Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart 1.
Initial storage tank service
provider training course.
The initial storage tank service provider training course must
be at least five days in length and must include lectures, demonstrations, four
hours of hands-on training, course review, and a final written
examination.
Subp. 2.
Renewal storage tank service provider training course.
The renewal storage tank service provider training course must
be at least two days in length and must include lectures, demonstrations,
course review, and a final written examination.
Subp. 3.
Storage tank service provider
training course requirements.
All the following topics must be included in the initial
course. One or more of the following topics must be included in the renewal
course. The commissioner shall approve topics to be included in the renewal
course based on a list submitted by training providers and based on the
requirements of part
7105.0100. Publications cited are
incorporated by reference in part
7105.0130:
A. regulatory review providing familiarity
with the following codes, statutes, rules, and recommended practices and how
they relate to the other course requirements, with particular emphasis on
subitem (9):
(1) PEI's Recommended Practices
for Installation of Underground Liquid Storage Systems (PEI/RP 100);
(2) API's Installation of Underground
Petroleum Storage Systems (API Recommended Practice 1615);
(3) API's Removal and Disposal of Used
Underground Petroleum Storage Tanks (API Recommended Practice 1604);
(4) EPA's Underground Storage Tanks -
Technical Requirements at Code of Federal Regulations, title 40, part 280,
subparts A to G;
(5) parts
7510.3120 and
7510.3240, incorporating by
reference and amending Article 79 of the Uniform Fire Code;
(6) parts
7001.0580,
7045.0020,
7045.0528,
7045.0580,
7045.0628, and
7045.0629, relating to hazardous
waste tanks;
(7) Minnesota
Statutes, sections
116.46 to
116.50;
(8) Minnesota Statutes, chapter 115C;
and
(9) state technical tank rules,
chapter 7150, adopted under Minnesota Statutes, section
116.49,
subdivision 1;
B. legal
liabilities and defenses:
(1)
responsibilities of the contractor;
(2) a discussion of comprehensive general
liability policies, claims-made and occurrence policies, and environmental and
pollution liability policy clauses;
(3) state tank contractor liability insurance
requirements;
(4) bonding and the
relationship of insurance availability to bond availability;
(5) a discussion of EPA's Underground Storage
Tanks Containing Petroleum - Financial Responsibility Requirements at Code of
Federal Regulations, title 40, part 280, subpart H; and
(6) third party liabilities and
defenses;
C. safety
aspects, including discussions on:
(1) OSHA's
Safety and Health standards relating to excavations, trenching, and shoring;
confined space; and competent person requirements;
(2) Minnesota Department of Labor and
Industry Employee Right-to-Know training standards in part
5206.0700;
(3) fire and explosion hazards;
(4) working around heavy equipment,
excavations, hazardous materials, vehicular traffic, overhead and underground
obstacles such as power and sewer lines, and other hazardous
situations;
(5) personal protective
equipment and its proper use; and
(6) safety considerations and precautions,
including erecting physical barriers and signs, and trench shoring;
D. underground storage tank
installation:
(1) project management:
(a) establishing lines of
responsibility;
(b) financial
parameters;
(c) planning and
mobilization, including lining up work crews and tools, calling subcontractors,
and picking up materials;
(d) site
visit before bidding;
(e) project
team, assigning a project leader;
(f) timing, including completion date and
schedules for equipment, materials, and crews;
(g) subcontractors and material suppliers,
including coordination of schedules and ordering materials, with consideration
given to material compatibility between other equipment and product to be
stored;
(h) job site management and
allocation of work areas, including areas to safely stockpile materials such as
backfill, tanks, and piping, and safe and effective traffic flow for heavy
equipment as well as civilian traffic;
(i) safety, including assessing hazards and
planning for proper safety equipment;
(j) employee training, including informal
field training and formal in-house or outside training;
(k) contingency planning;
(l) progress reports; and
(m) plans and specifications, as-built
drawings;
(2) material
handling:
(a) transportation, unloading,
lifting, lowering, and storage;
(b)
steel, fiberglass, and composite tanks and pipe handling requirements;
and
(c) single-wall versus
double-wall;
(3)
preinstallation inspection and testing:
(a)
inspection of tanks, pipes, and other materials for size, as well as scratches,
dents or other damages, and minor repairs;
