Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
B. Except as otherwise
provided, the definition of solid waste per
40 CFR
261.2 as incorporated by
9VAC20-60-261,
as amended, is also hereby incorporated as part of this chapter. Except as
otherwise provided, all material definitions, reference materials and other
ancillaries that are a part of 9VAC20-60-261, as amended, are also hereby
incorporated as part of this chapter as well.
C. Except as otherwise modified or excepted
by 9VAC20-60, the materials listed in the regulations of the United States
Environmental Protection Agency set forth in
40
CFR 261.4(a) are considered
a solid waste for the purposes of this chapter. However, these materials are
not regulated under the provisions of this chapter if all conditions specified
therein are met. This list and all material definitions, reference materials
and other ancillaries that are part of 40 CFR Part 261.4(a), as incorporated,
modified or accepted by 9VAC20-60 are incorporated as part of this chapter. In
addition, the following materials are not solid wastes for the purpose of this
chapter:
1. Materials generated by any of the
following, which are returned to the soil as fertilizers:
a. The growing and harvesting of agricultural
crops.
b. The raising and
husbanding of animals, including animal manures and used animal
bedding.
2. Mining
overburden returned to the mine site.
3. Recyclable materials used in manner
constituting disposal per
9VAC20-60-266.
4. Wood wastes burned for energy
recovery.
5. Materials that are:
a. Used or reused, or prepared for use or
reuse, as an ingredient in an industrial process to make a product, or as
effective substitutes for commercial products or natural resources provided the
materials are not being reclaimed or accumulated speculatively; or
b. Returned to the original process from
which they are generated.
6. Materials that are beneficially used as
determined by the department under this subsection. The department may consider
other waste materials and uses to be beneficial in accordance with the
provisions of
9VAC20-81-97.
7. The following materials and uses listed in
this part are exempt from this chapter as long as they are managed so that they
do not create an open dump, hazard, or public nuisance. These materials and the
designated use are considered a beneficial use of waste materials:
a. Clean wood, wood chips, or bark from land
clearing, logging operations, utility line clearing and maintenance operations,
pulp and paper production, and wood products manufacturing, when these
materials are placed in commerce for service as mulch, landscaping, animal
bedding, erosion control, habitat mitigation, wetlands restoration, or bulking
agent at a compost facility operated in compliance with Part IV (9VAC20-81-300 et seq.)
of this chapter;
b. Clean wood
combustion residues when used for pH adjustment in compost, liquid absorbent in
compost, or as a soil amendment or fertilizer, provided the application rate of
the wood ash is limited to the nutrient need of the crop grown on the land on
which the wood combustion residues will be applied and provided that such
application meets the requirements of the Virginia Department of Agriculture
and Consumer Services (2VAC5-400 and 2VAC5-410);
c. Compost that satisfies the applicable
requirements of the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services
(2VAC5-400 and 2VAC5-410);
d.
Nonhazardous, contaminated soil that has been excavated as part of a
construction project and that is used as backfill for the same excavation or
excavations containing similar contaminants at the same site, at concentrations
at the same level or higher. Excess contaminated soil from these projects is
subject to the requirements of this chapter;
e. Nonhazardous petroleum contaminated soil
that has been treated to the satisfaction of the department in accordance with
9VAC20-81-660;
f. Nonhazardous petroleum contaminated soil
when incorporated into asphalt pavement products;
g. Solid wastes that are approved in advance
of the placement, in writing, by the department or that are specifically
mentioned in the facility permit for use as alternate daily cover material or
other protective materials for landfill liner or final cover system
components;
h. Fossil fuel
combustion products that are not CCR when used as a material in the
manufacturing of another product (e.g., concrete, concrete products,
lightweight aggregate, roofing materials, plastics, paint, flowable fill) or as
a substitute for a product or material resource (e.g., blasting grit, roofing
granules, filter cloth pre-coat for sludge dewatering, pipe bedding);
i. Tire chips and tire shred when used as a
sub-base fill for road base materials or asphalt pavements when approved by the
Virginia Department of Transportation or by a local governing body;
j. Tire chips, tire shred, and ground rubber
used in the production of commercial products such as mats, pavement sealers,
playground surfaces, brake pads, blasting mats, and other rubberized commercial
products;
k. Tire chips and tire
shred when used as backfill in landfill gas or leachate collection pipes,
recirculation lines, and drainage material in landfill liner and cover systems,
and gas interception or remediation applications;
l. Waste tires, tire chips or tire shred when
burned for energy recovery or when used in pyrolysis, gasification, or similar
treatment process to produce fuel;
m. Waste-derived fuel product, as defined in
9VAC20-81-10,
derived from nonhazardous solid waste;
n. Uncontaminated concrete and concrete
products, asphalt pavement, brick, glass, soil, and rock placed in commerce for
service as a substitute for conventional aggregate; and
o. Clean, ground gypsum wallboard when used
as a soil amendment or fertilizer, provided the following conditions are met:
(1) No components of the gypsum wallboard
have been glued, painted, or otherwise contaminated from manufacture or use
(e.g., waterproof or fireproof drywall) unless otherwise processed to remove
contaminants.
