy
    ~
    This~e~tfOnTncorp6~Ees no futTure éditions
    or mth3ifictions.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    effective
    )
    Appendix
    G, Basis for Listing Hazardous Wastes
    EPA
    Hazardous constitutents for which listed
    hazardous
    waste No.
    FOOl
    Tetrachloroethylene, methylene chloride,
    trichloroethylene,
    1,l,l—trichloroethane,
    71-346

    —54—
    carbon
    tetrachloride,
    chlorinated
    fluorocarbons.
    F002
    Tetrachioroethylene, methylene chloride,
    trichioroethylene, 1,1
    ,
    l—trichloroethane,
    1,1,2—trichloroethane,_chlorobenzene,
    1,1,2—
    ~
    trlf)Ti’oroethane, ortho—
    dichlorobenzene, trichlorofluoromethane,
    F003
    NA.
    F004
    Cresols and cresylic acid, nitrobenzene.
    FOOS
    Toluene, methyl ethyl ketone, carbon
    disulfide,
    isobutanol, pyridine, 2—
    ethox~ethano1,benzene,_2—nitro~~
    F006
    ~
    nickel, cyanide
    (complexed).
    FOOl
    Cyanide
    (salts).
    F008
    Cyanide
    (salts).
    F009
    Cyanide
    (salts).
    FOlO
    Cyanide
    (salts).
    FOll
    Cyanide
    (salts).
    F012
    Cyanide
    (coinpiexed).
    F019
    Hexavalent chromium, cyanide
    (complexed).
    F020
    Tetra— and pentachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins;
    tetra— and pentachlorodibenzofurans; tn- and
    tetrachlorophenols and their chiorophenoxy
    derivative acids, esters, ethers, amines and
    other salts.
    F02l
    Penta— and hexachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins; penta—
    and hexachlorodibenzofurans; pentachlorophenol
    and
    its derivatives.
    F022
    Tetra—, penta— and hexachlorodibenzo—p—
    dioxins;
    tetra—, penta—
    -
    and
    hexachlorodibenzofurans.
    F023
    Tetra— and pentachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins;
    tetra— and pentachlorodibenzofurans; tn— and
    tetra— chlorophenols
    and their chlorophenoxy
    derivative acids, esters, ethers,
    amines and
    other salts.
    F024
    Chloromethane, dichloromethane,
    trichloromethane,
    carbon tetrachloride,
    chioroethylene, l,1—dichloroethane, 1,2—
    dichioroethane,
    trans—l,2—dichloroethylene,
    1,1—dichloroethylene,
    1,l,1—trichloroethane,
    l,1,2—tnjchloroethane, trichloroethylene,
    l,1,1,2—tetrachloroethane, 1,1,2,2—
    tetrachioroethane, tetrachioroethylene,
    pentachloroethane, hexachloroethane, ally?
    chloride
    (3—chloropropene), dichloropropane,
    dichloropropene, 2—chloro—l,3—butadiene,
    hexachloro—1,3—butadiene, hexachlorocyclo—
    pentadiene,
    hexach.orocyclohexane,
    benzene,
    chlorobenzene, dichlorobenzenes, 1,2,4—
    trichlorobenzene, tetrachlorobenzenes,
    pentachlorobenzene, hexachlorobenzene,
    71-347

    —55—
    toluene, naphthalene.
    F026
    Tetra—,
    penta—, and hexachlorodibenzo—p—
    dioxins; tetra—,
    penta—, and
    hexachlorodibenzofurans.
    F027
    Tetra—, penta—, and hexachlorodibenzo—p—
    dioxins; tetra—, penta—,
    and
    hexachlorodibenzofurans; tn—, tetra—,
    and
    pentachlorophenols and their chlorophenoxy
    derivative acids,
    esters,
    ethers, amine and
    other salts.
    F028
    Tetra—, penta—, and hexachlorodibenzo—p—
    dioxins;
    tetra—, penta—, and
    hexachlorodibenzofurans; tn—,
    tetra—, and
    pentachlorophenols and their chlorophenoxy
    derivative acids, esters, ethers,
    amine and
    other salts.
    KOOl
    Pentachlorophenol, phenol, 2—chlorophenol,
    p—
    chloro—m—cresol, 2,4—dimethylphenol, 2,4—
    dinitrophenol, tnichlorophenols,
    tetrachlorophenols, 2,4—dinitrophenol,
    cresosote,
    chrysene, naphthalene,
    fluoranthene, benzo(b)fluoranthene,
    berizo(a)pyrene,
    indeno(1,2,3—cd)pyrene,
    benz(a)anthracene, dibenz(a)anthracene,
    acenaphthalene.
    K002
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    KOO3
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    K004
    Hexavalent chromuim.
    1(005
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    1(006
    Hexavalent chromium.
    1(007
    Cyanide
    (complexed),
    hexavalent chromium.
    KOO8
    Hexavalent chromium.
    1(009
    Chloroform,
    formaldehyde, methylene chloride,
    methyl chloride, paraldehyde,
    formic acid.
    KOlO
    Chloroform,
    formaldehyde, methylene chloride,
    methyl chloride, paraldehyde,
    formic acid,
    chloroacetaldehyde.
    1(011
    Acrylonitrile, acetonitrile, hydrocyanic acid.
    1(013
    Hydrocyanic acid, acrylonitnile, acetonitnile.
    1(014
    Acetonitrile, acrylamide.
    1(015
    Benzyl chloride, chlorobenzene, toluene,
    benzotrichlonide.
    1(016
    Hexachlorobenzene,
    hexachlorobutadiene, carbon
    tetrachlonide, hexachloroethane,
    perchloroethylene.
    K0l7
    Epichlorohydnin, chloroethers
    bis(chloromethyl)
    ether and bis—(2—
    hloroethyl)
    ethers,
    trichloropropane,
    dichloropropanols.
    K018
    l,2—dichloroethane, trichloroethylene,
    hexachlorobutadiene, hexachlorobenzene.
    1(019
    Ethylene dichloride, 1,1,1—trichloroethane,
    71-348

    —56—
    1,l,2—tnichloroethane,
    tetrachioroethanes
    (l,1,2,2—tetrachloroethane and 1,1,1,2—
    tetrachioroethane), tnichloroethylene,
    tetrachloroethylene,
    carbon tetrachioride,
    chloroform,
    vinyl chloride, vinylidene
    chloride.
    1(020
    Ethylene dich.onide,
    l,l,l—tnichloroethane,
    l,1,2—tnichloroethane,
    tetrachloro—ethanes
    (1,1,2,2—tetrachloroethane and 1,1,1,2—
    tetrachloroethane), tnichloroethylene,
    tetrachloroethylene,
    carbon tetrachioride,
    chloroform, vinyl chloride, vinylidene
    chloride.
    1(021
    Antimony,
    carbon tetrachloride,
    chloroform.
    1(022
    Phenol,
    tars
    (polycyclic aromatic
    hydrocarbons).
    K023
    Phthalic anhydnide,
    maleic anhydnide.
    1(024
    Phthalic anhydnide,
    l,4—naphthoguinone.
    1(025
    Meta—dinitrobenzene, 2,4—dinitrotoluene.
    K026
    Paraldehyde, pyridines, 2—picoline.
    K027
    Toluene diisocyanate, toluene—2, 4—diamine.
    1(028
    l,l,1—tnichloroethane, vinyl chloride.
    1(029
    l,2—dichloroethane, 1,1,1—tnichloroethane,
    vinyl chloride, vinylidene chloride,
    chloroform.
    1(030
    Hexachlonobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene,
    hexachloroethane, 1,1,l,2—tetnachloroethane,
    1,1,2,2—tetrachloroethane,
    ethylene
    dichloride.
    1(031
    Arsenic.
    1(032
    Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.
    1(033
    Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.
    1(034
    Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.
    1(035
    Creosote,
    chrysene, naphthalene, fluoranthene,
    benzo(b) fluoranthene, benzo(a)—pyrene,
    indeno(l,2,3—cd) pyrene, benzo(a)anthracene,
    dibenzo(a)anthracene,
    acenaphthalene.
    1(036
    Toluene, phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic
    acid esters.
    1(037
    Toluene, phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic
    acid esters.
    1(038
    Phorate,
    formaldehyde, phosphorodithioic and
    phosphorothioic acid esters.
    K039
    Phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic acid
    esters.
    1(040
    Phorate,
    formaldehyde, phosphorodithioic and
    phosphorothioic acid esters.
    1(041
    Toxaphene~.
    1(042
    Hexachlorobenzene, ortho—dichlorobenzene.
    1(043
    2,4—dichlorophenol, 2,6—dichlorophenol, 2,4,6—
    trichiorophenol.
    1(044
    N.A.
    1(045
    N.A.
    71-349

