Pennsylvania Regulatory Program, 40836-40843 [2012-16945]
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40836
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 133 / Wednesday, July 11, 2012 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement
30 CFR Part 938
[PA–161–FOR; Docket ID: OSM–2012–0009]
Pennsylvania Regulatory Program
Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement (‘‘OSM’’),
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule; public comment
period and opportunity for public
hearing.
AGENCY:
OSM announces receipt of a
proposed amendment to the
Pennsylvania regulatory program under
the Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 (‘‘SMCRA’’ or
the ‘‘Act’’). Pennsylvania’s proposed
amendment consists of additions related
to beneficial use of coal ash upon active
and abandoned mine sites.
Pennsylvania is introducing beneficial
use of coal ash into the Pennsylvania
statutory scheme via Pennsylvania’s
Solid Waste Management Act
(‘‘SWMA’’), the Clean Streams Law
(‘‘CSL’’), the Surface Mining
Conservation and Reclamation Act and
the Administrative Code. Pennsylvania
intends to revise its approved program
pursuant to the additional flexibility
afforded by the revised Federal
regulations and SMCRA, as amended, to
ensure Pennsylvania’s proposed
provision is consistent with and in
accordance with SMCRA and the
corresponding regulations. This
document provides the times and
locations that the Pennsylvania program
and proposed amendment are available
for public inspection, the comment
period during which you may submit
written comments and the procedures
that we will follow for the public
hearing, if one is requested.
DATES: We will accept written
comments on these amendments until
4 p.m., Eastern Standard Time (‘‘EST’’)
August 10, 2012. If requested, we will
hold a public hearing on the
amendment on August 6, 2012. We will
accept requests to speak at a hearing
until 4 p.m., EST on July 26, 2012.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by SATS No. PA–161–FOR by
any of the following methods:
• Mail/Hand Delivery: Mr. Ben
Owens, Acting Chief, Pittsburgh Field
Division, Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, 3
Parkway Center, 3rd Floor, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15220.
• Fax: (412) 937–2888.
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SUMMARY:
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• Federal eRulemaking Portal: The
amendment has been assigned Docket
ID OSM–2012–0009. If you would like
to submit comments, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and follow the
instructions.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number for this rulemaking. For
detailed instructions on submitting
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Comment Procedures’’ heading
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to
review copies of the Pennsylvania
regulations, this amendment, a listing of
any scheduled public hearings, and all
written comments received in response
to this document, you must go to the
address listed below during normal
business hours, Monday through Friday,
excluding holidays. You may receive
one free copy of the amendments by
contacting OSM’s Pittsburgh Field
Division Office; or you can view the full
text of the program amendment
available for you to read at
www.regulations.gov.
In addition, you may review a copy of
the amendment during regular business
hours at one of the following locations:
Ben Owens, Acting Chief, Pittsburgh
Field Division, Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement, Appalachian Regional
Coordinating Center, 3 Parkway
Center, 3rd Floor, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 15220, Telephone: (412)
937–2827, Email: bowens@osmre.gov.
Thomas Callaghan, P. G., Director,
Bureau of Mining and Reclamation,
Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection, Rachel
Carson State Office Building, P.O. Box
8461, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania
17105–8461, Telephone: (717) 787–
5015, Email: tcallaghan@state.pa.us.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben
Owens, Acting Chief, Pittsburgh Field
Division; Telephone: (412) 937–2827.
Email: bowens@osmre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
law which provides for the regulation of
surface coal mining and reclamation
operations in accordance with the
requirements of this Act * * *; and
rules and regulations consistent with
regulations issued by the Secretary
pursuant to this Act.’’ See 30 U.S.C.
1253(a)(1) and (7). On the basis of these
criteria, the Secretary of the Interior
conditionally approved the
Pennsylvania program effective July 30,
1982. You can find background
information on the Pennsylvania
program, including the Secretary’s
findings, the disposition of comments,
and the conditions of approval of the
Pennsylvania program in the July 30,
1982, Federal Register (47 FR 33050).
You can also find later actions
concerning the Pennsylvania program
and program amendments at 30 CFR
938.11, 938.12, 938.13, 938.15, and
938.16.
I. Background on the Pennsylvania Program
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
III. Public Comment Procedures
IV. Procedural Determinations
290.1. Definitions
Temporary coal ash storage pile is
stored for not more than two weeks.
Water table is the toe top of the
saturated zone including regional
groundwater table, perched water tables,
seasonal water tables and mine pools.
I. Background on the Pennsylvania
Program
Section 503(a) of the SMCRA permits
a state to assume primacy for the
regulation of surface coal mining and
reclamation operations on non-Federal
and non-Indian lands within its borders
by demonstrating that its program
includes, among other things, ‘‘a State
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II. Description of the Proposed
Amendment
By letter dated March 13, 2012,
(Administrative Record Number PA
894.000), Pennsylvania sent OSM a
request to approve regulations related to
the beneficial use of coal ash on active
and abandoned mine lands. Key
provisions of the proposed amendment
include operating requirements for
beneficial use, including certification
guidelines for chemical and physical
properties of coal ash beneficially used
and water quality monitoring
requirements. Pennsylvania is
requesting approval of regulations found
at 25 Pa. Code Chapters 287.1 and 290,
promulgated pursuant to the
Pennsylvania SWMA.
287.1. Definitions
Coal ash, for the purposes of Chapters
287 and 290 includes: Fly ash, bottom
ash or boiler slag that resulted from the
combustion of coal and is or has been
beneficially used, reused or reclaimed
for a commercial, industrial or
governmental purpose. This includes
materials are stored, processed,
transported or sold for beneficial use,
reuse or reclamation.
290.2. Scope
Coal ash that is not beneficially used
in accordance with this regulation is
subject to residual waste regulations. In
the event of coal ash being mixed with
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residual waste, a beneficial use
designation must be approved. If the
coal is produced by co-firing coal or
waste coal with an alternative fuel the
material is regulated under this chapter
if the alternative fuel is less than 20%
by weight of the total fuel mixture and
contributes less than 10% by weight of
total ash quantity, if the coal ash is
mixed with construction and demolition
waste, the beneficial use must be
authorized under a permit for municipal
waste and this chapter. Coal ash mixed
with municipal waste—excluding
construction and demolition waste—
must not be beneficially used by direct
placement into the environment.
Beneficial use activities under this
chapter do not require an individual
disposal permit.
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290.101. General Requirements for
Beneficial Use
No permit is required for beneficial
use of coal ash if this chapter is
complied with. To be considered a
beneficial use, chemical analysis must
indicate the coal ash does not exceed
any of the maximum acceptable leachate
levels discussed infra. Certain physical
characteristics must be met as well.
A water quality monitoring plan is
required for any structural fill, use at a
mining activity site or abandoned
surface coal mine site where more than
10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more
than 100,000 tons in total per site is
used. Additionally, the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection
(‘‘the Department’’), at its discretion,
may implement a water quality
monitoring plan involving lesser
quantities of coal ash. Coal ash may not
be placed within eight feet of the water
table unless used for mine subsidence
control, mine fire control or mine
sealing.
290.102. Use as a Structural Fill
Sixty days prior to using coal ash as
a structural fill a written proposal must
be submitted to the Department
detailing:
• Description of the project including
a topographic and soils map;
• Commencement and completion
dates;
• Construction plans including a
stability analysis prepared by a licensed
professional engineer;
• Estimate of the volume of coal ash
to be utilized;
• A chemical and leaching analysis
that may not be older than one year; and
• A landowner consent.
Should the project be anticipated to
exceed 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre
or more than 100,000 tons in total site,
the landowner consent must be
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recorded and public notice given in a
local newspaper of general circulation at
least once a week for three consecutive
weeks. Information in this notice must
include:
• Name and business address of
person proposing to beneficially use
coal ash;
• Description, location and scope of
the project; and
• The location of the Department
office where a copy of the written
proposal may be inspected.
The Department, at its discretion, may
require a public notice for smaller
projects. The Department will publish a
notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin of
each written proposal received for use
of coal ash as structural fill.
The Department will respond in
writing to the person proposing the use
of coal ash as structural fill indicating
if it is consistent with this section.
The following additional
requirements for coal ash being
beneficially used as structural fill must
be satisfied:
• pH must be 7.0 or above, unless
otherwise approved; however, it may
not exceed 9.0 pH during placement and
storage unless public access is
restricted;
• Slope of the structural fill may not
be greater than 2.5 horizontal to 1.0
vertical;
• Coal ash must be spread uniformly
and compacted in layers not exceeding
two feet in thickness and must be
spread and compacted within 24 hours
of its delivery to the site unless it is
classified as a coal ash storage area;
• Surface runoff shall be minimized;
• Surface water shall be diverted;
• The coal ash shall be covered with
12 inches of soil;
• Minimum compaction of 90% of
the maximum dry density as determined
by the Modified Proctor Test or 95% of
the maximum dry density as determined
by the Standard Proctor Test must be
achieved; and
• Fugitive dust shall be minimized.
Coal ash used as structural fill may
not be located within:
• 100 feet of an intermittent or
perennial stream;
• 300 feet of an exceptional value or
high quality water;
• 300 feet of a water supply unless
consented to by the owner of the water
supply and submitted to the
Department;
• 25 feet of a bedrock outcrop (with
limited exceptions to be approved by
the Department);
• 100 feet of a sinkhole or sinkhole
draining area;
• A 100-year floodplain of a water of
Pennsylvania unless a properly
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constructed structure is in place as
permitted by the Department to protect
the structural fill;
• 100 feet of a wetland; or
• 300 feet of an exceptional value
wetland.
An annual report must be submitted
for any project where more than 10,000
tons of coal ash per acre or more than
100,000 tons of coal ash in total is
proposed.
Any deviation from the approved
physical or chemical standards must be
reported to the Department within 72
hours.
290.103. Use as a Soil Substitute
Coal ash may be used as a soil
substitute if sixty days prior to such use
a written proposal is submitted to the
Department. The proposal must contain:
• A description of the project
including a topographic and soils map
of the projected area and an explanation
of how the coal ash will be stored prior
to use, how the soil will be prepared for
application, how the coal ash will be
spread and, when necessary, how the
coal ash will be incorporated into the
soil;
• Commencement and conclusion
dates of the project;
• Proposed volume of coal ash to be
used, the proposed application rate and
a justification for the rate;
• A total chemical and leaching
analysis and pH analysis no older than
one year old;
• A chemical analysis as discussed
infra;
• An analysis indicating the coal ash
will be beneficial to use of the soil. This
must be prepared and signed by an
expert in soil science; and
• A landowner consent.
