1. 73.5~
      2. 73-508
      3. 73-510
      4. 73.512
      5. 73.513
      6. 73.514
      7. 73-515
      8. 73.516
      9. 73.517
      10. 73.519
      11. 73.520
      12. 73-521
      13. 73-523
      14. 73-524
      15. 73.526
      16. 73.527
      17. 73-529
      18. 73-531
      19. 73.535
      20. 73.536
      21. 73.537
      22. 73.538
      23. 73.539
      24. 73.540
      25. 73-541
      26. 73.542
      27. 73-543
      28. 73.545
      29. 73-546
      30. 73.547
      31. 73.548
      32. 73.549
      33. 73-550
      34. 73-551

ILLINOIS POLLUTION CONTROL BOARD
October 23, 1986
IN THE MATTER OF:
RCRA
UPDATE, USEPA REGULATIONS
)
R86-l9
(2/1/86 THROUGH 3/31/86)
FINAL ORDER.
ADOPTED RULE.
ORDER OF THE BOARD
(by 3. Anderson):
On July 11,
1986,
the Board proposed to amend
the RCRA rules
to correspond with United States Environmental protection Agency
amendments adopted between January 31 and March
31,
1986.
The
proposal was published on August 15,
1986,
at 10 Ill. Reg.
13998.
The Board received public comment as
is detailed
in the
accompanying Opinion.
The text of the amendments as modified
appears below.
The Board directs that the amendments be filed
and published
in the Illinois Register no sooner than November
19,
1986.
The Board will withhold filing until after
that date
to receive any final motions from the agencies involved with RCRA
authorization.
The complete text of the adopted amendments
is as follows.
Striking and underlining
refer
to the text of the rules as
amended
in docket R86—1.
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
703.122
Specific Inclusions
in Permit Program
703.123
Specific Exclusions from Permit Program
703.124
Discharges of Hazardous Waste
73-475

—2--
Purpose and Scope
Permits by Rule
Application by Existing HWM 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
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
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
SUBPART F:
PERMIT CONDITIONS
Section
703.241
Establishing Permit Conditions
Reapplications
Initial Applications
Federal Permits
(Repealed)
SUBPART C:
AUTHORIZATION BY RULE AND INTERIM STATUS
703.125
703.126
703.127
Section
703.140
703.141
703.150
703.151
703.152
703
.
153
703.154
703.155
703.156
703.157
703.158
SUBPART
D:
APPLICATIONS
Section
703.221
703. 222
703.223
703. 224
703.225
703. 230
703
231
73.476

—3--
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
(I1l~. Rev.
Stat.
1985,
ch.
ill 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.
13284,
effective July 29,
1986;
amended
in R86—l at
10
Ill. Reg.
14093,
effective August 12,
1986;
amended
in R86—l9 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 99
deys-~res the time periods provided
in 35
Ill.
AdTn.
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.
Adm.
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
73-477

—4.-
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
d++~ 270.1(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 oper&tor
first becomes subject to the standards in 35 ‘ill.
Adm. Code 725;
3)
For generators which generate greater than 100
kilograms but less than 1000 kilograms of hazardous
waste
in
a calendar month and treat,
store or
dispose of these wastes on—site,
by March 24,
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.
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
1-ias 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
73-478

—5.--
attributable to ambiguities in 35
Ill. Adm. Code 720,
721 or
725.
d)
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
73-479

—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
Section
720.101
Purpose, Scope and Applicability
720.102
Availability of Information;
Confidentiality of
Information
720.103
Use of Number and Gender
SUBPART B:
DEFINITIONS
Section
720.110
Definitions
720.111
References
SUBPART
C:
RULEMAKING PETITIONS AND OTHER PROCEDURES
Section
720.120
Rulemaking
720.121
Alternative Equivalent Testing Methods
720.122
Waste Delisting
720.130
Procedures
for Solid Waste Determinations
720.131
Solid Waste Determinations
720.132
Boiler Determinations
720.133
Procedures for Determinations
720.140
Additional regulation of certain hazardous waste
Recycling Activities on a case—by—case Basis
720.141
Procedures
for case—by—case regulation of hazardous
waste Recycling Activities
Appendix A
Overview of 40 CFR, Subtitle C Regulations
AUTHORITY:
Implementing Section 22.4 and authorized by Section
27 of the Environmental Protection Act
(Ill. Rev.
Stat.
1985,
ch.
111 1/2, pars.
1022.4 and 1027).
/
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R81-22,
43 PCB 427,
at 5
Ill.
Reg.
9781,
effective as noted in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended and
codified in R8l—22,
45 PCB 317,
at
6 Ill.
Reg.
4828, effective as
noted in 35
Ill.
Adrn.
Code 700.106;
amended
in R82—19 at
7
Ill.
Reg.
14015,
effective Oct.
12,
1983;
amended
in R84—9,
53 PCB
131
at
9
Ill.
Reg.
11819,
effective July 24,
1985; amended
in R85—22
at
10 Ill. Reg.
968, effective January
2, 1986;
amended
in R86—1
at
10 Ill.
Reg.
13998, effective August 12,
1986;
amended
in R86—
19
at 10 Ill.
Reg.
,
effective
73-480

—7—
SUBPART B:
DEFINITIONS
Section 720.110
Definitions
When used
in 35
Ill. Adm. 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 chamber and the primary
73.481

—8—
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,
73-482

—9.-
or that is regulated under
40 CFR 26l.6(c)(2)
or 40 CFR
266.Subpart F or 35
Ill. Adm. Code 721.106(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. Mm.
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.
73-483

—10--
“EPA region” means
the states and territories found
in
any one of the following ten regions:
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 construction of the
73-484

—11—
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.
“Hazardous waste” means a hazardous waste as defined
in
35
Ill. Mm. 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.
73-485

—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. Mm.
Code 725, Appendix
E
for
examples.)
“Industrial
furnace” means any of the following enclosed
devices that are integral components of manufacturing
processes and
that use controlled flame devices to
accomplish recovery of materials or energy:
Cement kilns
Lime kilns
Aggregate kilns
Phosphate kilns
Coke ovens
Blast furnaces
Smelting, melting and refining furnaces
(including
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
73.486

—13—
Combustion devices used in the recovery of sulfur
values from spent sulfuric acid
Any other
such device as the Agency determines
to
be an “Industrial Furnace” on the basis of one or
more of
the following factors:
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
73.487

—14---
closure.
“Landfill” means
a disposal facility or part of a
facility where hazardous waste is placed
in or on land
and which
is 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
require~dby 35 Ill. Mm. 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
73.488

—15—
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.
“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. Mm. 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
73-489

—16—
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.
“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 li~uid
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 1000
kg
of hazardous waste
in
a
calendar month.
“Solid waste” means
a solid waste as defined
in
35 Ill.
Mm.
Code 721.102.
“State” means any of the several states, the District of
73-490

—17—
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.
“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.
73.491

—18—
“Transporter” means a person engaged
in the off—site
transportation of hazardous waste by air, rail, highway
or water.
“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,
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
irifluent 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
73.492

—19—
waste as defined
in 35 Ill. Adm. Code 721.103;
and
Meets the definition of tank in 35
Ill. Adm. 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.
“Well
injection” (See “underground injection”).
(Source:
Amended
at 10
111 Reg.
effective
73-493

—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
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 WA~STES
Section
721.110
Criteria
for
Identifying the Characteristics of
Hazardous Waste
721.111
Criteria for Listing Hazardous Waste
Section
SUBPART C:
CHARACTERISTICS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE
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
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
Table
A
Representative Sampling Methods
EP Toxicity Test Procedures
Chemical Analysis Test Methods
Analytical Characteristics of Organic Chemicals
(Repealed)
Section
721
.
101
721.102
721
.
103
721.104
721
.
105
721
.
106
721.107
73.494

—21—
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—
Dioxins and Dibenzofurans
Appendix
3
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.
111 1/2,
pars.
1022.4 and 1027).
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R81—22,
43 PCB 427, at
5 Ill. Reg.
9781,
effective as noted in 35
Ill. Adm.
Code 700.106; amended and
codified
in R81—22,
45 PCB 317, at
6
Ill. Reg.
4828, effective as
noted
in 35
Ill. Mm.
Code 700.106; amended
in R82—l8, 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 8
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.
14002,
effective August 12,
1986;
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.
Code
702,
703,
705
and
722
through
~5
726
and
establishes
special
management
requirements
for
hazardous
waste
produced
by
conditionally exemp~
small
quantity
generators
and hazardous waste which
is
~e~-1
-~eused7 recycled
e~ ree~4med.
73-495

—22—
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
slags 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.
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:
73.496

—23—
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
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
73.497

—24—
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 exempt small quantity
generator
in a calendar month if
it generates ~ess ~thert
~O89no more than 100 kilograms of hazardous waste
in
that month.
35
Ill. Adm. 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 +h+
ertd +k+ and
(j),
a
conditionally
exempt
small quantity generator’s hazardous wastes are 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)7
end ~(-3~-
and
(j).
c)
Hazardous waste that is reeye~edend ~the~4~e~e-luded
-frcm -~egt~et4ei’t~y See~4en~
end
~
35 ~
Ad~ eede
6-~36notsubject
to
regulation or that
is subject only to 35 Ill. Adm Code
722.111, 722.112,
722.140(c)
and 722.141 is not included
in the quantity determinations of this See~4on~Partand
35 Ill. Adm.
Code 722 through 726 and
is not subject to
any requirements of th4s 6ee~4enthoseParts.
Hazardous
waste that is subject to the requirements
of Section
721.106(b)
and
(c)
and
35
Ill. Adm. Code 726.Subparts C,
D7 and
F
is included in
the quantity determinations of
this See~4enPartand
is subject to the requirements of
~th4s
See~ienthisPart and 35
Ill. Adm. Code 722 through
726.
d)
In determining
the quantity of hazardous waste
it
generates,
a
generator
need
not
include:
1)
~
4’iflazardous
waste
when
it
is
removed
from
on—
site
storage;
or
2)
Hazardous
waste
produced
by on—site treatment
~including
reclamation)
of its hazardous waste
so
long as the hazardous waste that is treated was
counted once;
or,
3)
$pent materials that are generated,
reclaimed and
subsequently reused
on—site, so
long as such spent
73.498

—25—
materials have been counted once.
e)
If
a en~e~quen
~y generator generates acutely
hazardous waste in a calendar month in quantities
greater than set forth below, all quantities of that
acutely hazardous waste are subject to full regulation
under
35
Ill. Adm.
Code 702,
703,
705 and 722 through
~5726,
and the notification requirements of Section
3010 of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act:
1)
A total of one kilogram of acute hazardous wastes
listed
in Sections 721.131, 721.1327 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, 721.1327 or 721.133(e).
f)
In order
for acute hazardous wastes generated by a smeH
quan~4~ygenerator of acutely 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 ~meH
quen~4~ygenerator may accumulate
acute-3y
hazardous waste on—site.
If it
accumulates
at
any
time acutely hazardous wastes in quantities greater
than set forth in subsections
(e)(1)
or
(e)(2), all
of those accumulated wastes
fe-r wh4eh ~the
-aeeuinu-le~4on
~
wes ei’eeeded are subject to
regulation under
35
Ill. Adm. Code 702,
703.,
705
and 722 through ~5726,
and the applicable
notification requirements of 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.
3)
A conditionally exempt 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;
73-499

—26—
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:
i)
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 exempt small quantity generator
in
quantities of less 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
conditionally
exempt
small quantity generator
may
accumulate
hazardous
waste
on—site.
If
it
ac~cumu1ates at
any
time
more
than
a
total
of
1000
kilograms
of
~th4sthegenerator’s hazardous waste,
all
of
those
accumulated
wastes
fe-r
whteh
~the
eeeumuie~en
l4m4~ we~e~teeeded are
subject
to
regulation
under
the
special
provisions
of
35
Ill.
Adm.
Code
722
applicable
to
generators
of
between
100
kg
and
1000
kg
of hazardous waste
in
a calendar
month as well
as the requirements of 35 Ill. Adm.
Code 702,
703,
705 and ~
~1~eugh ~5723
through
726,
and
the
applicable
notification
requirements
of
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
for
a
small
quantity
generator
when
the
accumulated
wastes
exceed
1000
kilograms;
3)
A
conditionally
exempt
small
quantity
generator
may
either
treat
or
dispose
of
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
73.500

