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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 10-2359

RULES AND REGULATIONS

Title 25—ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY BOARD

[ 25 PA. CODE CHS. 287, 290 AND 299 ]

Beneficial Use of Coal Ash

[40 Pa.B. 7062]
[Saturday, December 11, 2010]

 The Environmental Quality Board (Board) amends Chapters 287 and 299 (relating to residual waste management—general provisions; and storage and transportation of residual waste) and adds Chapter 290 (relating to beneficial use of coal ash) to read as set forth in Annex A. The regulations pertaining to beneficial use of coal ash in Chapter 287, Subchapter H (relating to beneficial use) are rescinded and moved to Chapter 290. Chapter 290 includes requirements for coal ash beneficial use, coal ash certification, water quality monitoring and storage.

 This order was adopted by the Board at its meeting of August 30, 2010.

A. Effective Date

 This final-form rulemaking will go into effect upon publication in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

B. Contact Persons

 For further information, contact Stephen Socash, Chief, Division of Municipal and Residual Waste, P. O. Box 8472, Rachel Carson State Office Building, Harrisburg, PA 17105-8472, (717) 787-3436; or Susan Seighman, Assistant Counsel, Bureau of Regulatory Counsel, P. O. Box 8464, Rachel Carson State Office Building, Harrisburg, PA 17105-8464, (717) 787-7060. Persons with a disability may use the Pennsylvania AT&T Relay Service, (800) 654-5984 (TDD users) or (800) 654-5988 (voice users). This final-form rulemaking is available electronically through the Department of Environmental Protection's (Department) web site at www.dep.state.pa.us.

C. Statutory Authority

 This final-form rulemaking is authorized under the following statutes:

 The Solid Waste Management Act (SWMA) (35 P. S. §§ 6018.101—6018.1003), under section 105(a) (35 P. S. § 6018.105(a)), grants the Board the power and the duty to adopt the rules and regulations of the Department to accomplish the purposes and carry out the provisions of the SWMA. Sections 102(4) and 104(6) of the SWMA (35 P. S. §§ 6018.102 and 6018.104) provide the Department with the power and duty to regulate the storage, collection, transportation, processing, treatment and disposal of solid waste to protect the public health, safety and welfare. Section 508 of the SWMA (35 P. S. § 6018.508) provides the Department with the authority to regulate the beneficial use of coal ash, including establishing siting criteria and design and operating standards governing the storage of coal ash prior to beneficial use and the use and certification of coal ash as structural fill, soil substitutes and soil additives.

 The Clean Streams Law (CSL) (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001), under section 5 (35 P. S. § 691.5(b)), grants the Department the authority to formulate, adopt, promulgate and repeal the rules and regulations that are necessary to implement the CSL. Section 402 of CSL (35 P. S. § 691.402) grants the Department the authority to adopt rules and regulations that require permits or conditions under which an activity shall be conducted when an activity creates a danger of pollution to waters of this Commonwealth or regulation of an activity is necessary to avoid pollution.

 Section 4.2(a) of the Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act (SMCRA), (52 P. S. § 1396.4b(a)), authorizes the Board to adopt regulations the Department deems necessary to fulfill the purposes and provisions of the SMCRA. Section 4(a) of the SMCRA (52 P. S. § 1396.4(a)) authorizes the Department to charge and collect a reasonable filing fee from persons submitting applications for a surface mining permit to cover the costs of reviewing and administering permits. Section 3.2 of the Coal Refuse Disposal Control Act (CRDCA) (52 P. S. § 30.53b), grants the Board the power and duty to adopt regulations to accomplish the purposes of the CRDCA. Section 5(b) of the CRDCA (52 P. S. § 30.55(b)) authorizes the Department to charge and collect a reasonable filing fee from persons submitting applications for a coal refuse disposal permit.

 Section 1917-A of The Administrative Code of 1929 (71 P. S. § 510-17) authorizes and requires the Department to protect the people of this Commonwealth from unsanitary conditions and other nuisances, including any condition that is declared to be a nuisance by any law administered by the Department. Section 1920-A of The Administrative Code of 1929 (71 P. S. § 510-20) grants the Board the power and duty to formulate, adopt and promulgate rules and regulations as may be determined by the Board for the proper performance of the work of the Department.

D. Background of the Final-Form Rulemaking

 This final-form rulemaking incorporates the key provisions of the Department's policies and procedures on the beneficial use of coal ash. The key provisions address the general and specific operating requirements for beneficial use, which include certification guidelines for the chemical and physical properties of coal ash beneficially used at active and abandoned mine sites. These provisions also relate to water quality monitoring and the storage of coal ash in piles and surface impoundments. This final-form rulemaking also adopts recommendations by the National Academy of Sciences in their 2006 report entitled Managing Coal Combustion Residues in Mines.

 There are hundreds of thousands of acres of mine lands in this Commonwealth that need to be reclaimed. These lands contain many dangerous pits and highwalls that have caused the deaths of numerous citizens over the years. The use of coal ash to reclaim these mines eliminates the dangers associated with the open pits and highwalls and restores a safe environment. Reclamation also restores positive drainage to watersheds by allowing rain water to flow on the surface to streams, rather than infiltrating into spoil or deep mines from which it discharges as acid mine drainage. Reclamation of these lands cannot be accomplished fully through Federal and State funds that are currently available for this purpose. Therefore, a program that allows for the beneficial use of coal ash for mine reclamation in an environmentally responsible manner will allow for the continued reclamation of mine sites and protect the public health and safety and the environment.

 The Department has been involved successfully with mine reclamation using coal ash for approximately 25 years. Information on several mine reclamation projects is in the 2006 report entitled Coal Ash Beneficial Use in Mine Reclamation and Drainage Remediation in Pennsylvania, which was a collaborative effort between the Department and the Materials Research Institute at the Pennsylvania State University.

 In addition to unreclaimed mines, more than 2 billion tons of waste coal piles are scattered across the anthracite and bituminous coal regions in this Commonwealth. These piles can cause several different types and degrees of adverse impacts on the environment. Waste coal piles produce some of the most severe mine drainage in this Commonwealth, often having a pH less than 3.0 and acidity in the hundreds to thousands of milligrams per liter, and are also a troublesome source of sediment that has impacted hundreds of miles of stream. Stormwater runoff from waste coal piles also carries large loads of metals including iron, manganese, zinc, nickel, arsenic and cadmium. Finally, waste coal piles can catch fire and produce noxious fumes.

 The use of waste coal to fuel power plants has assisted in the elimination of these waste coal piles and remedied the potentially harmful conditions resulting from the continued existence of the piles. To date, 145 million tons of waste coal have been used to fuel power plants. Annually, 10% of power in this Commonwealth is produced from power plants burning waste coal. The ash that is generated from the waste coal has been used to reclaim thousands of acres of abandoned mines. The Anthracite Region Independent Power Producer's Association (ARIPPA), an association of independent power producers, places a value of at least $90 million worth of reclamation that has been achieved at abandoned mine sites by the coal and power industries through the burning of waste coal and subsequent reclamation with the coal ash that was generated. Additionally, the Department has observed numerous instances where removal of the piles and reclamation has significantly reduced pollutant loads for metals, such as arsenic, zinc, nickel, iron and manganese.

 Prior to this final-form rulemaking, the beneficial use of coal ash, including abandoned and active mine reclamation, was managed through existing residual waste regulations and Department technical guidance. In 2008, the Department proposed amendments to the technical guidance documents ''Mine Site Approval for the Beneficial Use of Coal Ash,'' Document No. 563-2112-225, and ''Certification Guidelines for the Chemical and Physical Properties of Coal Ash Beneficially Used at Mines,'' Document No. 563-2112-224. The most frequent comment received during the public comment period on these amendments was that the content of the technical guidance should be placed in regulations rather than Department technical guidance. The Board agreed with the commentators and included the key provisions of the technical guidance in this final-form rulemaking and further enhanced the existing residual waste regulations regarding the beneficial use of coal ash.

 The citizens of this Commonwealth will be better served by this final-form rulemaking, which is summarized as follows: increased coal ash monitoring to ensure coal ash meets qualification criteria; increased water quality monitoring for a longer duration to create a robust dataset to facilitate the evaluation and documentation of water quality at sites where coal ash is beneficially used; a requirement for minimum number of monitoring wells to characterize the groundwater or other water quality points; a requirement for recording a landowner consent for placement of coal ash for beneficial use; improved reporting requirements to track volumes and location of sites where coal ash is beneficially used; consistent operational and monitoring standards for all types of beneficial use; a centralized process to qualify coal ash for beneficial use at mine sites; an annual fee payable to the Department to offset some of its costs for coal ash and water quality sampling and testing at mine sites where coal ash is beneficially used; and requirements for the storage of coal ash including provisions for design and operations.

