[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 28]
[Revised as of July 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR763.90]

[Page 715-717]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 763--ASBESTOS--Table of Contents
 
           Subpart E--Asbestos-Containing Materials in Schools
 
Sec. 763.90  Response actions.

    (a) The local education agency shall select and implement in a 
timely manner the appropriate response actions in this section 
consistent with the assessment conducted in Sec. 763.88. The response 
actions selected shall be sufficient to protect human health and the 
environment. The local education agency may then select, from the 
response actions which protect human health and the environment, that 
action which is the least burdensome method. Nothing in this section 
shall be construed to prohibit removal of ACBM from a school building at 
any time, should removal be the preferred response action of the local 
education agency.
    (b) If damaged or significantly damaged thermal system insulation 
ACM is present in a building, the local education agency shall:
    (1) At least repair the damaged area.
    (2) Remove the damaged material if it is not feasible, due to 
technological factors, to repair the damage.
    (3) Maintain all thermal system insulation ACM and its covering in 
an intact state and undamaged condition.
    (c)(1) If damaged friable surfacing ACM or damaged friable 
miscellaneous ACM is present in a building, the local education agency 
shall select from among the following response actions: encapsulation, 
enclosure, removal, or repair of the damaged material.
    (2) In selecting the response action from among those which meet the 
definitional standards in Sec. 763.83, the local education agency shall 
determine which of these response actions protects human health and the 
environment. For purposes of determining which of these response actions 
are the least burdensome, the local education agency may then consider 
local circumstances, including occupancy and use patterns within the 
school building, and its economic concerns, including short- and long-
term costs.
    (d) If significantly damaged friable surfacing ACM or significantly 
damaged friable miscellaneous ACM is present in a building the local 
education agency shall:
    (1) Immediately isolate the functional space and restrict access, 
unless

[[Page 716]]

isolation is not necessary to protect human health and the environment.
    (2) Remove the material in the functional space or, depending upon 
whether enclosure or encapsulation would be sufficient to protect human 
health and the environment, enclose or encapsulate.
    (e) If any friable surfacing ACM, thermal system insulation ACM, or 
friable miscellaneous ACM that has potential for damage is present in a 
building, the local education agency shall at least implement an 
operations and maintenance (O&M) program, as described under 
Sec. 763.91.
    (f) If any friable surfacing ACM, thermal system insulation ACM, or 
friable miscellaneous ACM that has potential for significant damage is 
present in a building, the local education agency shall:
    (1) Implement an O&M program, as described under Sec. 763.91.
    (2) Institute preventive measures appropriate to eliminate the 
reasonable likelihood that the ACM or its covering will become 
significantly damaged, deteriorated, or delaminated.
    (3) Remove the material as soon as possible if appropriate 
preventive measures cannot be effectively implemented, or unless other 
response actions are determined to protect human health and the 
environment. Immediately isolate the area and restrict access if 
necessary to avoid an imminent and substantial endangerment to human 
health or the environment.
    (g) Response actions including removal, encapsulation, enclosure, or 
repair, other than small-scale, short-duration repairs, shall be 
designed and conducted by persons accredited to design and conduct 
response actions.
    (h) The requirements of this subpart E in no way supersede the 
worker protection and work practice requirements under 29 CFR 1926.58 
(Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) asbestos worker 
protection standards for construction), 40 CFR part 763, subpart G (EPA 
asbestos worker protection standards for public employees), and 40 CFR 
part 61, subpart M (National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air 
Pollutants--Asbestos).
    (i) Completion of response actions. (1) At the conclusion of any 
action to remove, encapsulate, or enclose ACBM or material assumed to be 
ACBM, a person designated by the local education agency shall visually 
inspect each functional space where such action was conducted to 
determine whether the action has been properly completed.
    (2)(i) A person designated by the local education agency shall 
collect air samples using aggressive sampling as described in appendix A 
to this subpart E to monitor air for clearance after each removal, 
encapsulation, and enclosure project involving ACBM, except for projects 
that are of small-scale, short-duration.
    (ii) Local education agencies shall have air samples collected under 
this section analyzed for asbestos using laboratories accredited by the 
National Bureau of Standards to conduct such analysis using transmission 
electron microscopy (TEM) or, under circumstances permitted in this 
section, laboratories enrolled in the American Industrial Hygiene 
Association Proficiency Analytical Testing Program for phase contrast 
microscopy (PCM).
    (iii) Until the National Bureau of Standards TEM laboratory 
accreditation program is operational, local educational agencies shall 
use laboratories that use the protocol described in appendix A to 
subpart E of this part.
    (3) Except as provided in paragraphs (i)(4), and (i)(5), of this 
section, an action to remove, encapsulate, or enclose ACBM shall be 
considered complete when the average concentration of asbestos of five 
air samples collected within the affected functional space and analyzed 
by the TEM method in appendix A of this subpart E, is not statistically 
significantly different, as determined by the Z-test calculation found 
in appendix A of this subpart E, from the average asbestos concentration 
of five air samples collected at the same time outside the affected 
functional space and analyzed in the same manner, and the average 
asbestos concentration of the three field blanks described in appendix A 
of this subpart E is below the filter background level, as defined in 
appendix A of this subpart E, of 70 structures per square millimeter (70 
s/mm \2\).