The Department will respond in
writing to the person proposing the use
of coal ash as a soil substitute or
additive indicating if it is consistent
with this section.
To be considered a beneficial use as
a soil substitute or additive the
following must be met:
• pH must range between 6.5 to 8.0
when mixed together as required by the
project;
• Chemical analysis demonstrates
calcium carbonate equivalency
requirements;
• Surface runoff is controlled;
• Coal ash must be incorporated into
the soil within 48 hours of application,
unless the Department approves a
deviation. The coal ash must be
incorporated into the first layer of
surface soil or if such is not present, the
coal ash and substitute material must
equal one foot. Coal ash is to enhance
soil properties or plant growth;
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• Coal ash shall be applied at a rate
per acre that protects public health,
public safety and the environment; and
• Fugitive dust must be minimized.
Coal ash may not be applied to soil
being used for agriculture when the soil
pH is less than 5.5 or if resultant
chemical or physical soil conditions
would be detrimental to biota.
Coal ash as a soil substitute or
additive may not be placed within:
• 100 feet of an intermittent or
perennial stream;
• 300 feet of an exceptional value
wetland or exceptional value or high
quality waters;
• 300 feet of a water supply unless a
landowner consents to a variance;
• 100 feet of a sinkhole or area
draining to a sinkhole; and
• 300 feet from an occupied dwelling
unless a landowner consents to a
variance.
Maximum cumulative loading rates
may not be exceeded in relationship to
the following constituents: arsenic,
boron, cadmium, chromium, copper,
lead, mercury, molybdenum, nickel,
selenium and zinc.
Records of chemical and physical
analyses, quantity of coal ash utilized,
location of placement and sources of the
coal ash must be maintained for a
minimum of three years and must be
made available upon request by the
Department.
Any deviation from the approved
physical or chemical standards must be
reported to the Department within 72
hours.
290.104. Beneficial Use at Coal Mining
Activity Sites
Approval for the beneficial use of coal
ash at coal mining activity sites must be:
• In compliance with the
Pennsylvania CSL, Surface Mining
Conservation and Reclamation Act, Coal
Refuse Disposal Control Act and other
applicable environmental statutes and
regulations promulgated thereunder;
• Certification as discussed infra; and
• Approval of a request by the
Department. Each person wishing to use
certified coal ash for a beneficial use at
a coal mining activity site as part of a
reclamation plan must submit a request
with an appropriate filing fee and
include the following:
➢ A description of the project,
including an estimate in cubic yards of
the amount of coal ash to be used and
how it will be stored prior to placement;
➢ Documentation that the coal ash
has been certified for its intended use,
including the identity of the generator
and the Department-assigned
certification identifier;
➢ A consent from the landowner
properly recorded; and
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➢ An appropriate water quality
monitoring plan.
When beneficial coal ash is utilized at
a coal mining activity site, a
nonrefundable permit filing fee is to be
paid annually in the amount of $2,000
for each year it is utilized than $1,000
for each year until final bond release is
achieved. This fee will be utilized to
administer compliance programs. This
fee will be reviewed and adjusted as
necessary. Public notice shall be given
if coal ash is utilized at a coal mining
activity site. Overall improvement in
water quality or prevention of
degradation of water quality is to be the
requirement for using coal ash for
reclamation purposes at coal mining
activity sites. Coal ash shall only be
beneficially used for reclamation at the
following locations: pit area, abandoned
mine lands within the surface coal
mining permit, coal refuse disposal and
reprocessing sites and areas where other
beneficial uses incorporated into the
reclamation plan are being conducted.
To be placed at active coal mining
sites the following additional
operational requirements must be met
including:
• The volume of the coal ash placed
at the site may not exceed the volume
of the coal, coal refuse, culm or silt
removed, unless approved by the
Department. The exception to this is
when it is demonstrated that
reclamation will be enhanced or water
quality improved or certain exceptions
for coal refuse reprocessing sites;
• Placement occurs by mixing with
spoil or spreading it in horizontal layers
no greater than 2 feet thick;
• Spreading and compaction must
occur within 24 hours of delivery;
• Requirements of the Modified or
Standard Proctor Test must be met
when coal ash placement is not
accomplished by mixing with spoil;
• Maintenance of the sources and
volume of coal ash utilized;
• An approved water quality
monitoring plan; and
• Minimization of fugitive dust.
Additional requirements are
necessary for sites utilizing coal ash as
a soil substitute, soil additive, or
utilized at a coal refuse disposal site.
Quarterly water monitoring must be
collected and submitted to the
Department for review, unless less
frequent monitoring is approved by the
Department. Annual reporting of coal
ash placed on a coal mining activity site
must be submitted to the Department.
Any deviation from the approved
physical or chemical standards must be
reported to the Department within 72
hours.
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290.105. Beneficial Use at Abandoned
Mine Lands (‘‘AML’’)
Coal ash is permitted on AMLs in
instances where reclamation is
performed pursuant to a contract with
the Department contingent upon the
following:
• Compliance with all terms of this
code and ancillary applicable
environmental statutes and regulations;
• Appropriate Certification as
detailed in this regulation; and
• An approved contract as detailed
herein.
Each aforementioned contract
proposal has several components,
including a description of the project;
proof that the coal ash has been certified
for its intended use, including the
identity of the generator; a reclamation
plan prepared and sealed by a
professional engineer; a signed
statement of the land owner consenting
to the placement of the coal ash which
must be recorded, and a detailed water
quality monitoring plan. The
description of the project shall include
a commencement and completion date
for the project, the amount of coal ash
to be utilized—in cubic yardage—and
detail the coal ash placement and
storage of the coal ash prior to
placement and properly identify the
sources of the coal ash. When coal ash
is utilized as a soil substitute or an
additive, the proposal must also include
the justification for coal ash as
beneficial use and the application rate.
In the event more than 10,000 tons of
coal ash per acre or more than 100,000
total tons of coal ash are utilized at one
project public notice must be given for
a period of three consecutive weeks.
Contiguous projects will be considered
a single project when determining if the
above factors apply. The Department
also has discretion to require other coal
ash placement projects be advertised. A
proof of publication of the notice is
required demonstrating the notice
contained:
• Name and business address of
proposer;
• Description of the location and
scope of the use; and
• Location where a copy of the
contract proposal is available for public
inspection.
Additionally, certain operating
requirements for use of coal ash are
required:
• Slope cannot exceed 2.5 horizontal
to 1.0 vertical, unless approved by the
Department after a demonstration of
stability;
• Uniformity of spreading is
necessary and compacting in layers
shall not exceed two feet in thickness
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unless approved by the Department.
Spreading and compacting must occur
within 24 hours of delivery unless
provisions relative to coal ash storage
are invoked;
• Surface runoff must be minimized
and storm water managed;
• Surface water shall be diverted;
• Twelve inches of soil must cover
the coal ash unless an infiltration buffer
is utilized;
• Minimum compaction of 90% or
95% of the maximum dry density must
be accomplished in conformity with the
Modified Proctor Test or the Standard
Proctor Test, respectively. Ash from
each source shall be tested individually;
• Fugitive dust must be minimized;
• When used for reclamation the coal
ash generally cannot be placed within:
➢ 100 feet of an existing intermittent
or perennial stream or within 300 feet
of an exceptional value or high quality
water, unless demonstration is made to
the Department that placement in this
zone is necessary to achieve
remediation of abandoned mine features
located within this zone;
➢ 100 feet of a sinkhole or a wetland
(but not an exceptional value wetland
which requires a 300 foot buffer); and
➢ A 100-year floodplain of a water of
the Commonwealth unless protection of
this area is available consistent with the
Flood Plain Management Act, the Storm
Water Management Act and the Dam
Safety Encroachment Act.
• When used as a soil substitute or
soil additive, the coal ash shall be
applied at a rate per acre that protects
public health, public safety and the
environment; must be part of the
approved reclamation plan to increase
productivity or properties of the soil;
and may not be used in excess of the
maximum cumulative loading rates.
An annual report must be filed with
the Department detailing the company
contact information, identity of the
reclamation contract, including
Department-assigned certification
identifier, identity of each source of coal
ash and the amount of coal ash placed
on the site during the previous calendar
year.
Should any person utilizing coal ash
for beneficial use discover evidence that
the coal ash does not meet certification
requirements this person must notify
the Department within 72 hours.
290.106. Other Beneficial Uses
The following do not require a permit
as they are deemed beneficial uses. This
determination is contingent upon the
uses complying with the requirements
of this section:
• Coal ash used in the manufacture of
concrete or cement as long as it is
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utilized within 24 hours of delivery or
stored in accordance with applicable
coal ash storage criteria;
• Extraction or recovery of a
component of coal ash as long as it is
stored appropriately before and after
extraction or recovery and disposal of
the unutilized fraction of coal ash is
subject to the applicable requirements
for residual waste;
• Use of fly ash as a stabilized
product. Moreover, when fly ash is
altered prior to use or during placement
it will be considered a beneficial use if:
➢ The person proposing use gives
advance written notice;
➢ Fly ash is not mixed with solid
waste—unless advance, written
approval is given by the Department;
➢ The use results in a demonstrated
reduction of the potential of the material
to leach constituents into the
environment;
➢ If the fly ash is used as structural
fill the applicable requirements
contained herein are met; and
➢ If the fly ash is used as a soil
amendment the applicable requirements
contained herein are met.
• Use of bottom ash or boiler slag as
an antiskid material or road surface
preparation material, if consistent with
applicable Department of
Transportation specifications. Note: the
use of fly ash for the same purpose is
not deemed a beneficial use;
• Use of coal ash as raw material for
a commercially valuable product
including the use of bottom ash as
construction aggregate. Provisions
relative to storage prior to processing are
applicable;
• Use of coal ash pipe bedding
contingent upon advance, written notice
to the Department including an
evaluation of the pH and chemical
analysis of the coal ash;
• Use of coal ash for mine subsidence
control, mine fire control and mine
sealing, if the following are true:
➢ Advance, written notice is given to
the Department;
➢ Utilization occurs within 24 hours
of delivery, unless storage provisions
are adhered to;
➢ If funded by the Department, all
Departmental requirements and
contracts must be adhered to; and
➢ The coal ash will undergo
cementitious reactions.
