Haw. Code R. § 11-264-278 - Unsaturated zone monitoring
An owner or operator subject to this subchapter must establish an unsaturated zone monitoring program to discharge the following responsibilities:
(a) The owner or
operator must monitor the soil and soil-pore liquid to determine whether
hazardous constituents migrate out of the treatment zone.
(1) The director will specify the hazardous
constituents to be monitored in the facility permit. The hazardous constituents
to be monitored are those specified under subsection 11-264-271(b).
(2) The director may require monitoring for
principal hazardous constituents (PHCs) in lieu of the constituents specified
under subsection 11-264-271(b). PHCs are hazardous constituents contained in
the wastes to be applied at the unit that are the most difficult to treat,
considering the combined effects of degradation, transformation, and
immobilization. The director will establish PHCs if he finds, based on waste
analyses, treatment demonstrations, or other data, that effective degradation,
transformation, or immobilization of the PHCs will assure treatment at at least
equivalent levels for the other hazardous constituents in the wastes.
(b) The owner or operator must
install an unsaturated zone monitoring system that includes soil monitoring
using soil cores and soil-pore liquid monitoring using devices such as
lysimeters. The unsaturated zone monitoring system must consist of a sufficient
number of sampling points at appropriate locations and depths to yield samples
that:
(1) Represent the quality of background
soil-pore liquid quality and the chemical make-up of soil that has not been
affected by leakage from the treatment zone; and
(2) Indicate the quality of soil-pore liquid
and the chemical make-up of the soil below the treatment zone.
(c) The owner or operator must
establish a background value for each hazardous constituent to be monitored
under subsection (a). The permit will specify the background values for each
constituent or specify the procedures to be used to calculate the background
values.
(1) Background soil values may be
based on a one-time sampling at a background plot having characteristics
similar to those of the treatment zone.
(2) Background soil-pore liquid values must
be based on at least quarterly sampling for one year at a background plot
having characteristics similar to those of the treatment zone.
(3) The owner or operator must express all
background values in a form necessary for the determination of statistically
significant increases under subsection (f).
(4) In taking samples used in the
determination of all background values, the owner or operator must use an
unsaturated zone monitoring system that complies with paragraph
(b)(1).
(d) The owner or
operator must conduct soil monitoring and soil-pore liquid monitoring
immediately below the treatment zone. The director will specify the frequency
and timing of soil and soil-pore liquid monitoring in the facility permit after
considering the frequency, timing, and rate of waste application, and the soil
permeability. The owner or operator must express the results of soil and
soil-pore liquid monitoring in a form necessary for the determination of
statistically significant increases under subsection (f).
(e) The owner or operator must use consistent
sampling and analysis procedures that are designed to ensure sampling results
that provide a reliable indication of soil-pore liquid quality and the chemical
make-up of the soil below the treatment zone. At a minimum, the owner or
operator must implement procedures and techniques for:
(1) Sample collection;
(2) Sample preservation and
shipment;
(3) Analytical
procedures; and
(4) Chain of
custody control.
(f) The
owner or operator must determine whether there is a statistically significant
change over background values for any hazardous constituent to be monitored
under subsection (a) below the treatment zone each time he conducts soil
monitoring and soil-pore liquid monitoring under subsection (d).
(1) In determining whether a statistically
significant increase has occurred, the owner or operator must compare the value
of each constituent, as determined under subsection (d), to the background
value for that constituent according to the statistical procedure specified in
the facility permit under this subsection.
(2) The owner or operator must determine
whether there has been a statistically significant increase below the treatment
zone within a reasonable time period after completion of sampling. The director
will specify that time period in the facility permit after considering the
complexity of the statistical test and the availability of laboratory
facilities to perform the analysis of soil and soil-pore liquid
samples.
(3) The owner or operator
must determine whether there is a statistically significant increase below the
treatment zone using a statistical procedure that provides reasonable
confidence that migration from the treatment zone will be identified. The
director will specify a statistical procedure in the facility permit that he
finds:
(i) Is appropriate for the
distribution of the data used to establish background values; and
(ii) Provides a reasonable balance between
the probability of falsely identifying migration from the treatment zone and
the probability of failing to identify real migration from the treatment
zone.
(g) If
the owner or operator determines, pursuant to subsection (f), that there is a
statistically significant increase of hazardous constituents below the
treatment zone, he must:
(1) Notify the
director of this finding in writing within seven days. The notification must
indicate what constituents have shown statistically significant
increases.
(2) Within ninety days,
submit to the director an application for a permit modification to modify the
operating practices at the facility in order to maximize the success of
degradation, transformation, or immobilization processes in the treatment
zone.
(h) If the owner
or operator determines, pursuant to subsection (f), that there is a
statistically significant increase of hazardous constituents below the
treatment zone, he may demonstrate that a source other than regulated units
caused the increase or that the increase resulted from an error in sampling,
analysis, or evaluation. While the owner or operator may make a demonstration
under this subsection in addition to, or in lieu of, submitting a permit
modification application under paragraph (g)(2), he is not relieved of the
requirement to submit a permit modification application within the time
specified in paragraph (g)(2) unless the demonstration made under this
subsection successfully shows that a source other than regulated units caused
the increase or that the increase resulted from an error in sampling, analysis,
or evaluation. In making a demonstration under this subsection, the owner or
operator must:
(1) Notify the director in
writing within seven days of determining a statistically significant increase
below the treatment zone that he intends to make a determination under this
subsection;
(2) Within ninety days,
submit a report to the director demonstrating that a source other than the
regulated units caused the increase or that the increase resulted from error in
sampling, analysis, or evaluation;
(3) Within ninety days, submit to the
director an application for a permit modification to make any appropriate
changes to the unsaturated zone monitoring program at the facility;
and
(4) Continue to monitor in
accordance with the unsaturated zone monitoring program established under this
section.
Notes
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No prior version found.