All words and phrases defined in sections
376.301 and
376.79, F.S., shall have the
same meaning when used in this chapter unless specifically stated otherwise in
this chapter. See sections
376.301 and
376.79, F.S., for definitions of
the following terms: "Additive effects, " "Antagonistic effects, " "Brownfield
area, " "Brownfield site, " "Cleanup target level, " "Contaminant, "
"Contaminated site, " "Discharge, " "Drycleaning facility, " "Drycleaning
solvents, " "Hazardous substances, " "Institutional control, " "Long-term
natural attenuation, " "Natural attenuation, " "Person responsible for
brownfield site rehabilitation, " "Petroleum, " "Petroleum product, "
"Pollutants, " "Risk reduction, " "Site rehabilitation, " "Synergistic effects,
" "Temporary point of compliance, " and "Wholesale supply facility." The
following words and phrases used in this chapter shall, unless the context
clearly indicates otherwise, have the following meanings:
(1) "Action level" means a specified
concentration of a contaminant that, if exceeded during natural attenuation
with monitoring or post active remediation monitoring, may require additional
site assessment or active remediation. Action levels are established during the
approval process for Natural Attenuation Monitoring Plans pursuant to rule
62-780.690, F.A.C., and Post
Active Remediation Monitoring Plans pursuant to rule
62-780.750, F.A.C. "Action
levels" are not equivalent to "cleanup target levels."
(2) "Dose Additivity" is the calculated
interactive effects of chemicals that share the same mechanism of toxicity.
Guidance on the chemicals encompassed and methods for assessing dose additivity
is provided in the "Dose Additivity" document referenced in subsection
62-780.100(24),
F.A.C.
(3) "Background
concentrations" means concentrations of contaminants that are naturally
occurring or resulting from anthropogenic impacts unrelated to the discharge of
pollutants or hazardous substances at a contaminated site undergoing site
rehabilitation, in the groundwater, surface water, soil, or sediment in the
vicinity of the site.
(4) "Best
achievable detection limit" means the practical quantitation limit. [Refer to
the PQL guidelines referenced in subsection
62-780.100(5),
F.A.C., for guidance.]
(5)
"Brownfield Site Rehabilitation Agreement" (BSRA) means an agreement entered
into between the person responsible for brownfield site rehabilitation and the
Department. The BSRA shall at a minimum establish the time frames, schedules,
and milestones for completion of site rehabilitation tasks and submission of
technical reports, and other commitments or provisions pursuant to section
376.80(5),
F.S., and this chapter.
(6) "BSRA"
means Brownfield Site Rehabilitation Agreement.
(7) "CAD" means cleanup agreement
document.
(8) "Cleanup agreement
document" (CAD) means any order or agreement issued to or entered into by the
Department with a Person Responsible for Site Rehabilitation, including a
voluntary cleanup agreement, permit, consent order, final order, or final
judgment. For brownfield sites subject to a BSRA, CAD shall mean the BSRA. The
CAD shall at a minimum establish the time frames, schedules, and milestones for
completion of site rehabilitation tasks and submission of technical documents,
and other commitments or provisions pursuant to this chapter.
(9) "Conceptual Site Model" (CSM) means a
written and/or graphic representation of the physical, chemical and biological
processes that affect the transport, migration and actual or potential exposure
to contamination in all affected media to human and ecological receptors. The
CSM is used to develop and refine the extent of site assessment, support
remedial alternative, mitigation and cleanup technology evaluations, and
support risk management decisions. The CSM is an optional submittal and may be
prepared or updated at any time during site rehabilitation as new or revised
information becomes available. The CSM may be a single document or combined
with any other document.