• Use of coal ash as a fuel. To be
considered a ‘‘fuel’’ the minimum
heating value of 5,000 btu/lb must be
exceeded. Storage of the coal ash prior
to use must be consistent with this
subchapter.
To fully comply with a designation of
beneficial use, any person using coal
ash is obligated to notify the Department
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of any evidence that the material does
not meet appropriate chemical or
physical property requirements and
documentation of chemical and
physical analyses of the quantity of coal
ash utilized, placement and sources
must be maintained for a minimum of
three years following the cessation of
use of the coal ash.
290.107. Requests for Information
The Department has the right to
request information documenting
compliance with this subchapter and
failure to have documentation of
compliance may result in a presumption
of that person disposing of residual
waste without a permit.
290.201. Coal Ash Certification
To obtain coal ash certification, the
following must be met:
• Maximum acceptable leachate
levels must be met. Specifically, for
metals and other cations (other than
selenium) the criterion is 25 times the
waste classification standard for a
contaminant. For selenium and sulfate,
10 times the waste classification
standard and for non-metals and anions
(other than sulfate and fluoride) the
waste classification standard for a
contaminant;
• pH must be greater than 7.0;
• When coal ash is utilized as an
alkaline additive, the calcium carbonate
equivalency must be a minimum of 100
parts per thousand. The Neutralization
Potential Test is the standard unless
another is approved by the Department;
and
• When coal ash is utilized as a low
permeability material the hydraulic
conductivity must be 1.0 x 10 to the
negative sixth power or less. This is
evaluated utilizing approved
Department standards. The testing must
use compaction and other preparation
techniques to simulate conditions at the
mine site.
To reach the parameters established
above, lime or cement may be added to
the coal ash contingent upon request to
and approval by the Department.
Requests to the Department for
certification by a generator must
include:
• Name and location of the generator;
• Designation of the beneficial use or
uses requested;
• A specific description of the
generation process. This should include
details on the combustion and pollution
control processes, the impact of these
processes on the coal ash, fuel sources
utilized and the expected percentages of
coal ash that will be derived and
ultimately delivered to the beneficial
use site;
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• Description of any material mixed
with the coal ash;
• A detailed chemical analysis, from
a documented environmental
laboratory, on at least four samples,
taken throughout a 2 to 6-month
sampling period within a year that fully
characterizes the composition of the
coal ash. This analysis must include:
➢ Total concentrations and leachable
concentrations of a full complement of
heavy metals using methods and pH
using soil and waste pH method found
in EPA’s Test Methods for Evaluating
Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical
Methods’’ (EPA Publication No. SW–
846) or comparable methods approved
by the Department. Leachate
concentrations must be determined
using EPA Method 1312, or an approved
Department alternative.
• A laboratory analysis for optimum
moisture content and dry density;
• Analysis of hydraulic conductivity;
• Determination of neutralization
potential;
• A detailed description of the
sampling methodology utilized; and
• Other necessary testing if required
for a specific beneficial use proposed.
The Department will review requests
and notify the generator in writing of
the assigned certification identifier or
rationale as to why the source was not
certified. If the coal ash is certified, the
generator shall submit regular
monitoring information demonstrating
continued compliance. The monitoring
information shall include at least one
representative sample, taken quarterly.
Further, a representative sample is
required whenever there is a change in
operation that could result in a chemical
or physical component of the coal ash.
Annually a report must be produced
that includes the weight, in dry tons of
coal ash produced for beneficial use in
the previous calendar year, an estimate
of the volume and the locations of
where the coal ash is delivered.
A coal ash generator shall notify the
Department of any changes to the
information found in the application or
evidence that the coal ash is not meeting
certification requirements.
290.202. Revocation of Certification
Certification will be revoked if any of
the following occur:
• Monitoring requirements are not
met;
• Coal ash exceeds certification
standards and exceedance certification
requirements, as outlined infra; or
• Physical or chemical characteristics
make the coal ash unsuitable for
beneficial use.
Should certification be revoked, the
coal ash cannot be used at a coal mining
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activity site or an AML site in the
Commonwealth unless recertification is
approved by the Department as outlined
infra.
Recertification is possible if the
generator can demonstrate via a detailed
chemical analysis on the three recent
monthly representative samples that the
coal ash meets the certification
requirements, and there are no physical
or chemical characteristics that make
the coal ash unsuitable for beneficial
use.
290.203. Exceedance of Certification
Requirements
Should sample results exceed any
certification standard, the generator
must—within 30 days of receiving the
results—submit to the Department the
following, as applicable:
• In the event of a laboratory error,
documentation and an explanation of
the error from the laboratory along with
a corrected analysis demonstrating the
coal ash certification standards are met;
and
• Demonstration of an anomaly. This
shall be documented by a comparison of
the anomalous sample with prior
samples; additional samples
demonstrating criteria are being met; a
plan for temporary increases in
monitoring; and an explanation of the
cause of the exceedance and how
further exceedances will be avoided.
By providing this information, should
the generator demonstrate to the
Department’s satisfaction that the
exceedance is an anomaly, use of the
coal ash as a beneficial use may resume.
Failure to provide this information will
result in a revocation of beneficial use
certification for the source.
290.301. Water Quality Monitoring
Prior to placement or storage of coal
ash, a water quality monitoring plan
shall be submitted to the Department. At
a minimum the plan must include:
• The location and design of down
gradient and up-gradient monitoring
points;
• A minimum of 12 background
samples from each monitoring point
taken at monthly intervals prior to
placement of coal ash; and
• Samples are to be taken quarterly
after approval.
The person taking the samples and
the laboratory performing the analysis
shall employ the quality assurance/
quality control procedures outlined in
the EPA’s Handbook for Analytical
Quality Control in Water and
Wastewater Laboratories or Test
Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste.
The analytical methodologies used to
meet the requirements of this section
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must follow established EPA protocol.
The laboratory performing water quality
analysis must be in conformity with
Department mandated environmental
laboratory accreditation.
Samples are to be analyzed for pH,
temperature, specific conductance,
alkalinity, acidity, sulfate, chloride,
fluoride, nitrate, nitrate, ammonia, and
total suspended solids without
filtration.
Samples shall be analyzed for a host
of heavy metal, total and dissolved
concentrations. Also, static water
elevation for monitoring wells and for
springs, seeps and mine discharges must
be measured. Additional parameters
may be required at the Department’s
discretion.
Quarterly water quality monitoring
will continue and be submitted to the
Department for a minimum of five years
after final placement or storage of coal
ash and annually thereafter from the
end of year five through 10 years after
final placement or storage, unless a
longer period is required by the
Department.
A demonstration of attainment of
applicable groundwater or surface water
remediation standards must be made
and must be in conformity with this
subchapter relative to assessment and
abatement.
290.302. Number, Location and Depth
of Monitoring Points
The water quality monitoring system
shall accurately characterize
groundwater and surface water flow and
chemistry and flow systems on the site
and adjacent areas. To achieve this, the
following must be met:
• At least one point that is upgradient of the coal ash placement in
order to provide representative data of
groundwater not affected by the coal ash
placement. The exception to this is in
the event the placement is the upgradient point; in such instances down
gradient monitoring points will be
utilized;
• At least three groundwater
monitoring points down gradient of the
coal ash placement, unless two are
approved by the Department.
Furthermore, at the Department’s
discretion, springs, seeps and mine
discharges may serve as substitutes if
they are down gradient and will be as
effective in monitoring the coal ash
placement. Down gradient wells must
be hydrologically connected to the area
of coal placement and constructed in a
manner to detect chemical influence of
the coal ash placement area throughout
the longevity of the placement of coal
ash. These points must be developed
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and protected as approved by the
Department; and
• Surface water monitoring points are
necessary where such monitoring may
indicate any chemical influence on the
hydrologic regime from coal ash
placement.
Up-gradient and down gradient points
should be sufficient in number,
location, and depth to be representative
of water quality. These points shall not
interfere with routine operations at the
site and in most cases should be within
200 feet of the coal ash placement area.
Up-gradient points shall be located so
as not to be affected by effects on
groundwater or surface water from the
coal ash placement area. Down gradient
monitoring points shall be placed to
provide early detection.
All wells drilled must be in
compliance with the Water Well Drillers
License Act and all well materials shall
be decontaminated prior to installation.
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290.303. Standards for Wells and Casing
of Wells
Monitoring wells must be cased to
maintain the integrity of the borehole
and be constructed of material that will
not reach groundwater that is being
monitored. The minimum casing
diameter must be four inches. The well
must be constructed with a screen that
is factory-made, will not react with the
groundwater and the screen must
maximize open area to minimize
entrance velocities and allow rapid
sample recovery.
The well must be filter-packed with
chemically inert clean quartz sand,
silica or glass bead. The material chosen
must be well-rounded and
dimensionally stable.
The casing must extend at least one
foot above ground, unless the
Department allows for flush mount
wells.
The annular space above the sampling
depth must be sealed to prevent
contamination and the casing must be
designed and constructed to prevent
cross contamination. The Department
has discretion to approve alternative
casing designs for wells in stable
formations.
The protective monitoring well
casings must be enclosed in a protective
casing that protects the well from
damage, be installed for at least 10 feet
above the well cap and must stick up at
least three feet, and be grouted and
placed with a concrete collar at least
three feet deep. The casing must be
numbered, protrude above the
monitoring well casing, have a locked
cap and must be made of steel or other
material of equivalent strength.
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290.304. Assessment Plan
An assessment plan must be prepared
within 60 days should any of the
following occur:
• Degradation is indicated from water
monitoring. Federal ground water
sampling and analysis requirements will
be utilized to assess the data; or
• Laboratory analysis of public or
private water supplies indicate
contamination of ground or surface
water that could reasonably be
attributable to coal ash placement.
Assessment must consist of chemical
data and a supporting narrative should
one of the following apply:
• Ten working days following receipt
of the degraded sample and the resampling indicates degradation has not
occurred. Determination that
degradation is not present must be
approved by the Department; or
• Twenty working days following
receipt of the degraded sample,
demonstration is made that the
degradation is caused by seasonal
variations or activities unrelated to coal
ash placement.
The assessment plan must specifically
address the existence of, quality,
quantity, area, extent and depth of
degradation and the rate and direction
of migration of contaminates. It must be
prepared and sealed by a professional
geologist.