 Persons who generate coal ash with the intention of qualifying it for beneficial use and persons who utilize that ash will be required to comply with this final-form rulemaking. Currently, there are about 50 mine sites across this Commonwealth that are actively using ash under the beneficial use provisions. At any given time, there can be as many as 60 approved ash sources. Sources include large multiunit pulverized coal power plants and fluidized bed combustion (FBC) power plants that can produce hundreds of thousands of tons of ash per year and small industrial power plants that may produce less than 10,000 tons per year. The FBC plants, which burn waste coal, have traditionally used 100% of their ash for mine reclamation. A stated goal of the 43 coal-fired electricity producers in this Commonwealth is to find more ways to beneficially use the coal ash produced at their facilities.

 For each of the past several years, about 11 million tons of coal ash has been used for mine reclamation. To date, approximately 20 surface mine sites have been reclaimed using coal ash. In 2008, approximately 11 projects, other than mine reclamation, used coal ash structural fill to construct roadways, an airport runway in Snyder County and a golf course in York County. Many municipalities in this Commonwealth beneficially use bottom ash as antiskid material in the winter months. Currently, eight facilities qualify under a general permit to beneficially use the coal ash produced at that facility as construction material at sites other than mine sites.

 The Bureaus of Waste Management, Mining and Reclamation, District Mining Operations and Abandoned Mine Reclamation collaborated to produce this final-form rulemaking. The Bureau of Mining and Reclamation met with industry groups in 2008 representing both the corporate energy facilities and the independent power producers, including Reliant Energy, PPL and ARIPPA, and individually with various plant operators by request. The Department also provided information to the Pennsylvania Coal Association and the Pennsylvania Anthracite Council. The Department typically maintains discussions with the American Coal Ash Association and had several meetings with citizens representing Earthjustice and the Environmental Integrity Project. The concepts in this final-form rulemaking, in the form of technical guidance, were presented to the Mining and Reclamation Advisory Board and published at 38 Pa.B. 5228 (September 20, 2008). Comments received from industry, citizenry and Department staff were used in the development of this final-form rulemaking. Finally, this final-form rulemaking was presented to the Solid Waste Advisory Committee in May 2010. Draft final regulations were also presented to the Citizens Advisory Council in June 2010.

E. Summary of Regulatory Requirements

§ 287.1

 The final-form rulemaking amends the definitions of ''coal ash,'' ''solid waste'' and ''structural fill'' to provide clarity.

 The proposed definition of ''water table'' was moved to Chapter 290 since the term is only used in that chapter.

§§ 287.661—287.666

 The final-form rulemaking rescinds §§ 287.661—287.666. Chapter 290, Subchapter B (relating to beneficial use of coal ash) replaces these sections.

Subchapter A. General

Final-form § 290.1

 The definition of ''temporary coal ash storage pile'' was added to the final-form rulemaking to allow relief from siting restrictions for storage piles that only exist for periods of less than 2 weeks.

Final-form § 290.2

 Subsection (a) establishes that this chapter applies to the beneficial use of coal ash. It also establishes that fly ash, bottom ash or boiler slag that does not meet the beneficial use requirements (including the performance standards) of this chapter is a residual waste.

 Subsection (b) specifies that beneficial use of coal ash mixed with residual waste will be authorized by a residual waste permit and meet the requirements of this chapter. The requirements for ash produced by co-firing coal and alternative fuels was moved to subsection (c) and revised to not require a residual waste permit in all cases.

 Subsection (c) was added to the final-form regulation to allow ash produced by co-firing an alternative fuel with coal or waste coal as if it were coal ash, provided the alternative fuel is less than 20% of the total fuel and contributes less than 10% to the total quantity of ash. This change was made to encourage use of alternative fuels and may help offset some of the increased cost to industry due to additional analysis and monitoring required in the final-form rulemaking.

 Subsection (d) specifies that beneficial use of coal ash mixed with construction and demolition waste will be authorized by a municipal waste permit and meet the requirements of this chapter.

 Subsection (e) specifies that coal ash mixed with municipal waste, other than construction and demolition waste, must not be beneficially used by direct placement into the environment. Other beneficial uses may be authorized by a municipal waste permit.

 Subsection (f) establishes that beneficial use of coal ash under this chapter does not require a disposal permit.

Subchapter B. Beneficial Use of Coal Ash

Final-form § 290.101

 Subsection (a) establishes that use of coal ash under this chapter does not require a disposal permit.

 Subsection (b) in the final-form regulation identifies the beneficial use that requires a chemical analysis of the coal ash.

 Subsection (c) specifies that the physical characteristics required for certification for the intended beneficial use of the coal ash in Chapter 290, Subchapter C (relating to coal ash certification) must be met.

 Subsection (d) establishes that a water quality monitoring plan is required for any structural fill, use at a mining activity site or use at an abandoned surface coal mine site involving use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons in total per site. The final-form regulation allows the Department to require a water quality monitoring plan where lesser amounts of coal ash are to be beneficially used or coal ash is used for other beneficial uses.

 Subsection (e) specifies that coal ash may not be placed within 8 feet of the water table. The final-form regulation has been revised to limit placement within 8 feet of the water table when coal ash is used for mine subsidence control, mine fire control and mine sealing.

 Subsection (f) specifies that coal ash may not be used in ways that may cause water pollution.

Final-form § 290.102

 Subsection (a) establishes the requirements for a written proposal for coal ash to be used as structural fill. The term was modified in the final-form regulation from ''written notification'' to ''written proposal'' to avoid confusion with public notice requirements. This written proposal includes a description of the project, including maps, estimated project starting and completion dates, construction plans, estimated volume of coal ash to be utilized, chemical analysis and landowner consent. The landowner consent is a recordable document for projects involving use of more than 100,000 tons in total per site or 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre. The 100,000 tons per project trigger for a written proposal was added in the final-form regulation to be consistent with other sections of this chapter.

 Subsection (b) specifies that public notices in local newspapers must be published for coal ash structural fill projects involving use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons in total per site. The notice must include name and business address, a brief description of location and scope of the project and the Departmental office location where the request was sent. Notification to the local municipality has been added to the final-form regulation.

 Subsection (c) allows the Department to require public notice for projects less than 10,000 tons per acre and less than 100,000 tons per project when there is significant public interest or site conditions warrant notification.

 Subsection (d) establishes that the Department will publish a notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin of each written proposal received for use of coal ash as structural fill.

 Subsection (e) establishes that the Department will respond in writing to the notifier as to whether their final-form use is consistent with this section.

 Subsection (f) establishes additional requirements for coal ash used as structural fill, including compaction and layer thickness, runoff minimization and stormwater management, surface water diversion, cover, minimum compaction and dust minimization. The final-form regulation has been revised to indicate that the pH must be 7.0 or above for coal ash used as structural fill to be consistent with other sections in Chapter 290. In addition, the upper pH limit for use as structural fill only applies when public access is not restricted during storage or placement. The requirement that the Proctor Test be conducted by a certified lab has been dropped because the Department was unable to find an organization that certifies labs for that procedure.

 Subsection (g) establishes siting restrictions for structural fill, including distances from streams, water sources, bedrock outcrops, sinkholes and areas draining into sinkholes, floodplains and wetlands. A siting restriction of 300 feet from exceptional value waters and high quality waters was added to protect these special protection waters.

 Subsection (h) establishes annual reports required for projects involving use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre. The report must include contact information, site location, identity of each source of coal ash and the volume and weight of coal ash from each source. The final-form regulation also requires this report for projects involving more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total per site to be consistent with the requirements in other sections.

 Subsection (i) was added to the final-form regulation to require the person beneficially using coal ash as structural fill to notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet the chemical limits or physical property requirements in § 290.201 (relating to coal ash certification). This requirement was moved from Chapter 290, Subchapter C to Chapter 290, Subchapter B to clarify that it applies to the end user. The time frame was added to clarify that this notification should occur quickly after the evidence is discovered by the end user.

Final-form § 290.103

 Proposed subsection (a), which established that coal ash may be beneficially used as a soil substitute or soil amendment without a permit if the user complies with this section, was deleted in the final-form regulation because it is addressed in § 290.101(a) (relating to general requirements for beneficial use).

 Subsection (a) establishes the written proposal requirements for coal ash to be used as a soil substitute or soil amendment. This written proposal includes a description of the project, including maps, estimated project starting and completion dates, construction plans, estimated volume of coal ash to be utilized, chemical analysis of the coal ash and soil at placement site, an analysis showing the coal ash will be beneficial to productivity or soil properties and landowner consent.

 Subsection (b) establishes that the Department will respond to the notifier in writing as to whether their final-form use is consistent with this section.

 Subsection (c) establishes additional requirements for coal ash used as a soil substitute or soil amendment, including coal ash and soil pH, calcium carbonate equivalency, surface runoff minimization and stormwater management, surface water diversion, application rate, protection of biota and dust minimization. It specifies that coal ash must be either incorporated within 24 hours or stored in accordance with Chapter 290, Subchapter E (relating to coal ash storage).

 Subsection (d) establishes siting restrictions for coal ash used as a soil substitute or soil amendment, including distances from streams, water sources, occupied dwellings, sinkholes and areas draining into sinkholes and wetlands. A siting restriction of 300 feet from exceptional value waters and high quality waters was added to protect these special protection waters.

 Subsection (e) establishes cumulative contaminant loading rates for coal ash used as a soil substitute or soil amendment.