(10)
"Contaminated" or "contamination" means the presence of free product or any
contaminant in surface water, groundwater, soil, sediment, or upon the land, in
concentrations that exceed the applicable CTLs specified in chapter 62-777,
F.A.C., or water quality standards in chapter 62-302 or 62-520, F.A.C., or in
concentrations that may result in contaminated sediment. At sites where
alternative CTLs have been developed solely based upon intrinsic chemical
properties that do not vary under different exposure scenarios (e.g., toxicity)
or based upon a risk assessment where the exposure parameters have been
demonstrated to be applicable throughout the study area, then such alternative
CTLs are the applicable CTLs for evaluting "contaminated" or "contamination"
and would supersede the CTLs specified in chapter 62-777, F.A.C. However,
alternative CTLs can not be substituted for water quality standards in chapter
62-302 or 62-520, F.A.C. This definition is solely for use within chapter
62-780, F.A.C., and pursuant to section
376.30701(1)(a),
F.S., shall not be used to establish legal responsibility for conducting site
rehabilitation.
(11) "Contaminated
sediment" means sediment that is contaminated as determined by the
concentrations of the contaminants, actual circumstances of exposure,
biological diversity studies, toxicity testing, or other evidence of harmful
effects, as applicable. [Refer to the sediment guidelines referenced in
subsections
62-780.100(1) and
(6), F.A.C., for guidance on the evaluation
of contaminant concentrations, sediment quality conditions, and testing
methods.]
(12) "CSM" means
conceptual site model.
(13) "CTL"
means cleanup target level as defined in section
376.301, F.S.
(14) "Department" means the FDEP, or a county
or Department of Health local program established under a contract pursuant to
section 376.3073, F.S., to assist the
FDEP in the administration of the petroleum contamination site cleanup program,
or a local pollution control program that has received delegated authority from
the FDEP pursuant to sections
376.80(9) and
403.182, F.S., to administer all
or part of the brownfields program. For more information, visit the FDEP
website.
(15) "Emergency response
action" means activities intitiated pursuant to rule
62-780.500, F.A.C., within 24
hours of discovery of an unexpected situation or sudden occurrence of a serious
and urgent nature that demands immediate action to alleviate a threat to human
health, public safety, or the environment.
(16) "Engineering control" means use of
existing features (such as buildings) or modifications to a site to reduce or
eliminate the potential for migration of, or exposure to, contaminants.
Examples of modifications include physical or hydraulic control measures,
capping, point-of-use treatments, or slurry walls.
(17) "Excessively contaminated soil" for the
purposes of section 376.3071(12)(b),
F.S., means soil saturated with petroleum or petroleum products or soil that
causes a total corrected hydrocarbon measurement of 500 parts per million (ppm)
or higher for Gasoline Analytical Group or 50 ppm or higher for Kerosene
Analytical Group. Readings shall be obtained at the site on an organic vapor
analysis instrument with a flame ionization detector in the survey mode upon
sampling the headspace in half-filled, 8-ounce or 16-ounce jars. Each soil
sample shall be split into two jars, the two subsamples shall be brought to a
temperature of between 20° C. (68° F.) and 32° C. (90° F.), and
the readings shall be obtained 5 to 30 minutes thereafter. One of the readings
shall be obtained with the use of an activated charcoal filter unless the
unfiltered reading is nondetect. The total corrected hydrocarbon measurement
shall be determined by subtracting the filtered reading from the unfiltered
reading. Instruments with a photo ionization detector may be used, but shall
not be used in situations where humidity will interfere with the instruments'
sensitivity (including periods of rain, measuring wet or moist soil). If an
instrument with a photo ionization detector is used, a filtered reading is not
warranted and therefore sample splitting is not necessary. Analytical
instruments shall be calibrated in accordance with the manufacturer's
instructions.
(18) "Exposure unit"
means an area over which receptors are expected to have equal and random
exposure.
(19) "FDEP" means the
Florida Department of Environmental Protection.
(20) "Free product" means the presence of a
non-aqueous phase liquid in the environment in excess of 0.01 foot in
thickness, measured at its thickest point.
(21) "Gasoline Analytical Group" means
aviation gasoline, gasohol, and motor gasoline or equivalent petroleum
products.
(22) "Groundwater" means
water beneath the surface of the ground within a zone of saturation, whether or
not flowing through known or definite channels.
