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Compliance
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In the United
States, hazardous wastes are subject to regulations mandated by
the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Every month on
this page we provide clear, in-depth guidance on a different aspect
of the RCRA regulations. The information presented here is taken
from McCoy's RCRA Unraveled,
2010 Edition and is copyrighted by McCoy and Associates, Inc.
One thing you
will notice as you read the guidance presented below is references
to RCRA Online (RO) documents. These are letters, memos, or other
guidance documents issued by EPA and are often the source of the
information presented here. Each document is referred to with a
five-digit code (e.g., RO 11594). The most convenient way to obtain
copies of these documents is to use EPA's Internet-based document
retrieval service. This service, called RCRA
Online, is an excellent, free database developed by EPA. Go
to RCRA Online's Advanced Search Page. The second data-entry box
from the top on the right-hand side of the Advanced Search page
asks for the RCRA Online Number. Enter the five-digit RO code you
are interested in and click on the Search button. A "Search
Results" page will come up giving you a hyperlink and an abstract
of the document. Clicking on the hyperlink will retrieve the "Record
Detail" of the document, providing a summary and (finally)
a page icon hyperlink to the full text of the document.
RCRA
Empty Containers
On November
25, 1980, EPA decided that except where the hazardous
waste is an acutely hazardous material listed in §261.33(e),
the small amount of hazardous waste residue that remains
in individual empty, unrinsed containers does not pose a
substantial hazard to human health or the environment.
[45 FR 78525] Thus, such residues in RCRA-empty
containers are not subject to hazardous waste management
requirements. In that Federal Register, the agency promulgated
rules for what constitutes a RCRA-empty container in §261.7.
EPA
issued these regulations to let facilities know how to empty
their containers so they would no longer be subject to RCRA
regulation, even if some residue remains in them. Therefore,
these regs allow owners/operators to reuse containers meeting
the provisions in §261.7, since the container is no
longer considered to hold hazardous waste. [EPA/530/K-05/010]
It is
important to note that the §261.7 regulations exempt
only the residue remaining in an empty container; the regs
do not apply to the container itself. Consequently, if a
RCRA-empty container that is being discarded itself exhibits
a characteristic (e.g., it is made out of lead or is an
unpunctured aerosol can that exhibits the reactivity characteristic),
the container would have to be managed as a hazardous waste,
even though the residue would be deemed nonhazardous. [RO
11219, 13027, 13435]
Of course,
hazardous waste residue in any container that is not RCRA-empty
remains subject to full Subtitle C regulation, unless some
exemption applies. If a container holding hazardous waste
is not RCRA-empty and is being sent to a drum reconditioner
for cleaning and reuse, for example, the container must
be manifested and may only be shipped to a facility with
a RCRA permit (or interim status) or to a recycling facility.
[45 FR 78527, RO 11089]
The
empty-container requirements apply to three different types
of containers: 1) containers or inner liners that held nonacute
hazardous waste, 2) containers or inner liners that held
acute hazardous waste, and 3) containers that held compressed
gas. The RCRA-empty criteria for each of these three types
of containers are examined below.
Containers
that held nonacute hazardous waste
Containers
or inner liners that have held any nonacute hazardous waste
(other than a compressed gas) qualify as RCRA-empty if they
meet two requirements: 1) use of a common container
emptying practice, and 2) either a residue depth or
weight limit. (Nonacute hazardous wastes are all D-, F-
(other than dioxin-containing F-wastes having an (H) code
in the right-hand column of §261.31), K-, and U-wastes.)
