[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 40, Volume 24]

[Revised as of July 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 40CFR257.21]



[Page 382-384]

 

                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT

 

         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)

 

PART 257_CRITERIA FOR CLASSIFICATION OF SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL FACILITIES 

AND PRACTICES--Table of Contents

 

  Subpart B_Disposal Standards for the Receipt of Conditionally Exempt 

 Small Quantity Generator (CESQG) Wastes at Non-Municipal Non-Hazardous 

                          Waste Disposal Units

 

Sec.  257.21  Applicability.



    (a) The requirements in this section apply to units identified in 

Sec.  257.5(a), except as provided in paragraph (b) of this section.

    (b) Ground-water monitoring requirements under Sec. Sec.  257.22 

through 257.25 may be suspended by the Director of an approved State for 

a unit identified in Sec.  257.5(a) if the owner or operator can 

demonstrate that there is no potential for migration of hazardous 

constituents from that unit to the uppermost aquifer during the active 

life of the unit plus 30 years. This demonstration must be certified by 

a qualified ground-water scientist and approved by the Director of an 

approved State, and must be based upon:

    (1) Site-specific field collected measurements, sampling, and 

analysis of physical, chemical, and biological processes affecting 

contaminant fate and transport; and

    (2) Contaminant fate and transport predictions that maximize 

contaminant migration and consider impacts on human health and 

environment.

    (c) Owners and operators of facilities identified in Sec.  257.5(a) 

must comply with the ground-water monitoring requirements of this 

section according to the following schedule unless an alternative 

schedule is specified under paragraph (d) of this section:

    (1) Existing units and lateral expansions must be in compliance with 

the ground-water monitoring requirements specified in Sec. Sec.  257.22 

through 257.25 by July 1, 1998.

    (2) New units identified in Sec.  257.5(a) must be in compliance 

with the ground-water monitoring requirements specified in Sec. Sec.  

257.22 through 257.25 before waste can be placed in the unit.

    (d) The Director of an approved State may specify an alternative 

schedule for the owners or operators of existing units and lateral 

expansions to comply with the ground-water monitoring requirements 

specified in Sec. Sec.  257.22 through 257.25. This schedule must ensure 

that 50 percent of all existing units are in compliance by July 1, 1998, 

and all existing units are in compliance by July 1, 1999. In setting the 

compliance schedule, the Director of an approved State must consider 

potential risks posed by the unit to human health and the environment. 

The following factors should be considered in determining potential 

risk:

    (1) Proximity of human and environmental receptors;

    (2) Design of the unit;

    (3) Age of the unit;

    (4) The size of the unit; and

    (5) Resource value of the underlying aquifer, including:

    (i) Current and future uses;

    (ii) Proximity and withdrawal rate of users; and

    (iii) Ground-water quality and quantity.

    (e) Once established at a unit, ground-water monitoring shall be 

conducted throughout the active life plus 30 years. The Director of an 

approved State may decrease the 30 year period if the owner/operator 

demonstrates that a shorter period of time is adequate to protect human 

health and the environment and the Director approves the demonstration.

    (f) For the purposes of this section, a qualified ground-water 

scientist is a scientist or engineer who has received a baccalaureate or 

post-graduate degree in the natural sciences or engineering and has 

sufficient training and experience in ground-water hydrology and related 

fields as may be demonstrated by State registration, professional 

Certifications, or completion of accredited university programs that 

enable that individual to make sound professional judgments regarding 

ground-water monitoring, contaminant



[[Page 383]]



fate and transport, and corrective-action.

    (g) The Director of an approved State may establish alternative 

schedules for demonstrating compliance with Sec.  257.22(d)(2), 

pertaining to notification of placement of certification in operating 

record; Sec.  257.24(c)(1), pertaining to notification that 

statistically significant increase (SSI) notice is in operating record; 

Sec.  257.24(c) (2) and (3), pertaining to an assessment monitoring 

program; Sec.  257.25(b), pertaining to sampling and analyzing appendix 

II of part 258 constituents; Sec.  257.25(d)(1), pertaining to placement 

of notice (appendix II of 40 CFR part 258 constituents detected) in 

record and notification of notice in record; Sec.  257.25(d)(2), 

pertaining to sampling for appendix I and II of 40 CFR part 258; Sec.  