For assessment plans involving wells,
lysimeters, borings, pits, piezometers,
springs, seeps, mine discharges and
other assessment structures or devices,
the number, location, size, casing type
and depth must be included. If the
assessment points are wells they shall
be constructed in accordance with this
subchapter.
All assessment plans must include:
• Sampling and analytical methods
for parameters to be evaluated;
• Evaluation procedures, including
the previously gathered groundwater or
surface water quality and quantity
information is to be included to
determine the concentration, rate and
extent of groundwater or surface water
degradation from the facility;
• A biological assessment of surface
water;
• An implementation schedule; and
• Identification of the abatement
standard that will be met.
The assessment plan shall be
implemented upon approval by the
Department within a reasonable time
not to exceed six months.
Should the Department determine the
proposed plan is inadequate; it may
modify the plan and approve it as
modified.
If the groundwater or surface water
assessment indicates that contamination
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40841
is leaving the coal ash placement site,
the person shall notify, in writing, each
water supply owner within one-half
mile down gradient of the coal ash
placement area that an assessment has
been initiated.
Within 45 days after the completion
of the assessment plan, the person shall
submit a report containing the new data
collected, analysis of the data, and
recommendations on the necessity for
abatement.
If the Department determines after
review of the assessment report that
implementation of an abatement plan is
not required—pursuant to this
subchapter—a revised water quality
monitoring plan must be submitted for
approval to the Department. This
revised water quality plan must outline
any necessary changes and include an
application for permit modification if
applicable. The modifications to the
plan shall be implemented within 30
days of approval.
Nothing in this section prevents prior
or concurrent abatement or water
supply replacement.
290.305. Abatement Plan
An abatement plan must be submitted
to the Department when any of the
following occur:
• The aforementioned assessment
plan demonstrates the presence of
groundwater or surface water
degradation and analysis indicates an
abatement standard will not be met at
the compliance points;
• Departmental monitoring indicates
the exceedance of an abatement
standard even in a situation where an
assessment plan has not been
completed. The following are
exceptions to this standard and an
abatement plan will not be required to
be implemented:
➢ Within ten days after receipt of the
results re-sampling of the affected
monitoring points indicates exceedance
of an abatement standard has not
occurred and the Department concurs.
• After a biological assessment of
surface water indicates a detrimental
effect to biota.
Abatement plans must be prepared
and sealed by a professional geologist
licensed to practice in this
Commonwealth. The plan must include
specific abatement of groundwater or
surface water degradation, techniques to
prevent further degradation and a
schedule for implementation.
Abatement procedures must
demonstrate compliance with at least
one of the following standards at the
identified compliance points:
• Situations where Statewide health
standards are applicable, compliance
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with the Statewide health standard for
that constituent at and beyond 500 feet
of the perimeter of or the property
boundary, whichever is closer;
• The background standard for
constituents at and beyond 500 feet of
the perimeter of the coal ash placement
area or at and beyond the property
boundary, whichever is closer. Loadbased standards at groundwater
discharge points are acceptable under
certain circumstances where approval
was otherwise granted by the
Department;
• Constituents for which no primary
maximum contaminant levels exist the
risk-based standard (addressed supra) at
and beyond 500 feet of the perimeter of
the placement area or the property
boundary, whichever is closer is applied
if the following conditions are met:
➢ The risk assessment used to
establish the standard assumes human
receptors are present at the boundary;
➢ The level is derived in a manner
consistent with generally accepted and
applicable health risk assessments; and
➢ The level is based on scientifically
valid studies conducted in accordance
with good laboratory practice standards
or other scientifically valid studies
approved by the Department and
➢ If the constituent is a carcinogen,
the level represents a concentration
associated with an excess lifetime
cancer risk level of 1 × 10 to the negative
fifth power at the property boundary.
When measuring compliance with
secondary contaminants with statewide
health standards or those with no
primary maximum contaminant level,
the Department may approve a
compliance point beyond 500 feet on
land owned by the owner of the coal ash
placement area.
The abatement plan shall be
completed and submitted to the
Department for approval within 90 days,
unless modified in writing.
In the event the plan is deemed
inadequate it may be modified and
approved or the submission of a
sufficient modification may be required
by the Department.
The abatement plan shall be
implemented within 60 days of
approval.
Should the Department determine
that the plan is incapable of achieving
the groundwater or surface water
protection contemplated in the approval
the Department may issue an order
outlining one or more of the following:
requiring a proposed modification to the
abatement plan; requiring
implementation of an abatement plan
modified by the Department or another
order the Department deems effective
for enforcement.
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290.306. Recordkeeping
Records, analyses, and evaluations of
monitoring data and groundwater
elevations must maintained for a
minimum of three years after water
quality monitoring ceases. This
documentation must be made available
to the Department upon request.
290.307. Interim Water Quality
Monitoring Requirements
This section is applicable to sites
where coal ash has been stored or
placed for beneficial use prior to
December 11, 2010, and will continue
after that date.
Sites not previously subject to water
quality monitoring requirements must
submit a water quality monitoring plan
whereby the location and design of
down gradient and up-gradient
monitoring points is identified and
samples are taken quarterly. This plan
shall be implemented within one year of
the Department’s approval of the plan.
Sites previously subject to water
quality monitoring must ensure new
monitoring points and replacement
wells constructed after December 11,
2011, comply with the provisions of this
subchapter including number, location
and depth of monitoring wells and
ensure the wells are properly cased as
set forth in this subchapter.
All water quality monitoring after
March 11, 2011, must include analysis
of pH, temperature, specific
conductance, alkalinity, acidity,
sulfates, chlorides, fluoride, nitrate,
nitrite, ammonia and total suspended
solids as well as analysis of a variety of
heavy metals and static water elevation
for monitoring wells and the flow of
springs, seeps and mine discharges must
be measured.
Summary of Proposed Amendment
Submitted by Pennsylvania
The key provisions of the rule address
the operating requirements for
beneficial use of coal ash upon active
and abandoned mine land sites. The
proposed amendment addition has the
following components:
• Chemical and physical certification
standards for coal ash to ensure
compliance with beneficial use
requirements;
• Coal ash monitoring to ensure coal
ash meets qualification criteria;
• Water quality monitoring to create a
robust dataset to facilitate the evaluation
and documentation of water quality at
sites where coal ash is beneficially used;
• A minimum number of monitoring
points to characterize the groundwater;
• Recording of the landowner consent
for placement of coal ash for beneficial
use;
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• Reporting of volumes and locations
where coal ash is beneficially used;
• Operational and monitoring
standards for all types of beneficial use;
• A centralized process to qualify
coal ash for beneficial use at mine sites;
• An annual fee payable to the
Department to offset some of its costs for
coal ash and water quality sampling and
testing at mine sites where coal ash is
beneficially used; and
• Abatement plan requirements in the
event that site assessments indicate
groundwater or surface water
degradation.
III. Public Comment Procedures
Under the provisions of 30 CFR
732.17(h), we are seeking your
comments on whether Pennsylvania’s
proposed amendment satisfies the
applicable program approval criteria of
30 CFR 732.15. If we approve the
amendment, it will become part of
Pennsylvania’s State Program.
Electronic or Written Comments
If you submit written comments, they
should be specific, confined to issues
pertinent to the proposed regulations,
and explain the reason for any
recommended change(s). We appreciate
any and all comments, but those most
useful and likely to influence decisions
on the final regulations will be those
that either involve personal experience
or include citations to and analyses of
SMCRA, its legislative history, its
implementing regulations, case law,
other pertinent State or Federal laws or
regulations, technical literature, or other
relevant publications.
We cannot ensure that comments
received after the close of the comment
period (see DATES) or sent to an address
other than those listed (see ADDRESSES)
will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment including your
personal identifying information may be
made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Public Hearing
If you wish to speak at the public
hearing, contact the person listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT by
4 p.m., EST, on July 26, 2012. If you are
disabled and need reasonable
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accommodations to attend a public
hearing, contact the person listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. We
will arrange the location and time of the
hearing with those persons requesting
the hearing. If no one requests an
opportunity to speak, we will not hold
a hearing.
To assist the transcriber and ensure an
accurate record, we request, if possible,
that each person who speaks at the
public hearing provide us with a written
copy of his or her comments. The public
hearing will continue on the specified
date until everyone scheduled to speak
has been given an opportunity to be
heard. If you are in the audience and
have not been scheduled to speak and
wish to do so, you will be allowed to
speak after those who have been
scheduled. We will end the hearing after
everyone scheduled to speak and others
present in the audience who wish to
speak, have been heard.
Public Meeting
If only one person requests an
opportunity to speak, we may hold a
public meeting rather than a public
hearing. If you wish to meet with us to
discuss the amendment, please request
a meeting by contacting the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. All such meetings are open to
the public; if possible, we will post
notices of meetings at the locations
listed under ADDRESSES. We will make
a written summary of each meeting a
part of the administrative record.
IV. Procedural Determinations
Executive Order 12866—Regulatory
Planning and Review
This rule is exempted from review by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under Executive Order 12866.
erowe on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS-1
Other Laws and Executive Orders
Affecting Rulemaking
When a State submits a program
amendment to OSM for review, our
regulations at 30 CFR 732.17(h) require
us to publish a notice in the Federal
Register indicating receipt of the
proposed amendment, its text or a
summary of its terms, and an
opportunity for public comment. We
conclude our review of the proposed
amendment after the close of the public
comment period and determine whether
the amendment should be approved,
approved in part, or not approved. At
that time, we will also make the
determinations and certifications
required by the various laws and
executive orders governing the
rulemaking process and include them in
the final rule.
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List of Subjects in 30 CFR Part 938
Intergovernmental relations, Surface
mining, Underground mining.
Dated: May 18, 2012.
Michael K. Robinson,
Acting Regional Director, Appalachian
Region.
[FR Doc. 2012–16945 Filed 7–10–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 571
[Docket No. NHTSA–2011–0145]
Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard
No. 108; Lamp, Reflective Devices, and
Associated Equipment
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Request for comments on
technical report.
AGENCY:
This notice requests
comments on a technical report which
evaluates new approaches for the
regulation of motor vehicle lighting
performance. Since 1968, the lighting
standard in the United States has been
updated incrementally, while lighting
technologies have in some ways
changed dramatically. We are requesting
comments on the general approaches
and specific technical merits presented
in this report. These comments, in
conjunction with the agency’s overall
priorities, will be used to shape our next
steps.
