Virginia Administrative Code
Title 9 - ENVIRONMENT
Agency 20 - VIRGINIA WASTE MANAGEMENT BOARD
Chapter 60 - VIRGINIA HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS
Part XIII - Standards for the Management of Specific Hazardous Wastes and Specific Types ofManagement Facilities
Section 9VAC20-60-1390 - Changes in classifications as a solid waste
Universal Citation: 9 VA Admin Code 20-60-1390
Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
A. Variances.
1. Applicability.
a. A person who recycles waste that is
managed entirely within the Commonwealth may petition the director to exclude
the waste at a particular site from the classification as the solid waste
(Parts I (9VAC20-60-12 et seq.) and III (9VAC20-60-124 et seq.) of this
chapter). The conditions under which a petition for a variance will be accepted
are shown in subdivision 2 of this subsection. The wastes excluded under such
petitions may still, however, remain classified as a solid waste for the
purposes of other regulations issued by the Virginia Waste Management Board or
other agencies of the Commonwealth.
b. A person who generates wastes at a
generating site in Virginia and whose waste is subject to federal jurisdiction
(e.g., the waste is transported across state boundaries) shall first obtain a
favorable decision from the administrator in accordance with Subpart C, 40 CFR
Part 260, before his waste may be considered for a variance by the
director.
c. A person who recycles
materials from a generating site outside the Commonwealth and who causes them
to be brought into the Commonwealth for recycling shall first obtain a
favorable decision from the administrator in accordance with Subpart C, 40 CFR
Part 260, before the waste may be considered for a variance by the
director.
d. A person who received
a favorable decision from the administrator in the response to a petition for
variance or nonwaste determination or a person whose wastes were delisted as a
result of a successful petition to the administrator shall provide a
notification to the department containing the following information:
(i) the petitioner's name and address
and
(ii) a copy of the
administrator's decision.
2. Conditions for a variance. In accordance
with the standards and criteria in subsection B of this section and the
procedures in 9VAC20-60-1420 B, the director may determine on a case-by-case
basis that the following recycled materials are not solid wastes:
a. Materials that are accumulated
speculatively without sufficient amounts being recycled (as defined in Part
I).
b. Materials that are reclaimed
and then reused within the original primary production process in which they
were generated.
c. Materials that
have been reclaimed but must be reclaimed further before the materials are
completely recovered.
d. Hazardous
secondary materials that are reclaimed in a continuous industrial
process.
e. Hazardous secondary
materials that are indistinguishable in all relevant aspects from a product or
intermediate.
f. Hazardous
secondary materials that are transferred for reclamation under
40 CFR
261.4(a)(24) and are managed
at a verified reclamation facility or intermediate facility where the
management of the hazardous secondary materials is not addressed under a RCRA
Part B permit or interim status standards.
B. Standards and criteria for variances.
1. The director may grant requests for a
variance from classifying as a solid waste those materials that are accumulated
speculatively without sufficient amounts being recycled if the applicant
demonstrates that sufficient amounts of the material will be recycled or
transferred for recycling in the following year. If a variance is granted, it
is valid only for the following year, but can be renewed on an annual basis by
filing a new application. The director's decision will be based on the
following criteria:
a. The manner in which the
material is expected to be recycled, and when the material is expected to be
recycled, and whether this expected disposition is likely to occur (for
example, because of past practice, market factors, the nature of the material,
or contractual arrangement for recycling);
b. The reason that the applicant has
accumulated the material for one or more years without recycling 75% of the
volume accumulated at the beginning of the year;
c. The quantity of material already
accumulated and the quantity expected to be generated and accumulated before
the material is recycled;
d. The
extent to which the material is handled to minimize loss; and
e. Other relevant factors.
2. The director may grant requests
for a variance from classifying as a solid waste those materials that are
reclaimed and then reused as feedstock within the original production process
in which the materials were generated if the reclamation operation is an
essential part of the production process. This determination will be based on
the following criteria:
a. How economically
viable the production process would be if it were to use virgin materials,
rather than reclaimed materials;
b.
The prevalence of the practice on an industry-wide basis;
c. The extent to which the material is
handled before reclamation to minimize loss;
d. The time periods between generating the
material and its reclamation, and between reclamation and return to the
original primary production process;
e. The location of the reclamation operation
in relation to the production process;
f. Whether the reclaimed material is used for
the purpose for which it was originally produced when it is returned to the
original process, and whether it is returned to the process in substantially
its original form;
g. Whether the
person who generates the material also reclaims it; and
h. Other relevant factors.
3. The director may grant requests
for a variance from classifying as a solid waste those hazardous secondary
materials that have been partially reclaimed but must be reclaimed further
before recovery is completed if the partial reclamation has produced a
commodity-like material. A determination that a partially reclaimed material
for which the variance is sought is commodity-like will be based on whether the
hazardous secondary material is legitimately recycled as specified in
40 CFR
260.43 and on whether all of the following
decision criteria are satisfied:
a. Whether
the degree of partial reclamation the material has undergone is substantial as
demonstrated by using a partial reclamation process other than the process that
generated the hazardous waste;
b.
Whether the partially reclaimed material has sufficient economic value that it
will be purchased for further reclamation;
c. Whether the partially reclaimed material
is a viable substitute for a product or intermediate produced from virgin or
raw materials that is used in subsequent production steps;
d. Whether there is a market for the
partially reclaimed material as demonstrated by known customer or customers who
are further reclaiming the material (e.g., records of sales or contracts and
evidence of subsequent use, such as bills of lading); and
e. Whether the partially reclaimed material
is handled to minimize loss.
