Virginia Administrative Code
Title 9 - ENVIRONMENT
Agency 20 - VIRGINIA WASTE MANAGEMENT BOARD
Chapter 81 - SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS
Part VII - Variance Application Procedures
Section 9VAC20-81-710 - Solid waste classification exemption procedure
Universal Citation: 9 VA Admin Code 20-81-710
Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
A. Applicability.
1. A person who uses, reuses, or reclaims
waste that is managed entirely within the Commonwealth may apply to the
department to exclude the waste at a particular site from the classification as
the solid waste (see Part II of this chapter). The conditions under which an
application for a variance will be accepted are shown in
9VAC20-81-710 B. The wastes
excluded under such applications 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.
2. A person who uses, reuses, or reclaims
materials from a generating site outside the Commonwealth and who causes them
to be brought into the Commonwealth for use, reuse, or reclamation shall first
obtain favorable decision from the appropriate authorities in that state before
the waste may be considered for an exemption by the director.
B. Conditions for an exemption. As the result of an application and in accordance with the standards and criteria in 9VAC20-81-710 C and the procedures in 9VAC20-81-760, the director may determine on a case-by-case basis that the following used, reused, or reclaimed materials are exempt for the purposes of this chapter:
1. Materials that are accumulated
speculatively without sufficient amounts being used, reused or reclaimed
(9VAC20-81-95);
2. Materials that are reclaimed and then
reused within the original primary production process in which they were
generated;
3. Materials that have
been reclaimed but shall be reclaimed further before the materials are
completely recovered; and
4.
Materials that are reclaimed and then reused in applications involving their
placement into land.
C. Standards and criteria for exemptions.
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 used, reused, or reclaimed if the applicant demonstrates that sufficient
amounts of the material will be used, reused, or reclaimed or transferred for
recycling use, reuse, or reclamation 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 standards and criteria:
a. The manner in which the material is
expected to be used, reused, or reclaimed, and when the material is expected to
be used, reused, or reclaimed, 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 use, reuse, or
reclamation);
b. The reason that
the applicant has accumulated the material for one or more years without use,
reuse, or reclamation of 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 used, reused, or reclaimed;
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 primary 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 industrywide 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 materials that have been
reclaimed but shall be reclaimed further before recovery is completed if, after
initial reclamation, the resulting material is commodity-like (even though it
is not yet a commercial product, and has to be reclaimed further). This
determination will be based on the following factors:
a. The degree of processing the material has
undergone and the degree of further processing that is required;
b. The value of the material after it has
been reclaimed;
c. The degree to
which the reclaimed material is like an analogous raw material;
d. The extent to which an end market for the
reclaimed material is guaranteed;
e. The extent to which the reclaimed material
is handled to minimize loss; and
f.
Other relevant factors.
4. The director may grant requests for a
variance from classifying as a solid waste those materials that are reclaimed
and then reused in applications involving placement into land. This
determination will be based on the following factors:
a. How economically advantageous is the
utilization process using reclaimed materials compared to the virgin
materials;
b. The prevalence of the
practice on an industrywide basis;
c. The extent to which the material is
handled before reclamation to minimize loss;
d. The location of the generating and
reclamation operations in relation to the utilization process;
e. The chemical and physical characteristics
of the material prior and after the reclamation process;
f. An estimate of the rate of annual usage of
the reclaimed material;
g. Whether
the person who generates the material also reclaims it;
h. Proximity of emplaced materials to ground
and surface waters; and
i. Other
factors relevant to public health and the environment.
Statutory Authority
§ 10.1-1402 of the Code of Virginia; 42 USC § 6941 et seq.; 40 CFR Part 258.
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