Ala. Admin. Code r. 335-14-2-.13 - Emergency Preparedness And Response For Management Of Excluded Hazardous Secondary Materials
(1)
Applicability. The requirements of
335-14-2-.13 apply to those areas
of an entity managing hazardous secondary materials excluded under
335-14-2-.01(4)(a)23.
and/or 335-14-2-.01(4)(a)24.
where hazardous secondary materials are generated or accumulated on site.
(a) A generator of hazardous secondary
material, or an intermediate or reclamation facility, that accumulates 6000 kg
or less of hazardous secondary material at any time must comply with
335-14-2-.13(11)
and 335-14-2-.13(12).
(b) A generator of hazardous secondary
material, or an intermediate or reclamation facility, that accumulates more
than 6000 kg of hazardous secondary material at any time must comply with
335-14-2-.13(11)
and 335-14-2-.13(21).
(2) through (10) [Reserved].
(11) Preparedness and prevention.
(a) Maintenance and operation of facility
Facilities generating or accumulating hazardous secondary material must be
maintained and operated to minimize the possibility of a fire, explosion, or
any unplanned sudden or non-sudden release of hazardous secondary materials or
hazardous secondary material constituents to air, soil, or surface water which
could threaten human health or the environment.
(b) Required equipment All facilities
generating or accumulating hazardous secondary material must be equipped with
the following, unless none of the hazards posed by hazardous secondary material
handled at the facility could require a particular kind of equipment specified
below:
1. An internal communications or alarm
system capable of providing immediate emergency instruction (voice or signal)
to facility personnel;
2. A device,
such as a telephone (immediately available at the scene of operations) or a
hand-held two-way radio, capable of summoning emergency assistance from local
police departments, fire departments, or state or local emergency response
teams;
3. Portable fire
extinguishers, fire control equipment (including special extinguishing
equipment, such as that using foam, inert gas, or dry chemicals), spill control
equipment, and decontamination equipment; and
4. Water at adequate volume and pressure to
supply water hose streams, or foam producing equipment, or automatic
sprinklers, or water spray systems.
(c) Testing and maintenance of equipment All
facility communications or alarm systems, fire protection equipment, spill
control equipment, and decontamination equipment, where required, must be
tested and maintained as necessary to assure its proper operation in time of
emergency.
(d) Access to
communications or alarm system
1. Whenever
hazardous secondary material is being poured, mixed, spread, or otherwise
handled, all personnel involved in the operation must have immediate access to
an internal alarm or emergency communication device, either directly or through
visual or voice contact with another employee, unless such a device is not
required under
335-14-2-.13(11)(b).
2. If there is ever just one employee on the
premises while the facility is operating, he must have immediate access to a
device, such as a telephone (immediately available at the scene of operation)
or a hand-held twoway radio, capable of summoning external emergency
assistance, unless such a device is not required under
335-14-2-.13(11)(b).
(e) Required aisle space. The hazardous
secondary material generator or intermediate or reclamation facility must
maintain aisle space to allow the unobstructed movement of personnel, fire
protection equipment, spill control equipment, and decontamination equipment to
any area of facility operation in an emergency, unless aisle space is not
needed for any of these purposes.
(f) Arrangements with local authorities
1. The hazardous secondary material generator
or an intermediate or reclamation facility must attempt to make the following
arrangements, as appropriate for the type of waste handled at his facility and
the potential need for the services of these organizations:
(i) Arrangements to familiarize police, fire
departments, and emergency response teams with the layout of the facility,
properties of hazardous secondary material handled at the facility and
associated hazards, places where facility personnel would normally be working,
entrances to roads inside the facility, and possible evacuation
routes;
(ii) Where more than one
police and fire department might respond to an emergency, agreements
designating primary emergency authority to a specific police and a specific
fire department, and agreements with any others to provide support to the
primary emergency authority;
(iii)
Agreements with state emergency response teams, emergency response contractors,
and equipment suppliers; and
(iv)
Arrangements to familiarize local hospitals with the properties of hazardous
waste handled at the facility and the types of injuries or illnesses which
could result from fires, explosions, or releases at the facility.
2. Where state or local
authorities decline to enter into such arrangements, the hazardous secondary
material generator or an intermediate or reclamation facility must document the
refusal in the operating record.
(12) Emergency procedures for facilities
generating or accumulating 6000 kg or less of hazardous secondary material. A
generator or an intermediate or reclamation facility that generates or
accumulates 6000 kg or less of hazardous secondary material must comply with
the following requirements:
(a) At all times
there must be at least one employee i.e.,either on the premises or on call
(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
335-14-2-.13(12)(d).
This employee is the emergency coordinator.
(b) The generator or intermediate or
reclamation facility must post the following information next to the telephone:
1. The name and telephone number of the
emergency coordinator;
2. Location
of fire extinguishers and spill control material, and, if present, fire alarm;
and
3. The telephone number of the
fire department, unless the facility has a direct alarm.
