Or. Admin. Code § 340-122-0115 - Definitions
Terms not defined in this rule have the meanings set forth in ORS 465.200. Additional terms are defined as follows unless the context requires otherwise:
(1) "Acceptable risk level" with respect to
the toxicity of hazardous substances has the meaning set forth in ORS
465.315(1)(b)(A) and
(B) and is comprised of the acceptable risk
level definitions provided for carcinogenic exposures, noncarcinogenic
exposures, and ecological receptors in sections (2) through (6) of this
rule.
(2) "Acceptable risk level
for human exposure to individual carcinogens" means:
(a) For deterministic risk assessments, a
lifetime excess cancer risk of less than or equal to one per one million for an
individual at an upper-bound exposure; or
(b) For probabilistic risk assessments, a
lifetime excess cancer risk for each carcinogen of less than or equal to one
per one million at the 90th percentile, and less than or equal to one per one
hundred thousand at the 95th percentile, each based upon the same distribution
of lifetime excess cancer risks for an exposed individual.
(3) "Acceptable risk level for human exposure
to multiple carcinogens" means the acceptable risk level for human exposure to
individual carcinogens and:
(a) For
deterministic risk assessments, a cumulative lifetime excess cancer risk for
multiple carcinogens and multiple exposure pathways of less than or equal to
one per one hundred thousand at an upper-bound exposure; or
(b) For probabilistic risk assessments, a
cumulative lifetime excess cancer risk for multiple carcinogens and multiple
exposure pathways of less than or equal to one per one hundred thousand at the
90th percentile and less than or equal to one per ten thousand at the 95th
percentile, each based upon the same distribution of cumulative lifetime excess
cancer risks for an exposed individual.
(4) "Acceptable risk level for human exposure
to noncarcinogens" means:
(a) For
deterministic risk assessments, a hazard index less than or equal to one for an
individual at an upper-bound exposure; or
(b) For probabilistic risk assessments, a
hazard index less than or equal to one at the 90th percentile, and less than or
equal to ten at the 95th percentile, each based upon the same distribution of
hazard index numbers for an exposed individual.
(5) "Acceptable risk level for individual
ecological receptors" applies only to species listed as threatened or
endangered pursuant to 16
USC 1531 et seq. or ORS 465.172, and means:
(a) For deterministic risk assessments, a
toxicity index less than or equal to one for an individual ecological receptor
at an upper-bound exposure, where the toxicity index is the sum of the toxicity
quotients attributable to systemic toxicants with similar endpoints for
similarly-responding species and the toxicity quotient is the ratio of the
exposure point value to the ecological benchmark value; or
(b) For probabilistic risk assessments, a
toxicity index less than or equal to one at the 90th percentile and less than
or equal to 10 at the 95th percentile, each based on the same distribution of
toxicity index numbers for an exposed individual ecological receptor;
or
(c) The probability of important
changes in such factors as growth, survival, fecundity, or reproduction related
to the health and viability of an individual ecological receptor that are
reasonably likely to occur as a consequence of exposure to hazardous substances
is de minimis.
(6)
"Acceptable risk level for populations of ecological receptors" means a 10
percent chance, or less, that more than 20 percent of the total local
population will be exposed to an exposure point value greater than the
ecological benchmark value for each contaminant of concern and no other
observed significant adverse effects on the health or viability of the local
population.
(7) "Assessment
endpoint" means an explicit expression of a specific ecological receptor and an
associated function or quality that is to be maintained or protected.
Assessment endpoints represent ecological receptors directly or as their
surrogates for the purposes of an ecological risk assessment.
(8) "Background level" means the
concentration of hazardous substance, if any, existing in the environment in
the location of the facility before the occurrence of any past or present
release or releases.
(9)
"Beneficial uses of water" means any current or reasonably likely future
beneficial uses of groundwater or surface water by humans or ecological
receptors.
(10) "Carcinogen" means
any substance or agent that produces or tends to produce cancer in
humans.