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than September 10, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Report: The technical report
is available on the internet for viewing
in PDF format at https://
www.regulations.gov and search for this
docket number. You may obtain a copy
of the report free of charge by sending
a self-addressed mailing label to Markus
Price (NVS–121), National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590.
Comments: You may submit
comments [identified by Docket Number
NHTSA–2011–0145] by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments.
• Fax: 1–202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility,
M–30, U.S. Department of
SUMMARY:
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40843
Transportation, West Building, Ground
Floor, Rm. W12–140, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m. Eastern Time, Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
You may call Docket Management at
202–366–9826.
Instructions: For detailed instructions
on submitting comments, see the
Procedural Matters section of this
document. Note that all comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
non-legal issues, you may call Mr.
Markus Price, Office of Crash Avoidance
Standards (Phone: 202–366–0098; Fax:
202–366–7002).
You may send mail to this official at:
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS)
No. 108, Lamps, reflective devices, and
associated equipment, is a complex
motor vehicle standard that has been in
effect for several decades. The agency
contracted for the preparation of a
technical report, ‘‘Feasibility of New
Approaches for the Regulation of Motor
Vehicle Lighting Performance,’’ which
discusses the feasibility of new
approaches to regulating motor vehicle
lighting equipment. The report
examines ways to effectively achieve the
purposes of the performance
requirements of FMVSS No. 108, which
is to reduce crashes and injuries by
increasing the conspicuity of motor
vehicles and adequately illuminating
the roadway. The report is available in
the docket NHTSA–2011–0145.
The report identifies several potential
opportunities for performance
requirements in the following areas:
headlighting photometry, headlamp test
voltage, sensitivity of headlamps to
vertical aim, luminance of signaling and
marking lamps, masking of front turn
signals, and reliability of photometric
testing. The report also examines other
areas, including physical lamp testing
and signal lamp angular photometry.
In addition to a literature review, the
authors of this report consulted experts
within the lighting community through
SAE International. These experts were
consulted on the potential effects of
requirements that are primarily vehiclebased. To increase transparency and
broaden the input regarding this report,
this notice requests comments from the
public. We are specifically interested in
E:\FR\FM\11JYP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 133 (Wednesday, July 11, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 40836-40843]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-16945]
[[Page 40836]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
30 CFR Part 938
[PA-161-FOR; Docket ID: OSM-2012-0009]
Pennsylvania Regulatory Program
AGENCY: Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement (``OSM''),
Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule; public comment period and opportunity for public
hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: OSM announces receipt of a proposed amendment to the
Pennsylvania regulatory program under the Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 (``SMCRA'' or the ``Act''). Pennsylvania's
proposed amendment consists of additions related to beneficial use of
coal ash upon active and abandoned mine sites. Pennsylvania is
introducing beneficial use of coal ash into the Pennsylvania statutory
scheme via Pennsylvania's Solid Waste Management Act (``SWMA''), the
Clean Streams Law (``CSL''), the Surface Mining Conservation and
Reclamation Act and the Administrative Code. Pennsylvania intends to
revise its approved program pursuant to the additional flexibility
afforded by the revised Federal regulations and SMCRA, as amended, to
ensure Pennsylvania's proposed provision is consistent with and in
accordance with SMCRA and the corresponding regulations. This document
provides the times and locations that the Pennsylvania program and
proposed amendment are available for public inspection, the comment
period during which you may submit written comments and the procedures
that we will follow for the public hearing, if one is requested.
DATES: We will accept written comments on these amendments until 4
p.m., Eastern Standard Time (``EST'') August 10, 2012. If requested, we
will hold a public hearing on the amendment on August 6, 2012. We will
accept requests to speak at a hearing until 4 p.m., EST on July 26,
2012.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by SATS No. PA-161-FOR
by any of the following methods:
Mail/Hand Delivery: Mr. Ben Owens, Acting Chief,
Pittsburgh Field Division, Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and
Enforcement, 3 Parkway Center, 3rd Floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
15220.
Fax: (412) 937-2888.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: The amendment has been
assigned Docket ID OSM-2012-0009. If you would like to submit comments,
go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the instructions.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket number for this rulemaking. For detailed instructions on
submitting comments and additional information on the rulemaking
process, see the ``Public Comment Procedures'' heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to review copies of the
Pennsylvania regulations, this amendment, a listing of any scheduled
public hearings, and all written comments received in response to this
document, you must go to the address listed below during normal
business hours, Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. You may
receive one free copy of the amendments by contacting OSM's Pittsburgh
Field Division Office; or you can view the full text of the program
amendment available for you to read at www.regulations.gov.
In addition, you may review a copy of the amendment during regular
business hours at one of the following locations:
Ben Owens, Acting Chief, Pittsburgh Field Division, Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Appalachian Regional Coordinating
Center, 3 Parkway Center, 3rd Floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15220,
Telephone: (412) 937-2827, Email: bowens@osmre.gov.
Thomas Callaghan, P. G., Director, Bureau of Mining and Reclamation,
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, Rachel Carson
State Office Building, P.O. Box 8461, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania 17105-
8461, Telephone: (717) 787-5015, Email: tcallaghan@state.pa.us.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ben Owens, Acting Chief, Pittsburgh
Field Division; Telephone: (412) 937-2827. Email: bowens@osmre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background on the Pennsylvania Program
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
III. Public Comment Procedures
IV. Procedural Determinations
I. Background on the Pennsylvania Program
Section 503(a) of the SMCRA permits a state to assume primacy for
the regulation of surface coal mining and reclamation operations on
non-Federal and non-Indian lands within its borders by demonstrating
that its program includes, among other things, ``a State law which
provides for the regulation of surface coal mining and reclamation
operations in accordance with the requirements of this Act * * *; and
rules and regulations consistent with regulations issued by the
Secretary pursuant to this Act.'' See 30 U.S.C. 1253(a)(1) and (7). On
the basis of these criteria, the Secretary of the Interior
conditionally approved the Pennsylvania program effective July 30,
1982. You can find background information on the Pennsylvania program,
including the Secretary's findings, the disposition of comments, and
the conditions of approval of the Pennsylvania program in the July 30,
1982, Federal Register (47 FR 33050). You can also find later actions
concerning the Pennsylvania program and program amendments at 30 CFR
938.11, 938.12, 938.13, 938.15, and 938.16.
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
By letter dated March 13, 2012, (Administrative Record Number PA
894.000), Pennsylvania sent OSM a request to approve regulations
related to the beneficial use of coal ash on active and abandoned mine
lands. Key provisions of the proposed amendment include operating
requirements for beneficial use, including certification guidelines for
chemical and physical properties of coal ash beneficially used and
water quality monitoring requirements. Pennsylvania is requesting
approval of regulations found at 25 Pa. Code Chapters 287.1 and 290,
promulgated pursuant to the Pennsylvania SWMA.
287.1. Definitions
Coal ash, for the purposes of Chapters 287 and 290 includes: Fly
ash, bottom ash or boiler slag that resulted from the combustion of
coal and is or has been beneficially used, reused or reclaimed for a
commercial, industrial or governmental purpose. This includes materials
are stored, processed, transported or sold for beneficial use, reuse or
reclamation.
290.1. Definitions
Temporary coal ash storage pile is stored for not more than two
weeks. Water table is the toe top of the saturated zone including
regional groundwater table, perched water tables, seasonal water tables
and mine pools.
290.2. Scope
Coal ash that is not beneficially used in accordance with this
regulation is subject to residual waste regulations. In the event of
coal ash being mixed with
[[Page 40837]]
residual waste, a beneficial use designation must be approved. If the
coal is produced by co-firing coal or waste coal with an alternative
fuel the material is regulated under this chapter if the alternative
fuel is less than 20% by weight of the total fuel mixture and
contributes less than 10% by weight of total ash quantity, if the coal
ash is mixed with construction and demolition waste, the beneficial use
must be authorized under a permit for municipal waste and this chapter.
Coal ash mixed with municipal waste--excluding construction and
demolition waste--must not be beneficially used by direct placement
into the environment.
Beneficial use activities under this chapter do not require an
individual disposal permit.
290.101. General Requirements for Beneficial Use
No permit is required for beneficial use of coal ash if this
chapter is complied with. To be considered a beneficial use, chemical
analysis must indicate the coal ash does not exceed any of the maximum
acceptable leachate levels discussed infra. Certain physical
characteristics must be met as well.
A water quality monitoring plan is required for any structural
fill, use at a mining activity site or abandoned surface coal mine site
where more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000
tons in total per site is used. Additionally, the Pennsylvania
Department of Environmental Protection (``the Department''), at its
discretion, may implement a water quality monitoring plan involving
lesser quantities of coal ash. Coal ash may not be placed within eight
feet of the water table unless used for mine subsidence control, mine
fire control or mine sealing.
290.102. Use as a Structural Fill
Sixty days prior to using coal ash as a structural fill a written
proposal must be submitted to the Department detailing:
Description of the project including a topographic and
soils map;
Commencement and completion dates;
Construction plans including a stability analysis prepared
by a licensed professional engineer;
Estimate of the volume of coal ash to be utilized;
A chemical and leaching analysis that may not be older
than one year; and
A landowner consent.
Should the project be anticipated to exceed 10,000 tons of coal ash
per acre or more than 100,000 tons in total site, the landowner consent
must be recorded and public notice given in a local newspaper of
general circulation at least once a week for three consecutive weeks.
Information in this notice must include:
Name and business address of person proposing to
beneficially use coal ash;
Description, location and scope of the project; and
The location of the Department office where a copy of the
written proposal may be inspected.
The Department, at its discretion, may require a public notice for
smaller projects. The Department will publish a notice in the
Pennsylvania Bulletin of each written proposal received for use of coal
ash as structural fill.
The Department will respond in writing to the person proposing the
use of coal ash as structural fill indicating if it is consistent with
this section.