257.25(g), pertaining to notification (and placement of notice in 

record) of SSI above ground-water protection standard; Sec. Sec.  

257.25(g)(1)(iv) and 257.26(a), pertaining to assessment of corrective 

measures; Sec.  257.27(a), pertaining to selection of remedy and 

notification of placement in record; Sec.  257.28(c)(4), pertaining to 

notification of placement in record (alternative corrective action 

measures); and Sec.  257.28(f), pertaining to notification of placement 

in record (certification of remedy completed).

    (h) Directors of approved States can use the flexibility in 

paragraph (i) of this section for any non-municipal non-hazardous waste 

disposal unit that receives CESQG waste, if the non-municipal non-

hazardous waste disposal unit:

    (1) Disposes of less than 20 tons of non-municipal waste daily, 

based on an annual average; and

    (2) Has no evidence of ground-water contamination; and either

    (3) Serves a community that experiences an annual interruption of at 

least three consecutive months of surface transportation that prevents 

access to a regional waste management facility; or

    (4) Serves a community that has no practicable waste management 

alternative and the non-municipal solid waste disposal facility is 

located in an area that annually receives less than or equal to 25 

inches of precipitation.

    (5) Owners/operators of any non-municipal non-hazardous waste 

disposal unit that meets the criteria in paragraph (h) of this section 

must place in the operating record information demonstrating this.

    (i) Directors of approved States may allow any non-municipal non-

hazardous waste disposal unit meeting the criteria in paragraph (h) of 

this section to:

    (1) Use alternatives to the ground-water monitoring system 

prescribed in Sec. Sec.  257.22 through 257.25 so long as the 

alternatives will detect and, if necessary, assess the nature or extent 

of contamination from the non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal 

unit on a site-specific basis; or establish and use, on a site-specific 

basis, an alternative list of indicator parameters for some or all of 

the constituents listed in appendix I (Appendix I of 40 CFR part 258. 

Alternative indicator parameters approved by the Director of an approved 

State under this section must ensure detection of contamination from the 

non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal unit.

    (2) If contamination is detected through the use of any alternative 

to the ground-water monitoring system prescribed in Sec. Sec.  257.22 

through 257.25, the non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal unit 

owner or operator must perform expanded monitoring to determine whether 

the detected contamination is an actual release from the non-municipal 

solid waste disposal unit and, if so, to determine the nature and extent 

of the contamination. The Director of the approved State shall establish 

a schedule for the non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal unit owner 

or operator to submit results from expanded monitoring in a manner that 

ensures protection of human health and the environment.

    (i) If expanded monitoring indicates that contamination from the 

non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal unit has reached the 

saturated zone, the owner or operator must install ground-water 

monitoring wells and sample these wells in accordance with Sec. Sec.  

257.22 through 257.25.

    (ii) If expanded monitoring indicates that contamination from the 

non-municipal non-hazardous waste disposal unit is present in the 

unsaturated zone or on the surface, the Director of an



[[Page 384]]



approved State shall establish a schedule for the owner or operator to 

submit a description of any necessary corrective measures. The schedule 

shall ensure corrective measures, where necessary, are undertaken in a 

timely manner that protects human health and the environment. The 

proposed corrective measures are subject to revision and approval by the 

Director of the approved State. The owner or operator must implement the 

corrective measures according to a schedule established by the Director 

of the approved State.

    (3) When considering whether to allow alternatives to a ground-water 

monitoring system prescribed in Sec. Sec.  257.22 through 257.25, 

including alternative indicator parameters, the Director of an approved 

State shall consider at least the following factors:

    (i) The geological and hydrogeological characteristics of the site;

    (ii) The impact of manmade and natural features on the effectiveness 

of an alternative technology;

    (iii) Climatic factors that may influence the selection, use, and 

reliability of alternative ground-water monitoring procedures; and

    (iv) The effectiveness of indicator parameters in detecting a 

release.

    (4) The Director of an approved State can require an owner or 

operator to comply with the requirements of Sec. Sec.  257.22 through 

257.25, where it is determined by the Director that using alternatives 

to ground-water monitoring approved under this paragraph are inadequate 

to detect contamination and, if necessary, to assess the nature and 

extent of contamination.