Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a) For the
purposes of this Section, the definitions in
40 CFR
60.5250,
40 CFR 60.2875, and
40 CFR
60.51c shall apply in addition to the
following definitions:
(1) "Air curtain
incinerator," also referred to as an "air curtain burner," means an incinerator
that operates by forcefully projecting a curtain of air across an open chamber
or pit in which combustion occurs as defined in
40 CFR
60.2875.
(2) "Commercial and industrial solid waste
incinerator" (CISWI) or "commercial and industrial solid waste incineration
unit" is defined in 40 CFR
60.2875.
(3) "Co-fired combustor" is defined in
40 CFR
60.51c. For the purposes of this definition,
pathological waste, chemotherapeutic waste, and low-level radioactive waste
shall be deemed "other" wastes when calculating the percentage of hospital,
medical, or infectious waste combusted.
(4) "Crematory incinerator" means any
incinerator located at a crematory regulated pursuant to
21 NCAC
34C that is used solely for the cremation of
human remains.
(5) "Dioxin and
Furan" (also referred to as "dioxins/furans") means tetra- through octa-
chlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and dibenzofurans.
(6) "Hospital, medical, and infectious waste
incinerator (HMIWI)" means any device that combusts any amount of hospital,
medical, and infectious waste.
(7)
"Large HMIWI" means:
(A) a HMIWI whose
maximum design waste burning capacity is more than 500 pounds per
hour;
(B) a continuous or
intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than 500 pounds per hour;
or
(C) a batch HMIWI whose maximum
charge rate is more than 4,000 pounds per day.
(8) "Hospital waste" means discards generated
at a hospital, except unused items returned to the manufacturer. The definition
of hospital waste does not include human corpses, remains, and anatomical parts
that are intended for interment or cremation.
(9) "Medical and Infectious Waste" means any
waste generated in the diagnosis, treatment, or immunization of human beings or
animals, in research pertaining thereto, or in the production or testing of
biologicals that is listed in Part (A)(i) through (A)(vii) of this
Subparagraph.
(A) The definition of medical
and infectious waste includes:
(i) cultures
and stocks of infectious agents and associated biologicals, including:
(I) cultures from medical and pathological
laboratories;
(II) cultures and
stocks of infectious agents from research and industrial
laboratories;
(III) wastes from the
production of biologicals;
(IV)
discarded live and attenuated vaccines; and
(V) culture dishes and devices used to
transfer, inoculate, and mix cultures;
(ii) human pathological waste, including
tissues, organs, and body parts and body fluids that are removed during
surgery, autopsy, or other medical procedures, and specimens of body fluids and
their containers;
(iii) human blood
and blood products including:
(I) liquid waste
human blood;
(II) products of
blood;
(III) items saturated or
dripping with human blood; or
(IV)
items that were saturated or dripping with human blood that are now caked with
dried human blood, including serum, plasma, other blood components, and their
containers, that were used or intended for use in either patient care, testing
and laboratory analysis, or the development of pharmaceuticals. Intravenous
bags are also included in this category;
(iv) sharps that have been used in animal or
human patient care or treatment or in medical, research, or industrial
laboratories, including hypodermic needles, syringes (with or without the
attached needle), pasteur pipettes, scalpel blades, blood vials, needles with
attached tubing, and culture dishes (regardless of presence of infectious
agents). Also included are other types of broken or unbroken glassware that
were in contact with infectious agents, such as used slides and cover
slips;
(v) animal waste, including
contaminated animal carcasses, body parts, and bedding of animals that were
known to have been exposed to infectious agents during research (including
research in veterinary hospitals), production of biologicals, or testing of
pharmaceuticals;
(vi) isolation
wastes, including biological waste and discarded materials contaminated with
blood, excretions, exudates, or secretions from humans who are isolated to
protect others from highly communicable diseases, or isolated animals known to
be infected with highly communicable diseases; and
(vii) unused sharps, including the following
unused or discarded sharps;
(I) hypodermic
needles;
(II) suture
needles;
(III) syringes;
and
(IV) scalpel blades.
(B) The definition of
medical and infectious waste shall not include:
(i) hazardous waste identified or listed in
40 CFR Part 261;
(ii) household
waste, as defined in 40 CFR
261.4(b)(1);
(iii) ash from incineration of medical and
infectious waste after the incineration process has been completed;
(iv) human corpses, remains, and anatomical
parts that are intended for interment or cremation; and
(v) domestic sewage materials identified in
40 CFR
261.4(a)(1).
(10) "Medium HMIWI"
means:
(A) a HMIWI whose maximum design waste
burning capacity is more than 200 pounds per hour but less than or equal to 500
pounds per hour;
(B) a continuous
or intermittent HMIWI whose maximum charge rate is more than 200 pounds per
hour but less than or equal to 500 pounds per hour; or
(C) a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate
is more than 1,600 pounds per day but less than or equal to 4,000 pounds per
day.
(11) "POTW" means a
publicly owned treatment works as defined in
40 CFR
501.2.
(12) "Sewage sludge" is defined in
40 CFR
60.5250.
(13) "Sewage sludge incineration (SSI) unit"
is defined in 40 CFR
60.5250.
(14) "Small HMIWI" means:
(A) a HMIWI whose maximum design waste
burning capacity is less than or equal to 200 pounds per hour;
(B) a continuous or intermittent HMIWI whose
maximum charge rate is less than or equal to 200 pounds per hour; or
(C) a batch HMIWI whose maximum charge rate
is less than or equal to 1,600 pounds per day.
(15) "Small remote HMIWI" means any small
HMIWI that is located more than 50 miles from the boundary of the nearest
Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA) and that burns less than 2,000
pounds per week of hospital, medical and infectious waste. The 2,000 pound per
week limitation does not apply during performance tests.
(16) "Solid waste" means the term solid waste
as defined in 40 CFR
241.2.
(17) "Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area
(SMSA)" means any area listed in Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Bulletin
No. 93-17, entitled "Revised Statistical Definitions for Metropolitan Areas"
dated July 30, 1993, incorporated by reference not including subsequent
amendments or editions. A copy of this document may be obtained through the
internet at
http://www.census.gov/population/estimates/metro-city/93mfips.txt.
(b) Whenever reference is made to
the Code of Federal Regulations in this Section, the definition in the Code of
Federal Regulations shall apply unless specifically stated otherwise in a
particular rule. The Code of Federal Regulations is available in electronic
form free of charge at
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/search/home.action.