    —57—
    K046
    Lead
    1(047
    N.A.
    1(048
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    1(049
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    1(050
    Hexavalent chromium.
    1(051
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    1(052
    Lead
    1(060
    Cyanide,
    naphthalene, phenolic compounds,
    arsenic.
    1(061
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead,
    cadmium.
    1(062
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead.
    1(069
    Hexavalent chromium,
    lead,
    cadmium.
    1(071
    Mercury.
    1(073
    Chloroform,
    carbon tetrachlonide,
    hexachioroethane, tnichioroethane,
    tetrachloroethylene, dichloroethylene,
    1
    ,
    1
    ,
    2
    ,
    2—tetrachloroethane.
    1(083
    Aniline, diphenylamine, nitrobenzene,
    phenylenediamine.
    1(084
    Arsenic.
    1(085
    Benzene, dichlorobenzenes,
    tnichlorobenzenes,
    tetrachlorobenzenes, pentachlorobenzene,
    hexachiorobenzene, benzyl chloride.
    1(086
    Lead, hexavalent chromium.
    1(087
    Phenol, naphthalene.
    K093
    Phthalic anhydnide maleic anhydride.
    1(094
    Phthalic anhydride.
    1(095
    1,1 ,2—trichloroethane, 1,1,1,2—
    tetrachioroethane, 1,l,2,2—tetrachloroethane.
    K096
    l,2—dichloroethane, 1,l,l,—trichloroethane,
    1,1 ,2—trichloroethane.
    1(097
    Chlordane, heptachior.
    K098
    Toxaphene.
    K099
    2,4—dichlorophenol, 2,4,6—tnichlorophenol.
    1(100
    Hexavalent
    chromium,
    lead,
    cadmium.
    KlOl
    Arsenic.
    1(102
    Arsenic.
    Kl03
    Aniline, nitrobenzene, phenylenediatnine.
    K104
    Aniline,
    benzene, diphenylamine, nitrobenzene,
    phynylenediamine.
    1(105
    Benzene, monochlorobenzene,
    dichlorobenzenes,
    2,4,6—tnichlorophenol.
    1(106
    Mercury.
    Kill
    2,4—Dinitrotoluene.
    1(112
    2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toiuidine,
    aniline.
    1(113
    2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toluidine,
    aniline.
    1(114
    2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toluidine.
    Kl15
    2,4—Toluenediamine.
    K116
    Carbon tetrachlonide, tetrachloroethyiene,
    chloroform, phosgene.
    1(117
    Ethylene dibromide
    71-350

    —58—
    1(118
    ~1enedibromide
    ~i36
    Ethylene dibromide
    N.A.——Waste
    is hazardous because it fails
    the test for
    the
    characteristic of ignitability, corrosivity,
    or reactivity.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10
    Iii. Reg.
    effective
    )
    Appendix H
    Hazardous Constituents
    acetonitrile (ethanenitnile)
    acetophenone
    (ethanone, l—phenyl—)
    3—(alpha—acetonylbenzyl)—4—hydroxycoumarin and salts
    warfanin
    2—ace tylaminofluonene
    (acetamide, N—(9H—fluoren—2—yl)—)
    acetyl chloride
    (ethanoyl chloride)
    1—acetyl—2—thiourea
    (acetarnide, N—(aminothioxomethyl)—)
    acrolein
    (2—propenal)
    acrylamide
    (2—propenamide)
    acrylonitnile (2—propenenitrile)
    aflatoxins
    aldnin
    (l,2,3,4,10,10—hexachloro—1,4,4a,5,8,8a—hexahydro—
    endo, exo—1,4:5,8—dimethanonaphthalene)
    allyl alcohol
    (2—propen—l—ol)
    aluminum phosphide
    4—aminobiphenyl
    (l,1’—biphenyl—4—amine)
    6—amino—i ,1a,2,8, Ba,8b—hexahydro—8—(hydroxymethyl
    )
    —Ba—
    methoxy—5—methylcarbamate azinino2’
    ,3’:3,4)pyrrolo
    1,2aindole—4,7—dione,
    (ester)
    (mitoniycin C)
    (azirino2’,3’:3,4pyrrolo(l,2a)indole—4,7—djone,
    6—arnino—8—((aminocarboriyl)oxy)methyl—l,la,2,8,8a,8b—
    hexahydro—8a—methoxy—5—methyl—)
    5—(aminomethyl )—3—isoxazolol
    (3(2H)—isoxazolone, 5—(aminomethyl)—)
    4—aminopyridine (4—pynidinamine)
    amitrole (1H—l,2,4—triazol—3—amine)
    aniline
    (benzenamine)
    antimony and compounds, N.O.S.
    (not otherwise specified)
    aramite
    (sulfurous acid,
    2—chloroethyl—, 2—4—(1,l—
    dimethylethyl )phenoxy)—l—methylethyl ester)
    arsenic and compounds, N.0.S.
    arsenic acid (orthoarsenic acid)
    arsenic pentoxide (arsenic
    (V) oxide)
    arsenic tnioxide
    (arsenic
    (III)
    oxide)
    auramine
    (benzenamine, 4,4’—carbonimidoylbisN,N—diniethyl—,
    monohydrochloride
    71-351

    —59—
    azasenine (L—serine, diazoacetate
    (ester))
    barium and compounds,
    N.O.S.
    barium cyanide
    benzcacnidine
    (3,4—benzacnidine)
    benz aanthracene
    (1,2—benzanthracene)
    benzene
    (cyclohexatniene)
    benzene,
    2—amino—l—niethyl (o—toluidine)
    benzene, 4—amino-i—methyl
    (p—toluidine)
    benzenearsonic acid (arsonic acid, phenyl—)
    benzene, dichloroinethyl—
    (benzal chloride)
    benzenethiol
    (thiophenol)
    benzidine
    (l,l’—biphenyi—4,4’—diamine)
    benzo(b)fluoranthene (2,3—benzofluoranthene)
    benzo(j)fiuoranthene (7,8—benzofluoranthene)
    benzo(a)pyrene (3,4—benzopyrene)
    p—benzoquinone (1,4—cyclohexadienedione)
    benzotrichloride
    (benzene, trichlonomethyl—)
    benzyl chloride
    (benzene,
    (chloromethyl)—)
    beryllium and compounds, N.O.S.
    bis (2—chloroethoxy)methane
    (ethane, l,1’—methylenebis(oxy)bis2—chloro—
    bis(2—chloroethyl) ether
    (ethane, l,l’—oxybis2—chloro—
    N,N—bis
    ( 2—chloroethyl
    ) —2—napthylamine
    (chiornaphazine)
    bis(2—chloroisopropyl) ether
    (propane, 2,2’—oxybis2—chlorol—)
    bis(chloromethyl)
    ether
    (methane, oxybischloro)—)
    bis(2—ethylhexyl) phthalate
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid,
    bis(2—ethylhexyl)
    ester)
    bromoacetone
    (2—propanone, 1—bronto—)
    bromomethane
    (methyl bromide)
    4—bromophenyl phenyl ether
    (benzene, l—bromo—4—phenoxy—)
    brucine
    (strychnidin—lO—one, 2,3—dimethoxy—)
    2—butanone peroxide
    (methyl ethyl
    ketone, peroxide)
    butyl benzyl phthalate
    (l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid,
    butyl phenylmethyl ester)
    2—sec—butyl—4,6—dinitrophenol (DNBP)
    (phenol, 2,4—dinitro—6—(l—methyipropyl)—)
    cadmium and compounds, N.O.S.
    calcium chroniate
    (chromic acid,
    calcium salt)
    calcium cyanide
    carbon disulfide
    (carbon bisulfide)
    carbon oxyfluoride
    (carbonyl fluoride)
    chloral (~cetaldehyde,trichioro—)
    chlorambucil
    (butanoic acid, 4—bis(2—chloroethyl)aminolbenzene—)
    chlordane
    (alpha and gamma isomers)
    (4, 7—methanoindan,1,2,4,5,6,7,8,8—octachloro—
    3,4,7,7a—tetrahydro—)
    (alpha and gamma isomers)
    chlorinated benzenes, N.O.S.
    71-352