(b) preinstallation "soap test" on
single-wall and double-wall tanks, including proper soaping techniques,
selection of gauges, and proper pressures;
(c) preinstallation testing of tanks shipped
under a vacuum;
(d) holiday testing
techniques for composite tanks;
(e)
isolating and soap testing pipe runs before backfilling;
(f) inspection and testing of impervious
liners before backfilling; and
(g)
testing and visual inspection of cathodic protection systems, secondary
containment, monitoring systems, and overfill prevention systems before placing
the tank facility into operation;
(4) excavating and trenching:
(a) excavation size, depth, bedding, and
backfill;
(b) filter fabrics,
sloping, and water problems;
(c)
storage and disposal of excavated materials, contaminated versus
uncontaminated;
(d) adjacent
structures;
(e) safety
considerations, including properly sized equipment; and
(f) piping trench slope and depth
considerations;
(5)
supplemental restraints:
(a) reasons for
supplemental restraints;
(b) types
and proper installation of supports, foundations, and anchorage;
(c) water table, flooding, and weather
considerations; and
(d) factors
influencing buoyancy, including flotation and anchorage calculation
exercises;
(6)
backfilling and compaction:
(a)
ballasting;
(b) types and sizes of
backfill materials suitable for composite tanks and steel and fiberglass tanks
and piping;
(c) placement of tanks
and piping, including bedding depth and distances between tanks or
pipes;
(d) backfilling and
compaction procedures, including the special compaction requirements of
sand;
(e) measuring tank
deflection;
(f) prevention of
backfill migration using filter fabrics; and
(g) grading and paving precautions;
(7) secondary containment:
(a) types, including double-walled tanks and
piping, impervious liners, catchment basins, piping sumps, and concrete
vaults;
(b) installation methods
and considerations; and
(c)
material compatibility;
E. piping:
(1) leak statistics concerning improperly
installed piping;
(2) installation
methods:
(a) types and specific installation
requirements, including galvanized steel, fiberglass, coated, and single-walled
and double-walled;
(b) piping
layout and design;
(c) pipe
trenches, backfilling, compaction, and paving;
(d) pipefitting, including curing times for
fiberglass adhesives, compatibility of product with pipe dope, minimizing
fittings, tightness, and pipe support;
(e) swing joints and flexible
connectors;
(f) emergency shutoff
valves;
(g) tank fittings and
bushings;
(h) vent capacity,
location, arrangement, and height; and
(i) visual inspections;
(3) material compatibility;
(4) manifolded tanks; and
(5) vapor recovery systems;
F. electrical installation:
(1) regulatory review, including:
(a) parts
7510.3120 and
7510.3240, incorporating by
reference and amending Article 79 of the Uniform Fire Code; and
(b) API's Cathodic Protection of Underground
Petroleum Storage Tanks and Piping Systems (API Recommended Practice
1632);
(2) Class I
locations, Divisions I and II, requirements and restrictions as described in
parts
7510.3120 and
7510.3240, incorporating by
reference and amending Article 79 of the Uniform Fire Code;
(3) definitions, including explosion proof
apparatus and intrinsically safe equipment and wiring;
(4) general installation considerations,
including trenching, cover, grounding, backfill, seals, bushings, supports, and
stray currents;
(5) circuit
disconnects;
(6) accessibility of
circuit breakers for monitoring devices and impressed cathodic protection
systems by unauthorized personnel; and
(7) as-built drawings;
G. ancillary equipment placement and
installation:
(1) fuel dispensing
systems;
(2) emergency power
cutoffs;
(3) suction and remote
pumping systems;
(4) fill-pipe and
spill catchment basin;
(5) tank
fittings;
(6) observation and
monitoring wells, including a discussion of Minnesota Department of Health's
Water Well Construction Code in chapter 4725;
(7) interstitial tank and piping monitors;
and
(8) identification of wells,
manholes, and fill pipes;
H. tank system testing:
(1) methods and appropriate uses:
(a) a detailed discussion of how to conduct a
proper "soap" or air test;
(b)
tightness and precision tests;
(c)
spark testing for holidays on composite steel tanks;
(d) testing of new cathodic protection
systems for continuity and isolation;
(e) vapor testing during tank
closure;
(f) testing impervious
liners according to the manufacturers' instructions; and
(g) testing of other associated equipment for
proper installation and operation;
(2) testing considerations:
(a) new versus existing tanks or
piping;
(b) single-wall versus
double-wall tanks or piping;
(c)
manufacturers' instructions;
(d)
safeguards;
(e) tank deflection;
and
(f) variables specific to
certain tests, such as pressure, temperature, and vapor traps; and
(3) documentation and record
keeping requirements;
I.