4. The director may grant requests for a
variance from classifying as a solid waste those hazardous secondary materials
that are transferred for reclamation under
40 CFR
261.4(a)(24) and are managed
at a verified reclamation facility or intermediate facility where the
management of the hazardous secondary materials is not addressed under a RCRA
Part B permit or interim status standards. The director's decision will be
based on the following criteria:
a. The
reclamation facility or intermediate facility must demonstrate that the
reclamation process for the hazardous secondary materials is legitimate
pursuant to
40 CFR
260.43;
b. The reclamation facility or intermediate
facility must satisfy the financial assurance condition in
40 CFR
261.4(a)(24)(vi)(F);
c. The reclamation facility or intermediate
facility must not be subject to a formal enforcement action in the previous
three years and not be classified as a significant noncomplier under RCRA
Subtitle C, or must provide credible evidence that the facility will manage the
hazardous secondary materials properly. Credible evidence may include a
demonstration that the facility has taken remedial steps to address the
violations and prevent future violations, or that the violations are not
relevant to the proper management of the hazardous secondary
materials;
d. The intermediate or
reclamation facility must have the equipment and trained personnel needed to
safely manage the hazardous secondary material and must meet emergency
preparedness and response requirements under 40 CFR Part 261 Subpart
M;
e. If residuals are generated
from the reclamation of the excluded hazardous secondary materials, the
reclamation facility must have the permits required (if any) to manage the
residuals, have a contract with an appropriately permitted facility to dispose
of the residuals, or present credible evidence that the residuals will be
managed in a manner that is protective of human health and the environment;
and
f. The intermediate or
reclamation facility must address the potential for risk to proximate
populations from unpermitted releases of the hazardous secondary material to
the environment (i.e., releases that are not covered by a permit, such as a
permit to discharge to water or air), which may include potential releases
through surface transport by precipitation runoff, releases to soil and
groundwater, wind-blown dust, fugitive air emissions, and catastrophic unit
failures, and must include consideration of potential cumulative risks from
other nearby potential stressors.
5. An applicant may apply to the
administrator for a formal determination that a hazardous secondary material is
not discarded and therefore not a solid waste (i.e., nonwaste determination).
The determinations will be based on the criteria contained in subdivision B 6
or B 7 of this section, as applicable. If an application is denied, the
hazardous secondary material might still be eligible for a solid waste variance
or exclusion (e.g., one of the solid waste variances under this section).
Determinations may also be granted by the director if the state is either
authorized for this provision or if the following conditions are met:
a. The director determines the hazardous
secondary material meets the criteria in subdivision B 6 or B 7 of this
section, as applicable;
b. The
state requests that EPA review its determination; and
c. EPA approves the state
determination.
6. The
director may grant a nonwaste determination for hazardous secondary material
that is reclaimed in a continuous industrial process if the applicant
demonstrates that the hazardous secondary material is a part of the production
process and is not discarded. The determination will be based on whether the
hazardous secondary material is legitimately recycled as specified in
40 CFR
260.43 and on the following criteria:
a. The extent that the management of the
hazardous secondary material is part of the continuous primary production
process and is not waste treatment;
b. Whether the capacity of the production
process would use the hazardous secondary material in a reasonable timeframe
and ensure that the hazardous secondary material will not be abandoned (e.g.,
based on past practices, market factors, the nature of the hazardous secondary
material, or any contractual arrangements);
c. Whether the hazardous constituents in the
hazardous secondary material are reclaimed rather than released to the air,
water, or land at significantly higher levels from either a statistical or from
a health and environmental risk perspective than would otherwise be released by
the production process; and
d.
Other relevant factors that demonstrate the hazardous secondary material is not
discarded, including why the hazardous secondary material cannot meet, or
should not have to meet, the conditions of an exclusion under
40 CFR
261.2 or 40 CFR 261.4.
7. The director may grant a nonwaste
determination for hazardous secondary material that is indistinguishable in all
relevant aspects from a product or intermediate if the applicant demonstrates
that the hazardous secondary material is comparable to a product or
intermediate and is not discarded. The determination will be based on whether
the hazardous secondary material is legitimately recycled as specified in
40 CFR
260.43 and on the following criteria:
a. Whether market participants treat the
hazardous secondary material as a product or intermediate rather than a waste
(e.g., based on the current positive value of the hazardous secondary material,
stability of demand, or any contractual arrangements);
b. Whether the chemical and physical identity
of the hazardous secondary material is comparable to commercial products or
intermediates;
c. Whether the
capacity of the market would use the hazardous secondary material in a
reasonable timeframe and ensure that the hazardous secondary material will not
be abandoned (e.g., based on past practices, market factors, the nature of the
hazardous secondary material, or any contractual arrangements);
d. Whether the hazardous constituents in the
hazardous secondary material are reclaimed rather than released to the air,
water, or land at significantly higher levels from either a statistical or from
a health and environmental risk perspective than would otherwise be released by
the production process; and
e.
Other relevant factors that demonstrate the hazardous secondary material is not
discarded, including why the hazardous secondary material cannot meet, or
should not have to meet, the conditions of an exclusion under
40 CFR
261.2 or 40 CFR
261.4.
Statutory Authority: § 10.1-1402 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC § 6921 et seq.; 40 CFR Parts 260 through 272.
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