    —60—
    chlorinated ethane, N.0.S.
    chlorinated fluorocarbons, N.O.S.
    chlorinated naphthalene, N.0.S.
    chlorinated phenol, N.0.S.
    chioroacetaldehyde (acetaldehyde, chloro—)
    chloroalkyl ethers, N.O.S.
    p—chloroaniline
    (benzeneamine, 4—chioro—)
    chlorobenzene (benzene, chloro—)
    chlorobenzilate
    (benzeneacetic acid,
    4—chloro—alpha—(4—chlorophenyl)—
    aipha—hydroxy—,
    ethyl ester)
    (2—chloro—1,3—butadiene
    (chioroprene)
    p—chloro—m—cresol
    (phenol, 4—chloro—3—methyl—)
    1—chloro—2, 3—epoxypropane
    (oxirane, 2—(chloromethyl)—)
    2—chloroethyl vinyl ether
    (ethene,
    (2—chioroethoxy)—)
    chloroform (methane, trichioro—)
    chloromethane
    (methyl chloride)
    chloromethyl methyl ether
    (methane, chloromethoxy-)
    2—chloronaphthalene (naphthalene, beta—chloro—)
    2—chiorophenol
    (phenol, o—chioro—)
    1—(o—chiorophenyl)thiourea
    (thiourea,
    (2—chiorophenyl)—)
    3—chloropropene
    (aiiyi chloride)
    3—chioropropionitrile (propanenitnile, 3—chlono—)
    chromium and compounds, N.O.S.
    chrysene
    (1 ,2—benzphenanthrene)
    citrus red No.
    2
    (2—naphthol, 1—(2,5—dimethoxyphenyl)azo—)
    coal tars
    copper cyanide
    creosote
    (creosote, wood)
    cresols (cresylic acid)
    (phenol, methyl—)
    crotonaldehyde (2—butenal)
    cyanides
    (soluble salts and complexes),
    N.0.S.
    cyanogen (ethanedinitrile)
    cyanogen bromide
    (bromine cyanide)
    cyanogen chloride (chlorine cyanide)
    cycasin
    (beta—D—glucopyranoside,
    (niethyl—ONN—azoxy)methyl—)
    2—cyclohexyl—4
    ,
    6—dinitrophenol
    (phenol, 2—cyclohexyl—4
    ,
    6—dinitro—)
    cyciophosphamide
    (2H—1,3,2—oxazaphosphorine,
    bis(2—chloroethyl)amino—
    tetrahydro—, 2—oxide)
    daunontycin
    (5,12—naphthacenediorte,
    (BS—cis)—8—acetyl—1O—
    (3—amino—2,3,6—tnideoxy)--alpha—L—lyxo—hexopyranosyl)oxy--
    7,8,9 ,l0—tetrahydro—6
    ,
    8,ll—trihydroxy—1—methoxy—)
    DDD (dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane)
    (ethane, 1,1—dichloro—2,2—bis(p--chlorophenyl)—)
    DDE
    (ethylene, 1,i—dichloro—2,2—bis(4—chlorophenyl)—)
    71-353

    —61—
    DDT (dichlorodiphenyltnichloroethane)
    (ethane, 1,1,1—tn ichloro—2
    ,
    2—bis(p—chlorophenyl)—)
    diallate
    (S—(2 ,3—dichloroallyl)diisopropylthiocarbamate)
    dibenza,hacnidine
    (l,2,5,6—dibenzacnidine)
    dibenz a,jacridine
    (l,2,7,8—dibenzacridine)
    dibenza,hanthracene
    (l,2,5,6—dibenzanthracene)
    7H—dibenzoc,gcarbazole
    (3,4,5,6—dibenzcarbazole)
    dibenzoa,epyrene
    (1,2,4,5—dibenzpyrene)
    dibenzoa,hpyrene
    (1 ,2,5,6—dibenzpyrene)
    dibenzoa,ipyrene
    (l,2,7,8—dibenzpyrene)
    l,2—dibromo—3--chloropropane
    (propane, 1,2—dibromo—3—chloro—)
    1,2—dibromoethane
    (ethylene dibromide)
    dibromomethane
    (methylene bromide)
    di—n—butyl phthalate
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, dibutyl ester)
    o—dichlorobenzene
    (benzene, l,2—dichloro—)
    m—dichlorobenzene
    (benzene, 1,3—dichioro—)
    p—dichlorobenzene
    (benzene, l,4—dichloro—)
    dichlorobenzene,
    N.O.S.
    (benzene, dichloro—,
    N.O.S.)
    3,3’—dichloroberizidine
    (l,1’—biphenyl—4,4’—diarnine,
    3,3’—dichloro—)
    1,4—dichloro—2—butene
    (2—butene,
    l,4—dichloro—)
    dichlorodifluoromethane
    (methane, dichlorodifluoro—)
    1,1—dichioroethane
    (ethylidine dichloride)
    1,2—dichloroethane (ethylene dichloride)
    trans—l,2—dichlorethene (1,2—dichiorethylene)
    dichloroethylene,
    N.O.S.
    (ethene, dichloro—,
    N.O.S.)
    l,l—dichloroethylene
    (ethene, l,l—dichloro—)
    dichioromethane
    (methylene chloride)
    2,4—dichiorophenol (phenol,
    2,4—dichloro—)
    2,6—dichlorophenol
    (phenol,
    2,6—dichloro—)
    2,4—dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4—D),
    salts and esters
    (acetic acid, 2,4—dichlorophenoxy—,
    salts and esters)
    dichlorophenyl arsine
    (phenyl dichloroarsine)
    dichloropropane,
    N.O.S.
    (propane, dichloro—,N.O.S.)
    l,2—dichloropropane (propylene dichloride)
    dichioropropanol,
    N.O.S.
    (propanol,
    dichloro—, N.O.S.)
    dichloropropene, N.O.S.
    (propene, dichloro—, N.O.S.)
    1,3—dichioropropene (1—propene, 1,3—dichloro—)
    dieldnin
    (l,2,3,4,lO,lO—hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—l,4,4a,5,6,7,8,8a—
    octahydro—endo, exo—l ,4:5, 8—dimethanonaphthalene)
    1,2:3,4—diepoxybutane
    (2,2‘—bioxirane)
    diethylarsine (arsine, diethyl—)
    N,N’—diethylhydrazine
    (hydrazine, l,2—diethyl—)
    O,O—diethyl S—methyl ester of phosphorodithioic acid
    (phosphorodithioic acid, 0,0—diethyl
    S—methyl ester)
    O,O—diethylphosphoric acid, O—p—nitrophenyl ester
    (phosphoric acid,
    diethyl p—nitrophenyl ester)
    diethyl phthalate
    71-354