(2) The gypsum
wallboard shall be processed so that 95% of the gypsum wallboard is less than
1/4 inch by 1/4 inch in size, unless an alternate size is approved by the
department.
(3) The gypsum
wallboard shall be applied only to agricultural, silvicultural, landscaped, or
mined lands or roadway construction sites that need fertilization.
(4) The application rate for the ground
gypsum wallboard shall not exceed the following rates.
Region |
Rate |
Piedmont, Mountains, and Ridge and
Valley |
250 lbs/1,000
ft2 |
Coastal Plain |
50 lbs/1,000
ft2 |
Note: These weights are for dry ground gypsum
wallboard. |
D. The following activities are conditionally
exempt from this chapter provided no open dump, hazard, or public nuisance is
created:
1. Composting of sewage sludge at the
sewage treatment plant of generation without addition of other types of solid
wastes.
2. Composting of household
waste generated at a residence and composted at the site of
generation.
3. Composting
activities performed for educational purposes as long as no more than 100 cubic
yards of materials are onsite at any time. Greater quantities will be allowed
with suitable justification presented to the department. For quantities greater
than 100 cubic yards, approval from the department will be required prior to
composting.
4. Composting of animal
carcasses onsite at the farm of generation.
5. Composting of vegetative waste or yard
waste generated onsite by owners or operators of agricultural operations or
owners of the real property or those authorized by the owners of the real
property provided:
a. All decomposed
vegetative waste and compost produced is utilized on said property;
b. No vegetative waste or other waste
material generated from other sources other than said property is
received;
c. All applicable
standards of local ordinances that govern or concern vegetative waste handling,
composting, storage or disposal are satisfied; and
d. They pose no nuisance or present no
potential threat to human health or the environment.
6. Composting of yard waste by owners or
operators who accept yard waste generated offsite shall be exempt from all
other provisions of this chapter as applied to the composting activities
provided the requirements of
9VAC20-81-397
B are met.
7. Composting of
preconsumer food waste and kitchen culls generated onsite and composted in
containers designed to prohibit vector attraction and prevent nuisance odor
generation.
8. Vermicomposting,
when used to process Category I, Category II, or Category III feedstocks in
containers designed to prohibit vector attraction and prevent nuisance odor
generation. If offsite feedstocks are received no more than 100 cubic yards of
materials may be onsite at any one time. For quantities greater than 100 cubic
yards, approval from the department will be required prior to
composting.
9. Composting of sewage
sludge or combinations of sewage sludge with nonhazardous solid waste provided
the composting facility is permitted under the requirements of a Virginia
Pollution Abatement (VPA) or VPDES permit.
10. Management of solid waste in appropriate
containers at the site of its generation, provided that:
a. Putrescible waste is not stored more than
seven days between time of collection and time of removal for
disposal;
b. Nonputrescible wastes
are not stored more than 90 days between time of collection and time of removal
for proper management; and
c.
Treatment of waste is conducted in accordance with the following:
(1) In accordance with a waste analysis plan
that:
(a) Contains a detailed chemical and
physical analysis of a representative sample of the waste being treated and
contains all records necessary to treat the waste in accordance with the
requirements of this part, including the selected testing frequency;
and
(b) Is kept in the facility's
onsite file and made available to the department upon request.
(2) Notification is made to the
receiving waste management facility that the waste has been treated.
11. Using rocks, brick,
block, dirt, broken concrete, crushed glass, porcelain, and road pavement as
clean fill.