release detection:
(1) leak detection:
(a) interstitial monitoring;
(b) observation wells located in the
excavation zone and collection sumps of secondary containment
systems;
(c) automatic tank
gauging;
(d) vapor
monitoring;
(e) groundwater
monitoring;
(f) inventory control;
and
(g) line pressure
monitoring;
(2) spill
and overfill prevention:
(a) catchment
basins;
(b) automatic shutoff
devices; and
(c) ball float valves;
and
(3) identification
and security considerations for monitoring systems;
J. corrosion protection:
(1) requirements for external corrosion
protection in Code of Federal Regulations, title 40, part 280, subparts A to G,
and state technical tank rules adopted under Minnesota Statutes, section
116.49,
subdivision 1, when adopted;
(2) a
discussion of API's Cathodic Protection of Underground Storage Tanks and Piping
Systems (API Recommended Practice 1632);
(3) coatings for external corrosion
protection:
(a) desirable
characteristics;
(b) handling,
inspection, and installation; and
(c) minor, on-site repairs according to the
manufacturers' instructions;
(4) cathodic protection:
(a) sacrificial anode versus impressed
current;
(b) isolation of tank and
piping;
(c) rule of thumb and
mathematical determination of adequate corrosion protection;
(d) periodic inspections and
testing;
(e) considerations when
choosing a cathodic protection system;
(f) stray current corrosion;
(g) proper installation of a cathodic
protection system, including an in-depth discussion of the installation of the
factory-installed cathodic protection systems; and
(h) installation and use of test cells and
monitoring ports;
K. tank closure and removal:
(1) regulatory discussion:
(a) requirements for external corrosion
protection in EPA's Underground Storage Tanks - Technical Requirements at Code
of Federal Regulations, title 40, part 280, subparts A to G;
(b) API's Removal and Disposal of Used
Underground Petroleum Storage Tanks (API Recommended Practice 1604);
(c) API's Cleaning Petroleum Storage Tanks
(API Recommended Practice 2015);
(d) NFPA's Cleaning Small Tanks and
Containers (NFPA Standard 327);
(e)
requirements for tank closure in parts
7510.3120 and
7510.3240, incorporating by
reference and amending Article 79 of the Uniform Fire Code; and
(f) state technical tank rules, chapter 7150,
adopted under Minnesota Statutes, section
116.49,
subdivision 1;
(2)
temporary and permanent closure requirements;
(3) tank cleaning methods:
(a) purging procedures, pros and cons:
inert gas: carbon dioxide (CO2) or
nitrogen (N2);
solid carbon dioxide (dry ice);
compressed air;
diffused air;
water; and
steam;
(b)
compatibility of method with product;
(c) safety procedures and equipment;
and
(d) proper disposal of residues
and sludge;
(4) testing
for flammable and combustible vapors and oxygen content;
(5) closure in place, filling with inert
substances such as sand, concrete slurries, or polyurethane-type
foams;
(6) tank removal;
(7) site assessment requirements:
(a) sampling equipment and methods;
(b) reporting requirements; and
(c) records; and
(8) disposal of tanks;
L. role of other consultants, including
corrosion experts, environmental contamination consultants, and
engineers;
M. contract
specifications and discussion of key elements that are included in contract
specifications;
N. demonstrations
and hands-on training that gives actual experience performing tasks associated
with tank projects:
(1) soap testing and leak
detection procedures;
(2) cathodic
protection demonstrations;
(3) tank
and piping installation procedures; and
(4) safety considerations for installation,
repair, and removal;
O.
record keeping:
(1) records required by state
and federal regulations in item A;
(2) records recommended for legal and
insurance purposes; and
(3) use of
photographs or videotapes for installation and removal records;
P. supervisory techniques for tank
activities to enforce and reinforce the required work practices and discourage
unsafe work practices;
Q. a
discussion of the possible environmental consequences resulting from improper
installation, repair, and closure of underground storage tank systems;
R. course review covering the key
aspects of the training course; and
S. other subjects that the commissioner
determines should be taught to reflect advances in tank installation, repair,
and removal methods or safety practices.