    —62—
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, diethyl ester)
    0,0—diethyl O—2—pyraziriyl phosphorothioate
    (phosphorothioic
    acid,
    O..O—diethyl 0—pyrazinyl ester)
    diethylstilbestrol
    (4,4’—stilbenedio,
    alpha,alpha—diethyl,
    bis(dihydrogen phosphate,
    (E)—)
    dihydrosafrole
    (benzene, 1,2—methylenedioxy—4—propyl)
    3,4—dihydroxy—aipha—(methylamino)methyl benzyl alcohol
    (l,2—benzenediol, 4—l—hydroxy—2—(inethylamino)ethyl-)
    diisopropylfluorophOSphate
    (DFP)
    (phosphorofluoridic acid,
    bis(1—methylethyl) ester)
    dimethoate
    (phosphonodithioic acid,
    0,0—dimethyl
    S—2—(methylamino)-2—oxoethyl
    ester)
    3,3’—dimethoxybenzidine
    (1,l’—biphenyl—4.,4’—diamine,
    3,3’—dimethoxy—)
    p—dimethylaminoazobenzene
    (benzenamine, N,N—dimethyl—4—(phenylazo)—)
    7,12—dimethylbenz a
    arithracene
    (l,2—benzanthracene,
    7,l2—dimethyl—)
    3,3’—dimethylbenzidine
    1,1’—biphenyl)—4,4’—diarnine,
    3,3’—dimethyl—)
    dimethylcarbamoyl chloride
    (carbamaoyl chloride, dimethyl—)
    1,1—dimethyihydrazine
    (hydrazine, 1,1—dimethyl—)
    1,2—dirnethylhydrazine
    (hydrazine, 1,2—dimethyl—)
    3,3—dimethyl—l--(methyl thio)—2—butanone,
    O—(methylamino)carbonylloxime
    (thiofanox)
    alpha, alpha—dimethylphenethylamine
    (ethanarnine,
    l,l—diniethyl—2—phenyl—)
    2,4—dimethylphenol
    (phenol, 2,4—dimethyl—)
    dimethyl phthalate
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, dimethyl ester)
    dimethylsulfate
    (sulfuric acid,
    diinethyl ester)
    dinitrobenZene, N.O.S.
    (benzene, dinitro—, N.O.S.)
    4,6—dinitro—o—cresol
    and salts
    (phenol, 2,4—dinltro—6—rnethyl—,
    and salts)
    2,4—dinitrophenol
    (phenol,
    2,4—diriitro—)
    2,4—dinitrotoluene (benzene, 1—methyl—2,4—dinitro—)
    2,6—dinitrotoluene
    (benzene, l—methyl—2,6—dinitro—)
    di—ri—octyl phthalate
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid,
    dioctyl ester)
    1,4—dioxane (1,4—diethylene oxide)
    diphenylamine
    (benzenamine, N—phenyl—)
    l,2—diphenylhydrazine
    (hydrazine,
    1,2—diphenyl—)
    di—n-propylnitrosamine (N—nitroso—di—n—propylamine)
    disulfoton
    (0,0—diethyl S—2—(ethylthio)ethyl
    phosphorodithioate
    2,4—dithiobiuret (thioimidoc3icarbonic diamide)
    endosulfan
    71-355

    —63—
    (5—norbornene, 2,3—dimethanol, 1,4,5,6,7,7—hexachloro—,
    cyclic sulfite)
    endnin and metabolites
    (l,2,3,4,lO,lO—hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—1,4,4a,5,6,7,8,8a—
    octahydro—endo,endo—1, 4 :5,8—dimethanonaphthalene,
    and inetabolites)
    ethyl carbamate
    (urethan)
    (carbamic acid, ethyl ester)
    ethyl cyanide
    (propanenitrile)
    ethylenebisdithiocarbamic acid, salts
    and esters
    (l,2—ethanediylbiscarbamodithioic acid,
    salts and esters)
    eth~lene~lyco1 monoeth~ylether
    I~hanol, 2—ethox~
    ethyleneimine
    (aiiridine)
    ethylene oxide
    (oxirane)
    ethylenethiourea (2—imidazolidinethione)
    ethyl methacrylate
    (2—properioic acid, 2—methyl—,
    ethyl ester)
    ethyl methariesulfonate
    (methanesulfonic acid, ethyl ester)
    fluoranthene
    (benzoj
    ,k fluorene)
    fluorine
    2—fluoroacetamide (acetamide,
    2—fluoro--)
    fluoroacetic acid,
    sodium salt
    (acetic acid,
    fluoro—, sodium salt)
    formaldehyde
    (methylene oxide)
    formic acid
    (methanoic acid)
    glycidylaldehyde
    (1—propanal, 2,3—epoxy—)
    halomethane, N.O.S.
    heptachlon
    (4,7—methano—1H—idene, 1,4,5,6,7,8,8—heptachioro—
    3a,4,7,7a—tetrahydro—)
    heptachlor epoxide (alpha,
    beta and gamma isomers)
    (4,7—methano—1H—indene, 1,4,5,6,7,8,8—heptachloro—
    2,3—epoxy—3a,4,7,7—tetrahydro—, alpha,
    beta and
    gamma isomers)
    hexachlonobenzene
    (benzene, hexachioro—)
    hexachlorobutadiene (l,3—butadiene, hexachloro—)
    hexachlorocyclohexane
    (all isomers)
    (lindane and isomers)
    hexachlorocyclopentadiene
    (cyclopentadiene, hexachloro—)
    hexachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins
    hexachlorodibenzofurans
    hexachloroethane
    (ethane, hexachloro—)
    1,2,3,4,lO,lO—hexachloro—1,4,4a,5,B,8a—hexahydro—l,4:5,8—
    endo
    ,
    endo—dimethanonaphthalene
    (hexachlorohexahydro—endo,endo—dimethanonaphthalene)
    hexachlorophene
    (2,2‘—methylenebis(3,4,6—tnichlorophenol))
    hexachloropropene
    (propene, hexachloro—)
    hexaethyl tetraphosphate
    (tetraphosphoric
    acid, hexaethyl ester)
    hydrazine (diamine)
    hydrocyanic acid (hydrogen cyanide)
    71-356

    —64—
    hydrofluonic acid
    (hydrogen fluoride)
    hydrogen sulfide
    hydroxydimethylarsine oxide (cacodylic acid)
    indeno(1,2,3—cd) pyrene
    1,lO—(1 ,2—phenylene)pyrene)
    iodomethane
    (methyl
    iodide)
    iron dextran
    (ferric dextran)
    isocyanic acid, methyl ester
    (methyl isocyanate)
    isobutyl alcohol
    (1—propanol, 2—methyl—)
    isosafrole
    (benzene, 1,2—methylenedioxy—4—allyl—)
    ke
    ~0
    ne
    (decachlorooctahydro—1,3, 4—inetheno-2H—
    cyclobutacd)pentalen-2—one)
    lasiocarpine
    (2—butenoic acid, 2—methyl—, 7—(2,3—dihydroxy—
    2—
    (
    l—methoxyethyl
    ) —3—methyl—l—oxobutoxy)inethyll
    2,3,5,7a—tetrahydro--lH—pyrrolizirt—1—yl ester)
    lead and compounds, N.O.S.
    lead acetate
    (acetic acid,
    lead salt)
    lead phosphate (phosphoric acid,
    lead salt)
    lead subacetate
    (lead, bis(acetato—O)tetrahydroxytni—)
    maleic anhydride
    (2,5—furandione)
    nialeic hydrazide (1,2—dihydro—3,6—pyridazinedione)
    malononitrile
    (propanedinitnile)
    meiphalan
    alanine, 3—p—bis(2—chloroethyl)aminophenyl—,
    L—)
    mercury fulminate
    (fulminic acid, mercury salt)
    mercury and compounds, N.0.S.
    methacrylonitnile (2—propenenitrile, 2—methyl—)
    methanethiol
    (thiomethanol)
    methapyri.ene
    (pyridine, 2—(2—dimethylarnino)ethyl—2—thenylamino—)
    metholmyl
    (acetimidic acid, N—(methylcarbamoyl)oxythio—,
    methyl ester)
    methoxychior
    (ethane, l,l,1—trichloro—2,2’—bis(p—methoxyphenyl)—)
    2—inethylaziridine
    (1,2—propylenirnine)
    3—methyicholanthrene
    (benzjaceanthrylerte,
    1,2—dihydro—3—methyl—)
    methylchlorocarbonate
    (carbanochioridic acid,
    methyl ester)
    4,4
    ‘—methylenebis(2—chloroaniline)
    4,4’—methyienebis(2—chlorobenzenamine))
    methyl ethyl
    ketone
    (MEK)
    (2—butanone)
    methyl hydrazine
    (hydrazine, methyl—)
    2—methyilactonitrile
    (propanenitrile,
    2—hydroxy—2—ntethyl—)
    methyl methacrylate
    (2—propenoic acid,
    2—methyl—, methyl ester)
    methyl methanesulfonate (methanesulfonic acid, methyl ester)
    2—methyl—2— (methylthio(propionaldehyde—O—
    (methylcarbonyl) oxime
    (propanal,
    2—methyl—2—(niethylthio)—,
    O—(methylamino)carbonyloxime)
    71-357