(11) "Cleanup level", means
the residual concentration of a hazardous substance in a medium that is
determined to be protective of public health, safety and welfare, and the
environment under specified exposure conditions.
(12) "Commission" means the Environmental
Quality Commission.
(13) "Confirmed
release" means a release of a hazardous substance into the environment that has
been confirmed by the Department in accordance with OAR
340-122-0073.
(14) "Confirmed release list" means a list of
facilities for which the Director has confirmed a release of a hazardous
substance.
(15) "Contaminant of
concern" means a hazardous substance that is present in such concentrations
that the contaminant poses a threat or a potentially unacceptable risk to
public health, safety or welfare, or the environment considering:
(a) The toxicological characteristics of the
hazardous substance that influence its ability to affect adversely human
health, ecological receptors or the environment relative to the concentration
of the hazardous substance at the facility;
(b) The chemical and physical characteristics
of the hazardous substance that govern its tendency to persist in the
environment, move through environmental media, or accumulate through food
webs;
(c) The background level of
the hazardous substances;
(d) The
thoroughness of the testing for the hazardous substance at the
facility;
(e) The frequency that
the hazardous substance has been detected at the facility; and
(f) Degradation by-products of the hazardous
substances.
(16)
"Critical endpoint" or "Critical effect" means the adverse health effect used
as the basis for the derivation of the reference dose (RfD). Exposure to a
given chemical may result in a variety of toxic effects (e.g., liver defects,
kidney defects, or blood defects). The critical endpoint is selected from the
different adverse health effects produced by a given chemical, and is the
adverse health effect with the lowest dose level that produced
toxicity.
(17) "Department" means
the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality.
(18) "Deterministic risk assessment" means a
risk assessment that produces a point value estimate of risk for a specific set
of exposure assumptions.
(19) "De
minimis release" means a release of a hazardous substance that, because of the
quantity or characteristics of the hazardous substance released and the
potential for migration and exposure of human or environmental receptors, can
reasonably be considered to pose no significant threat to public health, safety
or welfare, or the environment.
(20) "Director" means the Director of the
Department of Environmental Quality or the Director's authorized
representative.
(21) "Ecological
benchmark value" means the highest no-observed-adverse-effect-level (NOAEL) for
individual ecological receptors considering effects on reproductive success or
the median lethal dose or concentration (LD50 or LC50) for populations of
ecological receptors. If a NOAEL, LD50 or LC50, as applicable, is not available
for ecological receptors considered in the risk assessment, the ecological
benchmark value may be derived from other toxicological endpoints for those
receptors or appropriate surrogates for those receptors, adjusted with
uncertainty factors to equate to a NOAEL, LD50 or LC50. The ecological
benchmark value shall be based, to the extent practicable, on studies whose
routes of exposure and duration of exposure were commensurate with the expected
routes and duration of exposure for ecological receptors considered in the risk
assessment, or appropriate surrogates for those receptors.
(22) "Ecological receptor" means a population
of plants or animals (excluding domestic animals and cultivated plants) or an
individual member of any species listed as threatened or endangered pursuant to
16 U.S.C.
1532 et seq. or ORS
496.172.
(23) "Engineering control" means a remedial
method used to prevent or minimize exposure to hazardous substances, including
technologies that reduce the mobility or migration of hazardous substances.
Engineering controls may include, but are not limited to, capping, horizontal
or vertical barriers, hydraulic controls, and alternative water
supplies.
(24) "Environment"
includes ecological receptors, the waters of the state, any drinking water
supply, any land surface and subsurface strata, sediments, saturated soils,
subsurface gas, or ambient air or atmosphere.
(25) "Exposure point value" means the
concentration or dose of a hazardous substance occurring at a location of
potential contact between a human receptor and the hazardous substance, or
between an ecological receptor and the hazardous substance.