12. Storage of less
than 100 waste tires at the site of generation provided that no waste tires are
accepted from offsite and that the storage will not present a hazard or a
nuisance.
13. Storage in piles of
land-clearing debris including stumps and brush, clean wood wastes, log yard
scrapings consisting of a mixture of soil and wood, cotton gin trash, peanut
hulls, and similar organic wastes that do not readily decompose, are exempt
from this chapter if they meet the following conditions at a minimum:
a. The wastes are managed in the following
manner:
(1) They do not cause discharges of
leachate, or attract vectors.
(2)
They cannot be dispersed by wind and rain.
(3) Fire is prevented.
(4) They do not become putrescent.
b. Any facility storing waste
materials under the provisions of this subsection shall obtain a stormwater
discharge permit if they are considered a significant source under the
provisions of
9VAC25-31-120
A 1 c.
c. No more than a total of
1/3 acre of waste material is stored onsite and the waste pile does not exceed
15 feet in height above base grade.
d. Siting provisions.
(1) All log yard scrapings consisting of a
mixture of soil and wood, cotton gin trash, peanut hulls, and similar organic
wastes that do not readily decompose are stored at the site of the industrial
activity that produces them;
(2) A
50-foot fire break is maintained between the waste pile and any structure or
tree line;
(3) The slope of the
ground within the area of the pile and within 50 feet of the pile does not
exceed 4:1;
(4) No waste material
may be stored closer than 50 feet to any regularly flowing surface water body
or river, floodplain, or wetland; and
(5) No stored waste materials shall extend
closer than 50 feet to any property line.
e. If activities at the site cease, any waste
stored at the site must be properly managed in accordance with these
regulations within 90 days. The director can approve longer timeframes with
appropriate justification. Justification must be provided in writing no more
than 30 days after ceasing activity at the site.
f. Waste piles that do not meet these
provisions are required to obtain a permit in accordance with the permitting
provisions in Part V (9VAC20-81-400 et
seq.) of this chapter and meet all of the applicable waste pile requirements in
Part IV (9VAC20-81-300 et seq.)
of this chapter. Facilities that do not comply with the provisions of this
subsection and fail to obtain a permit are subject to the provisions of
9VAC20-81-40.
14. Storage of nonhazardous solid
wastes and hazardous wastes, or hazardous wastes from very small quantity
generators as defined in Virginia Hazardous Waste Management Regulations
(9VAC20-60) at a transportation terminal or transfer station in closed
containers meeting the U.S. Department of Transportation specifications is
exempt from this section and the permitting provisions of Part V (9VAC20-81-400 et
seq.) of this chapter provided such wastes are removed to a permitted storage
or disposal facility within 10 days from the initial receipt from the waste
generator. To be eligible for this exemption, each shipment must be properly
documented to show the name of the generator, the date of receipt by the
transporter, and the date and location of the final destination of the
shipment. The documentation shall be kept at the terminal or transfer station
for at least three years after the shipment has been completed and shall be
made available to the department upon request. All such activities shall comply
with any local ordinances.
15. Open
burning of solid wastes as provided in the following:
a. For forest management, agriculture
practices, and highway construction and maintenance programs approved by the
State Air Pollution Control Board.
b. For training and instruction of government
and public firefighters under the supervision of the designated official and
industrial in-house firefighting personnel with clearance from the local
firefighting authority. Buildings that have not been demolished may be burned
under the provisions of this subdivision only. Additionally, burning rubber
tires, asphaltic materials, crankcase oil, impregnated wood, or other
rubber-based or petroleum-based wastes is permitted when conducting bona fide
firefighting instruction.
c. For
the destruction of classified military documents under the supervision of the
designated official.
d. For
campfires or other fires using clean wood or vegetative waste that are used
solely for recreational purposes, for ceremonial occasions, for outdoor
preparation of food, and for warming of outdoor workers.
e. For the onsite destruction of vegetative
waste located on the premises of private property, provided that no regularly
scheduled collection service for such vegetative waste is available at the
adjacent street or public road.
f.
For the onsite destruction of household waste by homeowners or tenants,
provided that no regularly scheduled collection service for such household
waste is available at the adjacent street or public road.
g. For the onsite destruction of clean wood
waste and debris waste resulting from property maintenance; from the
development or modification of roads and highways, parking areas, railroad
tracks, pipelines, power and communication lines, buildings or building areas,
sanitary landfills; or from any other clearing operations.
