Haw. Code R. § 11-265-1101 - Design and operating standards
(a) All containment
buildings must comply with the following design standards:
(1) The containment building must be
completely enclosed with a floor, walls, and a roof to prevent exposure to the
elements, (e.g., precipitation, wind, run-on), and to assure containment of
managed wastes.
(2) The floor and
containment walls of the unit, including the secondary containment system if
required under subsection (b), must be designed and constructed of materials of
sufficient strength and thickness to support themselves, the waste contents,
and any personnel and heavy equipment that operate within the unit, and to
prevent failure due to pressure gradients, settlement, compression, or uplift,
physical contact with the hazardous wastes to which they are exposed; climatic
conditions; and the stresses of daily operation, including the movement of
heavy equipment within the unit and contact of such equipment with containment
walls. The unit must be designed so that it has sufficient structural strength
to prevent collapse or other failure. All surfaces to be in contact with
hazardous wastes must be chemically compatible with those wastes. The
department will consider standards established by professional organizations
generally recognized by the industry such as the American Concrete Institute
(ACI) and the American Society of Testing Materials (ASTM) in judging the
structural integrity requirements of this subsection. If appropriate to the
nature of the waste management operation to take place in the unit, an
exception to the structural strength requirement may be made for light-weight
doors and windows that meet these criteria:
(i) They provide an effective barrier against
fugitive dust emissions under paragraph (c)(1)(iv); and
(ii) The unit is designed and operated in a
fashion that assures that wastes will not actually come in contact with these
openings.
(3)
Incompatible hazardous wastes or treatment reagents must not be placed in the
unit or its secondary containment system if they could cause the unit or
secondary containment system to leak, corrode, or otherwise fail.
(4) A containment building must have a
primary barrier designed to withstand the movement of personnel, waste, and
handling equipment in the unit during the operating life of the unit and
appropriate for the physical and chemical characteristics of the waste to be
managed.
(b) For a
containment building used to manage hazardous wastes containing free liquids or
treated with free liquids (the presence of which is determined by the paint
filter test, a visual examination, or other appropriate means), the owner or
operator must include:
(1) A primary barrier
designed and constructed of materials to prevent the migration of hazardous
constituents into the barrier (e.g., a geomembrane covered by a concrete wear
surface).
(2) A liquid collection
and removal system to prevent the accumulation of liquid on the primary barrier
of the containment building:
(i) The primary
barrier must be sloped to drain liquids to the associated collection system;
and
(ii) Liquids and waste must be
collected and removed to minimize hydraulic head on the containment system at
the earliest practicable time that protects human health and the
environment.
(3) A
secondary containment system including a secondary barrier designed and
constructed to prevent migration of hazardous constituents into the barrier,
and a leak detection system that is capable of detecting failure of the primary
barrier and collecting accumulated hazardous wastes and liquids at the earliest
practicable time.
(i) The requirements of the
leak detection component of the secondary containment system are satisfied by
installation of a system that is, at a minimum:
(A) Constructed with a bottom slope of 1
percent or more; and
(B)
Constructed of a granular drainage material with a hydraulic conductivity of
1x10-2 cm/sec or more and a thickness of 12 inches
(30.5 cm) or more, or constructed of synthetic or geonet drainage materials
with a transmissivity of
3X10-5m2/sec or
more.
(ii) If treatment
is to be conducted in the building, an area in which such treatment will be
conducted must be designed to prevent the release of liquids, wet materials, or
liquid aerosols to other portions of the building.
(iii) The secondary containment system must
be constructed of materials that are chemically resistant to the waste and
liquids managed in the containment building and of sufficient strength and
thickness to prevent collapse under the pressure exerted by overlaying
materials and by any equipment used in the containment building. (Containment
buildings can serve as secondary containment systems for tanks placed within
the building under certain conditions. A containment building can serve as an
external liner system for a tank, provided it meets the requirements of
paragraph 11-265-193(d)(1). In addition, the containment building must meet the
requirements of subsections 11-265-193(b) and (c) to be considered an
acceptable secondary containment system for a tank.)