(23) "Incremental Sampling Methodology" means
a structured composite sampling and processing protocol that reduces data
variability and provides a reasonably unbiased estimate of mean contaminant
concentrations in a volume of soil. [Refer to "Incremental Sampling
Methodology" referenced in subsection
62-780.100(21),
F.A.C., for guidance.]
(24)
"Innovative technology" means a process that has been tested and used as a
treatment for contamination, but lacks an established history of full-scale use
and information about its cost and how well it works sufficient to support
prediction of its performance under a variety of operating
conditions.
(25) "Interim source
removal" means the removal of free product, contaminated groundwater,
contaminated sediment, or contaminated soil, or the removal of contaminants
from soil or sediment that has been contaminated to the extent that leaching to
groundwater or surface water has occurred or is occurring, prior to approval of
a Remedial Action Plan pursuant to rule
62-780.700, F.A.C.
(26) "ISM" means incremental sampling
methodology.
(27) "Kerosene
Analytical Group" means diesel, Jet-A, Jet-B, JP-4, JP-5, and kerosene or
equivalent petroleum products.
(28)
"Low yield" means groundwater that is contained in an aquifer that has an
average hydraulic conductivity of less than one foot per day, determined by
performing slug tests or an equivalent method for determining hydraulic
conductivity on a minimum of three monitoring wells in each affected monitoring
zone; and a maximum yield of 80 gallons per day, determined by pumping a
four-inch well screened across the cross-section of the plume, for a minimum of
two hours.
(29) "Monitoring well"
means a well constructed with a surface seal and a sand filter pack in order to
provide for the collection of representative groundwater samples for laboratory
analyses. Such wells may also be used to detect the presence of free product or
collect water-level elevation data to aid in determining the direction of
groundwater flow.
(30) "MTBE" means
Methyl tert-butyl ether.
(31)
"Newspaper of general circulation" means a newspaper published at least on a
weekly basis and printed in the language most commonly spoken in the area
within which it circulates, but does not include a newspaper intended primarily
for members of a particular professional or occupational group, a newspaper
whose primary function is to carry legal notices, or a newspaper that is given
away primarily to distribute advertising.
(32) "Organoleptic" means pertaining to, or
perceived by, a sensory organ (i.e., color, taste, or odor).
(33) "PAHs" means Polycyclic Aromatic
Hydrocarbons.
(34) "PCBs" means
Polychlorinated Biphenyls.
(35)
"Person Responsible for Site Rehabilitation" (PRSR) means the Department when
conducting site rehabilitation, or any of the following, which may include an
agent or authorized representative, unless prohibited by statute or rule:
(a) Any person who has legal responsibility
for site rehabilitation pursuant to chapter 376 or 403, F.S., or any person who
voluntarily rehabilitates a site pursuant to the requirements of this chapter
and seeks an acknowledgement from the Department for approval of site
rehabilitation program tasks;
(b)
The individual or entity that is designated by a local government in its
resolution establishing a brownfield area to enter into the brownfield site
rehabilitation agreement with the Department, and that enters into an agreement
with the local government for redevelopment of the site pursuant to section
376.80(5)(i),
F.S.;
(c) The real property owner,
the facility owner, the facility operator, the discharger, or other person or
entity responsible for site rehabilitation, or the Department when the
Department is conducting the site rehabilitation at facilities with discharges
eligible for state-funded cleanup pursuant to sections
376.305(6),
376.3071(9),
376.3071(13),
and 376.3072, F.S., or
(d) A responsible party, a real property
owner, or any individual or entity that has entered into a Voluntary Cleanup
Agreement with the Department pursuant to section
376.3078(11)(b),
F.S., that is conducting site rehabilitation at a drycleaning solvent
contaminated site pursuant to this chapter.
(36) "Petroleum products' contaminants of
concern" means the contaminants listed in Table B of this chapter (tables are
located at the end of rule
62-780.900, F.A.C.), and similar
chemicals found in additives, provided the contaminants are present as a result
of a discharge of petroleum or petroleum products as defined in section
376.301, F.S.