If the
depth limit is used, all wastes must have been removed that
can be removed using commonly employed practices
(e.g., pouring, pumping, and aspirating) and no more than
one inch of residue may remain on the bottom of the container
or inner liner. Alternatively, containers may be deemed
empty if all wastes have been removed that can be removed
using commonly employed practices and no more than 3% by
weight of the total capacity of the container remains in
the container or inner liner. This 3% limit is for containers
with capacities of less than or equal to 119 gallons. For
containers greater than 119 gallons in size, no more than
0.3% by weight of the total capacity of the container may
remain in the container or inner liner. [§261.7(b)(1)]
Commonly
employed practices
The
first requirement that must be met for a container of nonacute
hazardous waste to be considered empty is that residues
must have been removed using practices commonly employed
for emptying that type of container. The regs at §261.7(b)(1)(i)
call out pouring, pumping, and aspirating as common practices;
EPA/530/K-05/010 adds draining to the list.
Commonly employed refers to the normal practice
of industry, not to what a given person does. Thus, containers
that have not been subjected to all commonly employed methods
of emptying are still subject to regulation. [RO 11048]
EPA
has provided scattered guidance on commonly employed practices
for different types of containers, including the following:
-
Tank
carsEPA expects bottom valves to be used (when
present) if they provide maximum removal of hazardous
waste. [RO 11048]
-
55-gallon
drumsAccording to EPA, [i]f pouring from
an inverted drum removes more residue than a hand pump
does, then pouring is obligatory. [RO 11048] See
Case Study 1.
-
Bags
containing solid hazardous wastesPouring out
the contents from a bag, then shaking and tapping the
outside of bags is a common emptying practice. [RO 12307]
The
one-inch requirement
As EPA
noted in the preamble to the August 18, 1982 amendments
to the empty-container provisions, one inch of waste may
remain in an empty container only if it cannot be removed
by normal means
. On the other hand, if extraordinary
means are necessary to remove the waste to lower the contents
of the container down to a depth of one inch, then they
must be employed. [Emphasis in original.] [47 FR 36093]
Q
Two inches of nonacute pesticide residue is rinsed
out of a 55-gallon drum, and the rinsewater is disposed.
What is the status of the rinsewater?
A
Because the drum was not RCRA-empty (i.e., it retained
more than one inch of residue), the residue was still subject
to regulation. If the rinsewater is a mixture containing
a pesticide listed as a U-waste when discarded, the rinsewater
is a U-listed hazardous waste via the mixture rule. If the
pesticide is not U-listed, the rinsewater is only hazardous
if it exhibits a characteristic. [RO 11374]
Q
A generator sends a sample of a spent solvent
(F004) waste to a laboratory for analysis. During analysis,
laboratory equipment, such as a pipet, is used. After the
analysis is performed, would the empty pipet (which will
be discarded) be considered hazardous waste?
A
At the lab, any wastes generated from the analysis
would still be considered F004 wastes under the contained-in
policy. However, some of the laboratory equipment used in
the analysis, such as a pipet, may meet the definition of
a container and therefore would not be regulated as hazardous
waste if it met the §261.7 empty criteria. [RO 13375]
Q
If a spent filter cartridge has been drained,
is it considered to be an empty container?
A
No. EPA does not consider spent filter cartridges
to be containers, so the empty-container provisions would
not apply to spent cartridges contaminated with hazardous
waste. [OSWER Directive 9444.18(84)]
The
weight-limit alternatives
In some
situations, it may be very hard to measure the depth of
residue in the bottom of containers due to their shape (rounded
or conical bottoms) or the position of the container opening.
Nevertheless, EPA has stipulated that the residue depth
must be measured from the deepest point of the bottom of
the container. [August 18, 1982; 47 FR 36093] Due to these
difficulties, EPA allows the generator to choose a weight
limit as an alternative to the one-inch criterion.
Two
different weight criteria are specified, depending on the
size of the container. Containers with capacities of less
than or equal to 119 gallons can contain no more than 3%
by weight of their total capacity; no more than 0.3% by
weight of the total capacity of the container can remain
for containers greater than 119 gallons in size. The 3%
limit for containers with capacities of less than or equal
to 119 gallons is based on the fact that 3% by weight of
the contents of a standard 55-gallon drum (one of the most
common containers for hazardous waste) is equal to 1 inch
of residue on the bottom of that drum.