 Subsection (f) adds recordkeeping requirements to the final-form regulation. The items subject to recordkeeping include chemical analysis and quantity of coal ash utilized, which are necessary to determine cumulative loading rates, as well as source of the coal ash and placement location.

 Subsection (g) was added to the final-form regulation to require the person beneficially using coal ash as a soil amendment or soil substitute to notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet the chemical limits or physical property requirements in § 290.201. This requirement was moved from Chapter 290, Subchapter C to Chapter 290, Subchapter B to clarify that it applies to the end user. The time frame was added to clarify that this notification should occur quickly after the evidence is discovered by the end user.

Final-form § 290.104

 Subsection (a) establishes the laws and regulations upon which this section is based.

 Subsection (b) establishes the procedures for requesting beneficial use of certified coal ash at a specific mine site.

 Subsection (c) establishes the amount of the permit filing fee for permits that will be beneficially using coal ash and where the money will be deposited. This fee was reduced from $2,000 to $1,000 per year after final placement of coal ash at the site. The costs to monitor sites incurred by the Department after completion of coal ash placement are expected to be less than the costs during active placement.

 Subsection (d) establishes a requirement for public notice.

 Subsection (e) establishes appropriate beneficial uses for coal ash at active coal mine sites.

 Subsection (f) establishes operational requirements for beneficial use of coal ash at active coal mines. The final-form regulation allows a greater quantity of ash to be beneficially used at a site if the operator can demonstrate that the greater quantity will enhance the reclamation or improve water quality. In addition, the greater quantity may be utilized at a site that is part of a multiple-site project involving multiple coal refuse reprocessing sites. The requirement to run the Proctor Test on each source of coal ash was dropped from the final-form regulation. The requirement that the Proctor Test be conducted by a certified lab was also dropped in the final-form regulation because the Department was unable to find an organization that certifies labs for that procedure.

 Subsection (g) establishes operational requirements for beneficial use of coal ash when used as a soil substitute or soil additive.

 Subsection (h) establishes operational requirements for the beneficial use of coal ash at coal refuse disposal sites.

 Subsection (i) establishes the requirement for mine site monitoring of coal ash. The final-form regulation allows for a reduced coal ash sampling frequency for end users where the coal ash being utilized is from a single source and the source is close to the placement area.

 Subsection (j) establishes annual reporting requirements pertaining to the amount and sources of ash used at a mine site.

 Subsection (k) was added to the final-form regulation to require the person beneficially using the coal ash at a mining activity site to notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet the certification requirements in § 290.201. This requirement was moved from Chapter 290, Subchapter C to Chapter 290, Subchapter B to clarify that it applies to the end user. The time frame was added to clarify that this notification should occur quickly after the evidence is discovered by the end user.

Final-form § 290.105

 The term ''abandoned coal surface mine'' has been changed to ''abandoned mine lands'' to provide clarity. ''Abandoned mine lands'' is defined in § 86.252 (relating to definitions).

 Subsection (a) establishes procedures and requirements for the use of coal ash at abandoned mine lands. The final-form regulation requires the approval to be under a contract with the Department. The Department does not have the authority to issue approvals without a contract for reclamation of abandoned mine lands.

 Subsection (b) establishes the elements required in a contract proposal to use coal ash at abandoned mine lands.

 Subsection (c) includes a requirement to publish a public notice in local newspapers of the final-form use of coal ash at abandoned mine lands involving use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons in total at any site. The final-form regulation also includes notification to the local municipalities.

 Subsection (d) establishes that the Department will publish a notice in the Pennsylvania Bulletin of each approved use of coal ash at abandoned mine lands.

 Subsection (e) establishes additional requirements for coal ash used at abandoned mine lands including: maximum slope of the reclaimed area; compaction and layer thickness; runoff minimization and stormwater management; surface water diversion; cover; minimum compaction; dust minimization; minimum distances for ash placement from streams, water sources, sinkholes and areas draining into sinkholes; floodplains; and requirements for the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive at abandoned mine lands. The pH range was dropped in the final-form regulation as it conflicted with the pH limitation in § 290.201.

 Subsection (f) establishes the annual reporting requirements pertaining to the amount and sources of coal ash used at abandoned mine lands.

 Subsection (g) was added to the final-form regulation to require the person beneficially using coal ash at abandoned mine lands to notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet the certification requirements in § 290.201(a). This requirement was moved from Chapter 290, Subchapter C to Chapter 290, Subchapter B to clarify that it applies to the end user. The time frame was added to clarify that this notification should occur quickly after the evidence is discovered by the end user.

Final-form § 290.106

 Proposed subsection (a), which established that coal ash may be beneficially used as a soil substitute or soil amendment without a permit if the user complies with this section, was deleted from the final-form regulation, since it is addressed in § 290.101(a).

 Subsection (a) identifies specific other uses of coal ash and requirements for storage and use. These other uses of coal ash include use in concrete, extraction or recovery of materials and chemicals from coal ash, use of fly ash as a stabilized product, use of bottom ash or boiler slag as antiskid or surface preparation material, use of coal ash as a raw material for a product with commercial value, use as pipe bedding and use for mine subsidence control, mine fire control and mine sealing. The final-form regulation adds use in cement and use of coal ash as fuel to the other beneficial uses.

 The use as a stabilized product has been modified in the final-form regulation to indicate that if the stabilized product is used as structural fill or as a soil amendment or soil substitute, it must also meet the requirements in §§ 290.102 or 209.103 (relating to use as structural fill; and use as a soil substitute or soil additive), respectively. The use of coal ash as drainage material has been deleted from the final-form regulation since this involves contact with water and the intent with the final-form regulation is to minimize contact with water.

 The use of coal ash for mine subsidence control, mine fire control and mine sealing in the final-form regulation requires the person beneficially using coal ash to demonstrate that its use will not cause groundwater contamination. Since these particular uses may be within 8 feet of the water table, the final-form regulation requires the coal ash to undergo cementitious reaction after placement.

 The final-form regulations allow beneficial use of coal ash with a minimum heating value of 5,000 Btu per pound as a fuel.

 Subsection (b) was added to the final-form regulation to require the person beneficially using coal ash for these other beneficial uses to notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet the appropriate chemical standards or physical property requirements in § 290.201(a). This requirement was moved from Chapter 290, Subchapter C to Chapter 290, Subchapter B to clarify that it applies to the end user. The time frame was added to clarify that this notification should occur quickly after the evidence is discovered by the end user.

Final-form § 290.107

 Subsection (a) requires persons beneficially using coal ash to provide documentation and information to demonstrate compliance with this subchapter upon the Department's request.

 Subsection (b) establishes that failure to have documentation of compliance with this subchapter may lead to a presumption that the person is disposing residual waste without a permit.

Subchapter C. Coal Ash Certification

Final-form § 290.201

 Subsection (a) establishes the chemical and physical certification standards for coal ash to meet beneficial use requirements. Chemical leaching standards are established. Low permeability standards are established for ashes that will be used as low permeability material. The final-form regulation allows addition of cement or lime to meet the standards and require disclosure of their addition in the certification request. Minimum calcium carbonate equivalence standards are established for ashes that will be used for alkaline addition. The final-form regulation has lowered the standard for selenium due to an indication from monitoring data that selenium leachability is higher than predicted based on the modeling used to develop standards for other species. Monitoring data has not indicated that there is environmental harm from sulfate when coal ash is beneficially used; therefore, the sulfate standard has been increased in the final-form regulation. The standard for fluoride has been dropped in the final-form regulation, as the Department has insufficient data to determine what an appropriate fluoride standard should be or if it is even necessary. Fluoride determinations in the coal ash and water quality monitoring remain a requirement of these regulations and the data generated will allow the Department to address this issue in a future rulemaking, if necessary.

 Proposed subsection (b), establishing certification exceptions for ashes that meet primary Maximum Contaminant Level (MCL) parameters, but fail to meet a secondary MCL parameter, has been deleted in the final-form rulemaking. The exceptions require a site-specific evaluation and are not appropriate for Statewide certification.

 Subsection (b) in the final-form rulemaking establishes informational requirements to be provided by the coal combustion waste generator, including sampling and analysis of the ash. The final-form regulation clarifies that it is the generator that can request certification and that only the pollution control devices that can impact the chemical or physical properties of the ash need to be identified in the request. The final-form regulation allows the Department to require a different leaching procedure than the specified EPA Method 1312 if other leaching procedures become available that more accurately predict the leaching behavior of coal ash.

 Subsection (c) establishes that the Department will provide written notification to the generator of the Department's decision on whether the generator's coal combustion waste is certified. If the certification requirements are met, the Department will provide a certification identifier. The term was changed from ''certification identification number'' to ''certification identifier'' in the final-form regulation because the identifier is alphanumeric.

 Subsection (d) establishes coal combustion waste monitoring requirements. The final-form regulation clarifies that reanalysis is required when a change in the fuel source exists that could alter the chemical characteristic or physical properties of the coal combustion waste that could adversely impact beneficial use.