(4) For existing units other than 90-day
generator units, the director may delay the secondary containment requirement
for up to two years, based on a demonstration by the owner or operator that the
unit substantially meets the standards of this subchapter. In making this
demonstration, the owner or operator must:
(i) Provide written notice to the director of
their request. This notification must describe the unit and its operating
practices with specific reference to the performance of existing containment
systems, and specific plans for retrofitting the unit with secondary
containment;
(ii) Respond to any
comments from the director on these plans within 30 days; and
(iii) Fulfill the terms of the revised plans,
if such plans are approved by the director.
(c) Owners or operators of all containment
buildings must:
(1) Use controls and
practices to ensure containment of the hazardous waste within the unit; and, at
a minimum:
(i) Maintain the primary barrier
to be free of significant cracks, gaps, corrosion, or other deterioration that
could cause hazardous waste to be released from the primary barrier;
(ii) Maintain the level of the stored/treated
hazardous waste within the containment walls of the unit so that the height of
any containment wall is not exceeded;
(iii) Take measures to prevent the tracking
of hazardous waste out of the unit by personnel or by equipment used in
handling the waste. An area must be designated to decontaminate equipment and
any rinsate must be collected and properly managed; and
(iv) Take measures to control fugitive dust
emissions such that any openings (doors, windows, vents, cracks, etc.) exhibit
no visible emissions. In addition, all associated particulate collection
devices (e.g., fabric filter, electrostatic precipitator) must be operated and
maintained with sound air pollution control practices. This state of no visible
emissions must be maintained effectively at all times during normal operating
conditions, including when vehicles and personnel are entering and exiting the
unit.
(2) Obtain
certification by a qualified registered professional engineer that the
containment building design meets the requirements of subsections (a) through
(c). For units placed into operation prior to February 18, 1993, this
certification must be placed in the facility's operating record (on-site files
for generators who are not formally required to have operating records) no
later than 60 days after the date of initial operation of the unit. After
February 18, 1993, PE certification will be required prior to operation of the
unit.
(3) Throughout the active
life of the containment building, if the owner or operator detects a condition
that could lead to or has caused a release of hazardous waste, the owner or
operator must repair the condition promptly, in accordance with the following
procedures.
(i) Upon detection of a condition
that has led to a release of hazardous waste (e.g., upon detection of leakage
from the primary barrier) the owner or operator must:
(A) Enter a record of the discovery in the
facility operating record;
(B)
Immediately remove the portion of the containment building affected by the
condition from service;
(C)
Determine what steps must be taken to repair the containment building, remove
any leakage from the secondary collection system, and establish a schedule for
accomplishing the cleanup and repairs; and
(D) Within 7 days after the discovery of the
condition, notify the director of the condition, and within 14 working days,
provide a written notice to the director with a description of the steps taken
to repair the containment building, and the schedule for accomplishing the
work.
(ii) The director
will review the information submitted, make a determination regarding whether
the containment building must be removed from service completely or partially
until repairs and cleanup are complete, and notify the owner or operator of the
determination and the underlying rationale in writing.
(iii) Upon completing all repairs and cleanup
the owner or operator must notify the director in writing and provide a
verification, signed by a qualified, registered professional engineer, that the
repairs and cleanup have been completed according to the written plan submitted
in accordance with paragraph (c)(3)(i)(D) of this section.
(4) Inspect and record in the facility's
operating record, at least once every seven days, data gathered from monitoring
equipment and leak detection equipment as well as the containment building and
the area immediately surrounding the containment building to detect signs of
releases of hazardous waste.
(d) For containment building that contains
both areas with and without secondary containment, the owner or operator must:
(1) Design and operate each area in
accordance with the requirements enumerated in subsections (a) through
(c);
(2) Take measures to prevent
the release of liquids or wet materials into areas without secondary
containment; and
(3) Maintain in
the facility's operating log a written description of the operating procedures
used to maintain the integrity of areas without secondary
containment.
(e)
Notwithstanding any other provision of this subchapter, the director may waive
requirements for secondary containment for a permitted containment building
where the owner or operator demonstrates that the only free liquids in the unit
are limited amounts of dust suppression liquids required to meet occupational
health and safety requirements, and where containment of managed wastes and
liquids can be assured without a secondary containment system.
Notes
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