(26) "Facility" or "Site" means any building,
structure, installation, equipment, pipe or pipeline including any pipe into a
sewer or publicly owned treatment works, well, pit, pond, lagoon, impoundment,
ditch, landfill, storage container, above ground tank, underground storage
tank, motor vehicle, rolling stock, aircraft, or any site or area where a
hazardous substance has been deposited, stored, disposed of, or placed, or
otherwise come to be located and where a release has occurred or where there is
a threat of a release, but does not include any consumer product in consumer
use or any vessel.
(27)
"Groundwater" means any water, except capillary moisture, beneath the land
surface or beneath the bed of any stream, lake, reservoir or other body of
surface water within the boundaries of the state, whatever may be the
geological formation or structure in which such water stands, flows, percolates
or otherwise moves.
(28) "Hazard
index" means a number equal to the sum of the hazard quotients attributable to
systemic toxicants with similar toxic endpoints.
(29) "Hazard quotient" means the ratio of the
exposure point value to the reference dose, where the reference dose is
typically the highest dose causing no adverse effects on survival, growth or
reproduction in human populations.
(30) "Hazardous substance" means:
(a) Hazardous waste as defined in ORS
466.005;
(b) Any substance defined as a hazardous
substance pursuant to section 101(14) of the federal Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, P.L. 96-510, as
amended, and P.L. 99-499;
(c) Oil
as defined in ORS 465.200(18);
and
(d) Methane generated at a
historic solid waste landfill; and
(e) Any substance designated by the
commission under ORS 465.400.
(31) "Historic solid waste landfill" means:
(a) A solid waste landfill that was never
permitted for disposal of solid waste, including landfills that received solid
waste prior to adoption of permit requirements under ORS
459.205;
(b) A solid waste landfill that was
previously permitted for disposal of solid waste pursuant to ORS
459.205, if operational and
post-closure permits for management of the facility have expired, or have been
terminated or revoked by the Department; and
(c) A permitted solid waste landfill, if the
Department determines that permit requirements for management of methane will
not be implemented by the permittee including determinations by the Department
that the permittee is financially unable to implement applicable permit
requirements.
(32) "Hot
spots of contamination" means:
(a) For
groundwater or surface water, hazardous substances having a significant adverse
effect on beneficial uses of water or waters to which the hazardous substances
would be reasonably likely to migrate and for which treatment is reasonably
likely to restore or protect such beneficial uses within a reasonable time, as
determined in the feasibility study; and
(b) For media other than groundwater or
surface water, (e.g., contaminated soil, debris, sediments, and sludges;
drummed wastes; "pools" of dense, non-aqueous phase liquids submerged beneath
groundwater or in fractured bedrock; and non-aqueous phase liquids floating on
groundwater), if hazardous substances present a risk to human health or the
environment exceeding the acceptable risk level, the extent to which the
hazardous substances:
(A) Are present in
concentrations exceeding risk-based concentrations corresponding to:
(i) 100 times the acceptable risk level for
human exposure to each individual carcinogen;
(ii) 10 times the acceptable risk level for
human exposure to each individual noncarcinogen; or
(iii) 10 times the acceptable risk level for
exposure of individual ecological receptors or populations of ecological
receptors to each individual hazardous substance.
(B) Are reasonably likely to migrate to such
an extent that the conditions specified in subsection (a) or paragraphs (b)(A)
or (b)(C) would be created; or
(C)
Are not reliably containable, as determined in the feasibility
study.
(33)
"Institutional control" means a legal or administrative tool or action taken to
reduce the potential for exposure to hazardous substances. Institutional
controls may include, but are not limited to, use restrictions, environmental
monitoring requirements, and site access and security measures.
(34) "Inventory" means a list of facilities
for which the Director has confirmed a release of a hazardous substance and,
based on a preliminary assessment or equivalent information, has determined
that additional investigation, removal, remedial action, or long term
engineering or institutional controls related to removal or remedial action are
required to assure protection of the present and future public health, safety
and welfare, and the environment.