[[Page 717]]

    (4) An action may also be considered complete if the volume of air 
drawn for each of the five samples collected within the affected 
functional space is equal to or greater than 1,199 L of air for a 25 mm 
filter or equal to or greater than 2,799 L of air for a 37 mm filter, 
and the average concentration of asbestos as analyzed by the TEM method 
in appendix A of this subpart E, for the five air samples does not 
exceed the filter background level, as defined in appendix A, of 70 
structures per square millimeter (70 s/mm \2\). If the average 
concentration of asbestos of the five air samples within the affected 
functional space exceeds 70 s/mm \2\, or if the volume of air in each of 
the samples is less than 1,199 L of air for a 25 mm filter or less than 
2,799 L of air for a 37 mm filter, the action shall be considered 
complete only when the requirements of paragraph (i)(3) or (i)(5), of 
this section are met.
    (5) At any time, a local education agency may analyze air monitoring 
samples collected for clearance purposes by phase contrast microscopy 
(PCM) to confirm completion of removal, encapsulation, or enclosure of 
ACBM that is greater than small-scale, short-duration and less than or 
equal to 160 square feet or 260 linear feet. The action shall be 
considered complete when the results of samples collected in the 
affected functional space and analyzed by phase contrast microscopy 
using the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) 
Method 7400 entitled ``Fibers'' published in the NIOSH Manual of 
Analytical Methods, 3rd Edition, Second Supplement, August 1987, show 
that the concentration of fibers for each of the five samples is less 
than or equal to a limit of quantitation for PCM (0.01 fibers per cubic 
centimeter (0.01 f/cm \3\) of air). The method is available for public 
inspection at the Office of the Federal Register, 800 North Capitol 
Street, NW, Suite 700, Washington, DC, 20408, and the Non-Confidential 
Information Center (NCIC) (7407), Office of Pollution Prevention and 
Toxics, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Room B-607 NEM, 401 M St., 
SW., Washington, DC 20460, between the hours of 12 p.m. and 4 p.m. 
weekdays excluding legal holidays. This incorporation by reference was 
approved by the Director of the Federal Register in accordance with 5 
U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. The method is incorporated as it exists 
on the effective date of this rule, and a notice of any change to the 
method will be published in the Federal Register.
    (6) To determine the amount of ACBM affected under paragraph (i)(5) 
of this section, the local education agency shall add the total square 
or linear footage of ACBM within the containment barriers used to 
isolate the functional space for the action to remove, encapsulate, or 
enclose the ACBM. Contiguous portions of material subject to such action 
conducted concurrently or at approximately the same time within the same 
school building shall not be separated to qualify under paragraph 
(i)(5), of this section.

[52 FR 41846, Oct. 30, 1987, as amended at 53 FR 12525, Apr. 15, 1988; 
60 FR 31922, June 19, 1995; 60 FR 34465, July 3, 1995]