Ariz. Admin. Code § R18-7-203 - Remediation Standards
A. A person
subject to this Article shall remediate soil so that any concentration of
contaminants remaining in the soil after remediation is less than or equal to
one of the following:
1. The background
remediation standards prescribed in
R18-7-204.
2. The pre-determined remediation standards
prescribed in
R18-7-205.
3. The site-specific remediation standards
prescribed in
R18-7-206.
B. A person who conducts a soil remediation
based on the standards in
R18-7-205,
R18-7-206,
R18-7-207 shall remediate soil so
that any concentration of contaminants remaining in the soil after remediation
does not:
1. Cause or threaten to cause a
violation of Water Quality Standards prescribed in 18 A.A.C. 11. If the
remediation level for a contaminant in the soil is not protective of aquifer
water quality and surface water quality, the person shall remediate soil to an
alternative soil remediation level that is protective of aquifer water quality
and surface water quality.
2.
Exhibit a hazardous waste characteristic of ignitability, corrosivity, or
reactivity as defined in
R18-8-261(A) . If
the remediation level for a contaminant in the soil results in leaving soils
that exhibit a hazardous waste characteristic other than toxicity, the person
shall remediate soil to an alternative soil remediation level such that the
soil does not exhibit a hazardous waste characteristic other than
toxicity.
3. Cause or threaten to
cause an adverse impact to ecological receptors. If the Department determines
that the remediation level for a contaminant in soil may impact ecological
receptors based on the existence of ecological receptors and complete exposure
pathways, the person shall conduct an ecological risk assessment. If the
ecological risk assessment indicates that any concentration of contaminants
remaining in the soil after remediation causes or threatens to cause an adverse
impact to ecological receptors, the person shall remediate soil to an
alternative soil remediation level, derived from the ecological risk
assessment, that is protective of ecological receptors.
C. Soil vapor concentration may be used to
estimate the total contaminant concentration in soil if the Department
determines that the soil vapor concentration methodology will not be
invalidated by the soil, hydrogeology, or other characteristics of the
site.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.