Cal. Code Regs. Tit. 22, § 66264.280 - Closure and Post-Closure Care
(a) During the closure period the owner or
operator shall:
(1) continue all operations
(including pH control) necessary to maximize degradation, transformation, or
immobilization of constituents of concern within the treatment zone as required
under section
66264.273(a),
except to the extent such measures are inconsistent with subsection (a)(7) of
this section;
(2) continue all
operations in the treatment zone to prevent run-off of constituents of concern
as required under section
66264.273(b);
(3) maintain the run-on control system
required under section
66264.273(c);
(4) maintain the run-off management system
required under section
66264.273(d);
(5) control wind dispersal of hazardous waste
if required under section 264.273(f);
(6) continue vadose zone monitoring in
compliance with section
66264.278, except that soil-pore
liquid monitoring may be terminated after the waste added to the treatment zone
has been shown to the satisfaction of the Department to have been completely
degraded, immobilized or transformed, but in no event can monitoring be
discontinued in less than 90 the last application of waste to the treatment
zone; and
(7) control of the
release of airborne contaminants to below hazardous or nuisance levels or other
levels as necessary to protect human health or the environment;
(8) establish a vegetative cover on the
portion of the facility being closed at such time that the cover will not
substantially impede degradation, transformation, or immobilization of
constituents of concern in the treatment zone. The vegetative cover shall be
capable of maintaining growth without extensive
maintenance.
(b) For the
purpose of complying with section
66264.115, when closure is
completed the owner or operator may submit to the Department certification by
an independent qualified soil scientist or an independent, California Certified
Engineering Geologist in lieu of an independent California registered
professional engineer, that the facility has been closed in accordance with the
specifications in the approved closure plan.
(c) During the post-closure care period the
owner or operator shall:
(1) continue all
operations (including pH control) necessary to enhance degradation and
transformation and sustain immobilization of constituents of concern in the
treatment zone to the extent that such measures are consistent with other
post-closure care activities;
(2)
maintain a vegetative cover over closed portions of the facility;
(3) maintain run-on control system required
under section
66264.273(c);
(4) maintain the run-off management system
required under section
66264.273(d);
(5) control wind dispersal of hazardous waste
if required under section
66264.273(f);
(6) continue vadose zone monitoring in
compliance with section
66264.278 and section
66264.280(a)(6);
and
(7) control of the release of
airborne contaminants to below hazardous or nuisance levels or other levels as
necessary to protect human health or the environment.
(d) The owner or operator is not subject to
regulation under subsections (a)(7) and (c) of this section if the Department
finds that the level of constituents of concern in the treatment zone soil does
not exceed the background value of those constituents by an amount that is
statistically significant when using the test specified in subsection (d)(3) of
this section and that the waste in the treatment zone has been shown to the
satisfaction of the Department to have been completely degraded, transformed or
immobilized. The owner or operator may submit such a demonstration to the
Department at any time during the closure or post-closure care periods. For the
purposes of this subsection:
(1) the owner or
operator shall establish background soil values and determine whether there is
a statistically significant increase over those values for all constituents of
concern specified in the facility permit under section
66264.271(b);
(A) background soil concentrations may be
based on a one-time sampling of a background plot having characteristics
similar to those of the treatment zone where soil has not been contacted by
constituents of waste;
(B) the
owner or operator shall express background values and values for constituents
of concern in the treatment zone in a form necessary for the determination of
statistically significant increases under subsection (d)(3) of this
section;
(2) in taking
samples used in the determination of background and treatment zone
concentrations, the owner or operator shall take samples at a sufficient number
of sampling points and at appropriate locations and depths to yield samples
that represent the chemical make-up of soil that has not been affected by
leakage from the treatment zone and the soil within the treatment zone,
respectively;
(3) in determining
whether a statistically significant increase has occurred, the owner or
operator shall compare the concentration of each constituent in the treatment
zone to the background concentration for that constituent using a statistical
procedure that provides reasonable confidence that constituent presence in the
treatment zone will be identified. The owner or operator shall use a
statistical procedure that:
(A) is
appropriate for the distribution of the data used to establish background
concentrations; and
(B) provides a
reasonable balance between the probability of falsely identifying a
statistically significant increase for a constituent of concern in the
treatment zone and the probability of failing to identify a statistically
significant increase in the treatment zone.
Notes
Note: Authority cited: Sections 208, 25150 and 25159, Health and Safety Code. Reference: Sections 25150, 25159, 25159.5 and 25245, Health and Safety Code; 40 CFR Section 264.280.
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