The following additional requirements for coal ash being
beneficially used as structural fill must be satisfied:
pH must be 7.0 or above, unless otherwise approved;
however, it may not exceed 9.0 pH during placement and storage unless
public access is restricted;
Slope of the structural fill may not be greater than 2.5
horizontal to 1.0 vertical;
Coal ash must be spread uniformly and compacted in layers
not exceeding two feet in thickness and must be spread and compacted
within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless it is classified as
a coal ash storage area;
Surface runoff shall be minimized;
Surface water shall be diverted;
The coal ash shall be covered with 12 inches of soil;
Minimum compaction of 90% of the maximum dry density as
determined by the Modified Proctor Test or 95% of the maximum dry
density as determined by the Standard Proctor Test must be achieved;
and
Fugitive dust shall be minimized.
Coal ash used as structural fill may not be located within:
100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream;
300 feet of an exceptional value or high quality water;
300 feet of a water supply unless consented to by the
owner of the water supply and submitted to the Department;
25 feet of a bedrock outcrop (with limited exceptions to
be approved by the Department);
100 feet of a sinkhole or sinkhole draining area;
A 100-year floodplain of a water of Pennsylvania unless a
properly constructed structure is in place as permitted by the
Department to protect the structural fill;
100 feet of a wetland; or
300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.
An annual report must be submitted for any project where more than
10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash
in total is proposed.
Any deviation from the approved physical or chemical standards must
be reported to the Department within 72 hours.
290.103. Use as a Soil Substitute
Coal ash may be used as a soil substitute if sixty days prior to
such use a written proposal is submitted to the Department. The
proposal must contain:
A description of the project including a topographic and
soils map of the projected area and an explanation of how the coal ash
will be stored prior to use, how the soil will be prepared for
application, how the coal ash will be spread and, when necessary, how
the coal ash will be incorporated into the soil;
Commencement and conclusion dates of the project;
Proposed volume of coal ash to be used, the proposed
application rate and a justification for the rate;
A total chemical and leaching analysis and pH analysis no
older than one year old;
A chemical analysis as discussed infra;
An analysis indicating the coal ash will be beneficial to
use of the soil. This must be prepared and signed by an expert in soil
science; and
A landowner consent.
The Department will respond in writing to the person proposing the
use of coal ash as a soil substitute or additive indicating if it is
consistent with this section.
To be considered a beneficial use as a soil substitute or additive
the following must be met:
pH must range between 6.5 to 8.0 when mixed together as
required by the project;
Chemical analysis demonstrates calcium carbonate
equivalency requirements;
Surface runoff is controlled;
Coal ash must be incorporated into the soil within 48
hours of application, unless the Department approves a deviation. The
coal ash must be incorporated into the first layer of surface soil or
if such is not present, the coal ash and substitute material must equal
one foot. Coal ash is to enhance soil properties or plant growth;
[[Page 40838]]
Coal ash shall be applied at a rate per acre that protects
public health, public safety and the environment; and
Fugitive dust must be minimized.
Coal ash may not be applied to soil being used for agriculture when
the soil pH is less than 5.5 or if resultant chemical or physical soil
conditions would be detrimental to biota.
Coal ash as a soil substitute or additive may not be placed within:
100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream;
300 feet of an exceptional value wetland or exceptional
value or high quality waters;
300 feet of a water supply unless a landowner consents to
a variance;
100 feet of a sinkhole or area draining to a sinkhole; and
300 feet from an occupied dwelling unless a landowner
consents to a variance.
Maximum cumulative loading rates may not be exceeded in
relationship to the following constituents: arsenic, boron, cadmium,
chromium, copper, lead, mercury, molybdenum, nickel, selenium and zinc.
Records of chemical and physical analyses, quantity of coal ash
utilized, location of placement and sources of the coal ash must be
maintained for a minimum of three years and must be made available upon
request by the Department.
Any deviation from the approved physical or chemical standards must
be reported to the Department within 72 hours.
290.104. Beneficial Use at Coal Mining Activity Sites
Approval for the beneficial use of coal ash at coal mining activity
sites must be:
In compliance with the Pennsylvania CSL, Surface Mining
Conservation and Reclamation Act, Coal Refuse Disposal Control Act and
other applicable environmental statutes and regulations promulgated
thereunder;
Certification as discussed infra; and
Approval of a request by the Department. Each person
wishing to use certified coal ash for a beneficial use at a coal mining
activity site as part of a reclamation plan must submit a request with
an appropriate filing fee and include the following:
[rtarr8] A description of the project, including an estimate in
cubic yards of the amount of coal ash to be used and how it will be
stored prior to placement;
[rtarr8] Documentation that the coal ash has been certified for its
intended use, including the identity of the generator and the
Department-assigned certification identifier;
[rtarr8] A consent from the landowner properly recorded; and
[rtarr8] An appropriate water quality monitoring plan.
When beneficial coal ash is utilized at a coal mining activity
site, a nonrefundable permit filing fee is to be paid annually in the
amount of $2,000 for each year it is utilized than $1,000 for each year
until final bond release is achieved. This fee will be utilized to
administer compliance programs. This fee will be reviewed and adjusted
as necessary. Public notice shall be given if coal ash is utilized at a
coal mining activity site. Overall improvement in water quality or
prevention of degradation of water quality is to be the requirement for
using coal ash for reclamation purposes at coal mining activity sites.
Coal ash shall only be beneficially used for reclamation at the
following locations: pit area, abandoned mine lands within the surface
coal mining permit, coal refuse disposal and reprocessing sites and
areas where other beneficial uses incorporated into the reclamation
plan are being conducted.
To be placed at active coal mining sites the following additional
operational requirements must be met including:
The volume of the coal ash placed at the site may not
exceed the volume of the coal, coal refuse, culm or silt removed,
unless approved by the Department. The exception to this is when it is
demonstrated that reclamation will be enhanced or water quality
improved or certain exceptions for coal refuse reprocessing sites;
Placement occurs by mixing with spoil or spreading it in
horizontal layers no greater than 2 feet thick;
Spreading and compaction must occur within 24 hours of
delivery;
Requirements of the Modified or Standard Proctor Test must
be met when coal ash placement is not accomplished by mixing with
spoil;
Maintenance of the sources and volume of coal ash
utilized;
An approved water quality monitoring plan; and
Minimization of fugitive dust.
Additional requirements are necessary for sites utilizing coal ash
as a soil substitute, soil additive, or utilized at a coal refuse
disposal site. Quarterly water monitoring must be collected and
submitted to the Department for review, unless less frequent monitoring
is approved by the Department. Annual reporting of coal ash placed on a
coal mining activity site must be submitted to the Department. Any
deviation from the approved physical or chemical standards must be
reported to the Department within 72 hours.
290.105. Beneficial Use at Abandoned Mine Lands (``AML'')
Coal ash is permitted on AMLs in instances where reclamation is
performed pursuant to a contract with the Department contingent upon
the following:
Compliance with all terms of this code and ancillary
applicable environmental statutes and regulations;
Appropriate Certification as detailed in this regulation;
and
An approved contract as detailed herein.
Each aforementioned contract proposal has several components,
including a description of the project; proof that the coal ash has
been certified for its intended use, including the identity of the
generator; a reclamation plan prepared and sealed by a professional
engineer; a signed statement of the land owner consenting to the
placement of the coal ash which must be recorded, and a detailed water
quality monitoring plan. The description of the project shall include a
commencement and completion date for the project, the amount of coal
ash to be utilized--in cubic yardage--and detail the coal ash placement
and storage of the coal ash prior to placement and properly identify
the sources of the coal ash. When coal ash is utilized as a soil
substitute or an additive, the proposal must also include the
justification for coal ash as beneficial use and the application rate.
In the event more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than
100,000 total tons of coal ash are utilized at one project public
notice must be given for a period of three consecutive weeks.
Contiguous projects will be considered a single project when
determining if the above factors apply. The Department also has
discretion to require other coal ash placement projects be advertised.
A proof of publication of the notice is required demonstrating the
notice contained:
Name and business address of proposer;
Description of the location and scope of the use; and
Location where a copy of the contract proposal is
available for public inspection.
Additionally, certain operating requirements for use of coal ash
are required:
Slope cannot exceed 2.5 horizontal to 1.0 vertical, unless
approved by the Department after a demonstration of stability;
Uniformity of spreading is necessary and compacting in
layers shall not exceed two feet in thickness
[[Page 40839]]
unless approved by the Department. Spreading and compacting must occur
within 24 hours of delivery unless provisions relative to coal ash
storage are invoked;
Surface runoff must be minimized and storm water managed;
Surface water shall be diverted;
Twelve inches of soil must cover the coal ash unless an
infiltration buffer is utilized;
Minimum compaction of 90% or 95% of the maximum dry
density must be accomplished in conformity with the Modified Proctor
Test or the Standard Proctor Test, respectively. Ash from each source
shall be tested individually;
Fugitive dust must be minimized;
When used for reclamation the coal ash generally cannot be
placed within:
[rtarr8] 100 feet of an existing intermittent or perennial stream
or within 300 feet of an exceptional value or high quality water,
unless demonstration is made to the Department that placement in this
zone is necessary to achieve remediation of abandoned mine features
located within this zone;
[rtarr8] 100 feet of a sinkhole or a wetland (but not an
exceptional value wetland which requires a 300 foot buffer); and
[rtarr8] A 100-year floodplain of a water of the Commonwealth
unless protection of this area is available consistent with the Flood
Plain Management Act, the Storm Water Management Act and the Dam Safety
Encroachment Act.
When used as a soil substitute or soil additive, the coal
ash shall be applied at a rate per acre that protects public health,
public safety and the environment; must be part of the approved
reclamation plan to increase productivity or properties of the soil;
and may not be used in excess of the maximum cumulative loading rates.
An annual report must be filed with the Department detailing the
company contact information, identity of the reclamation contract,
including Department-assigned certification identifier, identity of
each source of coal ash and the amount of coal ash placed on the site
during the previous calendar year.
Should any person utilizing coal ash for beneficial use discover
evidence that the coal ash does not meet certification requirements
this person must notify the Department within 72 hours.
290.106. Other Beneficial Uses
The following do not require a permit as they are deemed beneficial
uses. This determination is contingent upon the uses complying with the
requirements of this section:
Coal ash used in the manufacture of concrete or cement as
long as it is utilized within 24 hours of delivery or stored in
accordance with applicable coal ash storage criteria;
Extraction or recovery of a component of coal ash as long
as it is stored appropriately before and after extraction or recovery
and disposal of the unutilized fraction of coal ash is subject to the
applicable requirements for residual waste;
Use of fly ash as a stabilized product. Moreover, when fly
ash is altered prior to use or during placement it will be considered a
beneficial use if:
[rtarr8] The person proposing use gives advance written notice;
[rtarr8] Fly ash is not mixed with solid waste--unless advance,
written approval is given by the Department;
[rtarr8] The use results in a demonstrated reduction of the
potential of the material to leach constituents into the environment;
[rtarr8] If the fly ash is used as structural fill the applicable
requirements contained herein are met; and
[rtarr8] If the fly ash is used as a soil amendment the applicable
requirements contained herein are met.