 Subsection (e) requires the generator of the coal combustion waste to notify the Department of any changes that may affect the coal ash certification. In the final-form regulation, notification by the person beneficially using the coal ash to has been moved to the individual beneficial uses in Chapter 290, Subchapter B, since Chapter 290, Subchapter C applies to generators.

Final-form § 290.202

 Subsection (a) establishes procedures for revoking coal ash certification for coal combustion waste that fails to meet certification requirements. The final-form regulation clarifies that certification will be revoked if the generator fails to demonstrate that any exceedence was due to laboratory error or an anomalous result.

 Subsection (b) establishes that coal combustion waste with a revoked certification cannot be used at mine sites.

 Subsection (c) establishes the procedures for recertifying a revoked coal combustion waste, including resampling and establishing adequacy of chemical and physical properties.

Final-form § 290.203

 This section establishes procedures when exceedances of certification standards occur. The final-form regulation requires the generator to submit documentation within 30 days to demonstrate that any exceedence was due to laboratory error or an anomalous result.

Subchapter D. Water Quality Monitoring

Final-form § 290.301

 Subsection (a) establishes that water quality monitoring plans must be submitted to the Department for approval. The specific citations to when a plan is required have been replaced by the more general reference to Chapter 290.

 Subsection (b) establishes the content of water quality monitoring plans, including the location and design of upgradient and downgradient monitoring points, provisions for background sampling prior to placement of coal ash and quarterly sampling after approval. The final-form regulation does not allow the Department to reduce the number of monitoring points or the frequency of water quality monitoring.

 Subsection (c) establishes sources of quality assurance/quality control procedures for sampling and in the laboratory.

 Subsection (d) establishes sources of analytical methods used for water quality monitoring and that the laboratory must be accredited.

 Subsection (e) specifies the nonmetal parameters to be determined in water monitoring samples. The final-form regulation requires measurement of pH in both the field and laboratory.

 Subsection (f) specifies the metal parameters to be determined in water monitoring samples and that water elevation at monitoring point be recorded.

 Subsection (g) gives the Department the ability to require additional parameters based on site conditions. The final-form regulation also gives the Department the ability to require additional parameters based on characteristics of the coal ash.

 Subsection (h) specifies the minimum frequency and duration of water quality monitoring and allows the Department to require more frequent or longer water quality monitoring if results indicate contamination may be occurring.

 Subsection (i) specifies the frequency that water quality monitoring data is to be submitted to the Department. The final-form regulation indicates that this data must be submitted quarterly until 5 years after final placement when the frequency is reduced to annually for 5 additional years.

 Subsection (j) establishes that attainment with groundwater remediation standards must be demonstrated if there is water degradation due to placement of coal ash.

Final-form § 290.302

 Subsection (a) establishes parameters for the location and number of upgradient and downgradient groundwater monitoring points and that surface water monitoring points must be approved by the Department. The final-form regulation allows the Department to require upstream surface water monitoring where downstream surface water monitoring is required.

 Subsection (b) establishes that the number, location and depth of monitoring points must be representative of water quality and located so as not to interfere with site operations. The subsection also specifies the maximum distance from the coal ash placement site. The final-form regulation allows the maximum distance to be measured from the coal ash placement site or the mining activity area since the maximum distance from the placement area could be in the active mining area. It would be difficult to maintain the integrity of a monitoring well in an area where active mining is occurring. The final-form regulation allows the Department to approve monitoring points at greater distances if their locations are better for water quality monitoring purposes.

 Subsection (c) establishes that upgradient monitoring points be located where they will not be affected by coal ash placement.

 Subsection (d) establishes that downgradient monitoring points be located where they will not be affected by coal ash placement.

 Subsection (e) establishes that well drillers shall be licensed.

 Subsection (f) specifies that well construction materials be decontaminated prior to installation.

Final-form § 290.303

 Subsection (a) establishes well standards, including casing, diameter, screening, filter packing, visibility above ground, and annular space sealing and must be designed to prevent cross contamination. The section also allows alternative casing designs for wells located in stable formations. The final-form regulation allows the Department to approve alternatives to the filter packing requirements since filter packing is not possible when the monitoring well is within a mine void. The requirement for the monitoring wells to be clearly visible due to concerns with vandalism has been deleted in the final-form regulation.

 Subsection (b) establishes standards for protective casings around well casings, including strength, length above and below surface of ground, collar and grouting, labeling, protrusion above well casing, locked cap and material of construction. The requirement for the monitoring wells to be painted in a highly visible color due to concerns with vandalism has been deleted in the final-form regulation.

Final-form § 290.304

 Subsection (a) establishes when an assessment plan is to be submitted based on monitoring data or data from public or private water supplies. The final-form regulation clarifies that the changes in water quality that trigger the requirement for an assessment must be statistically significant degradation, not just any change. The methods for determining whether a change is statistically significant are specified by incorporating 40 CFR 258.53(g) and (h) (relating to ground-water sampling and analysis requirements) by reference.

 Proposed subsection (b) indicated an assessment is not required if resampling shows degradation is not occurring or if degradation is a result of seasonal variation or activities unrelated to coal ash placement. In the final-form regulation, the assessment is limited to data and a supporting narrative if it can be demonstrated that the degradation is a result of one of those reasons.

 Subsection (c) establishes the elements of an assessment plan, including monitoring point location, design and construction information, sampling and analytical methods to be used, an implementation schedule and identification of the abatement standard. The final-form regulation gives the Department the ability to require biological assessment of surface water as part of the assessment plan.

 Subsection (d) establishes Department approval and notification of public and private water supplies.

 Subsection (e) establishes report contents, including data, analysis and recommendations.

 Subsection (f) establishes procedures for submission of a revised water quality monitoring plan when an abatement plan is not required.

 Subsection (g) establishes that the Department may require abatement or water supply replacement prior to or concurrent with the assessment.

Final-form § 290.305

 Subsection (a) requires that an abatement plan be submitted to the Department when certain conditions exist. An abatement plan is required when an assessment indicates groundwater or surface water degradation and the analysis under subsection (c) indicates that an abatement standard will not be met at the compliance points. A plan is also required when data from the Department or other person from one or more compliance points indicates an abatement standard has been exceeded. The final-form regulation also requires abatement if a biological assessment of surface water indicates a detrimental effect on biota.

 Subsection (b) establishes the elements of an abatement plan, including identification of the specific methods or techniques to be used to abate degradation and to prevent future degradation and an implementation schedule.

 Subsection (c) establishes standards for abatement. In the final-form regulation, ''permitted'' was deleted from ''permitted coal ash placement area'' because only coal ash placement at mining activity sites require a permit. The guidelines used to assess health risk have been clarified in the final-form regulation by referencing the Department's Land Recycling Program Technical Guidance Manual. Flexibility has been built in by allowing use of other standard procedures commonly used in the environmental field.

 Subsection (d) allows a compliance point to be set for secondary contaminants beyond 500 feet on land owned by the owner of the coal ash placement area.

 Subsection (e) establishes a time limit for completion and submittal of abatement plans.

 Subsection (f) establishes that the Department may modify inadequate plans.

 Subsection (g) establishes a time frame for implementation of the abatement plan after approval.

 Subsection (h) establishes orders that may be issued by the Department if an abatement plan is found to be inadequate after approval or implementation.

Final-form § 290.306

 This section establishes recordkeeping requirements for water quality monitoring data.

Final-form § 290.307

 This section is new in the final-form rulemaking. Paragraph (1) establishes water quality monitoring requirements and transition times for sites where coal ash has been and will continue to be beneficially used or stored that were previously not subject to water quality monitoring.

 Paragraph (2) establishes water quality monitoring requirements and transition times for sites where coal ash has been and will continue to be beneficially used or stored that were previously subject to water quality monitoring.

Subchapter E. Coal Ash Storage

Final-form § 290.401

 Subsection (a) establishes that best engineering design and construction practices are to be used for all phases of construction and operation.

 Subsection (b) specifies that coal ash storage is not to exceed the design capacity of the storage facility.

 Subsection (c) specifies that the Department may require a water quality monitoring system to be installed if coal ash storage has the potential to cause groundwater degradation.

 Subsection (d) specifies that the person storing coal ash shall periodically inspect the storage facility for evidence of failure and take any necessary immediate corrective actions. Records of inspections and corrective actions are to be maintained for 3 years.

Final-form § 290.402

 Subsection (a) specifies general maximum storage time limits. The final-form regulation clarifies what is meant by ''previous year'' by adding that the year begins on January 1st. In the final-form regulation, proposed subsection (c) is incorporated into this subsection.

 Proposed subsection (b), which specified a maximum storage time limit for bottom ash, was deleted from the final-form regulation.

 Subsection (b) in the final-form rulemaking establishes that a person storing coal ash in a manner contrary to subsection (a) is presumed to be operating a disposal facility.

 Subsection (c) establishes operational record storage retention to overcome the presumption of disposal in subsection (a) or (b).

 Proposed subsection (f) was deleted as being unnecessary.

Final-form § 290.403

 Subsection (a) specifies minimization of surface water runoff from storage areas and stormwater management.

 Subsection (b) specifies minimization of surface water run-on to storage areas.