—27—
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~)-
In order for he2erd~euswaste generated by a
~uentity genereor 4n a guentty greeter then
100
~4~legremsbt~tless
then
1000
k
ogrems durng a eelender
month
‘to
be
e~e1ud’edfrom f~l1regule’ten under +.h4s
See’tton7
the
gene-retor
mtist
eomply
wtth the
fo-l~lew4ng
requremens~
1+
35~lH~
Adm--
eede
~7111t
A sme’l quantty
generete-r may aeeumulete hesardous
waste
en—s-ite-~
If
it
eeeumuletes
at
any
t-ime
more
then a total
of 1000 klograms of
ts
ha2ardeus
waste7
a-Il
these
aeeumu&eted
wastes
for
wheh
the
eeeumu at-ion
-imt was exeeeded
are
sub-~eet to
regtilet-ien under
35 ~
Adm~eode 7G~r~03~ ~G&
end ~
through
~5T
and
the
app~eebe
netf-ieat-ien
equrements of Seetien 3010
o-f the
Resouree
?onservation
end
Reeo~v’eryAet~
The
t4me
period
of
35
I1~
Adnt~ eode
~22-~l34
for
eeeumu3etion
of
heserdetts
waste
en—site
begins
for
a
smeH
quantity
generator
when
the
accumulated
wastes
e~eeed
1000-
kHegrems~
3+
Begnn4ng
August
57
l9&5~for
any
hasardous
waste
shipped off-site7 the
generator
must
ensure
that
such
waste
-is
accompanied
by
a
copy
of
-the
manifest
-(-35
fl~1-~
AdM7
eode
~2-7l~03
signed
by
h4~nend
eenta4n-ing
the
following
nformet4on--
A+
The
name
end
address
of the generater of
the
westei-
B+
The
United
States
Bepartment
of
Trenspertet4:on
deser-ipon of the waste7 ineudng
the proper
73.501

—28—
shipping name7 herard c-less and identif~icet-ion
number +UN/NA+-r
e+
The number and type of eontainersi-
B+
The quantity of waste being transportedt and
E+
The name end address of the feci-lity
designated to receive the waste-c
4+
A small quant-ity generator may e4ther treat or
dispose of
ts hazardous waste in en on—s4te
feclity-y or ensure delvery to an off—site
storage7 treatment or disposal fee-ilityT either of
which -isi~
A+
Perm~ittedunder 35 Ill~Adm~eade ~O-3~-
B-)-
In interim status under
35 I1l-
Adm-- eade ~0-3
end ~Si-
e+
Authorzed
to
manage
hazardous
waste by a
State with a hazardous waste management
program app-roved by USEPA-~
B-)-
Permitted7 Heensed or registered by a State
‘to manage mune-ipel
o.r
ndustr-i:el
sal-id
wastei-
or
B-)-
A fae~ilitywhehi-
i+
Benef~ie~iallyuses or reuses or
legitimately recycles or reclaims
-its
weste-~or
44+
Treats
-its waste prior to beneficial use
or reuse7 or legitimate recycling or
reelame’t4on~
ih)
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.
~i)
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.
~j.) If
a conditionally exempt 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
73-502

—29---
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. Mm. Code
720.120 and 720.122 and listed
in Appendix
I.
Industry
and
EPA Hazardous
Hazardous Waste
Hazard Code
Waste
No.
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
ch
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,
chlorobenzene,
1,l,2—trichloro—l,2,2—
trifluoroethane, orthodichlorobenzene and ~
trichlorofluoromethane and
1 ,l,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
F005;
and
still
bottoms from the recovery of these spent
solvents and
spent solvent mixtures.
73-503

—30—
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 FOO5;
and
still bottoms
from the recovery of these
spent
solvents and spent solvent mixtures.
F005
The following spent non—halogenated solvents:
(I, T)
toluene, methyl
ethyl
ketone, carbon disulfide,
isobutano1~andpyridine, benzene,
2—ethoxyethanol
and 2—nitropropane 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, FOO2
or F004; and still
bottoms from the recovery of these spent solvents
and spent solvent mixtures.
F006
Wastewater treatment sludges from
(T)
electroplating operations except from the following
processes:
(1) sulfuric
acid anodizing
of
aluminum;
(2)
tin plating on carbon steel;
(3)
zinc plating (segregated basis)
on carbon steel;
(4)
aluminum or zinc—aluminum plating on carbon
steel;
(5)
cleaning/stripping associated with tin,
zinc and aluminum
plating on carbon steel; and
(6)
chemical etching and milling of
aluminum.
F019
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 bottom of
(R,
T)
plating baths from electroplating operations where
cyanides are used
in the process.
F009
Spent stripping and cleaning bath solutions
(R,
T)
from electroplating operations where cyanides are
used
in the process.
FOb
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
CR,
T)
pot cleaning from metal heat treating operations.
F0l2
Quenching wastewater
treatment sludges from
CT)
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.)
73-504

—31—
FO21
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 pentachiorophenol, 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.
F023
Wastes (except wastewater
and spent carbon
(H)
from hydrogen chloride purification) from the
production of materials on equipment previously
used for
the production
or manufacturing use
(as
a
reactant, chemical intermediate or component in
a
formulating process) of tn—
and
tetrachlorophenols.
(This listing does not include
wastes
from
equipment
used
only
for
the
production
or
use
of
hexachlorophene
from
highly
purified
2,4,5—
trichlorophenol.
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 hexachlorobenzene
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
~ynthesized
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, FO21,
F022, FO23,
F026 and FO27.
(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
73.505

—32—
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.
Industry
and
EPA
Hazardous
Hazardous
Waste
Hazard
Code
Waste No.
Wood
Preservation:
KOO1
Bottom sediment sludge from the treatment
(T)
of wastewaters from wood preserving processes that
use creosote and/or pentachlorophenol.
Inorganic Pigments:
1002
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.
1004
Wastewater treatment sludge from the
(T)
production of zinc yellow pigments.
KOOS
Wastewater treatment sludge
from the
(T)
production of chrome green pigments.
1006
Wastewater treatment sludge from the
(T)
production of chrome oxide green pigments
(anhydrous and hydrated).
1007
Wastewater treatment sludge from the
(T)
production of iron blue pigments.
1008
Oven residue from the production of chrome
(T)
oxide green pigments.
Organic Chemicals:
K009
Distillation bottoms from the production of
CT)
acetaldehyde from ethylene.
1010
Distillation side cuts from the production of
CT)
acetaldehyde from ethylene.
1011
Bottom stream from the wastewater stripper
in
(R,T)
the production of acrylonitnile.
1013
Bottom stream from the acetrontnile column
(T)
in the production of acrylontrile.
1014
Bottoms
from the acetontnile purification
(T)
column in the production of acrylonitrile.
1015
Still bottoms from the distillation of benzyl
(T)
chloride.
1016
Heavy ends or distillation residues
from the
CT)
73.5~

—33—
production of carbon tetrachloride.
1017
Heavy ends (still bottoms) from the
(T)
purification column
in the production of
epichlorohydrin.
1018
Heavy ends from the fractionation column in
(T)
ethyl chloride production.
KO19
Heavy ends from the distillation of ethylene
(T)
dichlonide
in
ethylene dichloride production.
1020
Heavy
ends
from
the
distillation
of
vinyl
(T)
chloride
in
vinyl
chloride
monomer
production.
1021
Aqueous spent antimony catalyst waste from
(T)
fluoromethanes production.
1022
Distillation bottom tars
from the production
(T)
of phenol/acetone from cumene.
1023
Distillation light ends from the production
(T)
of phthalic anhydnide from naphthalene.
1024
Distillation bottoms from the production of
(T)
phthalic anhydnide
from naphthalene.
1093
Distillation
light
ends
from
the
production
(T)
of phthalic anhydride from ortho—xylene.
KO94
Distillation bottoms
from the production
(T)
of
phthalic
anhydride
from
ortho—xylene.
K025
Distillation
bottoms
from
the
production
(T)
of nitrobenzene by the nitration of benzene.
KO26
Stripping still
tails from the production of
(T)
methyl
ethyl
pynidines.
1027
Centrifuge and distillation residues from
(R,T)
toluene
diisocyanate
production.
1028
Spent catalyst from the hydrochiorinator
(T)
reactor
in the production of 1,l,l—trichloroethane.
1029
Waste from the product stream stripper
in
(T)
the production of l,1,l—tnichboroethane.
1095
Distillation bottoms from the production of
(T)
1,1,1—tnichloroethane.
1096
Heavy ends from the heavy ends column from
(T)
the production of l,l,1—trichloroethane.
KO3O
Column
bottoms
or
heavy
ends
from
the
(T)
combined production of tnichioroethylene and
perchioroethylene.
K083
Distillation
bottoms
from
aniline
production.
(T)
K103
Process residues from aniline extraction
(T)
from
the
production
of
aniline.
K1O4
Combined
wastewater
streams
generated
from
(T)
nitrobenzene/aniline
production.
K085
Distillation or fractionation column bottoms
from the production of chlorobenzenes.
1105
Separated aqueous stream from the reactor
(T)
product washing step
in the production of
chlorobenzenes.
Kill
Product wastewaters from the production of
(C,T)
dinitrotoluene via nitration of toluene.
1112
Reaction
by—product
water
from
the
drying
(T)
column in the production of toluenediamine via
hydrogenation of dinitrotoiuene.
73.507

—34—
1113
Condensed liquid light ends from the
CT)
purification
of
toluenediamine
in
the
production
of
toluenediamine
via
hydrogenation
of
dinitroluene.
1114
Vicinals from the purification of toluene—
(T)
diamine
in the production of toluenediamine via
hydrogenation of dinitrotolune.
K115
Heavy ends from the purification of
CT)
toluenediamine in the production of toluenediamine via
hydrogenation of dinitrotoluene.
1116
Organic condensate
from the solvent recovery
(T)
column
in the production of toluene diisocyanate via
phosgenation of toluenediamine.
K1l7
Wastewater from the reactor vent gas scrubber
(T)
in the production of ethylene dibromide via
bromination of ethene.
Kll8
Spent adsorbent solids from purification of
(T)
ethylene dibromide
in the production of ethylene
dibromide via bromination of ethene.
1136
Still bottoms
from the purification of
(T)
ethylene dibromide in the production of ethylene
dibromide via bromination of ethene.
Inorganic Chemicals:
K071
Brine purification muds from the mercury
CT)
cell process
in chlorine production, where
separately prepunified brine is not used.
1073
Chlorinated hydrocarbon waste from the
CT)
purification step of the diaphragm cell process
using graphite anodes
in chlorine production.
1106
Wastewater
treatment
sludge
from
the
mercury
(T)
cell process
in chlorine production.
Pesticides:
1031
By—product salts generated in the production
CT)
of MSMA and cacodylic acid.
1032
Wastewater
treatment
sludge
from
the
(T)
production of chiordane.
1033
Wastewater and scrub water from the
(T)
chlorination of cyclopentadiene
in the production
of chlordane.
1034
Filter solids from the filtration of
CT)
hexachlorocyclopentadiene
in the production of
chbordane.
K097
Vacuum stripper discharge from the chiordane
(T)
chlorinator
in the production of chlordane.
1035
Wastewater
treatment
sludges
generated
in
the
(T)
production of creosote.
1036
Still
bottoms
from
toluene
reclamation
CT)
distillation in the production of disulfoton.
1037
Wastewater treatment sludges from the
CT)
production of disulfoton.
1038
Wastewater from the washing and stripping of
(T)
73-508

—35—
phorate production.
1039
Filter cake from the filtration of
(T)
diethylphosphorodithioic
acid
in
the
production
of
phorate.
1040
Wastewater treatment sludge from the
(T)
production of phorate.
K04l
Wastewater
treatment sludge from the
CT)
production of toxaphene.
1098
Untreated process wastewater
from the
CT)
production of toxaphene.
KO42
Heavy ends or distillation residues from the
(T)
distillation
of
tetrachlorobenzene
in
the
production
of
2,4,5—T.
1043
2,6—Dichlorophenol
waste
from
the
production
(T)
of
2,4—D.
1099
Untreated wastewater
from the production
(T)
of 2,4—D.
Explosives:
KO44
Wastewater treatment sludges from the
CR)
manufacturing and
processing of explosives.
K045
Spent carbon from the treatment of wastewater
(R)
containing explosives.
1046
Wastewater
treatment sludges from the
CT)
manufacturing, formulation and loading of lead—
based initiating compounds.
K047
Pink/red water
from TNT operations.
(R)
Petroleum Refining:
1048
Dissolved air flotation
CDAF)
float from the
CT)
petroleum refining
industry.
1049
Slop oil emulsion solids from the petroleum
(T)
refining industry.
1050
Heat exchanger bundle cleaning sludge from
(T)
the petroleum
refining industry.
K051
API separator sludge from the petroleum
CT)
refining industry.
1052
Tank bottoms
(leaded) from the petroleum
(T)
refining industry.
Iron and Steel:
1061
Emission control dust/sludge from the primary
(T)
production of steel
in electric furnaces.
1062
Spent pickle liquor from steel finishing
(C,T)
operations.
Secondary Lead:
1069
Emission control dust/sludge from secondary
(T)
lead smelting.
K100
Waste leaching solution from acid leaching
(T)
73.509