Typically,
if hazardous wastes are transported in containers larger
than 119 gallons in size, they are transported in tank-like
containers of at least 5,000-gallon capacities (e.g., portable
tanks, cargo tanks, and tank cars). Consequently, EPA based
the 0.3% by weight limit on the fact that 0.3% by weight
of a 10,000-gallon tank (30 gallons) is roughly equivalent
to 1 inch of residue. [August 18, 1982; 47 FR 36093]
Empty
aerosol cans are still hazardous
Rendering
aerosol cans empty so they will exit RCRA hazardous waste
management is problematic. Even an empty aerosol can may
still be hazardous waste. This is the federal interpretation;
some authorized states have taken a different approach to
managing these wastes. For example, Colorado has added aerosol
cans as a universal waste. Additionally, some states (e.g.,
California) define an empty aerosol can to be nonhazardous.
Consequently, it is important to contact the appropriate
state agency to find out if they have different regulations
or policies that apply to these wastes.
Q
A furniture manufacturer generates spent aerosol
paint and solvent cans from painting and cleaning activities.
The cans are emptied using common industry practices and
contain less than 3% by weight of the total can capacity.
However, they may still be capable of detonation if subjected
to a strong initiating source or if heated under confinement.
Do the cans meet EPAs definition of empty and, as
such, can they be disposed as nonhazardous waste?
A
Even though the aerosol cans are RCRA-empty (i.e.,
commonly employed emptying practices have been used and
they contain less than 3% by weight hazardous wastes), they
still may demonstrate the RCRA hazardous characteristic
of reactivity per §261.23(a)(6). Accordingly, they
may be hazardous wastes, and if they are, they must be managed
as such. [RO 13027]
Containers
that held acute hazardous waste
Containers
or inner liners that held acute hazardous waste listed in
§261.31 (the dioxin F-wastes) or 261.33(e) (the P-wastes)
are RCRA-empty if:
-
They
have been triple rinsed using a solvent capable of removing
the hazardous waste,
-
They
have been cleaned by another method that has been proven
to achieve removal equivalent to triple rinsing, or
-
The
inner liner that prevented contact of the hazardous waste
with the container has been removed. [§261.7(b)(3)]
These
requirements are more stringent than those for containers
holding nonacute hazardous waste because acute hazardous
wastes pose a greater hazard to human health and the environment.
Q
Epinephrine (P042 when discarded) is a drug that
is injected using syringes. Since some of the drug typically
remains in the syringe after injection, should residual
drug in such syringes be managed as P042 until triple rinsed?
A
No. EPA considers that drug residues remaining in
used syringes have been used for their intended purpose
and are not discarded commercial chemical products. Therefore,
the residues in this example would not be P042 but would
be hazardous waste only if they exhibit a characteristic.
[RO 13718] Additionally, EPA clarified in RO 14788 that
this epinephrine interpretation extends to other P- and
U-listed pharmaceuticals administered by syringe. The agency
went on to clarify (as it also had in RO 13718), that even
though not listed, syringe residues exhibiting a characteristic
must be managed in accordance with the hazardous waste regulations.
Triple
rinsing
The
typical method of rendering empty a container that held
an acute hazardous waste is to triple rinse it with a suitable
solvent. Water is often used if the chemical is water soluble.
Otherwise, another appropriate solvent must be employed.
The
rinsate from containers being triple rinsed is a hazardous
waste if it 1) exhibits a hazardous waste characteristic,
or 2) comes out of a nonempty container. This last
provision provides that rinsates one, two, and three (none
of which came from an empty container) are listed hazardous
waste via the mixture rule. If a container were rinsed a
fourth time, the rinsate would come from an empty container
and would not be hazardous unless it exhibits a characteristic.