Use of bottom ash or boiler slag as an antiskid material
or road surface preparation material, if consistent with applicable
Department of Transportation specifications. Note: the use of fly ash
for the same purpose is not deemed a beneficial use;
Use of coal ash as raw material for a commercially
valuable product including the use of bottom ash as construction
aggregate. Provisions relative to storage prior to processing are
applicable;
Use of coal ash pipe bedding contingent upon advance,
written notice to the Department including an evaluation of the pH and
chemical analysis of the coal ash;
Use of coal ash for mine subsidence control, mine fire
control and mine sealing, if the following are true:
[rtarr8] Advance, written notice is given to the Department;
[rtarr8] Utilization occurs within 24 hours of delivery, unless
storage provisions are adhered to;
[rtarr8] If funded by the Department, all Departmental requirements
and contracts must be adhered to; and
[rtarr8] The coal ash will undergo cementitious reactions.
Use of coal ash as a fuel. To be considered a ``fuel'' the
minimum heating value of 5,000 btu/lb must be exceeded. Storage of the
coal ash prior to use must be consistent with this subchapter.
To fully comply with a designation of beneficial use, any person
using coal ash is obligated to notify the Department of any evidence
that the material does not meet appropriate chemical or physical
property requirements and documentation of chemical and physical
analyses of the quantity of coal ash utilized, placement and sources
must be maintained for a minimum of three years following the cessation
of use of the coal ash.
290.107. Requests for Information
The Department has the right to request information documenting
compliance with this subchapter and failure to have documentation of
compliance may result in a presumption of that person disposing of
residual waste without a permit.
290.201. Coal Ash Certification
To obtain coal ash certification, the following must be met:
Maximum acceptable leachate levels must be met.
Specifically, for metals and other cations (other than selenium) the
criterion is 25 times the waste classification standard for a
contaminant. For selenium and sulfate, 10 times the waste
classification standard and for non-metals and anions (other than
sulfate and fluoride) the waste classification standard for a
contaminant;
pH must be greater than 7.0;
When coal ash is utilized as an alkaline additive, the
calcium carbonate equivalency must be a minimum of 100 parts per
thousand. The Neutralization Potential Test is the standard unless
another is approved by the Department; and
When coal ash is utilized as a low permeability material
the hydraulic conductivity must be 1.0 x 10 to the negative sixth power
or less. This is evaluated utilizing approved Department standards. The
testing must use compaction and other preparation techniques to
simulate conditions at the mine site.
To reach the parameters established above, lime or cement may be
added to the coal ash contingent upon request to and approval by the
Department.
Requests to the Department for certification by a generator must
include:
Name and location of the generator;
Designation of the beneficial use or uses requested;
A specific description of the generation process. This
should include details on the combustion and pollution control
processes, the impact of these processes on the coal ash, fuel sources
utilized and the expected percentages of coal ash that will be derived
and ultimately delivered to the beneficial use site;
[[Page 40840]]
Description of any material mixed with the coal ash;
A detailed chemical analysis, from a documented
environmental laboratory, on at least four samples, taken throughout a
2 to 6-month sampling period within a year that fully characterizes the
composition of the coal ash. This analysis must include:
[rtarr8] Total concentrations and leachable concentrations of a
full complement of heavy metals using methods and pH using soil and
waste pH method found in EPA's Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste,
Physical/Chemical Methods'' (EPA Publication No. SW-846) or comparable
methods approved by the Department. Leachate concentrations must be
determined using EPA Method 1312, or an approved Department
alternative.
A laboratory analysis for optimum moisture content and dry
density;
Analysis of hydraulic conductivity;
Determination of neutralization potential;
A detailed description of the sampling methodology
utilized; and
Other necessary testing if required for a specific
beneficial use proposed.
The Department will review requests and notify the generator in
writing of the assigned certification identifier or rationale as to why
the source was not certified. If the coal ash is certified, the
generator shall submit regular monitoring information demonstrating
continued compliance. The monitoring information shall include at least
one representative sample, taken quarterly. Further, a representative
sample is required whenever there is a change in operation that could
result in a chemical or physical component of the coal ash. Annually a
report must be produced that includes the weight, in dry tons of coal
ash produced for beneficial use in the previous calendar year, an
estimate of the volume and the locations of where the coal ash is
delivered.
A coal ash generator shall notify the Department of any changes to
the information found in the application or evidence that the coal ash
is not meeting certification requirements.
290.202. Revocation of Certification
Certification will be revoked if any of the following occur:
Monitoring requirements are not met;
Coal ash exceeds certification standards and exceedance
certification requirements, as outlined infra; or
Physical or chemical characteristics make the coal ash
unsuitable for beneficial use.
Should certification be revoked, the coal ash cannot be used at a
coal mining activity site or an AML site in the Commonwealth unless
recertification is approved by the Department as outlined infra.
Recertification is possible if the generator can demonstrate via a
detailed chemical analysis on the three recent monthly representative
samples that the coal ash meets the certification requirements, and
there are no physical or chemical characteristics that make the coal
ash unsuitable for beneficial use.
290.203. Exceedance of Certification Requirements
Should sample results exceed any certification standard, the
generator must--within 30 days of receiving the results--submit to the
Department the following, as applicable:
In the event of a laboratory error, documentation and an
explanation of the error from the laboratory along with a corrected
analysis demonstrating the coal ash certification standards are met;
and
Demonstration of an anomaly. This shall be documented by a
comparison of the anomalous sample with prior samples; additional
samples demonstrating criteria are being met; a plan for temporary
increases in monitoring; and an explanation of the cause of the
exceedance and how further exceedances will be avoided.
By providing this information, should the generator demonstrate to
the Department's satisfaction that the exceedance is an anomaly, use of
the coal ash as a beneficial use may resume. Failure to provide this
information will result in a revocation of beneficial use certification
for the source.
290.301. Water Quality Monitoring
Prior to placement or storage of coal ash, a water quality
monitoring plan shall be submitted to the Department. At a minimum the
plan must include:
The location and design of down gradient and up-gradient
monitoring points;
A minimum of 12 background samples from each monitoring
point taken at monthly intervals prior to placement of coal ash; and
Samples are to be taken quarterly after approval.
The person taking the samples and the laboratory performing the
analysis shall employ the quality assurance/quality control procedures
outlined in the EPA's Handbook for Analytical Quality Control in Water
and Wastewater Laboratories or Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste.
The analytical methodologies used to meet the requirements of this
section must follow established EPA protocol. The laboratory performing
water quality analysis must be in conformity with Department mandated
environmental laboratory accreditation.
Samples are to be analyzed for pH, temperature, specific
conductance, alkalinity, acidity, sulfate, chloride, fluoride, nitrate,
nitrate, ammonia, and total suspended solids without filtration.
Samples shall be analyzed for a host of heavy metal, total and
dissolved concentrations. Also, static water elevation for monitoring
wells and for springs, seeps and mine discharges must be measured.
Additional parameters may be required at the Department's discretion.
Quarterly water quality monitoring will continue and be submitted
to the Department for a minimum of five years after final placement or
storage of coal ash and annually thereafter from the end of year five
through 10 years after final placement or storage, unless a longer
period is required by the Department.
A demonstration of attainment of applicable groundwater or surface
water remediation standards must be made and must be in conformity with
this subchapter relative to assessment and abatement.
290.302. Number, Location and Depth of Monitoring Points
The water quality monitoring system shall accurately characterize
groundwater and surface water flow and chemistry and flow systems on
the site and adjacent areas. To achieve this, the following must be
met:
At least one point that is up-gradient of the coal ash
placement in order to provide representative data of groundwater not
affected by the coal ash placement. The exception to this is in the
event the placement is the up-gradient point; in such instances down
gradient monitoring points will be utilized;
At least three groundwater monitoring points down gradient
of the coal ash placement, unless two are approved by the Department.
Furthermore, at the Department's discretion, springs, seeps and mine
discharges may serve as substitutes if they are down gradient and will
be as effective in monitoring the coal ash placement. Down gradient
wells must be hydrologically connected to the area of coal placement
and constructed in a manner to detect chemical influence of the coal
ash placement area throughout the longevity of the placement of coal
ash. These points must be developed
[[Page 40841]]
and protected as approved by the Department; and
Surface water monitoring points are necessary where such
monitoring may indicate any chemical influence on the hydrologic regime
from coal ash placement.
Up-gradient and down gradient points should be sufficient in
number, location, and depth to be representative of water quality.
These points shall not interfere with routine operations at the site
and in most cases should be within 200 feet of the coal ash placement
area.
Up-gradient points shall be located so as not to be affected by
effects on groundwater or surface water from the coal ash placement
area. Down gradient monitoring points shall be placed to provide early
detection.
All wells drilled must be in compliance with the Water Well
Drillers License Act and all well materials shall be decontaminated
prior to installation.
290.303. Standards for Wells and Casing of Wells
Monitoring wells must be cased to maintain the integrity of the
borehole and be constructed of material that will not reach groundwater
that is being monitored. The minimum casing diameter must be four
inches. The well must be constructed with a screen that is factory-
made, will not react with the groundwater and the screen must maximize
open area to minimize entrance velocities and allow rapid sample
recovery.
The well must be filter-packed with chemically inert clean quartz
sand, silica or glass bead. The material chosen must be well-rounded
and dimensionally stable.
The casing must extend at least one foot above ground, unless the
Department allows for flush mount wells.
The annular space above the sampling depth must be sealed to
prevent contamination and the casing must be designed and constructed
to prevent cross contamination. The Department has discretion to
approve alternative casing designs for wells in stable formations.
The protective monitoring well casings must be enclosed in a
protective casing that protects the well from damage, be installed for
at least 10 feet above the well cap and must stick up at least three
feet, and be grouted and placed with a concrete collar at least three
feet deep. The casing must be numbered, protrude above the monitoring
well casing, have a locked cap and must be made of steel or other
material of equivalent strength.