—36--
of emission control dust/sludge from secondary lead
smelting.
Veterinary Pharmaceuticals:
1084
Wastewater treatment sludges generated
(T)
during
the
production
of
veterinary
pharmaceuticals
from
arsenic
or
organo—arsenic
compounds.
1101
Distillation
tar
residues
from
the distillation
CT)
of
aniline—based
compounds
in
the
production
of
veterinary
pharmaceuticals
from
arsenic
or
organoarsenic
compounds.
K1O2
Residue
from
use
of
activated
carbon
for
CT)
decolorization in the production of veterinary
pharmaceuticals from arsenic or organo—arsenic
compounds.
Ink Formulation:
1086
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:
1060
Ammonia still lime sludge from cooking
CT)
operations.
1087
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
Ce)
or
(f).
b)
Any off—specification commercial chemical product or
manufacturing chemical intermediate which,
if it met
73-510

—37—
specifications,
would have the generic name listed
in
subsections
Ce)
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
container or inner liner removed from
a container that
has been used
to hold any off—specification chemical
product and manufacturing chemical intermediate whiôh,
if it met specifications,
would have the generic name
listed in subsection
Ce)
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
Ce)
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
Ce)
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
Ce)
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
73.511

—38—
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
products or manufacturing chemical intermediates
referred to in subsections
(a) through
Cd) 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 Notei~ For the
convenience
of the regulated community
‘the primary hazardous
properties of these materials have been indicated by the
letters P +To~ieity+7end R +Reaet4v4ty+~ Absence of a
letter -indeates that the compound only is l-isted for
acute
tox-ic4ty-~r+ These wastes and their corresponding
EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers are:
(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.)
Hazardous
Waste No.
Substance
P023
Acetaldehyde, chioro—
P002
Acetamide, 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
Allyl alcohol
P006
Aluminum
phosphide
P007
5—(Aminomethyl)—3—isoxazolol
P008
4—Aminopyridine
P009
Ammonium
picrate
CR)
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
73.512

—39—
P013
Barium cyanide
P024
Benzenamine, 4—chloro—
P077
Benzenamine, 4—nitro—
P028
Benzene,
(chloromethyl)—
P042
l,2—Benzenediol,
4—l—hydroxy—2—(methyl—
amino)ethyl)—
P014
Benzenethiol
P028
Benzyl chloride
P015
Beryllium dust
P016
BisCchloromethyl)
ether
P017
Bromoacetone
P018
Brucine
P021
Calcium cyanide
P123
Caniphene,
octachloro—
P103
Carbamidoselensoic acid
P022
Carbon bisulfide
P022
Carbon disulfide
P095
Carbonyl chloride
P033
Chlorine
cyanide
P023
Chloroacetaldehyde
P024
p—Chloroaniline
P026
1—(o—Chlorophenyl)thiourea
P027
3—Chloropropionitrile
P029
Copper
cyanides
P030
Cyanides
(soluble
cyanide
salts),
not
elsewhere specified
P031
Cyanogen
P033
Cyanogen
chloride
P036
Dichlorophenylarsine
P037
Dieldrin
P038
Diethylarsine
P039
O,O—Diethyl
S—2—(ethylthio)ethyl
phosphoro—
dithioate
P041
Diethyl—p—nitrophenyl phosphate
P040
0,0—Diethyl
O—pyrazinyl
phosphorothioate
P043
Diisopropyl fluorophosphate
P044
Dimethoate
P045
3,3—Dimethyl—l—(methylthio)--2—butanone, 0—
(methylamino)
carbonyl
oxime
P071
0,0-Dimethyl O—p—nitrophenyl phosphorothioate
P082
Dimethylnitrosamine
P046
alpha,
alpha—Dimethylphenethylamine
P047
4,6—Dinitro—o—cresol 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
73.513

—40—
P046
Ethanamine, l,l—dimethyl—2—phenyl—
P084
Ethenamine, N—methyl—N—nitroso—
P101
Ethyl cyanide
P054
Ethylenimine
P097
Famphur
2056
Fluorine
P057
Fluoroacetamide
P058
Fluoroacetic
acid,
sodium
salt
2065
Fulminic
acid,
mercury
(II)
salt
(R,T)
P059
Heptachlor
P051
l,2,3,4,10,lO—Hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—
1,4,4a,5,6,7,8,Ba—octahydro—endo,
endo—1,
4:5,
8—dimethanonaphthalene
P037
1,2,3,4,1O,1O—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,lO,lO—Hexachloro—1,4,4a,5,8,Ba—
hexahydro—l ,4: 5, 8—endo, endo-
dimethanonaphthalene
P004
1,2,3,4,1O,1O,—Hexachloro—l,4,4a,5,8,Sa----
hexahydro—1,4:5,8—endo,
exo—
dimethanonaphthal
ene
P060
Hexachlorohexàhydro—exo ,exo—
dimethanonaphthalene
P062
Hexaethyl
tetraphosphate
2116
Hydrazinecarbothioamide
2068
Hydrazine,
methyl—
P063
Hydrocyanic
acid
2063
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—
2112
Methane,
tetranitro—
CR)
2118
Methanethiol, trichioro—
P059
4,7—Methano—1H—indene,l,4,5,6,7,8,8—
heptachloro—3a,4 ,7,7a—tetrahydro---
P066
Methomyl
2067
2—Methylaziridine
P068
Methyl
hydrazine
P064
Methyl
isocyanate
P069
2—Methyllactonitrile
2071
Methyl parathion
P072
alpha—Naphthylthiourea
2073
Nickel
carbonyl
P074
Nickel
cyanide
P074
Nickel
(II)
cyanide
P073
Nickel
tetracarbonyl
P075
Nicotine and salts
2076
Nitric
oxide
P077
p—Nitroaniline
P078
Nitrogen dioxide
73.514

—41—
P076
Nitrogen
(II)
oxide
P078
Nitrogen
(IV) oxide
2081
Nitroglycerine
(R)
P082
N—Nitrosodimethylainine
P084
N—Ni trosomethylvinylamine
P050
5—Norbornene—2,3—dimethanol,
1,4,5,6,7,7—
hexachloro,
cyclic
sulfite
P085
Octamethylpyrophosphoramide
P087
Osmium
oxide
2087
Osmium tetroxide
P088
7—Oxabicyclo2.2.lheptane—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—, ammonium salt
CR)
P036
Phenyl
dichloroarsine
P092
Phenylmercuric
acetate
P093
N—Phenylthiourea
P094
Phorate
P095
Phosgene
P096
Phosphirie
P041
Phosphoric
acid, diethyl p—nitrophenyl ester
2044
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O—dimethyl S—2—
(methylamino)—2—oxoethyl
ester
P043
Phosphorofluoric
acid,
bis(l—methylethyl)ester
P094
Phosphorothioic
acid, 0,0—diethyl
S—
(ethylthio)methyl ester
P089
Phosphorothioic acid, 0,0—diethyl O—(p—
nitrophenyl)
ester
P040
Phosphorothioic acid, O,O—diethyl 0—pyrazinyl
ester
2097
Phosphorothioic acid, O,O—dimethyl O—p-
((dimethylamino)—sulfonyl)phenylester
2110
Plumbane, tetraethyl—
P098
Potassium
cyanide
2099
Potassium silver cyanide
P070
Propanal,
2—methyl—2—(methylthio)—,
0—
(methylamino)
carbonyl)
oxime
P101
Propanenitrile
2027
Propanentrile, 3—chloro—
P069
Propanenitrile,
2—hydroxy—2—methyl---
P081
1,2,3—Propanetriol, trinitrate—
(R)
P017
2—Propanone,
1—bromo—
P102
Propargyl alcohol
P003
2—Propenal
P005
2—Propen—l—ol
P067
1,2—Propylenimine
P102
2—Propyn—1—ol
P008
4—Pyridiriamine
P075
Pyridine,
(S)—3—(l—methy—2—pyrrolidinyl)—, and
salts
73-515

—42—
Pill
Pyrophosphoric
acid, tetraethyl
ester
2103
Selenourea
P104
Silver cyanide
P105
Sodium
azide
2106
Sodium
cyanide
2107
Strontium sulfide
2108
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
Thioimidodicarbonic diamide
P014
Thiophenol
2116
Thiosemicarbazide
P026
Thiourea,
(2—chlorophenyl)—
P072
Thiourea, l—naphthalenyl—
P093
Thiourea,
phenyl—
P123
Toxaphene
P118
Trichloromethanethiol
2119
Vanadic
acid,
animonium
salt
P120
Vanadium pentoxide
P120
Vanadium(V)
oxide
POOl
Warfarin,
when
present
at
concentration
greater than 0.3.
2121
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
Cd),
are
identified
as
toxic
wastes
(T)
unless
otherwise
designated
and
are
subject
to
the
small
quantity
exclusion
defined
in
Section
721.105(a)
and
(f~).
fBoerd
Note--
For
the
conveMenee
of
the
-regulated
eommunttyy the primary hazardous propert4es
of these
mate-r-ials have been -irtd-ieeted by the
ette-rs P
+Tox-icty+7
R
+Reaet-ivtty+~
~
+~gn~itab4l-ity+ and
e
+Co-r-ros-ivty+~-
Absence
of
a
letter
nd4eates
that
the
compound 4s only l~istedfor to~c-4’ty-~+These wastes and
their corresponding
EPA Hazardous Waste Numbers are:
(Board Note:
For the convenience of the regulated
community,
the primary hazardous properties of these
materials have been indicated by the letters T
73.516

—43—
(Toxicity),
R
(Reactivity),
I
(Ignitability)
and
C
(Corrosivity).
Absence of
a letter indicates that
the
compound
is only listed for toxicity.)
Hazardous
Waste No.
Substance
0001
Acetaldehyde
(I)
U034
Acetaldehyde, trichloro—
0187
Acetamide, N—(4—ethoxyphenyl)—
U005
Acetamide, N—9H—fluoren—2—yl—
0112
Acetic acid, ethyl ester
(I)
Ul44
Acetic acid, lead salt
0214
Acetic acid, thallium(I)
salt
0002
Acetone
(I)
U003
Acetonitrile
(I,T)
0248
3-(alpha—Acetonylbenzyl)—4—hydroxycoumarin
and salts, when present at concentrations of
0.3
or less
0004
Acetophenone
0005
2—Acetylaminofluorene
0006
Acetyl chloride
(C,R,T)
U007
Acrylamide
0008
Acrylic acid
(I)
U009
Acrylontrile
0150
Alanine, 3—p—bis(2—chloroethyl)amino
phenyl—, L—
U328
2—Amino—l-methylbenzene
U353
4—Aniino-l—methylbenzene
0011
Amitrole
0012
Aniline
(I,T)
0014
Auramine
U0l5
Azaserine
U010
Azirino(2’,3’:3,4)pyrrolo(l,2—a)indole—4,7—
dione,
6—amino—B—
((aminocarbonyl)oxy)rnethyl—1,la,2,8,8a,8b—
hexahydro—8a—methoxy—5—methyl—,
0157
Benzjaceanthrylene,
l,2—dihydro—3—methyl—
U016
Benz(c)acridine
U0l6
3,4—Benzacridine
0017
Benzal
chloride
U0l8
Benza
anthracene
U018
1,2—Benzanthracene
U094
l,2—Benzanthracene, 7,12—dimethyl—
0-012
Benzenamine
(I,T)
U0l4
Benzenamine, 4,4’—carbonimidoylbis(N,N—
dimethyl—
0049
Benzenamine, 4—chloro—2—methyl—
0093
Benzenamine, N,N’—dimethyl—4—phenylazo-
0158
Benzenamine, 4,4’—methylenebis(2—chloro—
U222
Benzenamine,
2—methyl—, hydrochloride
0181
Benzenamine, 2—methyl—5—nitro
U0l9
Benzene
CI,T)
U038
Benzeneacetic
acid,
4—chloro—alpha—C4—
73.517