    —65—
    N—methyl—N’ —nitro—N—nitrosoguanidine
    (guanidine, N—nitroso—N—methyl—N’—nitro—)
    methyl parathion
    (0,0—dimethyl 0—(4—nitrophenyl) phosphorothioate)
    methylthiouracil
    (4—1H—pyrimidinone, 2,3—dihydro—6—methyl—2—thioxo—)
    mustard gas
    (sulfide, bis(2—chloroethyl)—)
    naphthalene
    l,4—naphthoquinone
    (l,4—naphthalenedione)
    1—naphthylamine
    (alpha—naphthylamine)
    2—naphthylamine
    (beta—naphthylamine)
    1—naphthyi—2—thiourea
    (thiourea, l—naphthalenyl—)
    nickel and compounds, N.O.S.
    nickel carbonyl (nickel tetracarbonyl)
    nickel cyanide
    (nickel
    (II) cyanide)
    nicotine and salts
    (pyridine,
    (S)—3—(1—methyl—2—pyrrolidinyl)—,
    and salts)
    nitric oxide (nitrogen
    (II)
    oxide)
    p—nitroaniline
    (benzenarnine, 4—nitro—)
    nitrobenzene
    (benzene, nitno—)
    nitrogen dioxide (nitrogen
    (IV)
    oxide)
    nitrogen mustard and hydrochloride salt
    (ethanamine, 2—chloro—, N—(2—chloroethyl)—N—methyl—,
    and hydrochloride salt)
    nitrogen mustard N—oxide and hydrochloride salt
    (ethanamine,
    2—chloro—, N—(2—chloroethyl)—N—methyl—,
    N—oxide, and hydrochloride salt)
    nitroglycerin (1,2,3—propanetniol,
    trinitrate)
    4—nitrophenol
    (phenol, 4—nitro—)
    2—nitropropane
    (pro~ne,2—nitro—
    4—ni~roquinoline—l—oxide(quinoline, 4—nitro—l—oxide—)
    nitrosamine, N.O.S.
    N—nitrosodi—n—butylamine (1—butanamine, N—butyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosodiethanolamine
    (ethanol, 2,2’—(nitrosoimino)bis—)
    N—nitrosodiethylamine
    (ethanamine, N—ethyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosodimethylamine (dimethylnitrosamine)
    N—nitroso—N—ethylurea
    (carbamide,
    N—ethyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosornethylethylamine
    (ethanamine, N—methyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitroso—N—methylurea (carbamide,
    N—methyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitroso—N—methylurethane
    (carbamic acid, methylnitroso—, ethyl ester)
    N—nitrosomethylvinylamine
    (ethe~amine,N—methyl—N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosomorpholine (morpholine, N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosonornicotine
    (nornicotine, N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosopipenidine
    (pyridine, hexahydro—, N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrosopyrrolidine
    (pyrrole, tetrahydro—, N—nitroso—)
    N—nitrososarcosine
    (sarcosine, N—nitroso—)
    5—nitro—o—toluidine
    (benzenamine, 2—methyl—5—nitro—)
    octamethylpyrophosphoramide
    (diphosphoramide, octamethyl—)
    osmium tetroxide
    (osmium (VIII) oxide)
    71-358

    —66—
    7—oxabicyclo2.2.lheptane—2,3—dicarboxylic
    acid
    (endothal)
    paraidehyde
    (1,3,5—trioxane, 2,4,6—trimethyl—)
    parathion
    (phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—diethyl O—(p—nitrophenyl)
    ester)
    pentachlorobenzene
    (benzene, pentachioro—)
    pentachiorodibenzo—p—dioxins
    pentachlorodibenzofurans
    pentachioroethane (ethane, pentachloro—)
    pentachioronitrobenzene
    (PCNB)
    (benzene, pentachloronitro—)
    pentachlorophenol
    (phenol, pentachloro—)
    phenacetin
    (acetamide, N—(4—ethoxyphenyl)-)
    phenol
    (benzene, hydroxy—)
    phenylenediamine (benzenediamine)
    phenylmercury acetate
    (mercury, acetatophenyl—)
    N—phenylthiourea
    (thiourea, phenyl—)
    phosgene
    (carbonyl chloride)
    phosphine (hydrogen phosphide)
    phosphorodithioic acid, 0,0—diethyl S—(ethylthio)methyl
    ester
    (phorate)
    phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—dimethyl
    O—p—((dimethylamino)sulfonyl)phenyl
    ester
    (famphur)
    phthaiic acid esters, N.O.S.
    (benzene, 1,2—dicarboxylic acid, esters,
    N,.O.S.)
    phthalic anhydride
    (1,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid anhydride)
    2—picoline
    (pyridine, 2—methyl—)
    polychiorinated biphenyl, N.O.S.
    potassium cyanide
    potassium silver cyanide
    (argentate(l—),
    dicyano—, potassium)
    pronamide
    (3,5-dichloro—N—(1,1—dimethyl—2—propynyl)benzamide)
    1,3—propane sultone
    (1,2—oxathiolane, 2,2—dioxide)
    n—propyiamine (1—propanamine)
    propyithiouracil
    (2,3—dihydro—6—propyl—2—thioxo—4(iN)—pynimidinone)
    2—propyn—1—ol (propargyl alcohol)
    pyridine
    reserpine
    (yohimban—16—carboxylic
    acid,
    11,17—dimethoxy—
    18—(3,4,5—trimethoxybenzoyl)oxy3—,
    methyl
    ester)
    resorcinol
    (1,3—benzenediol)
    saccharin and salts
    (i,2—benzoisothiazolin—3—one, 1,1—dioxide, and salts)
    safrole
    (benzene, 1,2—methylenedioxy—4—allyl—)
    selenious acid (selenium dioxide)
    71-359

    —67—
    selenium and compounds,
    N.O.S.
    selenium sulfide (sulfur selenide)
    selenourea
    (carbamimidoselenoic acid)
    silver and compounds,
    N.O.S.
    silver cyanide
    sodium cyanide
    streptozotocin
    (D—giucopyranose, 2—deoxy—2—(3—methyl—3—nitrosoureido)—)
    strontium sulfide
    strychnine and salts
    (strychnidin—lO—one,
    and salts)
    l,2,4,5—tetrachlorobenzene
    (benzene, 1,2,4,5—tetrachioro—)
    Tetrachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins
    2,3,7, 8—tetrachlorodibenzo—p—dioxin
    (TCDD)
    (dibenzo—p—dioxin, 2,3,7,8—tetrachioro—)
    tetrachlorodibenzofurans
    tetrachloroethane,
    N.O.S.
    (ethane, tetrachloro—, N.O.S.)
    1,1,1, 2—tetrachloroethane (ethane,
    1,1,1,2—tetrachloro—)
    i,l,2,2—tetrachlonoethane
    (ethane, l,l,2,2—tetrachloro—)
    tetrachloroethene
    (perchioroethylene)
    tetrachloromethane
    (carbon tetrachlonide)
    2,3,4,6—tetrachlorophenoi
    (phenol,
    2,3,4,6—tetrachloro—)
    tetraethyldithiopyrophosphate
    (dithiopyrophosphoric acid, tetraethyl ester)
    tetraethyl
    lead (plumbane, tetraethyl—)
    tetraethylpyrophosphate
    (pyrophosphoric acid,
    tetraethyl ester)
    tetranitromethane (methane, tetranitro—)
    thallium and compounds, N.O.S.
    thallic oxide
    (thallium (III)
    oxide)
    thallium
    (I)
    acetate
    (acetic acid,
    thallium
    (I)
    salt)
    thallium
    (I) carbonate
    (carbonic acid, dithallium
    (I) salt)
    thallium
    (I)
    chloride
    thallium
    (I) nitrate
    (nitric acid,
    thallium
    (I) salt)
    thallium seienite
    thallium
    (I) sulfate (sulfuric acid,
    thallium
    (I)
    salt)
    thioacetamide (ethanethioamide)
    thiosemicarbazide
    (hydrazinecarbothioamide)
    thiourea
    (carbarnide,
    thio—)
    thiuram (bis(dimethylthiocarbamoyl) disulfide)
    toluene
    (benzene, methyl—)
    toluenediamine
    ,
    N.0.S.
    (diaminotoluene N.O.S.)
    2,4—toluenediamine
    2,6—toluenediarnine
    3,4—toluenediamine
    toluene diisocyanate (benzene, 1,3—diisocyanatomethyl—)
    o—toluidine hydrochloride
    (benzeneamine, 2—methyl—, hydrochloride)
    toxaphene (camphene, octachloro—)
    tnibromomethane
    (bromoform)
    i,2,4—tnichlorobenzene (benzene, 1,2,4—trichloro—)
    1,1,1—tnichloroethane
    (methyl chloroform)
    i,l,2—tnichioroethane
    (ethane, i,1,2—trichloro—)
    71-360

