Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) All potential
sources of discharges to groundwater within the facility, including, but not
limited to, all waste disposal units and the leachate management system, shall
be identified and studied through a network of monitoring wells operated during
the active life of the unit and for the time after closure specified in
accordance with Section
817.415.
Monitoring wells designed and constructed as part of the monitoring network
shall be maintained along with records that include, but are not limited to,
exact well location, well size, type of well, the design and construction
practice used in its installation and well and screen depths.
b) Standards for the location of monitoring
points:
1) A network of monitoring points
shall be established at sufficient locations downgradient with respect to
groundwater flow and not excluding the downward direction, to detect any
discharge of contaminants from any part of a potential source of
discharge.
2) Monitoring wells
shall be located in stratigraphic horizons that could serve as contaminant
migration pathways.
3) Monitoring
wells shall be established as close to the potential source of discharge as
possible without interfering with the waste disposal operations, and within
half the distance from the edge of the potential source of discharge to the
edge of the zone of attenuation downgradient, with respect to groundwater flow,
from the source.
4) The network of
monitoring points of several potential sources of discharge within a single
facility may be combined into a single monitoring network, provided that
discharges from any part of all potential sources can be detected.
5) A minimum of at least one monitoring well
shall be established at the edge of the zone of attenuation and shall be
located downgradient from the unit with respect to groundwater flow, and not
excluding the downward direction. Such well or wells shall be used to monitor
any statistically significant increase in the concentration of any constituent,
in accordance with Section
817.416(e)
and shall be used for determining compliance with an applicable groundwater
quality standard of Section 817.416. An observed statistically significant
increase above the applicable groundwater quality standards of Section
817.416
in a well located at or beyond the compliance boundary shall constitute a
violation.
c) Maximum
allowable predicted concentrations. For the purposes of this Part, the maximum
allowable predicted concentration (MAPC) for each monitored constituent shall
be determined as follows:
1) MAPCs for those
constituents with a MALC identified as a primary standard shall be background
plus 10 percent of the MALC. MAPCs for those constituents with a MALC
identified as a secondary standard shall be background plus 50 percent of the
MALC. The MAPCs calculated in this subsection shall be applicable within the
zone of attenuation.
2) For those
constituents listed in Section 817.Appendix A of this Part, the MAPC shall be
the practical quanitation limit (PQL) or, if the constituent's background
concentration exceeds the PQL, the MAPC shall be the background constituent
concentration.
d)
Standards for monitoring well design and construction:
1) All monitoring wells shall be cased in a
manner that maintains the integrity of the borehole. The casing material shall
be inert so as not to affect the water sample. Casing requiring solvent-cement
type coupling shall not be used.
2)
Wells shall be screened to allow sampling only at the desired interval. Annular
space between the borehole wall and well screen section shall be packed with
gravel sized to avoid clogging by the material in the zone being monitored. The
slot size of the screen shall be designed to minimize clogging. Screens shall
be fabricated from material expected to be inert with respect to the
constituents of the groundwater to be sampled.
3) Annular space above the well screen
section shall be sealed with a relatively impermeable, expandable material such
as a cement/bentonite grout, which does not react with or in any way affect the
sample, in order to prevent contamination of samples and groundwater and avoid
interconnections. The seal shall extend to the highest known seasonal
groundwater level.
4) The annular
space shall be back-filled with expanding cement grout from an elevation below
the frost line and mounded above the surface and sloped away from the casing so
as to divert surface water away.
5)
The annular space between the upper and lower seals and in the unsaturated zone
may be back filled with uncontaminated cuttings.
6) All wells shall be covered with vented
caps and equipped with devices to protect against tampering and
damage.
7) All wells shall be
developed to allow free entry of water, minimize turbidity of the sample, and
minimize clogging.
8) The
transmissivity of the zone surrounding all well screens shall be established by
field testing techniques.
9) Other
sampling methods and well construction techniques may be utilized if they meet
the water well construction standards of 77 Ill. Adm. Code 920 or if the Agency
has issued a written approval.
e) Standards for Sample Collection and
Analysis
1) The groundwater monitoring
program shall include consistent sampling and analysis procedures to assure
that monitoring results can be relied upon to provide data representative of
groundwater quality in the zone being monitored.
2) The operator shall utilize procedures and
techniques to insure that collected samples are representative of the zone
being monitored and that prevent cross contamination of samples from other
monitoring wells or from other samples. At least 95 percent of a collected
sample shall consist of groundwater from the zone being monitored.
3) The operator shall establish a quality
assurance program that provides quantitative detection limits and the degree of
error for analysis of each chemical constituent.
4) The operator shall establish a sample
preservation and shipment procedure that maintains the reliability of the
sample collected for analysis.
5)
The operator shall institute a chain of custody procedure to prevent tampering
and contamination of the collected samples prior to completion of
analysis.
6) At a minimum, the
operator shall sample the following parameters at all wells at the time of
sample collection and immediately before filtering and preserving samples for
shipment:
A) The elevation of the water
table;
B) The depth of the well
below ground;
C) pH;
D) The temperature of the sample;
and
E) Specific
conductance.