—44—
chlorophenyl)—alpha—hydroxy, ethyl ester
0030
Benzene, 1—bromo—4—phenoxy—
0037
Benzene, chioro—
Ul90
l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid anhydride
0028
l,2—Benzenedicarboxylic
acid,
bis(2—ethyl—
hexyl)
ester
0069
1,2—Benzenedicarboxylic acid, dibutyl ester
0088
l,2—Benzenedicarboxyiic acid,
diethyl ester
U102
l,2—Benzenedicarboxyiic acid,
dimethyl ester
0107
l,2—Benzenedicarboxyiic acid,
di—n—octyl
ester
U070
Benzene, 1,2—dichioro—
U071
Benzene,
1,3—dichioro—
0072
Benzene, 1,4—dichioro—
0017
Benzene, (dichloromethyl)—
0223
Benzene,
l,3—diisocyanatomethyl--
(R,T)
U239
Benzene, dimethyl— (I,T)
0201
1,3—Benzenediol
0127
Benzene, hexachloro—
U056
Benzene, hexahydro—(I)
0188
Benzene, hydroxy-
U220
Benzene, methyl—
Ul05
Benzene, l—methyl—l—2,4--dinitro—
0106
Benzene, l—methyl—2,6—dinitro—
U203
Benzene, 1,2—methylenedioxy—4—allyl—
U14l
Benzene, 1,2—methylenedioxy—4—propenyl—
0090
Benzene, l,2—methylenedioxy—4—propyl-
0055
Benzene,
(1—methylethyl)—
(I)
0169
Benzene, nitro—
(I,T)
0183
Benzene, pentachioro—
0185
Benzene, pentachloronitro-
0020
Benzenesulfonic acid chloride
(C,R)
0020
Benzenesulfonyl chloride (C,R)
0207
Benzene, l,2,4,5—tetrachloro—
0023
Benzene, (trichloromethyl)—(C,R,T)
0234
Benzene,
l,3,5—trinitro—
CR,T)
U02l
Benzidine
0202
1,2—Benzisothiazolin—3—one, l,l—dixoide
0120
Benzoj,k
fluorene
0022
Benzoapyrene
U022
3,4—Benzopyrene
0197
3—Benzoquinone
0023
Benzotrichloride (C,R,T)
0050
1
,
2—Benzphenanthrene
0085
2,2’—Bioxirane
(I,T)
0021
(l,1’—Biphenyl)—4 ,4 ‘—diamine
0073
(1,l’—Biphenyl)—4,4’—diamine, 3,3’—dichloro—
0091
(1,1’—Biphenyl)—4,4 ‘—diamine,
3,3’—
dimethoxy—
0095
(l,1’—Biphenyl)—4,4’—diamine, 3,3’—dimethyl—
0024
Bis(2—chloroethoxy) methane
U027
Bis(2—chloroisopropyl)
ether
0244
Bis(dimethylthiocarbamoyl) disulfide
U028
Bis(2—ethylhexyl) phthalate
73-518
—45—
0246
Bromine cyanide
0225
Bromoform
0030
4—Bromophenyl
phenyl
ether
0128
l,3—Butadiene, 1,l,2,3,4,4—hexachloro—
U172
1—Butanamine, N—butyl—N—nitroso—
0035
Butanoic acid, 4—Bis(2—chloroethyl)amino
benzene—
0031
1—Butanol
(I)
U159
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)
0136
Cacodylic acid
U032
Calcium chroniate
0238
Carbamic acid, ethyl ester
0178
Carbamic acid,
methylnitroso—,
ethyl ester
0176
Carbamide, N—ethyl—N—nitroso—
13177
Carbamide, N—methyl—N—nitroso—
0219
Carbamide, thio—
0097
Carbamoyl chloride, dimethyl
0215
Carbonic acid, dithallium
(I)
salt
0156
Carbonochloridic acid, methyl ester
CI,T)
0033
Carbon oxyfluoride
(R,T)
0211
Carbon tetrachioride
0033
Carbonyl fluoride (R,T)
0034
Chioral
0035
Chlorambucil
0036
Chiordane,
technical
0026
Chlornaphazine
0037
Chlorobenzene
U039
4—Chloro—m—cresol
0041
l—chloro—2,3—epoxypropane
0042
2—Chloroethyl vinyl ether
U044
Chloroform
U046
Chloromethyl methyl ether
(3047
beta—Chloronapthalene
0048
o—Chlorophenol
U049
4—chloro—o—toluidine,
hydrochloride
U032
Chronic
acid,
calcium
salt
U050
Chrysene
U051
Creosote
0052
Cresols
0052
Cresylic acid
U053
Crotonaldehyde
0055
Cumeme
(I)
0246
Cyanogen bromide
Ul97
l,4—Cyclohexadienedione
0056
Cyclohexane
(I)
0057
Cyclohexanone
(I)
1.3130
l,3—Cyclopentadiene,
l,2,3,4,5,5—hexachloro—
U058
Cyclophosphamide
0240
2,4—D,
salts and esters
0059
Daunoinycin
73.519

—46—
0060
DDD
0061
DDT
0142
Decachlorooctahydro-l
,3,4—metheno—2H—
cyclobuta
c,
d
—pen talen—2—one
U062
Diallate
13133
Diamine
(R,T)
0221
Diaminotoluene
0063
Dibenza,hlanthracene
0063
1,2:5,6—Dibenzanthracene
0064
l,2:7,8—Dibenzopyrene
0064
Dibenz(a,ipyrene
0066
1, 2—Dibromo—3—chloropropane
0069
Dibutyl phthalate
13062
S—(2,3—Dichloroallyl)
diisopropyithiocarbamate
U070
o—Dichlorobenzene
13071
m—Dichlorobenzene
0072
p—Dichlorobenzene
0073
3,3’—Dichlorobenzidine
0074
l,4—Dichloro—2—buterie
(I,T)
U075
Dichlorodifluorornethane
(.3192
3, 5—Dichloro—N— (1 ,l—dimethyl—2—propynyl)
benzamide
0060
Dichlorodiphenyldichloroethane
U061
Dichlorodiphenyltr
ichloroethane
0078
1,1—Dichloroethylene
0079
1,2—Dichloroethylene
U025
Dichloroethyl ether
0081
2,4—Dichiorophenol
(3082
2,6—Dichiorophenol
0240
2,4—Dichlorophenoxyacetic acid,
salts and
esters
U083
l,2—Dichloropropane
0084
1,3—Dichloropropene
U085
l,2:3,4—Diepoxybutane
(I,T)
(3108
l,4—Diethylene dioxide
0086
N,N—Diethylhydrazine
U087
0 ,0—Diethyl—S—methyl—dithiophosphate
(3088
Diethyl
phthalate
0089
Diethyistilbestrol
11148
1, 2—Dihydro—3 ,6—pyradizinedione
U090
Dihydrosafrole
0091
3,3‘—Dimethoxybenzidine
U092
Dimethylamine
(I)
0093
Dimethylaminoazobenzene
0094
7, l2—Diniethylbenz a
anthracerie
0095
3,3
‘—Dimethylbenzidine
0096
alpha, alpha—Dimethylbenzylhydroperoxide
(R)
U097
Dimethylcarbanioyl chloride
0098
1,1—Dimethylhydrazine
U099
1,2—Dimethylhydrazine
ulol
2,4—Dimethylphenol
(3102
Dimethyl phthalate
0103
Dimethyl sulfate
73.520

—47—
U105
2,4—Dinitrotoluene
0106
2,6—Dinitrotoluene
(3107
Di—n—octyl phthalate
0108
1,4—Dioxane
0109
l,2—Diphenylhydrazine
0110
Dipropylamine
CI)
(3111
Di—N--propylnitrosoamine
(3001
Ethanal
CI)
Ul74
Ethanamine, N—ethyl—N--nitroso—
(3067
Ethane,
1,2—dibromo—
U076
Ethane, l,l—dichloro—
U077
Ethane,
l,2—dichloro—
(3114
l,2—Ethanediylbiscarbamodithioic acid
(3131
Ethane, l,l,1,2,2,2—hexachloro—
(3024
Ethane, 1,l’—methylenebis(oxy)bisC2—
chloro-
0247
Ethane, l,l,1—trichloro—2,2—bis(p—
methoxyphenol)—
0003
Ethaneriitrile (I,T)
0117
Ethane, l,1’—oxybis—
CI)
0025
Ethane, 1,l’—oxybis(2—chloro—
0184
Ethane, pentachloro—
(3208
Ethane,
l,l,l,2—tetrachloro—
3209
Ethane,
1,1,2,2—tetrachioro--
13218
Ethanethioamide
(1227
Ethane,
l,l,2—trichloro—
11043
Ethene,
chloro—
(3042
Ethene,
2—chloroethoxy—
U078
Ethene,
l,1—dichloro—
UO79
Ethene, trans—1,2—dichloro—
U210
Ethene, 1,l,2,2—tetrachloro—
0173
Ethanol, 2,2’—(nitrosoimino)bis—
0004
Ethanone, 1—phenyl—
13006
Ethanoyl chloride CC,R,T)
(3359
2—Ethoxyethanol
(3112
Ethyl acetate
(I)
(3113
Ethyl acrylate
(I)
0238
Ethyl carbamate
(urethan)
0038
Ethyl 4,4’—dichlorobenzilate
(3114
Ethylenebis(dithiocarbamic acid)
3067
Ethylene dibromide
0077
Ethylene dichloride
0359
Ethylene
glycol
monoethyl
ether
0115
Ethylene oxide
(I,T)
0116
Ethylene thiourea
(3117
Ethyl ether
(I)
(3076
Ethylidene
dichloride
(3118
Ethylmethacrylate
0119
Ethyl methanesulfonate
13139
Ferric dextran
0120
Fluoranthene
11122
Formaldehyde
13123
Formic acid
(C,T)
0124
Furan
(I)
73-521

—48—
Ul25
2—Furaricarboxaldehyde
(I)
13147
2,5—Furandione
0213
Furan, tetrahydro—
(I)
u125
Furfural
CI)
Ul24
Furfuran
(I)
(3206
D—Glucopyranose,
2—deoxy—2—(3—methyl—3—
nitrosoureido)—
13126
Glycidylaldehyde
Ul63
Guanidine, N—nitroso—N—methyl—N’—nitro
Ul27
Hexachlorobenzene
0128
Hexachiorobutadiene
Ul29
Hexachlorocyclohexane
Cgamma isomer)
0130
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene
U131
Hexachloroetharie
0132
Hexachiorophene
U243
Hexachloropropene
(3133
Hydrazine
(R,T)
0086
Hydrazine, l,2—diethyl—
0098
Hydrazine,
l,1—dimethyl—
U099
Hydrazine, 1,2—diniethyl-
0109
Hydrazine, 1,2—Diphenyl-
13134
Hydrofluoric acid
(C,T)
0134
Hydrogen fluoride (C,T)
13135
Hydrogen sulfide
U096
Hydroperoxide, 1—methyl—l—phenylethyl—
CR)
13136
Hydroxydimethylarsine oxide
0116
2—Imidazolidinethione
U137
Indenol,2,3—cdpyrene
0139
Iron dextran
Ul40
Isobutyl alcohol
(I,T)
0141
Isosafrole
13142
Kepone
(3143
Lasiocarpene
Ul44
Lead acetate
Ul45
Lead phosphate
13146
Lead subacetate
(3129
Lindarie
(3147
Maleic anhydride
13148
Maleic hydrazide
0149
Malononitrile
0150
Meiphalan
0151
Mercury
(3152
Methacrylonitrile (I,T)
13092
Methanamine, N—methyl—
(I)
0029
Methane, bromo
13045
Methane, chioro—
(I,T)
0046
Methane, chloromethoxy—
U068
Methane, dibromo-
(3080
Methane, dichloro-
13075
Methane, dichlorodifluoro—
1.3138
Methane,
iodo—
(3119
Methanesulfonic acid,
ethyl
ester
13211
Methane,
tetrachloro—
13121
Methane, trichlorofluoro—
73522
—49—
(3153
Methanethiol
(I,T)
0225
Methane,
tribromo—
(3044
Methane, trichloro—
0121
Methane, trichlorofluoro—
U123
Methanoic acid
(C,T)
(3036
4,7—Methanoindan, 1,2,4,5,6,7,8,8—
octachloro—3a,4,7,7a—tetrahydro—
Ul54
Methanol
(I)
13155
Methapyrilene
0154
Methyl alcohol
(I)
0029
Methyl bromide
0186
1—Methylbutadiene
CI)
U045
Methyl chloride
(I,T)
13156
Methyl chlorocarbonate
(I,T)
0226
Methylchloroform
0157
3—Methylcholanthrene
(3158
4,4 ‘—Methylenebis(2—chloroaniline)
0132
2,2’—Methylenebis(3,4,6—trichlorophenol)
(3068
Methylene bromide
0080
Methylene chloride
0122
Methylene oxide
0159
Methyl ethyl
ketone
(I,T)
13160
Methyl ethyl ketone peroxide
(R,T)
U138
Methyl iodide
0161
Methyl isobutyl ketone
(I)
13162
Methyl methacrylate
(I,T)
13163
N—Methyl—N’—nitro—N—nitrosoguanidme
(3161
4—Methyl—2—pentanone
(I)
U164
Methyithiouracil
(3247
Methoxychlor
13010
Mitomycin
C
0059
5,12—Naphthacenedione, (8S—cis)—8—acetyl—10—
(3—amino—2,3,6—trideoxy—alpha—L—lyxo—
hexapyranosyl )oxyl —7,8,9,10—tetrahydro—
6,8,ll—tr ihydroxy—1—methoxy—
13165
Naphthalene
(3047
Naphthalene, 2—chioro—
13166
1,4—Naphthalenedione
0236
2,7—Naphthalenedisulfonic acid,
3,3’—(3,3’—
dimethyl—(1,l’—biphenyl)—4,4’—diyl)—
bis(azo)bis(5—amino—4—hydroxy)—,
tetrasodium
salt
0166
l,4—Naphthaquinone
U167
1—Naphthylamine
Ul68
2—Naphthylamine
0167
alpha—Naphthylamine
13168
beta—Naphthylamine
U026
2—Naphthylamine,
N,N’—bisC2—chloromethyl)—
(3169
Nitrobenzene
(I,T)
(3170
p—Nitrophenol
(3171
2—Nitropropane (I~~)
(3172
N—Nitrosodi—n—butylamine
1.3173
N—Nitrosodiethanolamine
13174
N—Nitrosodiethylarnine
73-523