 Subsection (c) specifies that coal ash is not to be stored in a manner to cause degradation of groundwater. The final-form regulation expands this to include surface water protection.

Final-form § 290.404

 Subsection (a) establishes siting restrictions for coal ash storage other than in surface impoundments. Restrictions include distances from streams, water sources, bedrock outcrops, sinkholes and areas draining into sinkholes, and wetlands. Siting restrictions for exceptional value waters and high quality waters have been added in the final-form regulation since these are considered special protection waters. These siting restrictions do not apply when coal ash storage is totally enclosed and on an impermeable floor.

 Subsection (b) establishes siting restrictions for coal ash storage in surface impoundments. Restrictions include distances from floodplains, streams, water sources, bedrock outcrops, occupied dwellings, property lines, sinkholes and areas draining into sinkholes, wetlands, schools, parks and playgrounds and areas underlain by limestone or carbonate formations or areas serving as habitat for endangered or threatened flora or fauna. Siting restrictions for exceptional value waters and high quality waters have been added, since these are considered special protection waters. The provision for waiver of the siting restriction from public or private water sources by the owner of the water supply in the proposed regulation has been revised to only allow the waiver for private water sources in the final-form regulation. The waiver language for the distance from a school building, park or playground was deleted from the final-form regulation.

 Subsection (c) has been added to the final-form regulation to establish siting restrictions for temporary coal ash storage piles (less than 2 weeks in duration). Restrictions include distances from streams and wetlands.

Final-form § 290.405

 Subsection (a) establishes a requirement to minimize dispersion of coal ash from storage piles.

 Subsection (b) establishes separation distance from the water table for coal ash stored in piles.

 Subsection (c) establishes a requirement for berms around storage piles, collection of runoff and leachate, and, when necessary, treatment of runoff and leachate. The final-form regulation does not require berms for temporary coal ash storage piles due to the short existence of these piles.

 Subsection (d) establishes that the Department may require groundwater monitoring for coal ash storage piles without liner systems or pads.

Final-form § 290.406

 Subsection (a) establishes that this section applies to storage of coal ash on liners or pads.

 Subsection (b) establishes performance and design criteria for the liner or pad related to leachate and runoff construction materials and construction standards that address the integrity and permiability of the liner or pad and any adverse effects from coal ash. Inspections must be performed during construction and installation. Subsection (c) provides for a monitoring system to determine whether coal ash or leachate has penetrated the liner or pad, if required by the Department.

Final-form § 290.407

 Subsection (a) establishes that storage piles with a pad or liner system must have leachate and runoff collection and a leachate storage system. The final-form regulation clarifies that the leachate and runoff can be directly sent to a treatment system instead of a leachate storage system.

 Subsection (b) establishes design requirements for the leachate storage system that must consist of tanks or impoundments. The requirements address sizing, chemical compatibility, strength, cleanouts and sealing.

 Subsection (c) establishes that leachate treatment or disposal must be in accordance with the CSL.

Final-form § 290.408

 Subsection (a) establishes that this section and §§ 290.409—290.415 apply to surface impoundments used to store coal ash prior to beneficial use. The citations in the final-form regulation were expanded to include the sections for interim requirements.

 Subsection (b) establishes that this section and §§ 290.409—290.415 apply to surface impoundments used to store only stormwater. The citations in the final-form regulation were corrected and expanded to include the sections for interim requirements.

 Subsection (c) establishes a definition of stormwater for this section.

Final-form § 290.409

 This section establishes that a coal ash surface impoundment must be permitted under the CSL and comply with requirements in Chapter 105 (relating to dam safety and waterway management).

Final-form § 290.410

 This section establishes design criteria for coal ash storage impoundments. The criteria include the liner system, subbase location in relation to water table, subbase performance criteria, leachate detection zone, liner performance criteria, protective cover performance criteria, leachate collection system performance criteria, leachate storage system, leachate collection and handling, and design, construction, operation and maintenance.

Final-form § 290.411

 Subsection (a) establishes minimum distance to be maintained between the bottom of the liner system's subbase and the water table.

 Subsection (b) specifies marking the edge of the liner.

 Subsection (c) establishes that a fence or barrier be maintained around the impoundment and the leachate collection and treatment system.

 Subsection (d) establishes fugitive air containment control measures for impoundments.

 Subsection (e) establishes that water quality monitoring is required for impoundments.

 Subsection (f) establishes coal ash removal performance requirements for impoundments and includes removal without damage to the impoundment, liner inspection, providing for the beneficial use of removed coal ash and ensuring coal ash is not accumulated speculatively.

Final-form § 290.412

 Subsection (a) establishes procedures and Department notification if impoundment fails.

 Subsection (b) establishes procedures to restore to service impoundments that have failed.

 Subsection (c) establishes closure for failed impoundments that cannot be cleaned up in a manner satisfactory to the Department.

Final-form § 290.413

 This section establishes that the Department will inspect coal ash storage impoundments.

Final-form § 290.414

 This section establishes closure of storage areas, including removal of coal ash and, if required by the Department, regrading and revegetation. The final-form regulation also requires removal of other materials as part of closure.

Final-form § 290.415

 This section is new and provides 1 year for storage sites previously meeting the requirements in rescinded § 299.153 to meet the new storage requirements unless they are able to demonstrate that the existing storage is protective.

F. Summary of Comments and Responses on the Proposed Rulemaking

 The Board received 285 comments regarding the proposed beneficial use of coal ash regulations during the public hearings and public comment period. The comments were received from over 1,100 commentators, including 13 industry organizations, 7 environmental groups, the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry and the Independent Regulatory Review Commission (IRRC). The commentators ranged from those who consider the current regulations to be sufficient to those who believe the beneficial use of coal ash should be stopped. Most commentators' opinions fell between these two views and many of their comments led to changes in the final-form rulemaking.

 Many commentators noted that after decades of reclamation projects using ash, there have not been negative impacts to the environment. Therefore, implementation of additional requirements is unnecessary and burdensome to industry and may prevent further beneficial use. As stated in the purpose for this final-form rulemaking, the Board saw that there was a need to codify policy into enforceable regulations. The Board also considered the improvements in water quality monitoring and coal ash characterization suggested by the National Academy of Sciences' study and public interest. The final-form rulemaking meets the stated purpose. Changes have been made to lessen the impact on industry. In § 290.2(c) (relating to scope), ash from co-firing alternative fuels with coal can be managed as coal ash. Section 290.104(f) (relating to beneficial use at coal mining activity sites) provides flexibility for the management of ash from multiple small waste coal piles and the reclamation of those sites. Finally, the permit filing fee in § 290.104(c) has been reduced after coal ash placement is completed.

 Some commentators see any requirement that may be waived or modified as a loophole and want them all eliminated. Others want the Department to have the ability to waive or modify more of the regulatory requirements. Some ability to waive or modify specific requirements based on site conditions is necessary, as a ''one-size fits all'' approach will not be appropriate in all situations. However, the commentators raised some valid points that resulted in elimination, modification or the addition of waiver language. Examples include the following: elimination of the waiver in § 290.404(b)(10) (relating to areas where coal ash storage is prohibited) of the siting restriction for distance to a public water supply for a coal ash storage impoundment; change from being able to modify the length of background water quality monitoring to only being able to require a longer period in § 290.301(b)(2) (relating to water quality monitoring); and addition of the ability to waive well filter-packing requirements in § 290.303(a)(4) (relating to standards for wells and casing of wells).

 Some commentators believe that limiting the amount of coal ash to the amount of coal, coal refuse, culm or silt in proposed § 290.104(f) and water quality monitoring requirements in proposed § 290.301 will cause remediation of small piles to cease due to costs associated with water quality monitoring. The final-form rulemaking allows a greater quantity of ash to be beneficially used at a site if the site is part of a multiple-site project involving multiple coal refuse reprocessing sites. By allowing a greater quantity to be placed at one location of a multiple-site project, the water quality monitoring requirements can be limited to one site, rather than every small pile in the multisite project.

 Several commentators thought the definition of ''coal ash'' should be revised in the final-form regulations to allow ash produced by co-combustion of coal with alternative fuels to be considered to be coal ash. However, changing the definition of ''coal ash'' to include ash when alternative fuels are used would broaden its definition beyond the definition of ''coal ash'' in the SWMA. To accommodate the use of alternative fuels, the final-form rulemaking makes allowances in § 290.2(c) for the beneficial use of coal ash produced from co-firing coal with alternative fuels.

 Many commentators said that the 8-foot separation to groundwater should never be waived. While the Department had success with a demonstration project in which coal ash was placed directly into a water-filled surface mine, the National Academy of Sciences recommended that coal ash be kept out of direct contact with water. The Board agreed with this recommendation and removed the waiver language in final-form § 290.101(e). The 8-foot separation does not apply when coal ash is used for mine subsidence control, mine fire control or mine sealing in the final-form regulation, since the coal ash is required to undergo cementitious reactions for these uses, which will greatly reduce the leachability of the coal ash.