    —68—
    trichloroethene
    (tnichloroethylene)
    trichloromethanethiol
    (methanethiol, tnichioro—)
    trichloromonofluoromethane
    (methane, trichlorofiuoro—)
    2,4,5—trichiorophenol
    (phenol, 2,4,5—trichloro—)
    2,4,6—trichlorophenol
    (phenol, 2,4,6—tnichioro—)
    2,4,5—trichiorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4,5—T)
    (acetic acid, 2,4,5—tnichlorophenoxy—)
    2,4,5—trichlorophenoxypropionic acid
    (2,4,5—TP)
    (silvex)
    (propionic acid, 2—(2,4,5—trichlorophenoxy)—)
    trichioropropane, N.O.S.
    (propane, trichioro—, N.O.S.)
    1,2,3—trichloropropane
    (propane, 1,2,3—trichioro—)
    0,0,0—triethyl phosphorothioate
    (phosphorothioic acid, O,O,0—tniethyl ester)
    sym—tninitrobenzene
    (benzene, 1,3,5—trinitro—)
    tris(1—aziridinyl) phosphine sulfide
    (phosphine sulfide, tnis(l—aziridinyl)—)
    tr is(2, 3—d ibromopropyl) phosphate
    (1—propanol, 2,3—dibromo—, phosphate)
    trypan blue
    (2,7—naphthalenedisulfonic
    acid, 3,3 ‘—(3,3’
    dimethyl(l,1’—biphenyl)—4,4’—diyl)bis(azo)lbis(5—
    amino—4—hydroxy—,
    tetrasodiurn salt)
    undecamethylenediamine, N,N’—bis(2—chlorobenzylamine),
    dihydrochioride
    (N,N’—undecamethylenebis)2—chlorobenzylamine),
    dihydrochloride)
    uracil mustard
    (uracii, 5—bis(2—chloroethyl)amino—)
    vanadic acid,
    ammoniuni salt
    (ainmonium vanadate)
    vanadium pentoxide
    (vanadium
    (V)
    oxide)
    vinyl chloride
    (ethene,
    chioro—)
    zinc cyanide
    zinc phosphide
    (Source:
    Amended at
    10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    effective
    71-361

    —69—
    TITLE
    35:
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    SUBTITLE G:
    WASTE DISPOSAL
    CHAPTER
    I:
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    SUBCHAPTER
    c:
    HAZARDOUS WASTE OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
    PART 722
    STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO GENERATORS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    SUBPART A:
    GENERAL
    Purpose, Scope and Applicability
    Hazardous Waste Determination
    USEPA Identification Numbers
    SUBPART
    B:
    THE MANIFEST
    General Requirements
    Acquisition of Manifests
    Number
    of Copies
    Use of the Manifest
    SUBPART C:
    PRE-TRANSPORT REQUIREMENTS
    Section
    722.140
    722.141
    722.142
    722. 143
    722.1
    ~
    Recordkeeping
    Annual Reporting
    Exception Reporting
    Additional Reporting
    !~ecia1~guirements
    for Generators of between 100
    andT~0ö
    kilograms per month
    —~
    ______
    SUBPART E:
    SPECIAL CONDITIONS
    Section
    722.150
    722.151
    A
    ppendix
    A
    International Shipments
    Farmers
    Form—Annual Report
    (EPA Form 8700—13)
    (Repealed)
    Section
    722.110
    722.111
    722.112
    Section
    722.120
    722.121
    722.122
    722.123
    Section
    722.130
    722.131
    722.132
    722.133
    722.134
    Packaging
    Labeling
    Marking
    Placarding
    Accumulation Time
    SUBPART D:
    RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING
    71-362

    —70—
    AUTHORITY:
    Implementing Section 22.4 and authorized by Section
    27
    of the Environmental Protection Act
    (Ill. Rev. Stat.
    1985,
    ch.
    ill
    1/2, pars.
    1022.4 and 1027).
    SOURCE:
    Adopted in R8l—22,
    43 PCB 427, at
    S Ill. Reg. 9781,
    effective as noted
    in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended and
    codified in R8l—22,
    45 PCB 317, at
    6 Ill. Reg. 4828, effective as
    noted in
    35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 700.106; amended
    in R82—18,
    51 PCB 31,
    at
    7 111. 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 Iii. Reg.
    1131, effective January
    2,
    1986;
    amended
    in
    R86—l at
    10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    ;
    amended in R86—l9 at 10 Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    SUBPART B:
    THE MANIFEST
    Section 722.120
    General Requirements
    a)
    A generator who transports,
    or offers for
    transportation, hazardous waste for off—site treatment,
    storage
    or disposal must prepare
    a manifest before
    transporting the waste off—site.
    b)
    A generator must designated on the manifest one facility
    which
    is permitted
    to handle the waste described on the
    manifest.
    C)
    A generator may also designate on the manifest one
    alternate facility which is permitted to handle his
    waste in
    the event
    an emergency prevents delivery of the
    waste
    to the primary designated facility.
    d)
    If the transporter
    is unable to deliver the hazardous
    waste
    to the designated facility or the alternate
    facility,
    the generator must either designate another
    facility or
    instruct the transporter
    to return the
    waste.
    e)
    The
    -
    re~jr~
    this Subpartdo not appl~to
    ~azardous
    waste
    proauced ~y ~
    than
    100~k9bÜE 1essthan T~O~
    k~g
    in
    a calend
    an
    month
    where:
    1)
    The waste
    is reclaimed under
    a contractual
    igreémeñt pursuai~tTbwhich:
    A)
    The ~pe
    of waste
    and frej~ency_ofshipments
    are sRecifie
    in the a~eement:
    B)
    The vehicle used
    to transport the waste
    to the
    ~cUn~facfl~~
    and to delive~rerrated
    material back to
    ~enefato~is
    ó~rnedand
    .2perated by ~
    and
    71-363

    —71—
    2)
    The~nerator maintains aco~’of_the reclamation
    ~reementJnEis
    files fof~j~iodof
    at
    least
    three y~arsafté~termf~ationor expiration of
    the
    ag~reement.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
    effective
    )
    SUBPART
    C:
    PRE-TRANSPORT REQUIREMENTS
    Section 722.134
    Accumulation Time
    a)
    A Except as provided
    in subsections
    (d),(e)
    or
    (f),
    a
    genérator may acciimulate hazardous wasEè on—site for
    90
    days or less without a permit or without having interim
    status provided that:
    1)
    The waste
    is placed
    in containers and the generator
    complies with Subpart I
    of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725 or
    the waste
    is placed
    in tanks and the generator
    complies with Subpart
    J
    of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
    725
    except 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 725.293;
    2)
    The date upon which each period of accumulation
    begins
    is clearly marked and visible
    for inspection
    on each container;
    3)
    While being accumulated on—site, each container and
    tank
    is labeled or marked clearly with the words,
    ~Hazardous Waste”,
    and
    4)
    The generator complies with the requirements for
    owners or
    operators in Subparts C and D in 35 Ill.
    Adin.
    Code 725 and with 35
    Ill.
    Adni.
    Code 725.116.
    b)
    A generator who accumulates hazardous waste
    for more
    than 90 days
    is an operator of
    a storage facility and is
    subject
    to the requirements of 35 Ill. Adm. Code 724 and
    725 and the permit requirements
    of
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code
    702, 703 and 705 unless he has been granted an extension
    of the 90—day period.
    Such extension may
    be granted by
    the Agency
    if hazardous wastes must remain on—site for
    longer than 90 days due
    to unforeseen,
    temporary, and
    uncontrollable circumstances.
    An extension of up to 30
    days may be granted at the discretion of the Agency on a
    dase—by--case basis.
    c)
    1)
    A generator may accumulate as much as
    55 gallons of
    hazardous waste or one quart of acutely hazardous
    waste listed
    in 35
    Ill.
    Adm. Code 721.133(e)
    in
    containers at or near any point of generation where
    wastes initially accumulate, which
    is under
    the
    71-364