—50—
0111
N-Nitroso—N-propylamine
0176
N—Nitroso—N—ethylurea
13177
N—Nitroso—N—methylurea
13178
N—Nitroso—N—methylurethane
U179
N—Nitrosopiperidine
0180
N—Nitrosopyrrolidine
(3181
5—Nitro—o—toluidine
U193
l,2—Oxathiolane,
2,2—dioxide
3058
2H—l,3,2—Oxazaphosphorine, 2—bisC2—chloro—
ethyl)aminotetrahydro—,
oxide 2—
(3115
Oxirane
(I,T)
0041
Oxarane, 2—(chloromethyl)—
Ul82
Paraldehyde
U183
Pentachlorobenzene
0184
Pentachloroethane
(3185
Pentachloronitrobenzene
See F027
Pentachlorophenol
U186
l,3—pentadiene
(I)
0187
Phenacetin
0188
Phenol
U048
Phenol,
2—chloro-
U039
Phenol, 4—chloro—3—methyl—
U08l
Phenol, 2,4—dichloro—
U082
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
1,lO—(l,2—phenylene)pyrene
0145
Phosphoric acid,
lead salt
U087
Phosphorodithioic acid, O,O—diethyl—, S—
methyl—ester
0189
Phosphorous sulfide
CR)
U190
Phthalic anhydride
0191
2—Picoline
0192
Pronamide
(3194
1—Propanamine
(I,T)
UllO
1—Propanamine, N—propyl—(I)
(3066
Propane, 1,2—dibromo—3—chloro—
0149
Propanedinitrile
3171
Propane, 2—nitro— (I~~)
3027
Propane, 2,2’—oxybis2—chloro—
0il93
1,3—Propane sultone
(3235
l—Propanol,
2,3—dibromo—, phosphate
(3:1)
(3126
l—Propanol, 2,3—epoxy—
(3140
1—Propanol,
2—methyl—
CI,T)
0002
2—Propanone
(I)
0007
2—Propenamide
0084
Propene,
1,3—dichloro—
(3243
l—Propene,
1,1,2,3,3,3—hexachioro—
(3009
2—Propenenitrile
(3152
2—Propenenitrile,
2—methyl—
(I,T)
73-524

—51-
0008
2—Propenoic acid
(I)
Ul13
2—Propenoic acid, ethyl ester
(I)
(3118
2—Propenoic acid,
2—methyl—,
ethyl ester
0162
2—Propenoic acid,
2—methyl—, methyl ester
(I ,T)
See
F027
Propionic
acid,2—(2,4,5—trichlorophenoxy)—
0194
n—Propylamine
(I,T)
0083
Propylene dichioride
(3196
Pyridine
0155
Pyridine, 2—(2—(dimethylamino)—2—
thenylamino
(3179
Pyridine, hexahydro—N—nitroso-
0191
Pryidine, 2—methyl—
13164
4(1H)—Pyrimidinone, 2,3—dihydro—6—niethyl—2—
thioxo-
(3180
Pyrrole, tetrahydro—N—nitroso—
0200
Reserpine
13201
Resorcinol
(.3202
Saccharin and salts
0203
Safrole
U204
Selenious acid
(3204
Selenium
dioxide
0205
Selenium disulfide
(R,T)
0015
L—Serine,
diazoacetate
(ester)
See F027
Silvex
U089
4,4’—Stilbenediol, alpha, alpha’—diethyl—
0206
Streptozotocin
Ul35
Sulfur hydride
0103
Sulfuric acid, dimethyl ester
0189
Sulfur phosphide
(R)
0205
Sulfur selenide
(R,T)
See F027
2,4,5—T
0207
l,2,4,5—Tetrachlorobenzene
0208
1,l,l,2—Tetrachloroethane
0209
1,l,2,2—Tetrachloroethane
U2l0
Tetrachloroethylene
See F027
2,3,4,6—Tetrachlorophenol
13213
Tetrahydrofuran
(I)
U214
Thallium
(I)
acetate
U215
Thallium
(I) carbonate
U216
Thallium
(I)
chloride
0217
Thallium
(I)
nitrate
(3218
Thioacetamide
Ul53
Thiomethanol
(I,T)
U2l9
Thiourea
0244
Thiram
0220
Toluene
(3221
Toluenediamine
0223
Toluene diisocyanate
CR,T)
(3328
o—Toluidine
13353
p—Toluidine
(3222
o—Toluidine hydrochloride
13011
lH—1,2,4—Triazol—3—amine
tJ226
l,l,l—Trichloroethane
73.525

—52—
U227
1,l,2—Trichloroethane
13228
Trichioroethene
13228
Trichioroethylene
0121
Trichloromonofluoromethane
See F027
2,4,5—Trichiorophenol
See F027
2,4,6—Trichlorophenol
See F027
2,4,5—Trichiorophenoxyacetic acid
U234
sym—Trinitrobenzene
(R,T)
0182
l,3,5—Trioxane, 2,4,5—trimethyl—
0235
Tris(2,3—dibromopropyl) phosphate
(1236
Trypari blue
0237
Oracil, 5bisC2—chloromethyl)amino—
(3237
tjracil mustard
0043
Vinyl chloride
(3248
Warfarin, when present at concentrations of
0.3
or less
0239
Xylene
(I)
13249
Zinc
phosphide,
when
present
at
concentrations
of
10
or
less
(3200
Yohimban—l6—carboxylic acid,
ll,l7—di—
methoxy—lB—(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.
Reg.
5330, February
13,
1986 and at
51 Fed. Reg.
6541,
February 25,
1986.
This Section incorporates no future editions
or modifications.
(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, niethylene chloride,
trichioroethylene,
i,1,1—trichloroethane,
carbon
tetrachloride, chlorinated fluorocarbons.
F002
Tetrachloroethylene, methylene chloride,
trichloroethyiene, l,l,1—trichloroethane,
1,1,2—trichloroethane,
chlorobenzene, 1,1,2—
trichloro—l,2,2— trifluoroethane,
ortho—
dichlorobenzene,
trichlorofluoromethane.
73.526

—53—
F003
N.A.
F004
Cresols and cresylic acid, nitrobenzene.
F005
Toluene, methyl ethyl
ketone,
carbon
disulfide,
isobutanol,
pyridine,
2—
ethoxyethanol, benzene, 2—nitropropane
F006
Cadmium, hexavalent chromium, nickel, cyanide
C complexed).
F007
Cyanide
(salts).
F008
Cyanide
Csalts).
F009
Cyanide
(salts).
FOlO
Cyanide
(salts).
FOil
Cyanide
(salts).
F012
Cyanide
(complexed).
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 hexachiorodibenzo—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 pentachiorodibenzofurans; tn— and
tetra- chlorophenols and their chlorophenoxy
derivative acids, esters, ethers,
amines and
other salts.
F024
Chioromethane, dichloromethane,
trichloromethane,
carbon
tetrachioride,
chloroethylene,
1,1—
dichioroethane,
1,2—dichloroethane, trans—l,2—
dichloroethylene,
l,l—dichloroethylene, 1,1,1—
trichloroethane,
l,1,2—trichloroethane,
trichloroethylene, l,l,1,2—tetrachloroethane,
1,1,2,
2—tetrachioroethane,
tetrachloroethylene, pentachioroethane,
hexachloroethane, allyl chloride
(3—
chloropropene), dichloropropane,
dichloropropene, 2—chloro—1,3—butadiene,
hexachloro—l,3—butadiene, hexachlorocyclo—
pentadiene, hexachlorocyclohexane, benzene,
chlorobenzene,
dichiorobenzenes,
1,2,4—
trichlorobenzene, tetrachlorobenzenes,
pentachlorobenzene, hexachlorobenzene,
toluene, naphthalene.
F026
Tetra—, penta—,
and hexachlorodibenzo-p—
dioxins;
tetra—,
penta-, and hexachlorodibenzofurans.
F027
Tetra—, penta—, and hexachiorodibenzo—p—
dioxins;
tetra—, penta—,
and hexachlorodibenzofurans;
73.527

—54—
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
chiorophenoxy derivative acids, esters,
ethers,
amine
and
other
salts.
1001
Pentachiorophenol, phenol,
2—chlorophenol, p—
chloro—m—cresol,
2,4—dimethyiphenol,
2,4—
dinitrophenol, trichlorophenols,
tetrachiorophenols,
2,4—dinitrophenol,
cresosote, chrysene, naphthalene,
fluoranthene, benzo(b)fluoranthene,
benzo(a)pyrene,
indeno(l,2,3—cd)pyrene,
benz(a)anthracene, dibenz(a)anthracene,
acenaphthalene.
1002
Hexavalent chromium,
lead.
1003
Hexavalent chromium,
lead.
1004
Hexavalent chromuim.
1005
Hexavalent chromium,
lead.
1006
Hexavalent chromium.
1007
Cyanide
(complexed), hexavalent chromium.
1008
Hexavalent chromium.
1009
Chloroform, formaldehyde, rnethylene chloride,
methyl chloride, paraldehyde,
formic acid.
1010
Chloroform, formaldehyde, methylene chloride,
methyl chloride, paraldehyde,
formic acid,
chl oroacetaldehyde.
1011
Acrylonitrile, acetonitnile, hydrocyanic acid.
1013
Hydrocyanic acid,
acrylonitnile, acetonitnile.
1014
Acetonitrile, acrylamide.
1015
Benzyi chloride, chlorobenzerie,
toluene,
benzotrichlor ide.
1016
Hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene, carbon
tetr achior ide, hexachioroethane,
perchloroethylene.
1017
Epichlorohydnin, chioroethers
bis( chloromethyl)
ether and bis—(2—chloroethyl) ethers
,
trichloropropane, dichloropropanols.
1018
1,2—dichloroethane, tnichioroethylene,
hexachlorobutadiene, hexachiorobenzene.
1019
Ethylene dichlonide, 1,l,l—trichloroethane,
1,1,2—trichioroethane,
tetrachioroethanes
(l,l,2,2—tetrachloroethane and 1,1,1,2—
tetrachioroethane), trichloroethylene,
tetrachloroethylene,
carbon tetrachionide,
chloroform, vinyl chloride, vinylidene
chloride.
K020
Ethylene dichloride, 1,1,l—trichloroethane,
1,1,2—trichioroethane,
tetrachloro—ethanes
(l,1,2,2—tetrachloroethane and 1,1,1,2—
73-528

—55—
tetrachioroethane),
trichioroethylene,
tetrachloroethylene, carbon tetrachlonide,
chloroform, vinyl chloride, vinylidene
chloride.
1021
Antimony, carbon tetrachloride, chloroform.
1022
Phenol, tars Cpolycyclic aromatic
hydrocarbons).
1023
Phthalic anhydride,
maleic anhydnide.
1024
Phthalic anhydnide,
i,4—naphthoguinone.
K025
Meta—dinitrobenzene,
2,4—dinitrotoluene.
1026
Paraidehyde, pyridines,
2—picoline.
K027
Toluene diisocyanate, toluene—2,
4—diamine.
1028
l,i,l—tnichloroethane, vinyl chloride.
K029
1,2—dichioroethane, l,l,l—trichloroethane,
vinyl
chloride, vinylidene chloride, chloroform.
1030
Hexachlorobenzene, hexachlorobutadiene,
hexachloroethane, 1,1,l,2—tetrachloroethane,
l,l,2,2—tetrachloroethane, ethylene
dichlonide.
1031
Arsenic.
1032
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.
1033
Hexachiorocyclopentadiene.
K034
Hexachlorocyclopentadiene.
1035
Creosote, chrysene, naphthalene,
fluoranthene,
benzo(b) fluoranthene, benzo(a)—pyrene,
indeno(i,2,3—cd) pyrene, benzo(a)anthracene,
dibenzo(a)anthracene, acenaphthalene.
1036
Toluene, phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic
acid esters.
1037
Toluene, phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic
acid esters.
1038
Phorate,
formaldehyde, phosphorodithioic and
phosphorothioic acid esters.
1039
Phosphorodithioic and phosphorothioic acid
esters.
1040
Phorate, formaldehyde, phosphorodithioic and
phosphorothioic acid esters.
1041
Toxaphene.
1042
Hexachlorobenzene,
ortho—dichlorobenzene.
1043
2,4—dichiorophenol, 2,6—dichlorophenol,
2,4,6—
tnichiorophenol.
1044
N.A.
1045
N.A.
1046
Lead
1047
N.A.
1048
Hexavalent
chromium,
lead.
1049
Hexavalent chromium,
lead.
1050
Hexavalent chromium.
1051
Hexavalent chromium,
lead.
1052
Lead
1060
Cyanide, naphthalene, phenolic compounds,
arsenic.
K06l
Hexavalent chromium,
lead, cadmium.
73-529