290.304. Assessment Plan
An assessment plan must be prepared within 60 days should any of
the following occur:
Degradation is indicated from water monitoring. Federal
ground water sampling and analysis requirements will be utilized to
assess the data; or
Laboratory analysis of public or private water supplies
indicate contamination of ground or surface water that could reasonably
be attributable to coal ash placement.
Assessment must consist of chemical data and a supporting narrative
should one of the following apply:
Ten working days following receipt of the degraded sample
and the re-sampling indicates degradation has not occurred.
Determination that degradation is not present must be approved by the
Department; or
Twenty working days following receipt of the degraded
sample, demonstration is made that the degradation is caused by
seasonal variations or activities unrelated to coal ash placement.
The assessment plan must specifically address the existence of,
quality, quantity, area, extent and depth of degradation and the rate
and direction of migration of contaminates. It must be prepared and
sealed by a professional geologist.
For assessment plans involving wells, lysimeters, borings, pits,
piezometers, springs, seeps, mine discharges and other assessment
structures or devices, the number, location, size, casing type and
depth must be included. If the assessment points are wells they shall
be constructed in accordance with this subchapter.
All assessment plans must include:
Sampling and analytical methods for parameters to be
evaluated;
Evaluation procedures, including the previously gathered
groundwater or surface water quality and quantity information is to be
included to determine the concentration, rate and extent of groundwater
or surface water degradation from the facility;
A biological assessment of surface water;
An implementation schedule; and
Identification of the abatement standard that will be met.
The assessment plan shall be implemented upon approval by the
Department within a reasonable time not to exceed six months.
Should the Department determine the proposed plan is inadequate; it
may modify the plan and approve it as modified.
If the groundwater or surface water assessment indicates that
contamination is leaving the coal ash placement site, the person shall
notify, in writing, each water supply owner within one-half mile down
gradient of the coal ash placement area that an assessment has been
initiated.
Within 45 days after the completion of the assessment plan, the
person shall submit a report containing the new data collected,
analysis of the data, and recommendations on the necessity for
abatement.
If the Department determines after review of the assessment report
that implementation of an abatement plan is not required--pursuant to
this subchapter--a revised water quality monitoring plan must be
submitted for approval to the Department. This revised water quality
plan must outline any necessary changes and include an application for
permit modification if applicable. The modifications to the plan shall
be implemented within 30 days of approval.
Nothing in this section prevents prior or concurrent abatement or
water supply replacement.
290.305. Abatement Plan
An abatement plan must be submitted to the Department when any of
the following occur:
The aforementioned assessment plan demonstrates the
presence of groundwater or surface water degradation and analysis
indicates an abatement standard will not be met at the compliance
points;
Departmental monitoring indicates the exceedance of an
abatement standard even in a situation where an assessment plan has not
been completed. The following are exceptions to this standard and an
abatement plan will not be required to be implemented:
[rtarr8] Within ten days after receipt of the results re-sampling
of the affected monitoring points indicates exceedance of an abatement
standard has not occurred and the Department concurs.
After a biological assessment of surface water indicates a
detrimental effect to biota.
Abatement plans must be prepared and sealed by a professional
geologist licensed to practice in this Commonwealth. The plan must
include specific abatement of groundwater or surface water degradation,
techniques to prevent further degradation and a schedule for
implementation.
Abatement procedures must demonstrate compliance with at least one
of the following standards at the identified compliance points:
Situations where Statewide health standards are
applicable, compliance
[[Page 40842]]
with the Statewide health standard for that constituent at and beyond
500 feet of the perimeter of or the property boundary, whichever is
closer;
The background standard for constituents at and beyond 500
feet of the perimeter of the coal ash placement area or at and beyond
the property boundary, whichever is closer. Load-based standards at
groundwater discharge points are acceptable under certain circumstances
where approval was otherwise granted by the Department;
Constituents for which no primary maximum contaminant
levels exist the risk-based standard (addressed supra) at and beyond
500 feet of the perimeter of the placement area or the property
boundary, whichever is closer is applied if the following conditions
are met:
[rtarr8] The risk assessment used to establish the standard assumes
human receptors are present at the boundary;
[rtarr8] The level is derived in a manner consistent with generally
accepted and applicable health risk assessments; and
[rtarr8] The level is based on scientifically valid studies
conducted in accordance with good laboratory practice standards or
other scientifically valid studies approved by the Department and
[rtarr8] If the constituent is a carcinogen, the level represents a
concentration associated with an excess lifetime cancer risk level of 1
x 10 to the negative fifth power at the property boundary.
When measuring compliance with secondary contaminants with
statewide health standards or those with no primary maximum contaminant
level, the Department may approve a compliance point beyond 500 feet on
land owned by the owner of the coal ash placement area.
The abatement plan shall be completed and submitted to the
Department for approval within 90 days, unless modified in writing.
In the event the plan is deemed inadequate it may be modified and
approved or the submission of a sufficient modification may be required
by the Department.
The abatement plan shall be implemented within 60 days of approval.
Should the Department determine that the plan is incapable of
achieving the groundwater or surface water protection contemplated in
the approval the Department may issue an order outlining one or more of
the following: requiring a proposed modification to the abatement plan;
requiring implementation of an abatement plan modified by the
Department or another order the Department deems effective for
enforcement.
290.306. Recordkeeping
Records, analyses, and evaluations of monitoring data and
groundwater elevations must maintained for a minimum of three years
after water quality monitoring ceases. This documentation must be made
available to the Department upon request.
290.307. Interim Water Quality Monitoring Requirements
This section is applicable to sites where coal ash has been stored
or placed for beneficial use prior to December 11, 2010, and will
continue after that date.
Sites not previously subject to water quality monitoring
requirements must submit a water quality monitoring plan whereby the
location and design of down gradient and up-gradient monitoring points
is identified and samples are taken quarterly. This plan shall be
implemented within one year of the Department's approval of the plan.
Sites previously subject to water quality monitoring must ensure
new monitoring points and replacement wells constructed after December
11, 2011, comply with the provisions of this subchapter including
number, location and depth of monitoring wells and ensure the wells are
properly cased as set forth in this subchapter.
All water quality monitoring after March 11, 2011, must include
analysis of pH, temperature, specific conductance, alkalinity, acidity,
sulfates, chlorides, fluoride, nitrate, nitrite, ammonia and total
suspended solids as well as analysis of a variety of heavy metals and
static water elevation for monitoring wells and the flow of springs,
seeps and mine discharges must be measured.
Summary of Proposed Amendment Submitted by Pennsylvania
The key provisions of the rule address the operating requirements
for beneficial use of coal ash upon active and abandoned mine land
sites. The proposed amendment addition has the following components:
Chemical and physical certification standards for coal ash
to ensure compliance with beneficial use requirements;
Coal ash monitoring to ensure coal ash meets qualification
criteria;
Water quality monitoring to create a robust dataset to
facilitate the evaluation and documentation of water quality at sites
where coal ash is beneficially used;
A minimum number of monitoring points to characterize the
groundwater;
Recording of the landowner consent for placement of coal
ash for beneficial use;
Reporting of volumes and locations where coal ash is
beneficially used;
Operational and monitoring standards for all types of
beneficial use;
A centralized process to qualify coal ash for beneficial
use at mine sites;
An annual fee payable to the Department to offset some of
its costs for coal ash and water quality sampling and testing at mine
sites where coal ash is beneficially used; and
Abatement plan requirements in the event that site
assessments indicate groundwater or surface water degradation.
III. Public Comment Procedures
Under the provisions of 30 CFR 732.17(h), we are seeking your
comments on whether Pennsylvania's proposed amendment satisfies the
applicable program approval criteria of 30 CFR 732.15. If we approve
the amendment, it will become part of Pennsylvania's State Program.
Electronic or Written Comments
If you submit written comments, they should be specific, confined
to issues pertinent to the proposed regulations, and explain the reason
for any recommended change(s). We appreciate any and all comments, but
those most useful and likely to influence decisions on the final
regulations will be those that either involve personal experience or
include citations to and analyses of SMCRA, its legislative history,
its implementing regulations, case law, other pertinent State or
Federal laws or regulations, technical literature, or other relevant
publications.
We cannot ensure that comments received after the close of the
comment period (see DATES) or sent to an address other than those
listed (see ADDRESSES) will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment including your personal identifying
information may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
Public Hearing
If you wish to speak at the public hearing, contact the person
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT by 4 p.m., EST, on July
26, 2012. If you are disabled and need reasonable
[[Page 40843]]
accommodations to attend a public hearing, contact the person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. We will arrange the location and
time of the hearing with those persons requesting the hearing. If no
one requests an opportunity to speak, we will not hold a hearing.
To assist the transcriber and ensure an accurate record, we
request, if possible, that each person who speaks at the public hearing
provide us with a written copy of his or her comments. The public
hearing will continue on the specified date until everyone scheduled to
speak has been given an opportunity to be heard. If you are in the
audience and have not been scheduled to speak and wish to do so, you
will be allowed to speak after those who have been scheduled. We will
end the hearing after everyone scheduled to speak and others present in
the audience who wish to speak, have been heard.
Public Meeting
If only one person requests an opportunity to speak, we may hold a
public meeting rather than a public hearing. If you wish to meet with
us to discuss the amendment, please request a meeting by contacting the
person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. All such meetings
are open to the public; if possible, we will post notices of meetings
at the locations listed under ADDRESSES. We will make a written summary
of each meeting a part of the administrative record.
IV. Procedural Determinations
Executive Order 12866--Regulatory Planning and Review
This rule is exempted from review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under Executive Order 12866.
Other Laws and Executive Orders Affecting Rulemaking
When a State submits a program amendment to OSM for review, our
regulations at 30 CFR 732.17(h) require us to publish a notice in the
Federal Register indicating receipt of the proposed amendment, its text
or a summary of its terms, and an opportunity for public comment. We
conclude our review of the proposed amendment after the close of the
public comment period and determine whether the amendment should be
approved, approved in part, or not approved. At that time, we will also
make the determinations and certifications required by the various laws
and executive orders governing the rulemaking process and include them
in the final rule.
List of Subjects in 30 CFR Part 938
Intergovernmental relations, Surface mining, Underground mining.
Dated: May 18, 2012.
Michael K. Robinson,
Acting Regional Director, Appalachian Region.
[FR Doc. 2012-16945 Filed 7-10-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-05-P