    —72—
    control
    of the operator of the process generating
    the waste, without a permit or interim status and
    without complying with paragraph
    (a) provided he:
    A)
    Complies with 35 111.
    Adni.
    Code 725.271,
    725.272 and 725.273(a);
    and
    B)
    marks his containers either with the words
    “Hazardous Waste”
    or with other words that
    identify the contents of the containers.
    2)
    A generator who accumulates either hazardous waste
    or
    acutely hazardous waste listed in 35 Ill. Adm.
    Code 721.133(e)
    in excess of
    the amounts listed
    in
    paragraph
    (c)(l)
    at or near any point of generation
    must, with respect to that amount of excess waste,
    comply within three days with paragraph
    (a)
    or
    other
    applicable provisions of this chapter.
    During
    the three day period the generator must
    continue to comply with paragraphs
    (c)(1).
    The
    generator must mark the container holding the
    excess accumulation
    of hazardous waste with the
    date the excess amount began accumulating.
    ~J_
    A~eneratorwho generates greater than 100 kilograms but
    iess than1~OO kilbgram.s of haiaidouswastè
    in a
    calendar month ~y
    accumulate hazardous waite on—site
    iàr
    180 days
    or less without
    a
    or without hav~p.g
    ~irite~ith
    status ~rovidéd that:
    1)
    The quanti~yof
    waste
    accumulated on—site never
    exceeds 6~O0kilograms:
    2)
    The ~g~nerator complies with the requirements of
    Subsec?iàn
    (a)(f)
    35 111. Adm. Code 725.276 ~
    the generator
    need not co~p11~h:
    3)
    The generator complies with the requirements
    of
    ~ibsectiói~s (a)f2) and
    (a)(3)
    35 Iii. Adm.Code
    1~5.SubpaiE C;
    and
    -
    4)
    The yenerator complies with
    the following
    £~~1rewents:
    A)
    At all
    times
    there must be at least one
    emplóyee i~itheron the premises of~ñ~ca11
    ~f1.e., available to respond
    to
    an emergency~~
    re~chi9 the facility within a shàrt period of
    tirne)
    with the ~s~onsTbIIity
    for cóbrd~a~
    all emergency response measures specified
    in
    ~ibsection (d)(3D~
    The employee
    is the emergenc~coordinator.
    71-365

    —73—
    B)
    The ~nerator
    must post the following
    *
    information next to the
    tele_phone:
    1)
    The name and te1e~~9nenumber of the
    emer~encycoo
    r~Th
    aton :
    -
    ii)
    Location of fire extin~uishersand
    spill
    controlmaterial,
    and
    if present, fire
    alarm:
    and
    iii) The telephone number
    of
    t~_!ire
    d~partment,unless the facility has
    a
    ~irect alarm.
    £1
    The g~eneratorniust ensure that all e~ioyees
    are thorou_
    l~~ami1iar
    with pr~er waste
    ~ndlin~
    and
    em~ency
    procedures,
    relevant to
    their_nes~onsibilitiesduninj__normal facili~y
    operaUàns and er~eriT~ii~:
    D)
    The emer~1~~coordinaton
    on designee must
    respond toany~ine~j~ñcies
    t~i~~rise.The
    ~piicable
    responses a~è
    a~
    f~oilows:
    i)
    In_the event of a fire, call the fire
    ~~artmènt~n
    at~~ptto extinguish usin~
    afT~~~i~h
    e r
    --
    ii)
    In the event
    of
    a_~2.il1, contain the flow
    of hazafdous~aste to
    ET~
    extent
    ~osiib1e,
    and as soon
    asJsp r a
    ~_~1 e~
    clean up the hazar~us~aste and any~
    contaminated materials or
    soil:
    iii) j~theeven~pf a
    _~,_~plosionor
    -—
    other
    reiiàse ~hTch could threaten human
    ~a1th
    ou?side
    ?W
    ~àcili~
    on whi~the
    1en~~torhas kno~.iIec3~e?hata
    spill
    has
    ré~he6sur~facewater,
    the generator must
    iiTate lt~~
    The
    ~aLio~I
    Response
    cent
    jusi~ its
    4~hountoll free
    nuinber~4~j~0~).__The
    rép&rt must
    Th~1udethe fol1owin9iñformatio~: The
    name~address and USEPA Identification
    Number
    (35 IlL
    Adm.
    ~22~112J~
    of the
    __
    ?ii~and
    ty~eof
    incident
    (e.g.,
    ipili or fire); Quanti~,y
    an~3type of hazardous waste involved
    in
    The
    incident;
    ExEen.t ofJ~~~es,
    Tf
    any
    and.
    e)
    ~enerator
    who_~erierates
    Lneater
    than 100 kilograms but
    less EhanT~00kilo~arnsof hazardous waste in
    a
    71-366

    —74—
    calendarj~nthand_who must
    sport the waste,
    or
    ~fféf
    the wastéfor
    trans ortation, over
    a distan~èof
    0 miles
    or more fono f—site treatment,
    stor~~_~
    6i~posalmayaccumulateházardouswaste on-i1?e
    for 270
    -
    —-
    .-
    —.—~-
    ~—r~
    k—
    ~___
    —~
    da~or less without a perm~__~without havia9 interim
    st~~_~ovidedthatthe géneratór complies ~ftththe
    requi.rernent~sof Subsection ~6).
    f)
    ~fl~ratorwho_~eneratesgreater than 100 kilograms but
    less
    thanl
    0ki1ograi~iófhazardous wastè f~a~
    calendar month and who acctim~lates
    ir~~i~
    waste
    in
    ~antitie~
    ~xded~
    ~Ub0
    k~Thraccum~Iáteshaza~dous
    waste for moré than I~0dais (or~Torióret~an~a~s
    ~flthe jenera~órmust transporE
    t
    a~té~or offer the
    -
    -~
    r-
    —-—
    waste ton transportation, over a ãistanceof 200 miles
    or
    more)
    i~an operator eTa
    sto
    efacility
    and
    is
    sub~ct~he
    reaui~ementsof~3Hi. Adñi~Code~1~4
    and
    __
    __
    ~__7 0~
    unless_th~ neratorhas_bee~~añ~ed
    an exten~Thnto
    The
    180~ay(~~
    d~
    a~i~~eriod.Suc
    ~
    if ha~ardous
    wastes must
    remain
    on-site
    for 1on~ertT~an~6~day~
    (or
    ~
    dais
    if ~fl~abIi~)
    due to unforeseen, te~c~a~3~
    and uncontro11able~ircumstan~es. An~xEènsionof up to
    -
    _—-———
    —~
    3u days may be granted at the discretion of the Agency
    ona case-by—casè ~
    ——
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
    effective
    )
    SUBPART
    0:
    RECORDKEEPING AND
    REPORTING
    Section 722.144
    Special Requirements for Generators of between
    -
    ---
    --
    —a-
    -
    _—
    Tt)1)
    and~1ô60
    kilograms per month
    A generatOr w
    _Senerates greater
    than 100 kilo’~jmsbut less
    -
    ~~—~—--x
    -
    _—_—
    -
    —__———_———~-—_——
    —r—-
    tnan iu0u kilograms of hazardous waste
    in a calendar month
    is
    ~~R.~_f~om
    ?he
    re~en?i~ofthis Sübpar?
    ~~ept
    for the
    recordke~~equirements~_Se~tfon
    ~22:TT~T~TT~c)
    ~d
    (d), and
    Thérementi~~EThn
    722
    —-
    -
    (Source:
    Added at 10
    Ill Reg.
    ,
    effective
    )
    71-367