[August 18, 1982; 47 FR 36095, RO 11004, 12299]
The
regulations dont specify the volume of solvent that
should be used in each of the three rinses. When the RCRA
regs were proposed, however, EPA said that a volume
of diluent at least equal to ten percent of the containers
capacity should be used for each rinse. [December
18, 1978; 43 FR 58955] Based on this proposed language (which
was never finalized), an industrial rule of thumb
is that a rinse volume of about 10% of the container capacity
should be used. It turns out that this rule of thumb
is actually codified in the TSCA regs for decontaminating
a PCB container. At 40 CFR 761.79(c)(1), EPA notes that
Each rinse shall use a volume of the flushing solvent
equal to approximately 10 percent of the PCB Container capacity.
Conversely, EPA recently issued pesticide container rinsing
instructions at 40 CFR 156.146 requiring containers to be
filled 1/4 full with solvent prior to shaking or tipping.
Note
that triple rinsing is not considered treatment in the federal
regs, and, consequently, a permit is not required. [November
25, 1980; 45 FR 78528]
Q
A drum recycler burns the hazardous waste residue
left in drums that have been triple rinsed (i.e., the drums
are RCRA-empty). Does this practice constitute hazardous
waste incineration subject to RCRA regulation?
A
No. Since the residue is not regulated as a hazardous
waste under §261.7(a)(1), burning it would not be considered
hazardous waste treatment, and the activity would not be
subject to RCRA regulation or require a permit. [RO 12535]
Q
Do the triple rinsing requirements apply to containers
that hold residues (e.g., ash) from incinerating acute hazardous
wastes?
A
Yes. The triple rinsing standards apply to these
types of containers in order to render them empty under
RCRA. However, the agency points out that §261.7(b)(3)(ii)
allows the use of alternative cleaning methods in place
of triple rinsing. If data are available proving that incineration
eliminates the hazardous constituents in the acute hazardous
wastes, perhaps such a determination could be made. [RO
11761]
Alternative
cleaning methods
No formal
EPA approval is required for alternative cleaning methods
under §261.7(b)(3)(ii); that is, the alternative is
self-implementing. However, EPA suggests that anyone using
an alternative method be sure to document the equivalency
of the method and its use and keep such records as part
of the facilitys operating log. Discussing use of
the method with the appropriate agency responsible for administering
hazardous waste regulations might also be helpful. [RO 11761,
11803]
Q
How should a generator empty paper bags that contain
acute hazardous waste that is physically solid?
A
EPA has determined that repeated beating of the outside
of the inverted paper bags after emptying them can be an
alternative to triple rinsing. [RO 12407]
Containers
that held compressed gas
As set
forth in §261.7(b)(2), a container that held a hazardous
compressed gas is empty when the pressure in the container
approaches atmospheric pressure. Products on the P- and
U-lists (i.e., commercial chemical products that are hazardous
wastes when discarded) that are gases at standard temperature
include P031cyanogen, P033cyanogen chloride,
P063hydrogen cyanide, P096phosphine, U001acetaldehyde,
U043vinyl chloride, U045chloromethane, U122formaldehyde,
and U135hydrogen sulfide. Even if the gaseous material
in the container is an acute P-waste, the container is empty
when the pressure approaches atmospheric pressure. [RO 12138]
Q
Discarded vinyl chloride gas (U043) is transported
to a TSD facility in a rail car. When it arrives at the
TSD facility, the gas is removed from the rail car, and
the rail car is opened to the atmosphere, rendering it empty
in accordance with §261.7(b)(2). The empty rail car
is then sealed and shipped back to the generator. During
shipment, the empty rail car is heated by the sun, and the
remaining gaseous residue inside the rail car subsequently
develops pressure. Is the pressurized residue subject to
regulation as hazardous waste?
A
No. It is not EPAs intent to regulate
containers in such situations where an incidental rise in
pressure occurs resulting from ambient environmental conditions.