 Several commentators suggested replacing leach testing using EPA Method 1312 (Synthetic Precipitation Leaching Procedure) (SPLP) in proposed § 290.201(c)(5)(i) with a more costly (estimated by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to be $10,000 to $15,000 per sample) leaching procedure developed by Kosson at Vanderbilt University. The EPA is currently working on developing this new procedure, which they call the ''framework,'' into a standard procedure. Difficulties in adopting this ''framework'' procedure include the following: it has not been accepted as an approved, standard method; interpretation of the results is unclear; and it is a very costly procedure that would replace an inexpensive procedure that has proven itself to be protective. The Board recognizes that improved leaching procedures based on the ''framework'' or on other research could be developed in the future. The final-form rulemaking specifies use of SPLP, but provides the option for the Department to require a different procedure if and when available.

 There were many comments on what triggers the need for an assessment plan under § 290.304 (relating to assessment plan). Some commentators indicated a plan should be required when any increase above background occurs. Others indicated that a plan should be required only after an abatement standard is exceeded. Finally, others indicated that a plan should be required only when statistically significant degradation occurs. Some changes that may exceed background levels are actually beneficial, such as an increase in alkalinity at a site impacted by acid mine drainage, and should not trigger an assessment. Abatement standards may already be exceeded prior to coal ash placement at mine sites. The final-form rulemaking indicates that an assessment plan is required when statistically significant degradation occurs. A citation to the methods that may be used to determine what is statistically significant has been added.

 Some commentators thought liners should be required for any area where coal ash is placed. Coal ash meeting the strict chemical leaching standards for beneficial use in § 290.201 have not negatively affected ground or surface water resources. Liners are not required in the final-form rulemaking for sites where coal ash is to be beneficially used.

 Many commentators indicated that financial assurance should be required for all sites where coal ash is to be beneficially used and that the financial assurance should be adequate upfront to cover the cost of corrective action. Since by statutory definition, beneficially-used coal ash is not solid waste, the Department's ability to require bonding upfront is limited to permitted mine sites. It also has been the Department's position not to require bonding to cover corrective action when problems are not expected to occur, which is the case with beneficial use. The Department does have the ability when degradation occurs to then require financial assurances to cover the Commonwealth's costs for corrective action in case the responsible party does not take sufficient corrective measures. The requested change was not made in the final-form rulemaking.

 Since many of the requirements in the final-form rulemaking are new, some commentators requested grandfathering existing requirements or a timeline for complying with new requirements. Interim requirements have been added in §§ 290.307 and 290.415 (relating to interim water quality monitoring requirements; and interim requirements for sites where coal ash has been stored) for water quality monitoring and storage requirements. Many of the new requirements in these regulations, such as coal ash certification, have already been implemented under Departmental policies, so transition provisions in these areas are unnecessary.

 IRRC requested an explanation as to why the time frames in § 290.301 are appropriate and how the requirements will work with other Department regulations. There are three time frames for water quality monitoring in § 290.301: background sampling; sampling during coal ash placement; and sampling during post-placement.

 Twelve months of background samples allow for the collection of a complete year of data, which will reflect seasonal variations. This approach allows for comparison with future monitoring results. This approach has worked well for establishing baseline conditions in the Remining Program (Chapter 87, Subchapter F and Chapter 88, Subchapter G (relating to surface coal mines: minimum requirements for remining areas with pollutional discharges; and anthracite surface mining activities and anthracite bank removal and reclamation activities: minimum requirements for remining areas with pollutional discharges)).

 Quarterly sampling during active placement is designed to capture seasonal variations while limiting the cost of sampling. This has been the Bureau of Mining and Reclamation's standard monitoring approach for other aspects of the Commonwealth's mining program, and it has worked effectively.

 Regarding the 10 years of post-placement monitoring, comments received ranged from there should be no regulations (and presumably no monitoring) to suggesting that 30 years should be required. The length of post-placement monitoring is based on Department observations and experience with groundwater systems in coal-bearing rocks and coal mine settings.

G. Benefits, Costs and Compliance

Benefits

 The citizens of this Commonwealth will be better served by this final-form rulemaking, which is summarized as follows: increased coal ash monitoring to ensure coal ash meets certification criteria; increased water quality monitoring for a longer duration to create a robust data set to facilitate the evaluation and documentation of water quality at sites where coal ash is beneficially used; a requirement for minimum number of monitoring wells to characterize the groundwater or other water quality points; a requirement for recording a landowner consent for placement of coal ash for beneficial use; improved reporting requirements to track volumes and location of sites where coal ash is beneficially used; consistent operational and monitoring standards for all types of beneficial use; a centralized process to certify coal ash for beneficial use at mine sites; an annual fee payable to the Department to offset its costs for coal ash and water quality sampling and testing at mine sites where coal ash is beneficially used; and requirements for the storage of coal ash including provisions for design and operations.

 Most of the coal ash beneficially used in this Commonwealth for mine reclamation is used in areas that have existing ground and surface water contamination due to mine drainage. The use of coal ash at these sites is intended to prevent further degradation and, when site conditions are conducive, to provide an overall improvement in groundwater quality. Generally, coal ash is not beneficially used in areas with high quality groundwater, except in special circumstances. For instance, coal ash may be mixed with Portland cement, sand and aggregate to create a grout material and injected into mine voids as a remediation measure for mine subsidence.

Compliance Costs

 The Department has already implemented many of the measures that would be required in the final-form rulemaking. Guidance documents have implemented the increased monitoring requirements, including sampling frequency, additional chemical parameters to be tested and additional pre-ash placement and post-ash placement monitoring. Thus, most costs that would be associated with the final-form rulemaking are already part of the Department's program.

 The regulated community will be required to complete four water samples per year for each monitoring point. Typically, two to four monitoring points exist for each site resulting in a water monitoring cost of $2,400 to $4,800 per year. Four ash dry weight/leachate samples are required every year from the generation site. This results in a cost of approximately $2,000 per source. Compaction tests for use of coal ash as a structural fill and for mine reclamation must be conducted two times per year at a cost of approximately $150 per test.

 The final-form rulemaking imposes an annual assessment of a permit filing fee of $2,000 during coal ash placement and $1,000 post placement. This fee is required to assure that the Department has funds to conduct comparative sampling of the coal ash and water quality regarding individual coal ash beneficial use sites. This fee amount covers the cost of one ash sample (approximately $500) and five water samples (approximately $300 x 5) per year.

 Sampling requirements have increased from the previous regulations and the filing fee adds these additional costs. These costs are justified to assure protection of human health and aquatic life and to ensure operational and performance standards for beneficial use of coal ash.

 More than 11 million tons of coal ash has been beneficially used for mine reclamation each of the past several years. The estimated cost of disposing this material at a landfill would be at least $275 million per year. Costs of placement at mine sites are on the order of $55 million per year. Use of coal ash at mine sites as opposed to land filling the material is a savings to the industry of at least $220 million per year.

Compliance Assistance Plan

 The public will be informed through Department publications, the Internet and other mass media.

Paperwork Requirements

 The Department has developed standard forms for applying for beneficial use at a mine site and for requesting certification of coal ash sources for beneficial use. The operators and coal ash generators use these forms to report all monitoring.

 A person beneficially using the coal ash is expected to retain documentation to show that the coal ash used at the approved site was a source that was certified by the Department. Annual reports are required for use as structural fill, abandoned coal surface mine sites and at mining activity sites.

H. Pollution Prevention

 The Pollution Prevention Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C.A. §§ 13101—13109) establishes a National policy that promotes pollution prevention as the preferred means for achieving state environmental protection goals. The Department encourages pollution prevention, which is the reduction or elimination of pollution at its source, through the substitution of environmentally friendly materials, more efficient use of raw materials or the incorporation of energy efficiency strategies. Pollution prevention practices can provide greater environmental protection with greater efficiency because they can result in significant cost savings to facilities that permanently achieve or move beyond compliance. This final-form rulemaking will not modify the pollution prevention approach by the regulated community and maintains the multimedia pollution prevention approach of existing requirements in 25 Pa. Code (relating to environmental protection).

I. Sunset Review

 These regulations will be reviewed in accordance with the sunset review schedule published by the Department to determine whether the regulations effectively fulfill the goals for which they were intended.

J. Regulatory Review

 Under section 5(a) of the Regulatory Review Act (71 P. S. § 745.5(a)), on October 28, 2009, the Department submitted a copy of the notice of proposed rulemaking, published at 39 Pa.B. 6429 (November 7, 2009), to IRRC and the Chairpersons of the House and Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committees for review and comment.

 Under section 5(c) of the Regulatory Review Act, IRRC and the House and Senate Committees were provided with copies of the comments received during the public comment period, as well as other documents when requested. In preparing the final-form rulemaking, the Department has considered all comments from IRRC, the House and Senate Committees and the public.

 Under section 5.1(j.2) of the Regulatory Review Act (71 P. S. § 745.5a(j.2)), on October 20, 2010, the final-form rulemaking was deemed approved by the House and Senate Committees. Under section 5.1(e) of the Regulatory Review Act, IRRC met on October 21, 2010, and approved the final-form rulemaking.

