Illinois Administrative Code
Title 35 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Part 817 - REQUIREMENTS FOR NEW STEEL AND FOUNDRY INDUSTRY WASTES LANDFILLS
Subpart D - NEW STEEL AND FOUNDRY INDUSTRY LOW RISK WASTE LANDFILLS
Section 817.416 - Groundwater Quality Standards
Universal Citation: 35 IL Admin Code ยง 817.416
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a) Applicable groundwater quality standards:
1)
Groundwater quality shall be maintained at each constituent's applicable
groundwater quality standard at or beyond the zone of attenuation. The
applicable groundwater quality standard established for any constituent shall
be:
A) The Board established standard;
or
B) The Board established
standard adjusted by the Board in accordance with the justification procedure
of subsection (b) of this Section; or
C) For those constituents where no Board
established standard exists, the background concentration.
2) Any statistically significant increase
above an applicable groundwater quality standard established pursuant to
subsection (a)(1) that is attributable to the facility and which occurs at or
beyond the zone of attenuation within 100 years after closure of the last unit
accepting waste within such a facility shall constitute a violation.
3) For the purposes of this Part:
A) "Background concentration" means that
concentration of a constitutent that is established as the background in
accordance with subsection (d).
B)
"Board-established standard" is the concentration of a constituent adopted by
the Board as a groundwater quality standard under 35 Ill. Adm. Code
620.
b) Justification for adjusted groundwater quality standards:
1) An operator may petition the Board for an
adjusted groundwater quality standard in accordance with the procedures
specified in Section 28.1 of the Act and 35 Ill. Adm. Code
106.410
through
106.416.
2) For groundwater which contains naturally
occurring constituents which do not meet the standards of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
620, the Board will specify adjusted groundwater quality standards, upon a
demonstration by the operator that:
A) The
groundwater does not presently serve as a source of drinking water;
B) The change in standards will not interfere
with, or become injurious to, any present or potential beneficial uses for such
waters;
C) The change in standards
is necessary for economic or social development, by providing information
including, but not limited to, the impacts of the standards on the regional
economy, social disbenefits such as loss of jobs or closing of landfills, and
economic analysis contrasting the health and environmental benefits with costs
likely to be incurred in meeting the standards; and
D) The groundwater cannot presently, and will
not in the future, serve as a source of drinking water because:
i) It is impossible to remove water in usable
quantities;
ii) the groundwater is
situated at a depth or location such that recovery of water for drinking
purposes is not technologically feasible or economically reasonable;
iii) The groundwater is so contaminated that
it would be economically or technologically impractical to render that water
fit for human consumption;
iv) The
total dissolved solids content of the groundwater is more than 3,000 mg/l and
the water will not be used to serve a public water supply system; or
v) The total dissolved solids content of the
groundwater exceeds 10,000 mg/l.
c) Determination of the zone of attenuation.
1) The zone of attenuation, within which
concentrations of constituents in leachate discharged from the unit may exceed
the applicable groundwater quality standard of this Section, is a volume
bounded by a vertical plane at the property boundary or 100 feet from the edge
of the unit, whichever is less, extending from the ground surface to the bottom
of the uppermost aquifer and excluding the volume occupied by the
waste.
2) Zones of attenuation
shall not extend to the annual high water mark of navigable surface
waters.
3) Overlapping zones of
attenuation from units within a single facility may be combined into a single
zone for the purposes of establishing a monitoring network.
d) Establishment of background concentrations:
1) The initial monitoring to
determine background concentrations shall commence during the hydrogeological
assessment required by Section
817.411.
The background concentrations for those parameters identified in Sections
817.411(e)(1)(G)
and
817.415(a)(2) and
(a)(3) shall be established based on
quarterly sampling of wells for one year, monitored in accordance with the
requirements of subsections (d)(2), (d)(3), and (d)(4) of this Section, which
may be adjusted during the operation of a facility. Statistical tests and
procedures shall be employed, in accordance with subsection (e) below,
depending on the number, type and frequency of samples collected from the
wells, to establish the background concentrations. Adjustments to the
background concentrations shall be made only if changes in the concentrations
of constituents observed in upgradient wells over time are determined, in
accordance with subsection (d)(3) below, to be statistically significant.
Background concentrations determined in accordance with this subsection shall
be used for the purposes of establishing groundwater quality standards, in
accordance with subsection (a) above. The operator shall prepare a list of
background concentrations established in accordance with this subsection. The
operator shall maintain such a list at the facility, shall submit a copy of the
list to the Agency for establishing standards in accordance with subsection
(a), and shall provide updates to the list within ten days after any change to
the list.