In this specific rail-car scenario, the empty
status of the rail car does not change due to the heating
from the sun. [RO 14120]
Cylinders
returned to gas suppliers and removal of residues
Due
to unique ownership issues surrounding compressed gas containers
or cylinders, EPA has provided guidance on who is responsible
for managing compressed gas remaining in cylinders. Compressed
gas cylinders, which are typically owned by the gas supplier,
are usually returned to the supplier when they are empty
or when the customer no longer needs them. The purpose of
this shipment is for refilling and/or to return the suppliers
property, not to discard the remaining contents of the cylinder.
Therefore, the customer does not have any input on the final
disposition of the residue in the cylinder, which occurs
at the suppliers facility at the suppliers discretion.
Consequently,
EPA has determined that returning a compressed gas cylinder
to the supplier does not constitute generation of waste
under RCRA. Neither the returned cylinder nor the residue
it contains is a solid waste, even if the cylinder
is not empty (i.e., it is still pressurized). As such, the
shipment of cylinders from the customer back to the supplier
does not have to be manifested. However, Department of Transportation
(DOT) requirements will apply, and the cylinders may have
to be transported as DOT hazardous materials. [August 18,
1982; 47 FR 36094, RO 14759, 14760, 14762]
If the
gas supplier decides to discard the contents of returned
cylinders, any liquid or physically solid waste removed
from the cylinders is regulated if it is hazardous waste.
If the supplier sends the cylinders offsite for treatment,
storage, or disposal, they must be manifested if they are
not empty and contain hazardous waste.
However
the
handling of gaseous residues removed from the cylinders
and neutralization or scrubbing of gases prior to release
are not subject to RCRA regulation [because they do not
meet the definition of solid waste]. Any liquid
or physically solid wastes derived from the treatment of
hazardous compressed gas is still subject to RCRA regulations,
if it is derived from listed waste or if the residue is
hazardous under Part 261, Subpart C (characteristics).
[RO 12350]
Although
the above quotation from EPA guidance might lead a facility
to believe it is acceptable to vent unwanted gas from compressed
gas cylinders, we have significant reservations about that
practice. First, RO 11835 suggests that, if all of the materials
generated by the venting (including the cylinders) will
be discarded, then the practice might be considered treatment
requiring a RCRA permit. Second, such venting may violate
state air regulations or the conditions in a facilitys
air permit. These concerns argue against this practice and
we strongly recommend not venting gases from compressed
gas cylinders to the atmosphere.
Beneficial
reuse of residues
Sometimes,
residues in containers are not intended for disposal but
rather for reuse. For example, if a container that has held
a P- or U-listed commercial chemical product is to be reused
to contain the same material that it previously held (and
the initial residue is not discarded), that constitutes
a beneficial use or reuse of that residue. In such situations,
EPA notes that the residues never became wastes, and the
accumulation, transportation, and treatment prior to use
or reuse is exempt from hazardous waste management. Another
situation is when a material is mixed into a container holding
a P- or U-listed product residue, where the mixing constitutes
a beneficial use or reuse of that residue. [§261.33(c),
November 25, 1980; 45 FR 78527] An example of this situation
might be where a drum contains a U-listed solvent residue,
and unused paint is mixed with the residue in the drum in
order to make it sprayable.
Regulatory
status of residues removed from empty containers
Under
§261.7(a)(1), any hazardous waste remaining in either
an empty container or an inner liner removed from an empty
container is not regulated as hazardous waste (i.e., the
RCRA hazardous waste regulations, including the land disposal
restrictions, do not apply). [RO 12793] Since residues remaining
in RCRA-empty containers are not regulated, it would seem
reasonable that any management practices associated with
residues removed from empty containers would not constitute
hazardous waste management or treatment.
