Environmental
   
         
 
 
 

Become a Member!

 
  Topic Areas
SetonAlerts™ For Safety
Archive
Compliance Library
The Federal Register
CFR Regulations
  29 CFR OSHA
  40 CFR EPA
  49 CFR DOT
OSHA State Plans
Compliance Publications
MSDS Library
Training Resources
Compliance Toolbox

Waste Management

Nearly everything we do leaves behind some kind of waste. Households create ordinary garbage. Industrial and manufacturing processes create solid and hazardous waste. The U.S. EPA regulates all this waste under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).
 
Overview
 
The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), an amendment to the Solid Waste Disposal Act, was enacted in 1976 to address a problem of enormous magnitude — the huge volumes of
municipal and industrial solid waste  generated nationwide.

 
RCRA's goals are to:
  1. Protect us from the hazards of waste disposal
  2. Conserve energy and natural resources by recycling and recovery
  3. Reduce or eliminate waste, and
  4. Clean up waste, which may have spilled, leaked, or been improperly disposed of.
RegulationsGo to the top of this page
 
The legal mechanism that establishes standards or
imposes requirements as mandated by the Act. RCRA regulations are promulgated by EPA, published in the Federal Register, and codified
in the Code of Federal Regulations.

The codified RCRA regulations can be found in Title 40 of the CFR, Parts 240-282. These  regulations are often cited as 40 CFR, with the part listed afterward (e.g., 40 CFR Part 264), or the part and section (e.g., 40 CFR §264.10).

 

Subtitle D — Solid WasteGo to the top of this page

 
RCRA Subtitle D focuses on state and local governments as the primary planning, regulating, and implementing entities for the management of
non-hazardous solid waste, such as household garbage and non-hazardous industrial solid waste. EPA provides these state and local agencies with information, guidance, policy and regulations through workshops and publications to help states and the regulated community make better decisions in dealing with waste issues, to reap the environmental and economic benefits of source reduction and recycling of solid wastes, and to require upgrading or closure of all environmentally unsound disposal units. In order to promote the use of safer units for solid waste disposal, EPA developed federal criteria for the proper design and operation of MSWLFs and other solid waste disposal facilities. Many states have adopted these criteria into their state solid waste programs.Go to the top of this page
What is a Solid Waste?
The term solid wastes, including those hazardous wastes that are excluded from the Subtitle C regulations including not only the traditional non-hazardous solid wastes, such as municipal garbage, but also some addresses solid (e.g., household hazardous waste), and exempt small quantity generators (CESQGs).

• Garbage
• Refuse
• Sludges from waste treatment plants, water supply treatment plants, or pollution control facilities
• Non-hazardous industrial wastes
• Other discarded materials, including solid, semisolid, liquid, or contained gaseous materials resulting from industrial, commercial, mining, agricultural, and community activities.Go to the top of this page
 
Measuring Recycling: A Guide for State and Local Governments
 
This guide is designed to help state and local agencies measure municipal solid waste (MSW) recycling. It contains instructions, definitions, case studies, tips, forms, and worksheets to help calculate an MSW recycling rate. Information is provided to help track broad categories of recycled materials and commodity specific categories, if desired. All features of the guide, including the survey forms and worksheets, can be used by both state and local governments that measure recycling.Go to the top of this page
 
Municipal Solid Waste in The United States: 2000 Facts and Figures
 
This report describes the national municipal solid waste (MSW) stream based on data collected for 1960 through 2000. The historical perspective is useful for establishing trends in types of MSW generated and in the ways it is managed. In this Executive Summary, we briefly describe the methodology used to characterize MSW in the United States and provide the latest facts and figures on MSW generation, recycling, and disposal. In the United States, we generated approximately 231.9 million tons of MSW in 2000— an increase of 0.9 million tons from 1999.*Go to the top of this page
 
Subtitle C — Hazardous WasteGo to the top of this page
 
RCRA Subtitle C establishes a federal program to manage hazardous wastes from cradle to grave. The objective of the Subtitle C program is to ensure that hazardous waste is handled in a manner that protects human health and the environment. To this end, there are Subtitle C regulations for the generation; transportation; and treatment, storage, or disposal of hazardous wastes. In practical terms, this means regulating a large number of hazardous waste handlers. As of 1997, EPA had on record more than 2,000 treatment, storage, and disposal facilities (TSDFs); 18,000 transporters; and about 20,000
large quantity generators.

more info

 
Occupational Safety and Health Guidance Manual for Hazardous Waste Site ActivitiesGo to the top of this page
 

This manual is a guidance document for managers responsible for  occupational safety and health programs at inactive hazardous waste sites. It assumes a basic knowledge of science and experience in occupational safety and health. It is the product of a four-agency committee (the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health [NIOSH], the Occupational Safety and Health Administration [OSHA], the U.S. Coast Guard [USCG], and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency [EPA]) mandated by CERCLA section 301(f) to study the problem of protecting the safety and health of workers at hazardous waste sites, and by CERCLA section 111(c)(6) to develop a program to protect the health and safety of employees involved in response to hazardous substance releases, removals, or remedial actions.
 

 
Subtitle I — Underground Storage TanksGo to the top of this page
 
Across the United States, there are approximately 700,000 federally regulated underground storage tanks (USTs) that store petroleum or certain hazardous substances. USTs are found at a variety of locations, including convenience stores, airports, service stations, small and large manufacturing facilities, and hazardous waste management facilities. Some USTs installed before 1988 were constructed of bare, unprotected steel. Because of their  underground location, these tanks pose unique problems in preventing their contents from leaking due to faulty  installation, corrosion, tank or pipe rupture, or spills. With over 50  percent of the U.S. population relying on groundwater as their primary source of drinking water, Congress acted to protect this resource in 1984 by adding Subtitle I to the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Pursuant to this congressional mandate, EPA established a regulatory program in 1988 that includes technical requirements to prevent, detect, and clean up releases from USTs. In addition, EPA created financial responsibility requirements to guarantee that UST owners and operators have enough money set aside to clean up releases and to compensate third parties.

RCRA Subtitle I regulates underground storage tanks (USTs) that contain petroleum or hazardous substances (as defined under CERCLA). A major objective of Subtitle I is to prevent and clean up releases from tanks. Under Subtitle I, EPA has developed performance standards for new tanks, upgrading requirements for existing tanks, and regulations to prevent, detect, and clean up releases at all UST sites. This program is similar to the Subtitle C program in that state programs may be  approved to operate in lieu of the federal program.

 
Introduction to: Underground Storage Tanks: RCRA Subtitle I
 (40 CFR Part 280)Go to the top of this page
 
This publication is designed to familiarize you with the universe of regulated USTs, and the technical and financial requirements that apply to them. After reading this module, you should be able to:
• Define UST and UST system
• Identify which USTs are subject to regulation
• Determine performance and operating  requirements
• Discuss such topics as historical deadlines for upgrading tanks and the closure and
corrective action requirements
• Summarize the financial responsibility requirements for petroleum USTs.
 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 
 
© 1995-2005 Tricor Direct, Inc. & IntraWEB, LLC. All Rights Are Reserved