2) A network of
monitoring wells shall be established upgradient from the unit, with respect to
groundwater flow, in accordance with the following standards, in order to
determine the background concentrations of constituents in the groundwater:
A) The wells shall be located at such a
distance that discharges of contaminants from the unit will not be detectable
but will be representative of groundwater immediately upgradient of the
unit;
B) The wells shall be sampled
at the same frequency as other monitoring points to provide continuous
background concentration data, throughout the monitoring period; and
C) The wells shall be located at several
depths to provide data on the spatial variability.
3) A determination of background
concentrations may include the sampling of wells that are not hydraulically
upgradient of the waste unit where:
A)
Hydrogeologic conditions do not allow the owner or operator to determine what
wells are hydraulically upgradient of the waste; and
B) Sampling at other wells will provide an
indication of background concentrations that is representative of that which
would have been provided by upgradient wells.
4) If background concentrations cannot be
determined on site, then alternative background concentrations may be
determined from actual monitoring data from the aquifer of concern, obtained
from sample points located as close as is reasonably possible to the
site.
e) Statistical analysis of groundwater monitoring data:
1)
Statistical tests shall be used to analyze groundwater monitoring data. One or
more of the normal theory statistical tests listed in subsection (e)(4) below
shall be chosen first for analyzing the data set or transformation of the data
set. Where such normal theory tests are demonstrated to be inappropriate, tests
listed in subsection (e)(5) or a test in accordance with subsection (e)(6)
shall be used. For any statistical test chosen from subsections (e)(4) or
(e)(5), the level of significance (Type 1 error level) shall be no less than
0.01, for individual well comparisons, and no less than 0.05, for multiple well
comparisons. The statistical analysis shall include, but not be limited to, the
accounting of data below, the detection limit of the analytical method used,
the establishment of background concentrations and the determination of whether
statistically significant changes have occurred in:
A) The concentration of any chemical
constituent with respect to the background concentration or MAPC; and
B) The established background concentration
of any chemical constituents over time.
2) The statistical test or tests used shall
be based upon the sampling and collection protocol of Sections
817.414
and 817.415.
3) Monitored data that
are below the level of detection shall be reported as not detected (ND). The
level of detection for each constituent shall be the minimum concentration of
that constituent which can be measured and reported with 99 percent confidence
that the true value is greater than zero, which is defined as the method
detection limit (MDL). The following procedures shall be used to analyze such
data, unless an alternative procedure in accordance with subsection (e)(6) is
shown to be applicable:
A) Where the
percentage of nondetects in the data base used is less than 15 percent, the
operator shall replace NDs with the MDL divided by two, then proceed with the
use of one or more of the Normal Theory statistical tests listed in subsection
(e)(4);
B) Where the percentage of
nondetects in the data base or data transformations used is between 15 and 50
percent, and the data are normally distributed, the operator shall use Cohen's
adjustment to the sample mean and standard deviation, followed by one or more
of the tests listed in subsection (e)(4)(C) of this Section. However, where
data are not normally distributed, the operator shall use an applicable
nonparametric test from subsection (e)(5);
C) Where the percentage of nondetects in the
data base used is above 50 percent, then the owner or operator shall use the
test of proportions listed in subsection (e)(4).
4) Normal theory statistical tests:
A) Student t-test including, but not limited
to, Cochran's Approximation to the Behren-Fisher (CABF) t-test and Averaged
Replicate (AR) t-test.
B)
Parametric analysis of variance (ANOVA) followed by one or more of the multiple
comparison procedures including, but not limited to, Fisher's Least Significant
Difference (LSD), Student Newman-Kuel procedure, Duncan's New Multiple Range
Test and Tukey's W procedure.
C)
Control Charts, Prediction Intervals and Tolerance Intervals, for which the
type I error levels shall be specified by the Agency in accordance with the
requirements of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
724.197(i).
5) Nonparametric statistical tests
shall include: Mann-Whitney U-test, Kruskal-Wallis test, a nonparametric
analysis of variance (ANOVA) for multiple comparisons or the Wilcoxon Rank Sum
test.
6) Any other statistical test
based on the distribution of the sampling data may be used, if it is
demonstrated to meet the requirements of 35 Ill. Adm. Code
724.197(i).
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