This
was EPAs original (1980) position regarding residues
or rinses removed from empty containers. However, even then,
the agency was concerned that drum reconditioners and other
facilities that clean out large numbers of RCRA-empty containers
might accumulate, treat, and/or dispose significant quantities
of these unregulated residues, which could pose a hazard
to human health and the environment. Therefore, in the November
25, 1980 Federal Register, EPA sought input on a
number of approaches for regulating residues removed
from RCRA-empty containers. [45 FR 78526] After reviewing
comments submitted, the agency decided not to amend the
§261.7 provisions and not to regulate such removed
residues. [August 18, 1982; 47 FR 36096]
Throughout
the 1980s and early 1990s, EPA reiterated in guidance that,
when residues are removed from RCRA-empty containers, the
resulting residues, rinsates, or washwaters are also exempt
from RCRA under §261.7(a)(1). Accordingly, generators
would not have had to determine whether they exhibit a hazardous
waste characteristic. However, residues, rinsates, or washwaters
that result from cleaning out containers that do not meet
the §261.7 definition of empty (or result from activities
that render the container RCRA-empty) are not exempt
but are fully subject to RCRA Subtitle C if they either
exhibit a characteristic or are a mixture containing a listed
hazardous waste. [RO 11447, 11504]
In 2004,
however, EPA reverted back to its earlier concerns about
residues removed from RCRA-empty containers. In RO 14708,
the agency noted that when residue is removed from
an empty container, the residue is subject to
full regulation under Subtitle C if the removal or subsequent
management of the residue generates a new hazardous waste
that exhibits any of the characteristics identified in Part
261, Subpart C.... (See also October 4, 2005; 70 FR
57779.)
This
April 2004 letter makes EPA headquarters consistent with
the conservative positions previously taken by some of the
regions and states. For example, EPA Region I has for some
time required characterization of residues/rinsates from
RCRA-empty containers, as discussed in Case Study 2.
RO 14708
adds that if the rinsing agent includes a solvent
(or other chemical) that would be a listed hazardous waste
when discarded, then the rinsate from an empty
container would be considered a listed hazardous waste.
This would be due to the nature of the rinsing agent (e.g.,
toluene used to clean out a RCRA-empty drum would be F005
listed spent solvent), not due to the residues remaining
in the empty container. (See also October 4, 2005; 70 FR
57779.)
Discharging
rinsates into wastewater treatment systems
EPA
believes that small amounts of chemicals that, when discarded,
are hazardous wastes listed in §261.33 and small amounts
of F- and K-wastes are often unavoidably lost
during normal material handling operations; such activities
include emptying and rinsing containers. Facilities frequently
dispose such chemicals and F- and K-wastes rinsed out of
containers by draining or washing them into the facilities
wastewater treatment systems. According to the agency, [t]his
typically is a reasonable and practical means of disposing
of these lost materials. Segregating and separately managing
them often would be exceedingly expensive and may not be
necessary because the small quantities can be assimilated
and treated in the wastewater treatment system. [November
17, 1981; 46 FR 56586] Due to the small quantities of wastes
involved, the agency does not believe that this practice
poses a substantial threat to human health or the environment.
Based
on this reasoning, EPA exempts mixtures of wastewater and
such de minimis losses of P- and U-listed chemical rinsates
and F- and K-waste container rinsates from RCRA regulation
under §261.3(a)(2)(iv)(D) if they are discharged to
wastewater treatment systems regulated under the Clean Water
Act. Included in this exemption is rinsate from empty containers
or from containers that are rendered empty by that rinsing.
This exemption lets facilities discharge rinses from containers
holding §261.31 F-wastes, §261.32 K-wastes, and
§261.33 chemicals into their wastewater treatment system
without worrying about hazardous waste management. The wording
of the exemption indicates that, as long as the rinsate
flows into the wastewater treatment system, it doesnt
matter if the container was RCRA-empty or not before it
was rinsed (although the container must be RCRA-empty after
rinsing).