16. Open burning of vegetative waste is
allowed at a closed landfill that has not been released from postclosure care.
The activity shall be included in the text of the postclosure plan and
conducted in accordance with §
10.1-1410.3
of the Code of Virginia.
17.
Placement of trees, brush, or other vegetation from land used for agricultural
or silvicultural purposes on the same property or other property of the same
landowner.
18. Using fossil fuel
combustion products that are not CCR in one or more of the following
applications or when handled, processed, transported, or stockpiled for the
following uses:
a. As a base, sub-base or fill
material under a paved road, the footprint of a structure, a paved parking lot,
sidewalk, walkway or similar structure, or in the embankment of a road. In the
case of roadway embankments, materials will be placed in accordance with
Virginia Department of Transportation specifications, and exposed slopes not
directly under the surface of the pavement must have a minimum of 18 inches of
soil cover over the fossil fuel combustion products, the top six inches of
which must be capable of sustaining the growth of indigenous plant species or
plant species adapted to the area. The use, reuse, or reclamation of unamended
coal combustion byproduct shall not be placed in an area designated as a
100-year flood plain;
b. Processed
with a cementitious binder to produce a stabilized structural fill product that
is spread and compacted with proper equipment for the construction of a project
with a specified end use; or
c. For
the extraction or recovery of materials and compounds contained within the
fossil fuel combustion products.
E. The following solid wastes are exempt from
this chapter provided that they are managed in accordance with the requirements
promulgated by other applicable state or federal agencies:
1. Management of wastes regulated by the
State Board of Health, the State Water Control Board, the Air Pollution Control
Board, the Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy, Department of Agriculture
and Consumer Services, or any other state or federal agency with such
authority.
2. Drilling fluids,
produced waters, and other wastes associated with the exploration, development,
or production of crude oil, natural gas, or geothermal energy.
3. Solid waste from the extraction,
beneficiation, and processing of ores and minerals, including coal.
4. Fossil fuel combustion products used for
mine reclamation, mine subsidence, or mine refuse disposal on a mine site
permitted by the Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy (DMME) when
used in accordance with the standards.
5. Solid waste management practices that
involve only the onsite placing of solid waste from mineral mining activities
at the site of those activities and in compliance with a permit issued by the
DMME, that do not include any municipal solid waste, are accomplished in an
environmentally sound manner, and do not create an open dump, hazard or public
nuisance are exempt from all requirements of this chapter.
6. Waste or byproduct derived from an
industrial process that meets the definition of fertilizer, soil amendment,
soil conditioner, or horticultural growing medium as defined in §
3.2-3600 of the Code
of Virginia, or whose intended purpose is to neutralize soil acidity (see
§
3.2-3700 of the Code
of Virginia), and that is regulated under the authority of the Virginia
Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
7. Fossil fuel combustion products bottom ash
or boiler slag used as a traction control material or road surface material if
the use is consistent with Virginia Department of Transportation practices.
This exemption does not apply to CCR used in this manner.
8. Waste tires generated by and stored at
salvage yards licensed by the Department of Motor Vehicles provided that such
storage complies with requirements set forth in §
10.1-1418.2
of the Code of Virginia and such storage does not pose a hazard or
nuisance.
9. Tire chips used as the
drainage material in construction of septage drain fields regulated under the
authority of the Virginia Department of Health.
F. The following solid wastes are exempt from
this chapter provided that they are reclaimed or temporarily stored
incidentally to reclamation, are not accumulated speculatively, and are managed
without creating an open dump, hazard, or a public nuisance:
1. Paper and paper products;
2. Clean wood waste that is to undergo size
reduction in order to produce a saleable product, such as mulch;
3. Cloth;
4. Glass;
5. Plastics;
6. Tire chips, tire shred, ground rubber;
and
7. Mixtures of above materials
only. Such mixtures may include scrap metals excluded from regulation in
accordance with the provisions of subsection C of this section.
Statutory Authority: 9VAC02-81-10, 9VAC20-81-95, and 9VAC20-81-250 : §
10.1-1402 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC §
6941 et seq.; 40 CFR Parts 257 and
258.