—56—
1062
Hexavalent chromium, lead.
1069
Hexavalent chromium,
lead, cadmium.
K071
Mercury.
1073
Chloroform,
carbon tetrachlonide,
hexachioroethane,
trichloroethane,
tetrachloroethylene, dichloroethylene,
1,1,2, 2—tetrachloroethane.
1083
Aniline, diphenylamine, nitrobenzene,
phenylenediamine.
1084
Arsenic.
K085
Benzene, dichlorobenzenes, tnichlorobenzenes,
tetrachlorobenzenes, pentachlorobenzene,
hexachlorobenzene, benzyl chloride.
1086
Lead, hexavalent chromium.
1087
Phenol, naphthalene.
1093
Phthalic anhydnide maleic anhydnide.
1094
Phthalic anhydride.
1095
1,1,2—tnichioroethane,
1,1,1,2—
tetrachloroethane, l,l,2,2—tetrachloroethane.
1096
l,2—dichioroethane, l,i,i,—trichloroethane,
1,1,
2—tr ichi oroethane.
1097
Chlordane,
heptachior.
1098
Toxaphene.
K099
2,4—dichlorophenoi, 2,4,6—tnichlorophenol.
1100
Hexavalent chromium,
lead, cadmium.
1101
Arsenic.
K102
Arsenic.
1103
Aniline, nitrobenzene, phenylenediamine.
K104
Aniline, benzene, diphenylamine, nitrobenzene,
phynylenediamine.
1105
Benzene, monochlorobenzene,
dichlorobenzenes,
2,4, 6—tnichlorophenol.
Ki06
Mercury.
1111
2,4—Dinitrotoluene.
Ki12
2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toluidine,
aniline.
1113
2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toluidine,
aniline.
1114
2,4—Toluenediamine, o—toluidine, p—toluidine.
1115
2,4—Toluenediamine.
1116
Carbon tetrachlonide, tetrachloroethylene,
chloroform, phosgene.
1117
Ethylene dibromide
1118
Ethylene dibromide
1136
Ethylene dibromide
N.A.——Waste
is hazardous because
it fails the test for the
characteristic of
ignitability, corrosivity,
or reactivity.
(Source:
Amended at
10
Ill. Reg.
effective
Appendix H
Hazardous Constituents
73.530

—57—
acetonitrile (ethanenitrile)
acetophenone
(ethanone, 1—phenyl—)
3—Calpha-acetonylbenzyi)—4—hydroxycoumarin and salts
(warfanin)
2—acetylaminofluorene
(acetamide,
N—(9H—fluoren—2—yl)—)
acetyl chloride
(ethanoyl chloride)
l—acetyi—2—thiourea
(acetamide,
N—(aininothioxomethyi)—)
acrolein
C2—propenal)
acrylamide (2—propenamide)
acrylonitnile (2—propenenitrile)
afiatoxins
aldnin
(l,2,3,4,10,lO—hexachloro—l,4,4a,5,8,8a—hexahydro—
endo,exo—l,4: 5,8—dimethanonaphthalene)
allyl alcohol
(2—propen—1—ol)
aluminum phosphide
4—aminobiphenyl
C
1,l’—biphenyi—4—amine)
6—amino—l,la,2,8,8a,8b—hexahydro—8—(hydroxymethyi)—8a—
methoxy—5—methylcarbamate azirino2’
,3’ :3,4pyrrolo
1,2alindole—4,7—dione,
(ester)
(rnitomycin
C)
(azirino2’,3’:3,4pyrrolo(l,2a)indole—4,7—dione,
6—amino—8—((aminocarbonyl)oxy)methyl—l,la,2,8,8a,8b—
hexahydro-8a--methoxy—5—methyl—)
5—C
aminomethyl )—3—isoxazolol
(3(2H)—jsoxazoione, 5—(aminomethyl)—)
4—aminopynidine (4—pynidinamine)
amitrole
(lH—l,2,4—tniazol—3—amine)
aniline (benzenamine)
antimony and compounds, N.O.S.
(not otherwise specified)
anami te
(sulfurous acid,
2—chloroethyl—,
2—4—(l,l—
dimethylethyl)phenoxy
—1—methylethyl ester)
arsenic and compounds, N.O.S.
arsenic acid (orthoarsenic acid)
arsenic pentoxide (arsenic
(V)
oxide)
arsenic tnioxide
(arsenic
(III) oxide)
auramine
(benzenamine, 4,4’—carbonmmidoylbisN,N—dimethyl—,
monohydrochioride
azasenine
(L—serine, diazoacetate
(ester))
barium and compounds, N.0.S.
barium cyanide
benzc
acnidine
(3,4—benzacridine)
benz a
anthracene
(1 ,2—benzanthracene)
benzene
(cyclohexatriene)
benzene, 2—amino—i—methyl
(o—toluidine)
benzene, 4—amino—1—methyl
(p—toluidine)
benzenearSOnic acid (arsonic acid,
phenyl—)
benzene, dichloromethyi—
(benzal chloride)
benzenethiol
(thiophenol)
benzidine (l,l’—biphenylj—4,4’—diamine)
benzo(b)fluoranthene (2,3—benzofluoranthene)
73-531

—58—
benzo(j)fluoranthene
(7,8—benzofluoranthene)
benzo(a)pyrene (3,4—benzopyrene)
p—benzoquinone
(1
,
4—cyclohexadienedione)
benzotrichloride (benzene, tnichioromethyl—)
benzyl
chloride
(benzene,
(chloroxnethyl)—)
beryllium and compounds, N.O.S.
bis(2—chloroethoxy)methane
(ethane, 1,i’—methylenebis(oxy)bis2—chloro—
bis(2—chloroethyl)
ether
(ethane, l,1’—oxybis2—chloro—
N,N—bis( 2—chloroethyl)—2—napthyiainine
(chlornaphazine)
bis(2—chloroisopropyl)
ether
(propane, 2,2’—oxybis2—chioro—)
bis(chloromethyi) ether
(methane, oxybischlorol—)
bis(2—ethyihexyl) phthaiate
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, bis(2—ethylhexyl)
ester)
bromoacetone (2—propanone, 1—bromo—)
bromomethane (methyl bromide)
4—bromophenyl phenyl ether
(benzene, 1—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—diriitrophenol
(DNBP)
(phenol, 2,4—dinitro—6—(l—methylpropyi)—)
cadmium and compounds, N.O.S.
calcium chromate
(chronic acid,
calcium salt)
calcium cyanide
carbon disulfide (carbon bisulfide)
carbon oxyfluoride (carbonyl fluoride)
chioral
Cacetaldehyde, trichloro—)
chiorambucil
(butanoic acid, 4—tbis(2—chloroethyi)aminobenzene—)
chlordane (alpha and gamma isomers)
(4, 7—metharioindan,l,2,4,5,6,7,8, 8—octachloro—
3,4,7,7a—tetrahydro—)
(alpha and gamma isomers)
chlorinated benzenes, N.O.S.
chlorinated ethane, N.O.S.
chlorinated fluorocarbons, N.O.S.
chlorinated naphthalene,
N.O.S.
chlorinated phenol, N.O.S.
chloroacetaldehyde (acetaldehyde,
chloro—)
chioroalkyl ethers, N.0.S.
p—chloroaniline (benzeneamine, 4—chloro—)
chlorobenzene
(benzene, chloro—)
chlorobenzilate
(benzeneacetic acid,
4—chloro—alpha—(4—chlorophenyl)--
aipha—hydroxy—, ethyl ester)
(2—chloro—l ,3—butadiene
(chloroprene)
p—chloro—m—cresol
(phenol, 4—chloro—3—methyl—)
73-532

—59—
l—chloro—2, 3—epoxypropane
(oxirane,
2—(chioromethyl)—)
2—chioroethyl vinyl
ether
(ethene,
(2—chloroethoxy)—)
chloroform (methane, trichloro—)
chloromethane (methyl chloride)
chioromethyl methyl ether
(methane, chloromethoxy—)
2—chloronaphthalene (naphthaiene, beta-chloro-)
2—chlorophenol
(phenol, o—chloro—)
1—(o—chlorophenyi)thiourea (thiourea,
(2—chiorophenyl)—)
3—chloropropene
(allyl chloride)
3—chloropropionitrile (propanenitrile, 3—chloro—)
chromium and compounds,
N.0.S.
chrysene
(l,2—benzphenanthrene)
citrus red No.
2
(2—naphthol, 1—(2,5—dimethoxyphenyl)azoj—)
coal tars
copper cyanide
creosote (creosote, wood)
cresols (cresylic acid)
(phenol, methyl—)
crotonaldehyde
(2—butenal)
cyanides
(soluble salts and complexes), N.O.S.
cyanogen (ethanedinitrile)
cyanogen
bromide
(bromine
cyanide)
cyanogen
chloride
(chlorine
cyanide)
cycasin
(beta—D—glucopyranoside,
(methyl—ONN—azoxy)methyl—)
2—cyclohexyl—4,6—dinitrophenol
(phenol,
2—cyclohexyl—4,6—dinitro—)
cyclophosphamide
(2H—1,3,2—oxazaphosphorine,
bis(2—chloroethyl)amino—
tetrahydro—,
2—oxide)
d aunomycin
(5,i2—naphthacenedione,
(8S—cis)—8—acetyl—1O—
(3—amino—2,3,6—tnideoxy)—alpha—L—iyxo—hexopyranosyl)oxy—
7,8,9,lO—tetrahydro—6,8,1l—trihydroxy—l—methoxy—)
DDD
(dichiorodiphenyldichioroethane)
(ethane, l,i—dichloro—2,2—bis(p—chlorophenyl)—)
DDE
(ethylene,
l,i—dichloro—2,2—bis(4—chiorophenyl)—)
DDT
(dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane)
(ethane, l,1,l—trichioro—2,2—bis(p—chlorophenyl)—)
diallate
(S—C2,3—dichloroallyl)diisopropylthiocarbamate)
dibenzfa,hacridine
(l,2,5,6—dibenzacnidine)
dibenza,jacridine
Ci,2,7,8—dibenzacridine)
dibenza,hanthracene
(l,2,5,6—dibenzanthracene)
7H—dibenzoc,gcarbazoie
(3,4,5,6—dibenzcarbazole)
dibenzoa,epyrene
(l,2,4,5—dibenzpyrene)
dibenzoa,hpyrene
(l,2,5,6—dibenzpyrene)
dibenzoa,ipyrene
(l,2,7,8—dibenzpyrene)
1, 2—dibromo—3—chloropropane
(propane, 1,2—dibromo—3—chloro—)
1,2—dibromoethane
(ethylene dibromide)
dibromomethane (methylene bromide)
“4”

—60—
di—n—butyl phthalate
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, dibutyl ester)
o—dichlorobenzene (benzene,
l,2—dichloro—)
ni—dichlorobenzene (benzene, l,3—dichloro—)
p—dichlorobenzene (benzene, l,4—dichloro—)
dichlorobenzene,
N.0.S.
(benzene,
dichloro—, N.O.S.)
3,3‘—dichlorobenzidine
(l,l’—biphenyl—4,4’—diamine,
3,3’—dichioro—)
l,4—dichloro—2—butene
(2—butene,
l,4—dichloro—)
dichlorodifiuoromethane (methane, dichlorodifluoro—)
1,l—dichloroethane (ethylidine dichloride)
1,2—dichloroethane
(ethylene dichioride)
trans—1,2—dichlorethene (l,2—dichlorethylene)
dichloroethylene,
N.0.S.
(ethene, dichloro—, N.0.S.)
l,1—dichloroethylene (ethene, l,l—dichloro—)
dichloromethane
(methylene chloride)
2,4—dichiorophenol (phenol, 2,4—dichioro—)
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)
dichioropropane, N.0.S.
(propane, dichloro—,N.O.S.)
i,2—dichloropropane (propylene dichioride)
dichloropropanol,
N.O.S.
Cpropanol, dichloro—, N.O.S.)
dichloropropene, N.0.S.
(propene, dichloro—, N.0.S.)
1,3—dichioropropene (1—propene,
1,3—dichloro-)
dieldrin
(1,2,3,4,lO,10—hexachloro—6,7—epoxy—1,4,4a,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,
1,2—diethyl—)
0,0—diethyl S—methyl ester of phosphorodithioic acid
(phosphorodithioic acid, O,O—diethyl
S—methyl ester)
O,O—diethylphosphoric
acid, 0—p—nitrophenyl ester
(phosphoric
acid, diethyl p—nitrophenyl ester)
diethyl phthalate
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid,
diethyl ester)
0,0—diethyl 0—2—pyrazinyl phosphorothioate
(phosphorothioic acid,
O,O—diethyl O—pyrazinyl ester)
diethylstilbestrol
(4,4’—stilbenedioi, alpha,alpha—diethyi,
bis(dihydrogen phosphate,
CE)—)
dihydrosaf
role
(benzene,
1, 2—methylenedioxy—4—propyl—)
3,4—dihydroxy—alpha—(methylamino)methyl benzyl alcohol
(l,2—benzenediol, 4—1—hydroxy—2—(methylamino)ethyl—)
diisopropylfluorophosphate
(DFP)
(phosphorofluoridic acid, bis(l—methylethyl)
ester)
dimethoate
(phosphorodithioic
acid, 0,0—dimethyl
S—2—(methylamino)—2—oxoethyll
ester)
3,3 ‘—dimethoxybenzidine
73-534