Note
that EPA provided some disconcerting guidance about these
de minimis losses from container rinsing. On January 31,
1991, the agency noted that only the third rinse in
triple rinsing would meet the definition of rinsate
from containers that are rendered empty by that rinsing.
[56 FR 3869]
Miscellaneous
empty-container examples
Three
additional examples illustrating the complex considerations
of managing and emptying a hazardous waste container are
given in Case Study 3.
RCRA
and DOT definitions of empty are different
Even
though an empty container may be exempt from RCRA requirements,
DOT shipping requirements may still apply because the RCRA
and DOT definitions of an empty container are
not the same. Under the 49 CFR 173.29 DOT standards, any
packaging (e.g., container) that contains residues of hazardous
materials must be handled and transported as if it were
full unless it meets all of the following criteria:
-
The
packaging 1) is unused, 2) is cleaned of residue and purged
of vapors so that no potential hazard remains, 3) is
refilled with a nonhazardous material so that any remaining
hazardous material residue no longer poses a hazard, or
4) contains only the residue of an ORM-D material
(other regulated material, such as consumer commodities)
or a Division 2.2 nonflammable gas (other than anhydrous
ammonia) with no subsidiary hazard at an absolute pressure
of <40.6 psia at 68°F.
-
The
material that remains after cleaning does not meet the
definition of a RCRA hazardous waste, DOT hazardous substance,
or marine pollutant.
-
All
hazardous material shipping name and identification number
markings, hazard warning labels or placards, and any other
markings indicating that the material is hazardous must
be removed, obliterated, or securely covered.
Manifesting
nonempty shipments back to a generator
Due
to the sticky nature or other properties of some hazardous
waste, it is often very difficult, if not impossible, for
a TSD facility to render a generators tank truck or
rail car RCRA-empty. Therefore, when the TSD facility sends
the container back to the generator to pick up more of the
same waste (i.e., the container is dedicated to this service),
the shipment consists of a nonempty container of hazardous
waste that should be manifested.
In a
March 4, 2005 final rule that changed the manifest system
starting September 5, 2006 [70 FR 10776], EPA modified the
definition of designated facility in §260.10
to include generators receiving non-RCRA-empty containers
returned under a new manifest from a TSD facility. Generators
receiving such returned shipments must sign in Block 20
of the new manifest, and they then have either 90 or 180
days (depending on their generator status) to send returned
waste to another designated facility under yet another manifest.
[§262.34(m)]
Waste
counting issues
Per
§261.5(c)(1), residues in RCRA-empty containers are
not counted when making monthly generator status determinations.
CERCLA
issues
Material
contained in RCRA-empty containers that is sent offsite
for disposal must be reported as an offsite transfer for
purposes of disposal on Form R of the toxic release inventory
(TRI). This situation occurs because material remaining
in empty containers is still considered a toxic chemical
under the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know
Act (EPCRA) Section 313. The status of a toxic chemical
as nonhazardous waste under RCRA has no impact on the applicability
of EPCRA regulations. Therefore, the quantity of such material
should be reported in Section 8.1 of Form R, unless the
facility is exempt from reporting. [EPCRA Hotline question
and answer dated February 1996]
Disclaimer
Considerable
care has been exercised in preparing this document; however, McCoy
and Associates, Inc. makes no representation, warranty, or guarantee
in connection with the publication of this information. McCoy and
Associates, Inc. expressly disclaims any liability or responsibility
for loss or damage resulting from its use or for the violation of
any federal, state, or municipal law or regulation with which this
information may conflict. McCoy and Associates, Inc. does not undertake
any duty to ensure the continued accuracy of this information.
This document
addresses problems of a general nature related to the federal RCRA
regulations. Persons evaluating specific circumstances dealing with
the RCRA regulations should review state and local laws and regulations,
which may be more stringent than federal requirements. In addition,
the assistance of a qualified professional should be enlisted to
address any site-specific circumstances.
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