K. Findings

 The Board finds that:

 (1) Public notice of proposed rulemaking was given under sections 201 and 202 of the act of July 31, 1968 (P. L. 769, No. 240) (45 P. S. §§ 1201 and 1202) and regulations promulgated thereunder, 1 Pa. Code §§ 7.1 and 7.2.

 (2) A public comment period was provided as required by law and all comments were considered.

 (3) These regulations do not enlarge the purpose of the proposed rulemaking published at 39 Pa.B. 6429.

 (4) These regulations are necessary and appropriate for administration and enforcement of the authorizing acts identified in Section C of this order.

L. Order

 The Board, acting under the authorizing statutes, orders that:

 (a) The regulations of the Department, 25 Pa. Code, are amended by amending §§ 287.1, 287.101 and 287.601, deleting §§ 287.661—287.666 and 299.153 and adding §§ 290.1, 290.2, 290.101—290.107, 290.201—290.203, 290.301—290.307 and 290.401—290.415 to read as set forth in Annex A, with ellipses referring to the existing text of the regulations.

 (Editor's Note: The addition of §§ 290.1, 290.307 and 290.415 and the deletion of § 299.153 were not included in the proposed rulemaking published at 39 Pa.B. 6429.)

 (b) The Chairperson of the Board shall submit this order and Annex A to the Office of General Counsel and the Office of Attorney General for review and approval as to legality and form, as required by law.

 (c) The Chairperson of the Board shall submit this order and Annex A to IRRC and the Senate and House Environmental Resources and Energy Committees as required by the Regulatory Review Act.

 (d) The Chairperson of the Board shall certify this order and Annex A and deposit them with the Legislative Reference Bureau, as required by law.

 (e) This order shall take effect immediately.

JOHN HANGER, 
Chairperson

 (Editor's Note: For the text of the order of the Independent Regulatory Review Commission relating to this document, see 40 Pa.B. 6487 (November 6, 2010).)

Fiscal Note: Fiscal Note 7-442 remains valid for the final adoption of the subject regulations.

Annex A

TITLE 25. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

PART I. DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION

Subpart D. ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND SAFETY

ARTICLE IX. RESIDUAL WASTE MANAGEMENT

CHAPTER 287. RESIDUAL WASTE MANAGEMENT—GENERAL PROVISIONS

Subchapter A. GENERAL

§ 287.1. Definitions.

 The following words and terms, when used in this article, have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

*  *  *  *  *

Coal ash—For purposes of Chapters 287 and 290, fly ash, bottom ash or boiler slag resulting from the combustion of coal, that is or has been beneficially used, reused or reclaimed for a commercial, industrial or governmental purpose. The term includes such materials that are stored, processed, transported or sold for beneficial use, reuse or reclamation. For purposes of Chapter 288 (relating to residual waste landfills), the term also includes fly ash, bottom ash or boiler slag resulting from the combustion of coal, that is not and has not been beneficially used, reused or reclaimed for a commercial, industrial or governmental purpose.

*  *  *  *  *

Solid waste—Waste, including, but not limited to, municipal, residual or hazardous waste, including solid, liquid, semisolid or contained gaseous materials. The term does not include coal ash that is beneficially used under Chapter 290 (relating to beneficial use of coal ash) or drill cuttings.

*  *  *  *  *

Structural fill—The engineered use of coal ash as a base or foundation for a construction activity that is completed promptly after the placement of the coal ash, including the use of coal ash as backfill for retaining walls, foundations, ramps or other structures. The term does not include valley fills or the use of solid waste to fill open pits from coal or noncoal mining.

*  *  *  *  *

Subchapter C. GENERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR PERMITS AND PERMIT APPLICATIONS

GENERAL

§ 287.101. General requirements for permit.

*  *  *  *  *

 (b) A person or municipality is not required to obtain a permit under this article, comply with the bonding or insurance requirements of Subchapter E (relating to bonding and insurance requirements) or comply with Subchapter B (relating to duties of generators) for one or more of the following:

*  *  *  *  *

 (3) The beneficial use of coal ash under Chapter 290 (relating to beneficial use of coal ash).

Subchapter H. BENEFICIAL USE

SCOPE

§ 287.601. Scope.

 (a) This subchapter sets forth requirements for the processing and beneficial use of residual waste. Sections 287.611, 287.612, 287.621—287.625, 287.631, 287.632, 287.641—287.643, 287.651 and 287.652 establish procedures and standards for general permits for the beneficial use or processing of residual waste.

*  *  *  *  *

§§ 287.661—287.666. (Reserved).

CHAPTER 290. BENEFICIAL USE OF COAL ASH

Subch.

A.GENERAL
B.BENEFICIAL USE OF COAL ASH
C.COAL ASH CERTIFICATION
D.WATER QUALITY MONITORING
E.COAL ASH STORAGE

Subchapter A. GENERAL

Sec.

290.1.Definitions.
290.2.Scope.

§ 290.1. Definitions.

 The following words and terms, when used in this chapter, have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise:

Temporary coal ash storage pile—A pile in which coal ash is stored for not more than 2 weeks.

Water table

 (i) The top of the saturated zone.

 (ii) The term includes the regional groundwater table, perched water tables, seasonal high water table and mine pools.

§ 290.2. Scope.

 (a) This chapter sets forth requirements for beneficial use of coal ash. Fly ash, bottom ash or boiler slag resulting from the combustion of coal that is not beneficially used in accordance with this chapter is a residual waste and is subject to regulation under other chapters in this article.

 (b) If coal ash is mixed with residual waste, the beneficial use must be authorized by a permit issued under Chapter 287, Subchapter H (relating to beneficial use) and the requirements of this chapter must be met.

 (c) If coal ash is produced by co-firing coal or waste coal with an alternative fuel:

 (1) Beneficial use of that material is regulated under this chapter as coal ash if the alternative fuel is less than 20% by weight of the total fuel mixture, as burned, and contributes less than 10% by weight of total ash quantity.

 (2) Beneficial use must be authorized by a permit issued under Chapter 287, Subchapter H and the requirements of this chapter must be met if the alternative fuel is equal to or greater than 20% by weight of the total fuel mixture, as burned, or contributes equal to or greater than 10% by weight of total ash quantity.

 (d) If coal ash is mixed with construction and demolition waste, the beneficial use must be authorized under a permit issued under Article VIII (relating to municipal waste) and the requirements of this chapter must be met.

 (e) Coal ash mixed with municipal waste, other than construction and demolition waste, may not be beneficially used by direct placement into the environment. Other types of beneficial use of coal ash mixed with municipal waste may be authorized by a permit issued under Article VIII and any applicable requirements of this chapter must be met.

 (f) Beneficial use activities that are subject to and meet the requirements of this chapter are not required to obtain an individual disposal permit under this article.

Subchapter B. BENEFICIAL USE OF COAL ASH

Sec.

290.101.General requirements for beneficial use.
290.102.Use as structural fill.
290.103.Use as a soil substitute or soil additive.
290.104.Beneficial use at coal mining activity sites.
290.105.Beneficial use at abandoned mine lands.
290.106.Other beneficial uses.
290.107.Requests for information.

§ 290.101. General requirements for beneficial use.

 (a) Coal ash may be beneficially used without a permit from the Department under the act if the person proposing the use complies with this chapter.

 (b) Chemical analysis must demonstrate that the coal ash does not exceed any of the maximum acceptable leachate levels in § 290.201(a) (relating to coal ash certification) when coal ash is proposed to be used under §§ 290.102—290.105 or § 290.106(a)(3) or (7). The minimum sampling and analysis procedures must satisfy the requirements in § 290.201(b) and (d).

 (c) The coal ash must satisfy the physical characteristics for the intended use in § 290.201(a).

 (d) A water quality monitoring plan in accordance with § 290.301 (relating to water quality monitoring) and, if applicable, Chapters 86—90 shall be developed and implemented if either more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total will be used as structural fill at a coal mining activity site or at an abandoned mine land site. Contiguous projects will be considered a single project for purposes of this section. The Department may require a water quality monitoring plan for projects involving lesser quantities of coal ash or for other beneficial uses of coal ash where site conditions warrant.

 (e) Coal ash may not be placed within 8 feet of the water table, except where coal ash is used for mine subsidence control, mine fire control or mine sealing under § 290.106(a)(7) (relating to other beneficial uses).

 (f) Coal ash may not be used in a way that causes water pollution.

§ 290.102. Use as structural fill.

 (a) At least 60 days before using coal ash as structural fill, the person proposing the use shall submit a written proposal to the Department. The written proposal must contain, at a minimum, the following information:

 (1) A description of the nature, purpose and location of the project, including a topographic map showing the project and available soils maps of the area of the project.

 (2) The estimated beginning and ending dates for the project.

 (3) Construction plans for the structural fill, including a stability analysis when necessary, which shall be prepared by a licensed professional engineer in accordance with sound engineering practices and which shall be signed and sealed by the engineer.

 (4) An estimate of the volume of coal ash to be used for the project.