(37) "Piezometer" means a permanent or
temporary well that may be designed and constructed without the surface sealing
or sand filter pack requirements of a monitoring well. This type of well is
primarily used to detect the presence of free product or collect water-level
elevation data to aid in determining the direction of groundwater
flow.
(38) "Plume" means the
portion of an aquifer or aquifers in which groundwater contamination above
applicable CTLs, and background concentrations as defined in subsection
62-780.200(3),
F.A.C., has been detected.
(39)
"Poor quality" means groundwater within the affected monitoring zone with
background concentrations, as defined in subsection
62-780.200(3),
F.A.C., that exceed any of Florida's Primary or Secondary Drinking Water
Standards referenced in chapter 62-550, F.A.C.
(40) "PQL" means practical quantitation
limit.
(41) "Practical quantitation
limit" (PQL) means the lowest level that can be reliably measured during
routine laboratory operating conditions within specified limits of precision
and accuracy. [Refer to the PQL guidelines referenced in subsection
62-780.100(5),
F.A.C., for guidance.]
(42)
"Product recovery" means the removal of free product.
(43) "PRSR" means person responsible for site
rehabilitation.
(44) "Real property
owner" means the person or entity that is vested with ownership, dominion, or
legal or rightful title to the real property. For a drycleaning facility, this
includes an individual or entity that has a ground lease interest in the real
property, on which a drycleaning facility or wholesale supply facility is or
has ever been located.
(45)
"Response Action Contractor" means a person who is carrying out any emergency
response action activities pursuant to rule
62-780.500, F.A.C., including a
person retained or hired by such person to provide services relating to an
emergency response action.
(46)
"Sediment" means the unconsolidated solid matrix occurring immediately beneath
any surface water body. The surface water body may be present part or all of
the time and may support a wetland environment or vegetation.
(47) "Site" means "contaminated site" as
defined in section 376.301, F.S.
(48) "Site assessment" means the performance
of any of the tasks or activities as described in rules
62-780.525 and
62-780.600, F.A.C.
(49) "Source removal" means the removal of
free product, contaminated groundwater, contaminated sediment, or contaminated
soil, or the removal of contaminants from soil or sediment that has been
contaminated to the extent that leaching to groundwater or surface water has
occurred or is occurring, after approval of a Remedial Action Plan pursuant to
rule
62-780.700, F.A.C.
(50) "Surface water" means water upon the
surface of the earth where state water quality standards apply, whether
contained in bounds created naturally or artificially or diffused. Water from
natural springs shall be classified as surface water when it exits from the
spring onto the earth's surface.
(51) "TPOC" means temporary point of
compliance.
(52) "TRPHs" means
Total Recoverable Petroleum Hydrocarbons.
(53) "UCL" means upper confidence limit
estimate of the arithmetic mean.
(54) "Used oil" means any lubricants for use
in internal combustion engines that have been refined from crude oil and, as a
result of use, storage, or handling, have become unsuitable for their original
purpose due to the presence of impurities or loss of properties, but that may
be suitable for further use as a fuel or are economically recyclable for use as
a fuel. "Used oil" shall not include any used oil that has been mixed with any
material that is a hazardous waste, unless the material is a hazardous waste
solely due to the characteristic of ignitability as defined in 40 CFR Part
261, Subpart C (7-1-12 Edition), hereby adopted and incorporaed by reference (
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-02417).
(55) "VCA" means Voluntary Cleanup
Agreement.
(56) "VOHs" means
Volatile Organic Halocarbons.
(57)
"Voluntary Cleanup Agreement" (VCA) means an agreement entered into between a
PRSR and the Department for the purpose of rehabilitating a site contaminated
with drycleaning solvents. The VCA shall at a minimum establish the time
frames, schedules, and milestones for completion of site rehabilitation tasks
and submission of technical reports, and other commitments or provisions
pursuant to section 376.3078(11),
F.S., and this chapter.
(58)
"Waters" or "waters of the state" means waters as defined in section
403.031,
F.S.