    —_75—
    TITLE
    35:
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
    SUBTITLE G: WASTE DISPOSAL
    CHAPTER
    I:
    POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
    SUBCHAPTER
    C:
    HAZARDOUS WASTE OPERATING REQUIREMENTS
    PART 723
    STANDARDS APPLICABLE TO
    TRANSPORTERS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
    SUBPART A:
    GENERAL
    Section
    723.110
    Scope
    723.111
    USEPA Identification Number
    723.112
    Transfer Facility Requirements
    SUBPART B:
    COMPLIANCE WITH THE MANIFEST
    SYSTEM AND RECORDKEEPING
    Section
    723.120
    The Manifest System
    723.121
    Compliance with the Manifest
    723.122
    Recordkeeping
    SUBPART
    C:
    HAZARDOUS WASTE DISCHARGES
    Section
    723.130
    Immediate Action
    723.131
    Discharge Clean Up
    AUTHORITY:
    Authorized by Section 27 and implementing Section
    22.4 of the Environmental Protection Act (Ill. Rev. Stat.
    1985,
    Ch. 111 1/2, pars.
    1027 and 1022.4).
    SOURCE:
    Adopted in R8l—22,
    43 PCB 427, at
    5 Ill.
    Reg. 9781,
    effective
    as noted
    in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended and
    codified in R8l—22,
    45 PCB
    17,
    at
    6 Ill. Reg. 4828,
    effective
    as
    noted in 35
    Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended
    in R84—9, at
    9 Ill.
    Reg.
    11961, effective July 24, 1985; amended in R86—l9, at 10
    Ill.
    Reg.
    ,
    effective
    SUBPART B:
    COMPLIANCE WITH THE MANIFEST SYSTEM AND
    RECORDKEEPING
    Section 723.120
    The Manifest System
    a)
    A transporter may not accept hazardous waste from
    a
    generator unless
    it is accompanied by a manifest, signed
    by the generator
    in accordance with the provisions
    of
    P~r~
    35
    Ill. Adm. Code 722.
    71-368

    —76—
    b)
    Before transporting the hazardous waste,
    the transporter
    must sign and date the manifest acknowledging acceptance
    of the hazardous waste from the generator.
    The
    transporter must return a signed copy of the generator
    before leaving the generator’s property.
    c)
    The transporter must ensure that the manifest
    accompanies the hazardous waste.
    d)
    A transporter who delivers a hazardous waste to another
    transporter or
    to the designated facility must:
    I)
    Obtain the date of delivery and the handwritten
    signature of that transporter
    or
    of the owner
    or
    operator of the designated facility on the
    manifest; and
    2
    Retain one copy of the manifest in accordance with
    Section 723.122; and
    3)
    Give the remaining copies
    of the manifest
    to the
    accepting transporter on designated facility.
    e)
    The requirements of
    r~grep1~Subsections
    (c),
    (d) and
    (f) o~th~ ~eet4on do not apply to wáIE~ (bulk
    shipment) transporters
    if:
    1)
    The hazardous waste
    is delivered by water
    (bulk
    shipment)
    to the designated facility; and
    2)
    A shipping paper containing all the information
    required on the manifest
    (excluding
    the EPA
    identification numbers, generator certification and
    signatures) accompanies
    the hazardous waste; and
    3)
    The delivering transporter obtains the date of
    delivery and handwritten signature of the owner or
    operator designated facility on either
    the manifest
    or the shipping paper;
    and
    4)
    The person delivering the hazardous waste to the
    initial water
    (bulk shipment)
    transporter obtains
    the date of delivery and signature of the water
    (bulk shipment) transporter on the manifest and
    forwards
    it to the designated facility;
    and
    5)
    A copy of the shipping paper or manifest is
    retained by each water
    (bulk shipment) transporter
    in accordance with Section
    723.122.
    f)
    For shipments involving nail transportation,
    the
    requirements of p~r~grapheSubsections
    (c),
    (d) and
    (e)
    do not apply and the fo11owTñ~réguirementsdo apply:
    71-369

    —77—
    1)
    When accepting hazardous waste from a non—rail
    transporter,
    the initial rail transporter must:
    A)
    Sign and date the manifest acknowledging
    acceptance of the hazardous waste;
    B)
    Return a signed copy of the manifest to the
    non—rail transporter;
    C)
    Forward at least three copies of the man~~est
    to:
    i)
    The next non—rail transporter,
    if any;
    or,
    ii)
    The designated facility,
    if the shipment
    is delivered
    to that facility by nail;
    or
    iii) The last rail transporter designated to
    handle the waste in the United States;
    D)
    Retain one copy of
    the manifest and rail
    shipping paper
    in accordance with Section
    723.122.
    2)
    Rail transporters must ensure that a shipping paper
    containing all the information required on the
    manifest
    (excluding the EPA identification numbers,
    generator certification and signatures)
    accompanies
    the hazardous waste at all
    times.
    (Board Note.
    ——
    Intermediate rail transporters are
    not required to sign either the manifest or
    shipping papen.)
    3)
    When delivering hazardous waste to the designated
    facility,
    a rail transporter must:
    A)
    Obtain the date
    of delivery and handwritten
    signature of the owner or
    operator of the
    designated facility on the manifest or the
    shipping paper
    (if the manifest has not been
    received by the facility); and
    B)
    Retain a copy of the manifest or signed
    shipping paper in accordance with Section
    723.122.
    4)
    When delivering hazardous waste
    to a non—rail
    transporter
    a rail transporter must:
    71-370

    —78—
    A)
    Obtain the date of
    delivery
    and
    the
    handwritten signature of the next non—rail
    transporter
    on the manifest; and
    B)
    Retain
    a copy of the manifest in accordance
    with Section
    723.122.
    5)
    Before accepting hazardous waste from a rail
    transporter, a non-rail transporter must sign and
    date the manifest and provide a copy of the rail
    transporter.
    g)
    Transporters who transport hazardous waste out of the
    United States must:
    1)
    indicate on the manifest the date the hazardous
    waste left the United States; and
    2)
    sign the manifest and retain one copy
    in accordance
    with Section
    723.122(c); and
    3)
    return
    a signed copy of the manifest to the
    generator.
    h)
    ~tran~porter
    tran~portin~ghazardous waste from
    a
    1ner~torwh~generatesgreater ?Han
    100 kilo~~rnsbut
    les~than l~00
    I~~amCof hä
    á~doui waste
    in
    a
    -
    calenda r ~bnth
    ne ed
    r~
    ~
    -
    ~
    re~fremsnts of
    this
    Section or those of Section 72~122~rovidedthat:
    1)
    The waste
    i s
    bein9~E.~por
    t~
    ~u~r
    S
    uant
    to
    a
    recTàñiàtion
    aj~eement
    provfded
    for
    in
    35
    Iil.
    Adin.
    CodeT2 2.
    I20 (e)
    -—
    2)
    The
    transporter records, on
    a l~or shi~pin~
    ~
    n
    fo~
    ~h
    ib ~pm~nt
    A)
    The name,
    address,
    and USEPA Identification
    Number735Il1.Adm.
    Code 722.fl2)
    of
    the
    ~nerato~
    of the waste
    B)
    The guantit~
    of
    wa~teaccepted
    C)
    All_shi~pin~
    information required
    by
    the
    Uñiiid
    S~tes~artmentófTra~orta?Ton
    21.
    The
    date
    the
    waste
    is
    acc~p~ed;
    and
    ~j
    The
    trans~ort~r
    carrj.es this record when
    transporti~gwasti to the r~lamatiónfaci~fl~an4
    71-371

    —79—
    4)
    The transporter
    retains these
    records fora p~riod
    of at leas?th~jè~ars
    after
    teri~inationon
    ~pirati5n
    of the agreement.
    (Source:
    Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
    ,
    effective
    )
    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 ~7z~-day of
    -
    ,
    1986,
    by a vote of
    (..-°
    ~
    ~Or6Ehy M. Gunn,~l~rk
    Illinois Pollution Control Board
    71-372

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