94-11083. Public Meetings on Alternatives for Ground-Water Monitoring at Small Dry/Remote Municipal Solid Waste Landfills  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 88 (Monday, May 9, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-11083]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: May 9, 1994]
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    [FRL-4882-6]
    
     
    
    Public Meetings on Alternatives for Ground-Water Monitoring at 
    Small Dry/Remote Municipal Solid Waste Landfills
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Notice of public meetings.
    
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    SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is announcing a 
    series of four public, one-day meetings on alternatives for ground-
    water monitoring at small, dry/remote municipal solid waste landfills 
    (MSWLFs). These meetings will offer an opportunity for interested 
    parties to express their views and provide information on the issues 
    and impacts associated with alternatives for ground-water monitoring at 
    MSWLFs that qualify for the small landfill exemption under 40 CFR 
    258.1(f). The Agency will use this information in preparing any further 
    action on alternatives to ground-water monitoring for these affected 
    landfills. These meetings will be held in Midland, Texas; Salt Lake 
    City, Utah; Anchorage, Alaska; and Washington, DC, as discussed below. 
    Interested parties may submit comments directly to the Agency without 
    speaking or attending a meeting if they choose.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
    For information on meeting plans or to pre-register to present a 
    statement at any of the meetings, please call the U.S. EPA Alternatives 
    to Ground-Water Monitoring Hot Line at 800-230-3564. For technical 
    information, contact Scott Ellinger, Municipal and Industrial Solid 
    Waste Division, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (Mail Code 5306) 
    401 M Street, SW., Washington, DC 20460 (202-260-1350). If you require 
    sign language or voice language interpreting services, please call 800-
    230-3564 through relay.
        A summary of the meetings and all written comments received by EPA 
    on alternatives to ground-water monitoring will be placed in a public 
    docket and made available for viewing in the RCRA Information Center 
    (RIC), which is located in room M2616, U.S. EPA, 401 M Street SW., 
    Washington, DC 20460. Please place the docket number F-94-AGAP-FFFFF on 
    all documents submitted to the Agency. The RIC is open from 9 a.m. to 4 
    p.m., Monday through Friday, except for Federal holidays. The public 
    must make an appointment to view docket materials. Call 202-260-9327 
    for an appointment. Copies cost $0.15 per page.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    A. Background
    
        On October 9, 1991, EPA promulgated a Final Rule (40 CFR part 258) 
    for Municipal Solid Waste Landfills (MSWLFs) under Subtitle D of the 
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). See 56 FR 50978. The 
    Final Rule set forth minimum federal criteria for MSWLFs, including 
    location restrictions, facility design and operating criteria, ground-
    water monitoring requirements, corrective action requirements, 
    financial assurance requirements, and closure and post-closure care 
    requirements. In addition, the Final Rule included an exemption for 
    owner/operators of certain small MSWLF units from the design (Subpart 
    D) and ground-water monitoring and corrective action (Subpart E) 
    requirements of the criteria. See 40 CFR 258.1(f). To qualify for the 
    exemption, the small landfill had to accept less than 20 tons per day 
    (TPD), on an annual average basis, exhibit no evidence of ground-water 
    contamination, and serve either:
        (1) A community that experiences an annual interruption of surface 
    transportation of at least three consecutive months that prevents 
    access to a regional waste management facility, or
        (2) A community that has no practical waste management alternative 
    and the landfill is located in an area that receives less than or equal 
    to 25 inches of precipitation annually.
        In adopting this limited exemption, the Agency maintained that it 
    had complied with the statutory standard to protect human health and 
    the environment, taking into account the practicable capabilities of 
    small landfill owners and operators. See discussion in 56 FR 50911 
    (October 9, 1991). In January, 1992, the Sierra Club and the Natural 
    Resources Defense Council (NRDC) filed a petition with the U.S. Court 
    of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit, for review of the Subtitle D 
    criteria. The Sierra Club and NRDC alleged, among other things, that 
    EPA exceeded its statutory authority when it exempted these small 
    landfills from the ground-water monitoring requirements. On May 7, 
    1993, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia 
    Circuit issued its opinion (Sierra Club versus United States 
    Environmental Protection Agency, 992 F.2d 337 (D.C. Cir. 1993)), 
    stating that under RCRA section 4010(c), the only factor EPA could 
    consider in determining whether facilities must monitor their ground 
    water was whether such monitoring was ``necessary to detect 
    contamination'', not whether such monitoring is ``practicable.'' Thus, 
    the Court vacated the small community exemption as it pertains to 
    ground-water monitoring. (The Court did not require EPA to remove the 
    exemption for design requirements.)
        Accordingly, the Agency, as part of the October 1, 1993 final rule 
    delaying the effective date of the MSWLF criteria (58 FR 51536, October 
    1, 1993), rescinded the small landfill ground-water monitoring 
    exemption. At the same time, however, to assure that owners and 
    operators of such small MSWLFs had adequate time to decide whether to 
    continue to operate under the Court's ruling, and to prepare 
    financially for the added costs if they decided to continue to operate, 
    EPA delayed the effective date of the MSWLF criteria for these 
    facilities for two years.
        This additional two years provides the time for EPA to determine if 
    there were practical and affordable alternative monitoring systems/
    approaches which were adequate to detect contamination. The U.S. Court 
    of Appeals, in its decision, did not preclude the possibility that EPA 
    could establish separate ground-water monitoring standards for these 
    small, dry/remote landfills that take into account size, location, and 
    climate, as long as these separate requirements ensured that an owner/
    operator could detect ground-water contamination. The Agency, 
    therefore, solicited comments on alternative ground-water monitoring 
    requirements in the publication of the proposed rule to extend the 
    effective date of the MSWLF criteria (56 FR 40568, July 28, 1993). 
    Today's announcement of public meetings provides interested parties 
    with an additional opportunity to provide the Agency with information 
    regarding alternative ground-water monitoring requirements.
    