—61—
(1,l’—biphenyi—4,4’—diamine,
3,3’—dimethoxy—)
p-dimethylaminoazobenzene
(benzenamine, N,N-dimethyi—4—(phenyiazo)-)
7,12—dimethyibenza
anthracene
(i,2—benzanthracene, 7,12—dimethyi—)
3,3 ‘—diinethylbenzidine
Cl,l’—biphenyi—4,4’—diamine,
3,3’—dimethyl—)
dimethyicarbamoyl chloride
(carbamaoyl chloride, dimethyl—)
l,1—dimethylhydrazine
(hydrazine, 1,1—dimethyl—)
l,2—dimethylhydrazine (hydrazine,
i,2—dimethyl—)
3,3—dimethyl—i—(methyithio)-2—butanone,
O—(methylamino)carbonyl
oxime
C
thiofanox)
alpha,alpha—dimethylphenethylamine
(ethanamine,
l,l—dimethyl-2—phenyl—)
2,4—dimethylphenol
(phenol,
2,4—dimethyl—)
dimethyl phthalate
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid, dimethyl ester)
dimethylsulfate
(sulfuric acid, dimethyl ester)
dinitrobenzene,
N.0.S.
(benzene, dinitro—, N.0.S.)
4,6—dinitro—o—cresoi and salts
Cphenol, 2,4—dinitro—6—methyl-,
and salts)
2,4—dinitrophenol
(phenol,
2,4—dinitro—)
2,4—dinitrotoiuene
(benzene, 1—methyl—2,4—dinitro—)
2,6—dinitrotoluene
(benzene, 1—methyl—2,6—dinitro—)
di—n—octyl phthalate
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic acid,
dioctyl ester)
1,4—dioxane
(1,4—diethylene oxide)
diphenylamine
(benzenamine,
N—phenyl—)
i,2—diphenylhydrazine (hydrazine, l,2—diphenyl—)
di—n—propylnitrosainine (N—nitroso--di—n—propylamine)
disulfoton
(O,O—diethyi S—(2—(ethylthio)ethyl
phosphorodithioate
2,4—dithiobiuret (thioimidodicarbonic diamide)
endosuif
an
(5—norbornene, 2,3—dimethanol,
l,4,5,6,7,7—hexachloro--,
cyclic sulfite)
endrin
and metabolites
(l,2,3,4,lO,1O—hexachlono—6,7—epoxy—1,4,4a,5,6,7,8,8a—
octahydro—endo,endo—l
,
4: 5,8—dimethanonaphthalene,
and metabolites)
ethyl carbamate
(urethan)
(carbamic acid, ethyl
ester)
ethyl cyanide (proparienitrile)
ethylenebisdithiocarbamic
acid, salts
arid esters
(l,2—ethanediylbiscarbamodithioic
acid,
salts and esters)
ethylene glycol monoethyl ether
(ethanol, 2—ethoxy-)
ethyleneimine
(aziridine)
ethylene oxide
(oxirane)
ethylenethiourea
(2—imidazolidinethione)
ethyl methacrylate (2—propenoic acid,
2—methyl—,
ethyl ester)
73.535

—62—
ethyl methanesulfonate Cmethanesulfonic
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.0.S.
heptachlor
(4,7—methano—1H—idene,
1,4,5,6,7,8 ,8—heptachloro—
3a, 4,7 ,7a—tetrahydro—)
heptachlor epoxide
(alpha, beta and gamma
isomers)
(4,7—methano—lH—indene, 1,4,5,6,7,8,8—heptachloro—
2,3—epoxy—3a,4,7,7—tetrahydro—, alpha, beta and
gamma
isomers)
hexachlorobenzene
(benzene, hexachloro—)
hexachiorobutadiene
(l,3—butadiene, hexachloro—)
hexachlorocyclohexane
Call isomers)
(lindane and isomers)
hexachlorocyclopentadiene
(cyclopentadiene, hexachloro—)
hexachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins
hexachlorodibenzofurans
hexachloroethane
(ethane, hexachloro—)
l,2,3,4,lO,iO—hexachioro—1,4,4a,5,B,8a—hexahydro—l,4:5,8—
endo
,
endo—dimethanonaphthalene
(hexachlorohexahydro—endo,endo—dimethanonaphthalene)
hexachiorophene
(2,2’—methylenebis(3,4,6—trichlorophenol))
hexachloropropene (propene, hexachloro—)
hexaethyl tetraphosphate
(tetraphosphoric acid, hexaethyl ester)
hydrazine
(diarnine)
hydrocyanic acid (hydrogen cyanide)
hydrofluoric acid (hydrogen fluoride)
hydrogen sulfide
hydroxydimethylarsine oxide
(cacodylic acid)
indeno(l,2,3—cd) pyrene
l,10—(1,2—phenylene)pyrene)
iodomethane
(methyl iodide)
iron dextran (ferric dextran)
isocyanic acid, methyl ester
(methyl isocyanate)
isobutyi a’lcohol
(l—propanol, 2—methyl—)
isosafrole (benzene, l,2—methylenedioxy—4—allyl—)
kepone
C
decachlorooctahydro—1
,
3,4—metheno—2H—
cyclobutacd
pentalen—2—one)
lasiocarpine
(2—butenoic acid,
2—methyl—,
7—(2,3—dihydroxy—
2—(1—methoxyethyi)—3—methyl—1—oxobutoxy)methyi
-
2,3,5,7a—tetrahydro—lH—pyrrolizin—1—yl
ester)
lead and compounds, N.0.S.
73.536

—63—
lead acetate
(acetic acid, lead salt)
lead phosphate (phosphoric acid, lead salt)
lead subacetate
(lead, bis(acetato—0)tetrahydroxytri—)
maleic anhydride (2,5—furandione)
maleic hydrazide
(l,2—dihydro—3,6—pyridazinedione)
malononitriie (propanedinitrile)
meiphalan
alanine,
3—(p—bis(2—chloroethyl)amino)phenyl—,
L—)
mercury fulminate
(fulminic acid, mercury salt)
mercury and compounds, N.0.S.
methacrylonitrile
(2—propenenitrile,
2—methyl—)
methanethiol
(thiomethanol)
methapyrilene
(pyridine, 2—(2—diinethylamino)ethyl—2—thenylamino—)
metholmyl
(acetimidic acid, N—(methylcarbamoyl)oxythio—,
methyl ester)
methoxychior
(ethane,
l,1,l—trichloro—2,2’—bisCp—methoxyphenyi)—)
2—methylaziridine
(1,2—propylenimine)
3—methyicholanthrene
(benz
j
aceanthrylene,
1, 2—dihydro—3—methyl—)
methylchlorocarbonate
(carbanochloridic acid, methyl ester)
4,4 ‘—methylenebisC2—chioroaniline)
4,4 ‘—rnethylenebis(2—chlorobenzenamine))
methyl ethyl
ketone
(MEK)
C2—butanone)
methyl hydrazine (hydrazine, methyl—)
2—methyilactonitrile (propanenitrile, 2—hydroxy—2—methyi—)
methyl methacrylate (2—propenoic acid, 2—methyl—,
methyl ester)
methyl methanesulfonate
(methanesulfonic acid,
methyl ester)
2—methyl—2—(methylthio(propionaldehyde—0—
(methylcarbonyl)
oxitne
(propanal,
2—methyl—2—(inethylthio)—,
0—
(methylamino)carbonyl
oxmme)
N—methyl—N’—nitro—N—nitrosoguanidine
(guanidine, N—nitroso—N—methyl—N’—nitro—)
methyl
parathion
(O,O—dimethyl O—(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)
l—naphthyiamine (aipha—naphthylamine)
2—naphthyiamine (beta—naphthylamine)
1—naphthyl—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—(l—methyl—2—pyrrolidinyl)—, and salts)
nitric oxide (nitrogen
(II)
oxide)
p—nitroaniline (benzenamine, 4—nitro—)
73.537

—64—
nitrobenzene (benzene, nitro—)
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
(ethanainine, 2—chloro—, N—(2—chloroethyl)—N—methyl—,
N—oxide,
and hydrochloride salt)
nitroglycerin (1,2,3—propanetriol, trinitrate)
4—nitrophenol (phenol,
4—nitro—)
2—nitropropane
(propane,
2—nitro—)
4—nitroquinoline—l—oxide
(quinoline, 4—nitro—l—oxide—)
nitrosamirie, N.0.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
Cdimethylnitrosamine)
N—ni troso—N—ethylurea
(carbamide, N—ethyl—N—nitroso—)
N—nitrosomethylethylarnine (ethanamine, N—ntethyl—N—nitroso—)
N—ni troso—N—inethylurea
(carbamide,
N—inethyl—N—nitroso-)
N—ni troso—N--me thyl urethane
(carbamic acid, methylnitroso—,
ethyl ester)
N—nitrosomethylvinylamine
(ethenamine, N—niethyl—N—nitroso—)
N—rtitrosomorpholine
(morpholine, N—nitroso—)
N—nitrosonornicotine (nornicotine, N—nitroso--)
N—nitrosopiperidine
(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
C diphosphoramide, octamethyl—)
osmium tetroxide (osmium (VIII) oxide)
7—oxabicyclo2.2.1heptane—2,3—dicarboxylic
acid
(endothal)
paraldehyde
(l,3,5—trioxane,
2,4,6—trimethyl—)
parathion
(phosphorothioic
acid, 0,0—diethyl O—(p—nitrophenyl)
ester)
pentachlorobenzene (benzene, pentachloro—)
pentachlorodibenzo—p—dioxins
pentachlorodibenzofurans
pentachloroethane (ethane, pentachloro—)
pentachloronitrobenzene
(PCNB)
(benzene, pentachioronitro—)
pentachlorophenol
(phenol, pentachioro—)
phenacetin
(acetamide, N—(4—ethoxyphenyl)—)
phenol (benzene, hydroxy—)
phenylenediamine (benzenediamine)
phenylmercury acetate
(mercury, acetatophenyl—)
N-phenyithiourea (thiourea, phenyl—)
phosgene (carbonyl chloride)
phosphine (hydrogen phosphide)
73.538

—65—
phosphorodithioic
acid, 0,O—diethyl
S—(ethylthio)methyl)
ester
(phorate)
phosphorothioic acid, O,0—dimethyi
O—p—(
(dimethylamino)sulfonyl)phenyl
ester
(famphur)
phthalic acid esters, N.O.S.
(benzene,
1,2—dicarboxylic
acid,
esters,
N.0.S.)
phthalic anhydride
(l,2—benzenedicarboxylic
acid
anhydride)
2—picoline
(pyridine,
2—methyl—)
polychiorinated biphenyl, N.O.S.
potassium
cyanide
potassium silver cyanide
(argentate(i—),
dicyano—,
potassium)
pro n am ide
(3,5—dichloro—N—(1,i—dimethyl—2—propynyl)benzamide)
1,3—propane sultone
(1,2—oxathiolane, 2,2—dioxide)
n—propylamine (1—propanamine)
propylthiouracil
(2,3—dihydro—6—propyl-2--thioxo—4(1H)—pyrimidinone)
2—propyn—l—ol
(propargyl
alcohol.)
pyridine
reserpine
(yohimban—l6—carboxylic acid,
1l,l7—dimethoxy—
18—(3,4,5—trimethoxybenzoyl)oxy—,
methyl ester)
resorcinol
(1,
3—benzenedioi)
saccharin and salts
(i,2—benzoisothiazolin—3—one, 1,1—dioxide, and salts)
safrole (benzené, l,2—methyienedioxy—4—allyl—)
selenious acid (selenium dioxide)
selenium and compounds, N.0.S.
selenium sulfide (sulfur
selenide)
selenourea (carbamimidoselenoic acid)
silver and compounds, N.0.S.
silver cyanide
sodium cyanide
streptozotocin
(D—glucopyranose,
2—deoxy—2—(3—niethyl—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.0.S.
(ethane,
tetrachioro—,
N.O.S.)
1,l,l,2—tetrachloroethane (ethane, l,1,l,2—tetrachloro—)
1,l,2,2—tetrachloroethane
(ethane, l,1,2,2—tetrachloro—)
tetrachioroethene (perchloroethylene)
tetrachloromethane (carbon tetrachioride)
2,3,4,6—tetrachlorophenol
(phenol, 2,3,4,6—tetrachloro—)
73.539