(c) The generator or an intermediate or
reclamation facility must 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 his designee
must respond to any emergencies that arise. The applicable responses are as
follows:
1. In the event of a fire, call the
fire department or attempt to extinguish it using a fire
extinguisher;
2. 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;
3. In the event of a fire,
explosion, or other release which could threaten human health outside the
facility or when the generator or an intermediate or reclamation facility has
knowledge that a spill has reached surface water, the generator or an
intermediate or reclamation facility must immediately notify the National
Response Center (using their 24-hour toll free number 800/424-8802). The report
must include the following information:
(i)
The name, address, and U.S. EPA Identification Number of the
facility;
(ii) Date, time, and type
of incident (e.g., spill or fire);
(iii) Quantity and type of hazardous waste
involved in the incident;
(iv)
Extent of injuries, if any; and
(v)
Estimated quantity and disposition of recovered materials, if any.
(13) through
(20) [Reserved].
(21)
Contingency planning and emergency procedures for facilities generating or
accumulating more than 6000 kg of hazardous secondary material. A generator or
an intermediate or reclamation facility that generates or accumulates more than
6000 kg of hazardous secondary material must comply with the following
requirements:
(a) Purpose and implementation
of contingency plan.
1. Each generator or an
intermediate or reclamation facility that accumulates more than 6000 kg of
hazardous secondary material must have a contingency plan for his facility. The
contingency plan must be designed to minimize hazards to human health or the
environment from fires, explosions, or any unplanned sudden or non-sudden
release of hazardous secondary material or hazardous secondary material
constituents to air, soil, or surface water.
2. The provisions of the plan must be carried
out immediately whenever there is a fire, explosion, or release of hazardous
secondary material or hazardous secondary material constituents which could
threaten human health or the environment.
(b) Content of contingency plan.
1. The contingency plan must describe the
actions facility personnel must take to comply with paragraphs
335-14-2-.13(21)(a)
and 335-14-2-.13(21)(f)
in response to fires, explosions, or any unplanned sudden or non-sudden release
of hazardous secondary material or hazardous secondary material constituents to
air, soil, or surface water at the facility.
2. If the generator or an intermediate or
reclamation facility accumulating more than 6000 kg of hazardous secondary
material has already prepared a Spill Prevention, Control, and Countermeasures
(SPCC) Plan in accordance with 40 CFR Part 112, or some other emergency or
contingency plan, he need only amend that plan to incorporate hazardous waste
management provisions that are sufficient to comply with the requirements of
335-14-2-.13(21).
The hazardous secondary material generator or an intermediate or reclamation
facility may develop one contingency plan which meets all regulatory
requirements. EPA recommends that the plan be based on the National Response
Team's Integrated Contingency Plan Guidance ("One Plan"). When modifications
are made to non-RCRA provisions in an integrated contingency plan, the changes
do not trigger the need for a RCRA permit modification.
3. The plan must describe arrangements agreed
to by local police departments, fire departments, hospitals, contractors, and
State and local emergency response teams to coordinate emergency services,
pursuant to
335-14-2-.13(11)(f).
4. The plan must list names, addresses, and
phone numbers (office and home) of all persons qualified to act as emergency
coordinator [see
335-14-2-.13(21)(e)],
and this list must be kept up to date. Where more than one person is listed,
one must be named as primary emergency coordinator and others must be listed in
the order in which they will assume responsibility as alternates.
5. The plan must include a list of all
emergency equipment at the facility (such as fire extinguishing systems, spill
control equipment, communications and alarm systems (internal and external),
and decontamination equipment), where this equipment is required. This list
must be kept up to date. In addition, the plan must include the location and a
physical description of each item on the list, and a brief outline of its
capabilities.
6. The plan must
include an evacuation plan for facility personnel where there is a possibility
that evacuation could be necessary. This plan must describe signal(s) to be
used to begin evacuation, evacuation routes, and alternate evacuation routes
(in cases where the primary routes could be blocked by releases of hazardous
waste or fires).
(c)
Copies of contingency plan. A copy of the contingency plan and all revisions to
the plan must be:
1. Maintained at the
facility; and
2. Submitted to all
local police departments, fire departments, hospitals, and State and local
emergency response teams that may be called upon to provide emergency
services.
(d) Amendment
of contingency plan. The contingency plan must be reviewed, and immediately
amended, if necessary, whenever:
1.
Applicable regulations are revised;
2. The plan fails in an emergency;
3. The facility changes-in its design,
construction, operation, maintenance, or other circumstances-in a way that
materially increases the potential for fires, explosions, or releases of
hazardous secondary material or hazardous secondary material constituents, or
changes the response necessary in an emergency;
4. The list of emergency coordinators
changes; or
5. The list of
emergency equipment changes.