(35) "Locality of the facility" means any
point where a human or an ecological receptor contacts, or is reasonably likely
to come into contact with, facility-related hazardous substances, considering:
(a) The chemical and physical characteristics
of the hazardous substances;
(b)
Physical, meteorological, hydrogeological, and ecological characteristics that
govern the tendency for hazardous substances to migrate through environmental
media or to move and accumulate through food webs;
(c) Any human activities and biological
processes that govern the tendency for hazardous substances to move into and
through environmental media or to move and accumulate through food webs;
and
(d) The time required for
contaminant migration to occur based on the factors described in subsections
(35)(34)(a) through (c) of this rule.
(36) "Measurement endpoints for ecological
receptors" are quantitative expressions of an observed or measured response in
ecological receptors exposed to hazardous substances.
(37) "Noncarcinogen" means hazardous
substances with adverse health effects on humans other than cancer.
(38) "Onsite", for purposes of ORS
465.315(3),
means the areal extent of contamination and all suitable areas in close
proximity to the contamination necessary for implementation of a removal or
remedial action.
(39) "Permitted or
authorized release" means a release that is from an active facility and that is
subject to and in substantial compliance with a current and legally enforceable
permit issued by an authorized public agency.
(40) "Population" and "Local population", for
purposes of evaluating ecological receptors, means a group of individual
plants, animals, or other organisms of the same species that live together and
interbreed within a given habitat, including any portion of a population of a
transient or migratory species that uses habitat in the locality of the
facility for only a portion of the year or for a portion of their
lifecycle.
(41) "Practical
quantification limit" or "PQL" means the lowest concentration that can be
reliably measured within specified limits of precision, accuracy,
representativeness, completeness, and comparability when testing field samples
under routine laboratory operating conditions using Department-approved
methods.
(42) "Preliminary
assessment" means an investigation conducted in accordance with OAR
340-122-0072 for the purpose
ofdetermining whether additional investigation, removal, remedial action, or
related engineering or institutional controls are needed to assure protection
of public health, safety and welfare, and the environment.
(43) "Probabilistic risk assessment" means a
risk assessment that produces a credible range or distribution of possible risk
estimates by taking into consideration the variability and uncertainty in the
exposure and toxicity data used to make the assessment.
(44) "Release" means any spilling, leaking,
pumping, pouring, emitting, emptying, discharging, injecting, escaping,
leaching, dumping or disposing into the environment including the abandonment
or discarding of barrels, containers and other closed receptacles containing
any hazardous substance, or any threat thereof, but excludes:
(a) Any release which results in exposure to
a person solely within a workplace, with respect to a claim that the person may
assert against the person's employer under ORS chapter 656;
(b) Emissions from the engine exhaust of a
motor vehicle, rolling stock, aircraft, vessel or pipeline pumping station
engine;
(c) Any release of source,
by product or special nuclear material from a nuclear incident, as those terms
are defined in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended, if such release is
subject to the requirements with respect to financial protection established by
the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under Section 170 of the Atomic Energy Act of
1954, as amended, or, for the purposes of ORS
465.260 or any other removal or
remedial action, any release of source by product special nuclear material from
any processing site designated under Section 102(a)(1) or 302(a) of the Uranium
Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978; and
(d) The normal application of
fertilizer.
(45)
"Remedial action" and "Removal" have the meanings set forth in ORS
465.200(22) and
(24), respectively, and, for purposes of
these rules, may include investigations, treatment, excavation and offsite
disposal, engineering controls, institutional controls, any combination
thereof.
(46) "Remediated" means
implementation of a removal or remedial action.
(47) "Residual risk assessment" means both:
(a) A quantitative assessment of the risk
resulting from concentrations of untreated waste or treatment residuals
remaining at the conclusion of any treatment and offsite disposal taking into
consideration current and reasonably likely future land and water use scenarios
and the exposure assumptions used in the baseline risk assessment; and
(b) A qualitative or quantitative
assessment of the adequacy and reliability of any institutional or engineering
controls to be used for management of treatment residuals and untreated
hazardous substances.
