Or. Admin. Code § 340-040-0125 - Method and Criteria for Establishment of Maximum Measurable Levels of Contaminants in Groundwater: Methods to Establish Maximum Measurable Levels
(1) If a federal
standard has been promulgated for any substance of concern (OAR
340-040-0110(1))
or any contaminant (OAR
340-040-0110(2)),
the Department shall review and propose only that federal standard to the
Commission for adoption as the maximum measurable level, unless at least one of
subsections (a), (b), and (c) of this section is determined:
(a) The Department determines that valid
scientific evidence establishes that the federal standard is not protective of
public health as defined in OAR
340-040-0105(8).
To so determine, the Department must declare that at least one of the following
applies:
(A) For substances of concern or
contaminants which are carcinogens, the federal standard represents a risk
greater than one additional cancer in one million humans;
(B) For all substances of concern or
contaminants, the federal standard has not considered relevant scientific
evidence that demonstrate the federal standard does not protect public
health.
(b) The
Department determines that valid scientific evidence establishes that
groundwater contaminated to the level of that federal standard is not
protective of the affected environment;
(c) The Department determines that valid
scientific evidence establishes that the federal standard is not protective of
existing and future beneficial uses of the natural groundwater in
Oregon.
(2) In the event
that the Department proposes to reject the federal standard for one or more of
the reasons described in section (1) of this rule, the Department shall state
the reason(s) in its proposal and shall propose a maximum measurable level
which takes into account the following factors:
(a) Public Health Factors:
(A) For substances of concern or contaminants
that are carcinogens, the scientifically valid evidence which supports a
conclusion that the Department's proposed maximum measurable level poses a risk
level to public health that is less than or equal to one additional cancer in a
million humans;
(B) Concentration
levels of the substance of concern or contaminant that are considered
protective of human health, as a result of evaluation by a federal agency or a
recognized scientific advisory group. The Department shall evaluate the
available data, conclusions, or recommendations reached in the following
sources of data by said agencies or advisory groups and determine whether a
value can be identified as protective of human health. Once a value is
identified as protective of human health, the Department will propose that
value to the Environmental Quality Commission as the proposed MML. The
Department will consider data sources in the following priority order:
(i) An EPA proposed maximum contaminant level
(MCL) or maximum contaminant level goal (MCLG);
(ii) An EPA federal health
advisory;
(iii) Assistance from the
EPA relative to a federal health advisory or a maximum contaminant
level;
(iv) Recommendations from
EPA's Science Advisory Board, the National Academy of Science, the
International Agency for Research on Cancer, the European Economic Commission,
EPA's Cancer Assessment Group, the Carcinogenic Assessment Verification
Endeavor Working Group, the National Toxicology Program, other states that
follow EPA-like procedures, and other recognized scientific advisory
groups.
(C) Risk to
public health is greater than the risk to the environment.
(b) Environmental Factors:
(A) Scientifically valid evidence that a
contaminant or substance of concern in concentrations less than the federal
maximum contaminant level (MCL) will cause adverse effects to the
environment;
(B) Concentration
levels of the substance of concern or contaminant that are considered
protective of the environment, as a result of evaluation by a federal agency or
a recognized scientific advisory group. The Department shall evaluate and
incorporate in its proposal the data and recommendations of EPA's Quality
Criteria for Water (1986), or subsequent update of this publication, unless
EPA's "National Guidelines for Deriving Numerical National Water Quality
Criteria for the Protection of Aquatic Organisms and Their Uses,' or other
valid scientific evidence demonstrates that EPA's Quality Criteria for Water
(1986), is not protective of the environment.
(3) In the event there is no federal standard
for a substance of concern or contaminant to be regulated under OAR
340-040-0110 and valid
scientific evidence exists to support the development of a maximum measurable
level for that substance of concern or contaminant, the Department shall
propose a maximum measurable level. If the Department proposes a maximum
measurable level under this condition, the Department shall consider the public
health factors and the environmental factors set forth in section (2) of this
rule.
(4) In the event no federal
standard exists for a substance of concern or contaminant to be regulated under
OAR 340-040-0110 and there are
insufficient scientifically valid data available to the Department to establish
that the public health factors and the environmental factors set forth in
section (2) of this rule can be met:
(a) The
Department shall request assistance from the EPA to:
(A) Set a federal standard when valid
scientific evidence warrants; or
(B) Initiate research on the federal level to
determine if scientific evidence will support establishment of a federal
standard; or
(C) Establish a
criterion as defined in Section 304 of the Clean Water Act (33 USCA Section
1314(a)) which is protective
of the environment.
(b)
The Department shall cause to be published a Health and Environmental Advisory
as outlined in OAR 340-040-0130, for the
contaminant.
View a PDF of EPA Guidelines by clicking on "Tables" link below.
Notes
Publications referenced and not attached to this rule are available from the agency.
To view tables referenced in rule text, click here to view rule.
Statutory/Other Authority: ORS 183.335(7), 468.015, 468B & 536.137
Statutes/Other Implemented: ORS 468B.155, 468B.165, 468B.166 & 468B.167
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