(e) Emergency coordinator. At all times,
there must be at least one employee either on the facility 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. This emergency coordinator must be thoroughly familiar with
all aspects of the facility's contingency plan, all operations and activities
at the facility, the location and characteristics of waste handled, the
location of all records within the facility, and the facility layout. In
addition, this person must have the authority to commit the resources needed to
carry out the contingency plan. The emergency coordinator's responsibilities
are more fully spelled out in paragraph (f). Applicable responsibilities for
the emergency coordinator vary, depending on factors such as type and variety
of hazardous secondary material(s) handled by the facility, and type and
complexity of the facility.
(f)
Emergency procedures.
1. Whenever there is an
imminent or actual emergency situation, the emergency coordinator (or his
designee when the emergency coordinator is on call) must immediately:
(i) Activate internal facility alarms or
communication systems, where applicable, to notify all facility personnel;
and
(ii) Notify appropriate State
or local agencies with designated response roles if their help is
needed.
2. Whenever there
is a release, fire, or explosion, the emergency coordinator must immediately
identify the character, exact source, amount, and areal extent of any released
materials. He may do this by observation or review of facility records or
manifests and, if necessary, by chemical analysis.
3. Concurrently, the emergency coordinator
must assess possible hazards to human health or the environment that may result
from the release, fire, or explosion. This assessment must consider both direct
and indirect effects of the release, fire, or explosion (e.g., the effects of
any toxic, irritating, or asphyxiating gases that are generated, or the effects
of any hazardous surface water runoffs from water or chemical agents used to
control fire and heat-induced explosions).
4. If the emergency coordinator determines
that the facility has had a release, fire, or explosion which could threaten
human health, or the environment, outside the facility, he must report his
findings as follows:
(i) If his assessment
indicates that evacuation of local areas may be advisable, he must immediately
notify appropriate local authorities. He must be available to help appropriate
officials decide whether local areas should be evacuated; and
(ii) He must immediately notify either the
government official designated as the on-scene coordinator for that
geographical area, or the National Response Center (using their 24-hour toll
free number 800/424-8802). The report must include:
(I) Name and telephone number of
reporter;
(II) Name and address of
facility;
(III) Time and type of
incident (e.g., release, fire);
(IV) Name and quantity of material(s)
involved, to the extent known;
(V)
The extent of injuries, if any; and
(VI) The possible hazards to human health, or
the environment, outside the facility.
5. During an emergency, the emergency
coordinator must take all reasonable measures necessary to ensure that fires,
explosions, and releases do not occur, recur, or spread to other hazardous
secondary material at the facility. These measures must include, where
applicable, stopping processes and operations, collecting and containing
released material, and removing or isolating containers.
6. If the facility stops operations in
response to a fire, explosion or release, the emergency coordinator must
monitor for leaks, pressure buildup, gas generation, or ruptures in valves,
pipes, or other equipment, wherever this is appropriate.
7. Immediately after an emergency, the
emergency coordinator must provide for treating, storing, or disposing of
recovered secondary material, contaminated soil or surface water, or any other
material that results from a release, fire, or explosion at the facility.
Unless the hazardous secondary material generator can demonstrate, in
accordance with
335-14-2-.01(3)(c) or
(d), that the recovered material is not a
hazardous waste, the owner or operator becomes a generator of hazardous waste
and must manage it in accordance with all applicable requirements of 335-14-3,
335-14-4, and 335-14-6.
8. The
emergency coordinator must ensure that, in the affected area(s) of the
facility:
(i) No secondary material that may
be incompatible with the released material is treated, stored, or disposed of
until cleanup procedures are completed; and
(ii) All emergency equipment listed in the
contingency plan is cleaned and fit for its intended use before operations are
resumed.
9. The hazardous
secondary material generator must note in the operating record the time, date,
and details of any incident that requires implementing the contingency plan.
Within 15 days after the incident, he must submit a written report on the
incident to the Department. The report must include:
(i) Name, address, and telephone number of
the hazardous secondary material generator;
(ii) Name, address, and telephone number of
the facility;
(iii) Date, time, and
type of incident (e.g., fire, explosion);
(iv) Name and quantity of material(s)
involved;
(v) The extent of
injuries, if any;
(vi) An
assessment of actual or potential hazards to human health or the environment,
where this is applicable; and
(vii)
Estimated quantity and disposition of recovered material that resulted from the
incident.
(g)
Personnel training. All employees must be thoroughly familiar with proper waste
handling and emergency procedures relevant to their responsibilities during
normal facility operations and emergencies.
Notes
Author: Bradley N. Curvin; Vernon H. Crockett; Jonah L. Harris.
Statutory Authority: Code of Ala. 1975, ยงยง 22-30-11.
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