(48) "Risk" means the probability that a
hazardous substance, when released into the environment, will cause adverse
effects in exposed humans or ecological receptors.
(49) "Risk assessment" means the process used
to determine the probability of an adverse effect due to the presence of
hazardous substances. A risk assessment includes identification of the
hazardous substances present in the environmental media; assessment of exposure
and exposure pathways; assessment of the toxicity of the hazardous substances;
characterization of human health risks; and characterization of the impacts or
risks to the environment.
(50)
"Sensitive environment", for purposes of OAR
340-122-0045, means an area of
particular environmental value where a hazardous substance could pose a greater
threat than in other non-sensitive areas. Sensitive environments include but
are not limited to: Critical habitat for federally endangered or threatened
species; National Park, Monument, National Marine Sanctuary, National
Recreational Area, National Wildlife Refuge, National Forest Campgrounds,
recreational areas, game management areas, wildlife management areas;
designated federal Wilderness Areas; wetlands (freshwater, estuarine, or
coastal); wild and scenic rivers; state parks; state wildlife refuges; habitat
designated for state endangered species; fishery resources; state designated
natural areas; county or municipal parks; and other significant open spaces and
natural resources protected under Goal 5 of Oregon's Statewide Planning
Goals.
(51) "Significant adverse
effect on beneficial uses of water" means current or reasonably likely future
exceedance of:
(a) Applicable or relevant
federal, state or local water quality standards, criteria, or
guidance;
(b) In the absence of
applicable or relevant water quality standards, criteria, or guidance, the
acceptable risk level; or
(c) If
subsections (a) and (b) of this section do not apply, the concentration of a
hazardous substance indicated by available published peer-reviewed scientific
information to have a significant adverse effect on a current or reasonably
likely future beneficial use of water.
(52) "Soil" means a mixture of organic and
inorganic solids, air, water, and biota which exists on the earth surface above
bedrock, including materials of anthropogenic sources such as slag and
sludge.
(53) "Solid waste" means
all useless or discarded putrescible and nonputrescible materials, including
but not limited to garbage, rubbish, refuse, ashes, paper and cardboard, sewage
sludge, septic tank and cesspool pumpings or other sludge, useless or discarded
commercial, industrial, demolition and construction materials, discarded or
abandoned vehicles or parts thereof, discarded home and industrial appliances,
manure, vegetable or animal solid and semisolid materials, dead animals and
infectious waste as defined in ORS
459.386. "Solid waste" does not
include:
(a) Hazardous waste as defined in
ORS 466.005.
(b) Materials used for fertilizer or for
other productive purposes or which are salvageable as such materials are used
on land in agricultural operations and the growing or harvesting of crops and
the raising of animals.
(54) "Solid waste landfill" means a facility
for the disposal of solid waste involving the placement of solid waste on or
beneath the land surface.
(55)
"Surface water" means lakes, bays, ponds, impounding reservoirs, springs,
wells, rivers, streams, creeks, estuaries, wetlands, inlets, canals, the
Pacific Ocean within the territorial limits of the State of Oregon, and all
other bodies, natural or artificial, inland or coastal, fresh or salt, public
or private (except those private waters which do not combine or effect a
junction with natural surface waters), which are wholly or partially within or
bordering the state or within its jurisdiction.
(56) "Total excess cancer risk" means the
upper bound on the estimated excess cancer risk associated with exposure to
multiple hazardous substances and multiple exposure pathways.
(57) "Treatment" means to permanently and
substantially eliminate or reduce the toxicity, mobility or volume of hazardous
substances with the use of either in-situ or ex-situ remedial
technologies.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 465.315 & 465.400
Stats. Implemented: ORS 465.200-455, 465.900, 466.706-835 & 466.895
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