    B. Meeting Format, Dates, and Locations
    
        The Agency is inviting interested parties to provide factual 
    information to assist the Agency in better understanding alternatives 
    to ground-water monitoring. Interested parties (including 
    representatives from State and local governments; landfill owners and 
    operators; consultants, geologists, engineers, and others involved in 
    waste management; and environmental and other public interest 
    organizations) may attend the meetings, present a statement, and/or 
    submit written information to the Agency. Speakers should register at 
    least one week in advance of the meeting at which they wish to speak. 
    Speakers should limit their oral statement to approximately five 
    minutes. In addition, speakers may be asked to respond to questions 
    from the EPA panel. Interested parties may submit written comments at 
    the meeting without speaking, or directly to the public docket without 
    attending the meeting (see information above). All written statements 
    should be submitted in an original and two copies. Meeting attendees 
    who do not wish to speak do not need to register in advance.
        Each meeting will begin at 8:30 a.m. and will continue until 5 
    p.m., (except for the Salt Lake City meeting which will begin at 9 
    a.m.), with a break for lunch from 12 noon to 1 p.m. EPA will give its 
    introductory remarks at the beginning of each meeting. Depending on the 
    number of speakers, the meetings may adjourn earlier than 5 p.m. if all 
    attendees who have registered to make a statement have completed their 
    presentations earlier than 5 p.m. Speakers generally will be scheduled 
    in the order of registration. Speakers may be asked to limit their 
    statement to less than five minutes, depending on the number of 
    speakers. If there is sufficient time available after all pre-
    registered speakers have been scheduled, additional speakers who 
    register at the meeting site will be able to present a statement.
        The schedule for the public meetings is listed below. Please note 
    that meeting space is limited to a first-come, first-serve basis.
    
    June 8, 1994--Salt Lake City, Utah: The Chapman Library, 577 South 900 
    West, Meeting Room 1.
    June 10, 1994--Anchorage, Alaska: Federal Building, 222 West 7th 
    Avenue, Rooms 137 and 139.
    June 14, 1994--Midland, Texas: The Permian Basin Regional Planning 
    Commission Conference Room, 2910 LaForce Boulevard, Midland 
    International Airport.
    June 28, 1994--Washington, DC: The U.S. EPA Auditorium, Waterside Mall, 
    401 ``M'' Street, Southwest.
    
    C. Issues Associated with Alternatives to Ground-Water Monitoring
    
        Although EPA would like to learn of any issues that the Agency 
    should address for future actions on alternatives to ground-water 
    monitoring for MSWLFs, the Agency encourages interested parties to 
    focus their comments and provide factual information regarding the 
    following:
         What would it cost these small, dry/remote communities to 
    comply with the full set of ground-water monitoring requirements as 
    specified in 40 CFR part 258, Subpart E?
         The Agency is investigating the potential for using 
    alternatives to conventional ground-water monitoring well systems that 
    may be capable of detecting ground-water contamination, taking into 
    account such factors as landfill size and location; leachate quantity 
    and quality; and local climate hydrology, geology, and hydrogeology. 
    Examples of such alternatives include: monitoring of the unsaturated 
    (vadose) zone; surface geophysical techniques such as electrical 
    resistivity and ground penetrating radar, and the sampling of seeps, 
    springs, and nearby drinking water or agricultural supply wells. The 
    Agency solicits ideas regarding potential alternatives and their costs 
    and limitations, particularly with respect to implementation by small 
    landfill owners and operators.
         Should no alternative ground-water monitoring techniques 
    be appropriate for a small dry/remote landfill, and ground-water 
    monitoring wells are required, in what ways can the Agency modify the 
    ground-water monitoring regulations (e.g., monitoring parameters, 
    schedules) to provide greater implementation flexibility?
         The ``no-migration'' demonstration currently available 
    under 40 CFR 258.50(b) allows an approved State to suspend ground-water 
    monitoring at a landfill if the owner/operator can demonstrate that 
    there will be no potential for migration from the landfill to the 
    uppermost aquifer during the active life and post-closure care of the 
    landfill. The Agency seeks comment on whether owners/operators of these 
    small landfills can collect the information needed in order to make 
    this demonstration at their particular landfill.
         The Agency is considering preparation of additional 
    guidance that would assist owners and operators of small dry/remote 
    landfills in making no-migration demonstrations. The Agency solicits 
    ideas for this guidance.
    
        Dated: April 15, 1994.
    Elizabeth A. Cotsworth,
    Acting Director, Office of Solid Waste.
    [FR Doc. 94-11083 Filed 5-6-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/09/1994
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of public meetings.
Document Number:
94-11083
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: May 9, 1994, FRL-4882-6