—66—
tetraethyldithiopyrophosphate
(dithiopyrophosphoric acid, tetraethyl ester)
tetraethyl
lead
(plumbane, tetraethyl—)
tetraethylpyrophosphate Cpyrophosphoric acid,
tetraethyl ester)
tetranitromethane
(methane, tetranitro—)
thallium and compounds, N.0.S.
thailic 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 selenite
thallium
(I)
sulfate
(sulfuric acid, thallium (I)
salt)
thioacetamide (ethanethioamide)
thiosemicarbazide (hydrazinecarbothioaniide)
thiourea
(carbamide, thio—)
thiuram (bis(dimethyithiocarbamoyl)
disulfide)
toluene (benzene, methyl—)
toiuenediamine
,
N.O.S.
(diaminotoluene N.O.S.)
2, 4—toluenediamine
2, 6—toluenediamine
3, 4—toluenediamine
toluene diisocyanate (benzene, 1,3—diisocyanatomethyi—)
o—toluidine hydrochloride
(benzeneamine,
2—methyl—,
hydrochloride)
toxaphene
(camphene,
octachloro—)
tribroinomethane (bromoform)
1,2, 4—trichlorobenzene (benzene,
1,2, 4—trichloro—)
l,1,l—trichloroethane
(methyl chloroform)
l,1,2—trichioroethane
(ethane, 1,1,2—trichloro—)
trichloroethene
(trichioroethylene)
trichioromethanethiol (methanethiol, trichloro—)
trichloromonofluoromethane (methane, trichlorofluoro—)
2,4,5—trichlorophenol (phenol,
2,4,5—trichloro—)
2,4,6—trichlorophenol
(phenol, 2,4,6—trichloro—)
2,4,5—trichlorophenoxyacetic acid
(2,4,5—T)
(acetic
acid,
2,4,5—trichlorophenoxy—)
2,4,5—trichlorophenoxypropionic acid (2,4,5—TP)
(silvex)
(propionic acid,
2—(2,4,5—trichlorophenoxy)—)
trichioropropane, N.O.S.
(propane, trichloro—, N.O.S.)
1, 2,3—trichloropropane
(propane, 1,2,3—trichloro—)
O,O,O—triethyl phosphorothioate
(phosphorothioic acid, 0,0,0—triethyl ester)
sym—tr
mi
trobenzene
Cbenzene, 1,3,5—trinitro—)
tris(1—aziridinyl) phosphine sulfide
Cphosphine sulfide, tris(l—aziridinyl)—)
tris(2,3—dibromopropyi) phosphate
Ci—propanol,
2,3—dibromo—, phosphate)
trypan blue
(2,7—naphthalenedisulfonic
acid,
3,3’—(3,3’—
dimethyl(i,l’—biphenyl)—4,4’—diyl)bis(azo)bis(5—
73.540

—67—
amino—4—hydroxy—, tetrasodium salt)
undecamethyienediamine, N,N’—bis(2—chlorobenzylamine),
dihydrochioride
(N,N’—undecamethylenebis)2—chlorobenzylamine),
dihydrochloride)
uracil
mustard
(uracil, 5—bis(2—chloroethyi)amino—)
vanadic acid, ammonium salt (ammonium vanadate)
vanadium pentoxide (vanadium
CV) oxide)
vinyl chloride (ethene, chioro—)
zinc cyanide
zinc phosphide
(Source:
Amended
at
10
Ill.
Reg.
effective
73-541

—68—
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
Packaging
Labeling
Marking
Placard
ing
Accumulation
Time
SUBPART
D:
RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING
Section
722.140
722.141
722
.
142
722.143
722.144
Recordkeeping
Annual
Reporting
Exception
Reporting
Additional
Reporting
Special Requirements for Generators of between 100
and
1000
kilograms
per
month
SUBPART
E:
SPECIAL CONDITIONS
Section
722. 150
722.151
Appendix A
International Shipments
Farmers
Form—Annual
Report
(EPA
Form
8700—13)
(Repealed)
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).
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
73.542

—69—
SOURCE:
Adopted
in R8l—22,
43
PCB
427,
at
5 Iii. Reg. 9781,
effective as noted in 35
Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended and
codified
in RBl—22,
45 PCB 317, at
6
Ill. Reg.
4828, effective as
noted
in
35
Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended in R82—18,
Si PCB 31,
at
7
Ill.
Reg.
2518,
effective February 22, 1983;
amended
in R84—
9 at
9
Ill.
Reg. 11950, effective July 24,
1985; amended in R85—
22
at 10
Ill. Reg.
1131, effective January
2,
1986;
amended in
R86—l at
10
Ill. Reg. 14112, effective August 12,
1986;
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 requirements of this Subpart do not apply
to
hazardous waste produced by generators of greater than
100 kg but less than 1000 kg
in
a calendar month where:
1)
The waste
is reclaimed under
a contractual
agreement pursuant to which:
A)
The type of waste
and frequency of shipments
are specified
in the agreement:
B)
The vehicle used
to transport the waste to the
recycling facility and
to deliver regenerated
material back to the generator
is owned and
operated by the reclaimer of the waste;
and
2)
The generator maintains
a copy of the reclamation
agreement
in his files
for
a period
of at least
three years after
termination or expiration of
the
agreement
*
73-543

—70—
(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
generator may accumulate hazardous waste 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 ~ of
35 Ill. Adm. Code
725.Subpart
I or the waste is placed
in tanks and
the generator complies with Subper~
a~
of
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 725.Subpart
J 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 ?
and B in 35 Ill.
Adm.
Code 725.Subparts
C and D and with 35 Ill.
Adm. 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 ~
the generator has been
granted an extension of the 90—day period.
Such
eitensien may be granted by the Agency iIf hazardous
wastes must remain on—site for longer than
90
days
due
to unforeseen, temporary, and uncontrollable
circumstances~,the generator may seek an extension of
up to 30 days by means of a variance or provisional
variance, pursuant to Section 37
of the Environmental
Protection Act.
An e~ctensienof up to ~G days may be
granted at the discretion of the Agency on a ease-by—
ease bes4e7
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
73.544

—71—
control
of
the
operator
of
the
process
generating
the
waste,
without
a
permit
or
interim
status
and
without complying with paragraph
(a) provided hethe
generator:
A)
Complies with 35
Ill. Adm. Code 725.271,
725.272 and 725.273(a); and
B)
marks 1~isthe generator’s 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
peregraphsubsection
(c)(i)
at or near any point of
generation must, with respect to that amount of
excess waste, comply within three days with
paregrephsubsection
(a)
or other applicable
provisions of this chapter.
During the three day
period the generator must continue
to comply with
paragraphssubsection (c)(l).
The generator must
mark the container holding the excess accumulation
of hazardous waste with the date the excess amount
began accumulating.
d)
A generator who generates greater than 100 kilograms but
less than 1000 kilograms of hazardous waste
in
a
calendar month may accumulate hazardous waste on—site
for 180 days or less without
a permit or without having
interim status provided that:
1)
The quantity of waste accumulated on—site never
exceeds 6000 kilograms:
2)
The generator complies with the requirements of
subsection
(a)(i)
except the generator need not
comply with 35 Ill. Adm. Code 725.276:
3)
The generator complies with the requirements of
subsections
(a)(2)
and
(a)(3)
and the requirements
of
35 Ill.
Adni. Code 725.Subpart C; and
4)
The generator complies with the following
requirements:
A)
At all times there must be at least one
employee either on the premises or on call
(i.e.,
available
to
respond
to
an emergency by
reaching the facility within
a short period of
time) with the responsibility for coordinating
all emergency response measures specified
in
subsection
(d)(4)(D).
The employee is the
73.545

—72—
emergency coordinator.
B)
The generator shall post the following
information next
to the telephone:
i)
The name and telephone number of the
emergency coordinator:
ii)
Location of fire extinguishers and spill
control material, and
if present,
fire
alarm: and
iii) The telephone number of the fire
department, unless the facility has a
direct alarm.
C)
The generator shall ensure that all employees
are thoroughly familiar with proper waste
handling and emergency procedures,
relevant to
their responsibilities during normal facility
operations and emergencies:
D)
The emergency coordinator or designee shall
respond
to any emergencies that arise.
The
applicable responses are as follows:
i)
In the event of
a fire,
call the fire
department or attempt to extinguish it
using
a fire extinguisher:
ii)
In the event of
a spill, contain the flow
of hazardous waste
to the extent
possible, and as soon as is practicable,
clean up the hazardous waste and any
contaminated materials or soil:
iii)
In the event of a fire,
explosion or
other release which could threaten human
health outside the facility or when the
generator has knowledge that
a spill has
reached surface water,
the generator
shall immediately notify the National
Response Center
(using its 24—hour
toll
free_number 800/424—8802).
The report
must include the following information:
the name, address and USEPA
identification number
(35 Ill. Adm. Code
722.112)
of the generator;
date, time and
type of incident
(e.g., spill
or fire);
quantity and
type of hazardous waste
involved
in the incident; extent of
injuries,
if any;
and, estimated quantity
and disposition of recoverable materials1
if any.
73-546

—73—
e)
A generator who generates greater than 100 kilograms
but
less than 1000 kilograms of hazardous waste in
a
calendar month and who must transport the waste, or
offer
the waste for transportation, over
a distance of
200 miles or more for off—site treatment,
storage or
disposal may accumulate hazardous waste on—site for 270
days or less without
a permit or without having interim
status
provided
that the generator complies with the
requirements of subsection
Cd).
f)
A
generator
who
generates
greater
than 100 kilograms but
less than
1000
kilograms of hazardous waste
in a
calendar month and who accumulates hazardous waste in
quantities exceeding 6000 kg or accumulates hazardous
waste for more than 180 days
(or for more than 270 days
if the generator must transport the waste,
or offer
the
waste for transportation,
over
a distance of
200 miles
or more)
is an operator of
a storage facility and
is
subject to the requirements of 35 Ill. Mm. Code 724 and
725
and
the
permit
requirements
of
35 Ill.
Adm. Code 703
unless the generator has been granted an extension to
the 180—day
(or 270—day
if applicable)
period.
If
hazardous wastes must remain on—site for longer than 180
days
(or 270 days
if applicable)
due
to unforeseen,
temporary and uncontrollable circumstances, the
generator may seek an extension of up to
30 days by
means
of variance or provisional variance pursuant to
Section 37
of the Environmental Protection act.
(Source:
Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
effective
)
SUBPART D:
RECORDKEEPING AND REPORTING
Section 722.144
Special Requirements for Generators
of between
100
and
1000
kilograms per month
A
generator
who
generates
greater
than
100 kilograms but less
than 1000 kilograms of hazardous waste
in a calendar month
is
exempt from the requirements of this Subpart, except for the
recordkeeping requirements in Section 722.140(a),(c)
and (d), and
the requirements of Section 722.143.
(Source:
Added
at
10
Ill Reg.
,
effective
)
73.547

—74—
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 R81—22,
43 PCB 427, at
5
Ill. Reg.
9781,
effective as noted
in 35
Ill. Adm. Code 700.106; amended and
codified
in R81—22, 45 PCB 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—19, 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
Pert
35 Ill. Adm. Code 722.
b)
Before transporting the hazardous waste, the transporter
must sign and date the manifest acknowledging acceptance
of the hazardous waste from the generator.
The
73.548

—75—
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:
1)
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 or designated facility.
e)
The requirements of paragraph subsections
Cc),
(d)
and
(f) of this section do not apply to water
(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 rail transportation, the
requirements of paragraphs subsections
Cc),
Cd)
and
(e)
do not apply and the following requirements do apply:
1)
When accepting hazardous waste from a non—rail
transporter, the initial rail transporter must:
73.549

—76—
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 manifest
to:
i)
The next non—rail transporter,
if any;
or,
ii)
The designated facility,
if the shipment
is delivered to that facility by rail;
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 paper.)
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:
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.
73-550

—77—
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)
A transporter transporting hazardous waste from a
generator who generates greater than 100 kilograms but
less than 1000 kilograms of hazardous waste in
a
calendar month need not comply with the requirements of
this Section or those of Section 723.122 provided that:
1)
The waste
is being transported pursuant to
a
reclamation agreement provided for
in
35
Ill. Mm.
Code 722.120(e)
2)
The transporter records, on a log or shipping
paper, the following information
for each shipment:
A)
The name, address, and USEPA Identification
Number
(35 Ill. Mm.
Code 722.112)
of the
generator of the waste
B)
The quantity of waste accepted
C)
All shipping information required by the
United States Department of Transportation
D)
The date the waste
is accepted;
and
3)
The transporter carries this record when
transporting waste
to the reclamation facility; and
4)
The transporter retains these records for
a period
of at least
three years after termination or
expiration of the agreement.
(Source:
Amended at 10 Ill Reg.
effective
)
IT IS SO ORDERED.
73-551

—78—
I, Dorothy M. Gum, Clerk of the Illinois Pollution Control
Board, hereby certify that the above Order was adopted on
the ~3”(day
of
~
,
1986, by a vote of
~
1~.
Dorothy M.
Gu n, Clerk
Illinois Pollution Control Board
73-S52

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