Utah Admin. Code R315-264-97 - General Ground-Water Monitoring Requirements
The owner or operator shall comply with the following
requirements for any ground-water
(a) The ground-water
monitoring system shall consist of a sufficient number of wells, installed at
appropriate locations and depths to yield ground-water samples from the
uppermost aquifer that:
(1) Represent the
quality of background ground water that has not been affected by leakage from a
regulated unit;
(i) A determination of
background ground-water quality may include sampling of wells that are not
hydraulically upgradient of the waste management area where:
(A) Hydrogeologic conditions do not allow the
owner or operator to determine what wells are hydraulically upgradient; and
(B) Sampling at other wells will
provide an indication of background ground-water quality that is representative
or more representative than that provided by the upgradient wells; and
(2)
Represent the quality of ground water passing the point of compliance.
(3) Allow for the detection of
contamination when hazardous waste or hazardous constituents have migrated from
the waste management area to the uppermost aquifer.
(b) If a facility contains more than one
regulated unit, separate ground-water monitoring systems are not required for
each regulated unit provided that provisions for sampling the ground water in
the uppermost aquifer will enable detection and measurement at the compliance
point of hazardous constituents from the regulated units that have entered the
ground water in the uppermost aquifer.
(c) All monitoring wells shall be cased in a
manner that maintains the integrity of the monitoring -well bore hole. This
casing shall be screened or perforated and packed with gravel or sand, where
necessary, to enable collection of ground-water samples. The annular space,
i.e., the space between the bore hole and well casing, above the sampling depth
shall be sealed to prevent contamination of samples and the ground water.
(d) The ground-water monitoring
program shall include consistent sampling and analysis procedures that are
designed to ensure monitoring results that provide a reliable indication of
ground-water quality below the waste management area. At a minimum the program
shall include procedures and techniques for:
(1) Sample collection;
(2) Sample preservation and shipment;
(3) Analytical procedures; and
(4) Chain of custody control.
(e) The ground-water
monitoring program shall include sampling and analytical methods that are
appropriate for ground-water sampling and that accurately measure hazardous
constituents in ground-water samples.
(f) The ground-water monitoring program shall
include a determination of the ground-water surface elevation each time ground
water is sampled.
(g) In detection
monitoring or where appropriate in compliance monitoring , data on each
hazardous constituent specified in the permit will be collected from background
wells and wells at the compliance point(s). The number and kinds of samples
collected to establish background shall be appropriate for the form of
statistical test employed, following generally accepted statistical principles.
The sample size shall be as large as necessary to ensure with reasonable
confidence that a contaminant release to ground water from a facility will be
detected. The owner or operator shall determine an appropriate sampling
procedure and interval for each hazardous constituent listed in the facility
permit which shall be specified in the unit permit upon approval by the
Director . This sampling procedure shall be:
(1) A sequence of at least four samples,
taken at an interval that assures, to the greatest extent technically feasible,
that an independent sample is obtained, by reference to the uppermost aquifer's
effective porosity, hydraulic conductivity, and hydraulic gradient, and the
fate and transport characteristics of the potential contaminants, or
(2) an alternate sampling procedure proposed
by the owner or operator and approved by the Director .
(h) The owner or operator shall specify one
of the following statistical methods to be used in evaluating ground-water
monitoring data for each hazardous constituent which, upon approval by the
Director , shall be specified in the unit permit . The statistical test chosen
shall be conducted separately for each hazardous constituent in each well.
Where practical quantification limits (pql's) are used in any of the following
statistical procedures to comply with Subsection R315-26497(i)(5), the pql
shall be proposed by the owner or operator and approved by the Director . Use of
any of the following statistical methods shall be protective of human health
and the environment and shall comply with the performance standards outlined in
Subsection R315-264-97(i).
(1) A parametric
analysis of variance, ANOVA, followed by multiple comparisons procedures to
identify statistically significant evidence of contamination. The method shall
include estimation and testing of the contrasts between each compliance well's
mean and the background mean levels for each constituent.
(2) An analysis of variance, ANOVA, based on
ranks followed by multiple comparisons procedures to identify statistically
significant evidence of contamination. The method shall include estimation and
testing of the contrasts between each compliance well's median and the
background median levels for each constituent.
(3) A tolerance or prediction interval
procedure in which an interval for each constituent is established from the
distribution of the background data, and the level of each constituent in each
compliance well is compared to the upper tolerance or prediction limit.
(4) A control chart approach that
gives control limits for each constituent.
(5) Another statistical test method submitted
by the owner or operator and approved by the Director .
(i) Any statistical method chosen under
Subsection R315-264-97(h) for specification in the unit permit shall comply
with the following performance standards, as appropriate:
(1) The statistical method used to evaluate
ground-water monitoring data shall be appropriate for the distribution of
chemical parameters or hazardous constituents. If the distribution of the
chemical parameters or hazardous constituents is shown by the owner or operator
to be inappropriate for a normal theory test , then the data should be
transformed or a distribution-free theory test should be used. If the
distributions for the constituents differ, more than one statistical method may
be needed.
(2) If an individual
well comparison procedure is used to compare an individual compliance well
constituent concentration with background constituent concentrations or a
ground-water protection standard, the test shall be done at a Type I error
level no less than 0.01 for each testing period. If a multiple comparisons
procedure is used, the Type I experiment wise error rate for each testing
period shall be no less than 0.05; however, the Type I error of no less than
0.01 for individual well comparisons shall be maintained. This performance
standard does not apply to tolerance intervals, prediction intervals or control
charts.
(3) If a control chart
approach is used to evaluate ground-water monitoring data, the specific type of
control chart and its associated parameter values shall be proposed by the
owner or operator and approved by the Director if he or she finds it to be
protective of human health and the environment.
(4) If a tolerance interval or a prediction
interval is used to evaluate groundwater monitoring data, the levels of
confidence and, for tolerance intervals, the percentage of the population that
the interval shall contain, shall be proposed by the owner or operator and
approved by the Director if he or she finds these parameters to be protective
of human health and the environment. These parameters shall be determined after
considering the number of samples in the background data base, the data
distribution, and the range of the concentration values for each constituent of
concern.
(5) The statistical
method shall account for data below the limit of detection with one or more
statistical procedures that are protective of human health and the environment.
Any practical quantification limit (pql) approved by the Director under
Subsection R315-264-97(h) that is used in the statistical method shall be the
lowest concentration level that can be reliably achieved within specified
limits of precision and accuracy during routine laboratory operating conditions
that are available to the facility .
(6) If necessary, the statistical method
shall include procedures to control or correct for seasonal and spatial
variability as well as temporal correlation in the data.
(j) Ground-water monitoring data collected in
accordance with Subsection R315-264-97(g) including actual levels of
constituents shall be maintained in the facility operating record. The Director
shall specify in the permit when the data shall be submitted for review.
Notes
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