 (5) A total chemical and leaching analysis under § 290.201(a)(1) and (2) (relating to coal ash certification) for the coal ash to be used in the project. If the coal ash was generated at a facility for which the Department has previously approved a chemical and leaching analysis and the analysis is not older than 1 year, the person may submit a copy of the analysis that was approved.

 (6) A signed statement by the owner of the land on which the structural fill is to be placed, acknowledging and consenting to the beneficial use of coal ash as structural fill.

 (7) The statement by the landowner in paragraph (6) shall be a recordable document for any project, or set of contiguous projects involving placement of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total per project. Prior to beneficial use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total per project under this section, the statement by the landowner shall be recorded at the office of the recorder of deeds in the county in which the proposed coal ash beneficial use will take place.

 (b) A person proposing to use coal ash as structural fill where more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre will be used on a project or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total will be used at a project shall place, at the time of filing a written proposal with the Department, a public notice in a local newspaper of general circulation in the locality of the proposed coal ash beneficial use activities at least once a week for 3 consecutive weeks. Contiguous projects will be considered a single project for purposes of this section. A copy of the public notice shall be provided to the local municipality and proof of public notice shall be submitted to the Department. At a minimum, the public notice must contain the following information:

 (1) The name and business address of the person proposing to beneficially use coal ash.

 (2) A brief description of the location and scope of the proposed beneficial use.

 (3) The location of the Department office where a copy of the written proposal submitted to the Department is available for public inspection.

 (c) The Department may require public notice for projects involving less than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or less than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total if the Department determines that the proposed beneficial use activities are of significant interest to the public or site conditions warrant.

 (d) The Department will publish a summary of each written proposal in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

 (e) After receiving the information required under subsection (a), the Department will inform, in writing, the person that provided the information whether the proposed use of coal ash as structural fill is consistent with this section.

 (f) For coal ash being beneficially used as a structural fill, the following additional requirements must be satisfied:

 (1) The pH of the coal ash as placed must be 7.0 or above, unless otherwise approved by the Department. Lime may be added to raise pH. The pH of the coal ash may not be above 9.0 during placement and storage at the site of placement unless public access is restricted.

 (2) The slope of a structural fill may not be greater than 2.5 horizontal to 1.0 vertical. The Department may approve a greater slope based on a demonstration of structural stability.

 (3) Coal ash shall be spread uniformly and compacted in layers not exceeding 2 feet in thickness. The coal ash shall be spread and compacted within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless stored in accordance with Subchapter E (relating to coal ash storage).

 (4) Surface runoff from the fill area shall be minimized during filling and construction activity. Stormwater shall be managed in accordance with The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (5) Surface water shall be diverted away from the disturbed area during filling and construction activity.

 (6) Coal ash shall be covered with 12 inches of soil, unless infiltration is prevented by other cover material.

 (7) Coal ash must achieve a minimum compaction of 90% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Modified Proctor Test, or 95% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Standard Proctor Test.

 (8) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (g) Coal ash used as structural fill may not be located:

 (1) Within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream or within 300 feet of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1 (relating to definitions), unless the structural fill is otherwise protected by a properly engineered diversion or structure that is permitted by the Department under the Dam Safety and Encroachments Act (32 P. S. §§ 693.1—693.27).

 (2) Within 300 feet of a water supply unless the person obtains, in a form acceptable to the Department, a written waiver from the owner of the water supply, allowing for another distance.

 (3) Within 25 feet of a bedrock outcrop, unless the outcrop is properly treated to minimize infiltration into fractured zones or otherwise approved by the Department.

 (4) Within 100 feet of a sinkhole or area draining into a sinkhole.

 (5) Within a 100-year floodplain of a water of this Commonwealth, unless a properly engineered dike, levee or other structure that can protect the structural fill from a 100-year flood is permitted by the Department in a manner that is consistent with the Flood Plain Management Act (32 P. S. §§ 679.101—679.601), the Storm Water Management Act (32 P. S. §§ 680.1—680.17) and the Dam Safety and Encroachments Act.

 (6) In or within 100 feet of a wetland, other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (7) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.

 (h) A person that proposed more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total at any project or contiguous projects shall submit to the Department prior to January 31 an annual report for the previous calendar year that includes contact information, the location of the site where the coal ash was utilized, the identity of each source of coal ash, and the volume in cubic yards and the weight in dry tons for each source.

 (i) A person beneficially using coal ash under this section shall notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the material does not meet the chemical standards or physical property requirements in § 290.201.

§ 290.103. Use as a soil substitute or soil additive.

 (a) At least 60 days before using coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive, the person proposing the use shall submit a written proposal to the Department. The written proposal must contain, at a minimum, the following information:

 (1) A description of the nature, purpose and location of the project, including a topographic map showing the project area and available soils maps of the project area. The description must include an explanation of how coal ash will be stored prior to use, how the soil will be prepared for the application of coal ash, how coal ash will be spread and, when necessary, how coal ash will be incorporated into the soil.

 (2) The estimated beginning and ending dates for the project.

 (3) An estimate of the volume of coal ash to be used for the project, the proposed application rate and a justification for the proposed application rate.

 (4) A total chemical and leaching analysis and pH under § 290.201(a)(1) and (2) (relating to coal ash certification) for the coal ash to be used in the project. If the coal ash was generated at a facility for which the Department has previously approved a chemical and leaching analysis and the analysis is not older than 1 year, the person may submit a copy of the analysis that was approved.

 (5) A chemical analysis for constituents listed in subsection (e) of the soil on which the coal ash is proposed to be placed.

 (6) An analysis showing how the application of coal ash will be beneficial to the productivity or properties of the soil to which it is proposed to be applied. The analysis shall be prepared and signed by an expert in soil science.

 (7) A signed statement by the owner of the land on which the coal ash is to be placed, acknowledging and consenting to the use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive.

 (b) After receiving the information required by subsection (a), the Department will inform, in writing, the person that provided the information whether the proposed use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive is consistent with this section.

 (c) Coal ash used as a soil substitute or soil additive may not be considered a beneficial use unless the following requirements are met:

 (1) The pH of the coal ash and the pH of the soil must be in the range of 6.5 to 8.0 when mixed together in the manner required by the project, as shown by field and laboratory testing. Lime may be added to raise pH.

 (2) Chemical analysis demonstrates the coal ash satisfies the minimum calcium carbonate equivalency requirement in § 290.201(a).

 (3) Surface runoff from the project area shall be controlled during the project. Stormwater shall be managed in accordance with The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (4) Coal ash shall be incorporated into the soil within 48 hours of application, unless otherwise approved by the Department. The coal ash shall be incorporated into the top 1-foot layer of surface soil. If 1 foot of surface soil is not present, coal ash may be combined with the surface soil that is present until the layer of combined surface soil and coal ash is 1 foot. The coal ash required for the beneficial use is limited to the amount necessary to enhance soil properties or plant growth.

 (5) Coal ash shall be applied at a rate per acre that will protect public health, public safety and the environment.

 (6) Coal ash may not be applied to soil being used for agriculture where the soil pH is less than 5.5.

 (7) Coal ash may not be applied if resultant chemical or physical soil conditions would be detrimental to biota.

 (8) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (d) Coal ash may not be used as a soil substitute or soil additive:

 (1) Within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream, other than exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1 (relating to definitions), or a wetland other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (2) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland, or of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (3) Within 300 feet of a water supply unless the person obtains, in a form acceptable to the Department, a written waiver from the owner of the water supply, allowing for another distance.

 (4) Within 100 feet of a sinkhole or area draining into a sinkhole.

 (5) Within 300 feet measured horizontally from an occupied dwelling, unless the current owner has provided a written waiver consenting to the activities closer than 300 feet. The waiver shall be knowingly made and separate from a lease or deed unless the lease or deed contains an explicit waiver from the current owner.

 (e) Coal ash may not be used as a soil substitute or soil amendment in amounts that exceed the following maximum cumulative loading rates:

Constituent Cumulative Loading Rate
arsenic 36 lbs/acre (41 kg/hectare)
boron 60 lbs/acre (67.2 kg/hectare)
cadmium 34 lbs/acre (38 kg/hectare)
chromium 2,672 lbs/acre (3,104 kg/hectare)
copper 1,320 lbs/acre (1,490 kg/hectare)
lead 264 lbs/acre (296 kg/hectare)
mercury 15 lbs/acre (17 kg/hectare)
molybdenum 16 lbs/acre (18 kg/hectare)
nickel 370 lbs/acre (420 kg/hectare)
selenium 88 lbs/acre (99 kg/hectare)
zinc 2,464 lbs/acre (2,780 kg/hectare)

 (f) A person subject to the requirements of this section shall retain records of chemical and physical analyses, the quantity of coal ash utilized, the location of placement and the sources of coal ash for a minimum of 3 years after the beneficial use has ceased. The records shall be made available to the Department upon request.

 (g) A person beneficially using coal ash under this section shall notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the material does not meet the chemical standards or physical property requirements in § 290.201.

§ 290.104. Beneficial use at coal mining activity sites.

 (a) Coal ash approval at coal mining activity sites. Approval for the beneficial use of coal ash at coal mining activity sites as defined in § 86.1 (relating to definitions) will, at a minimum, be based on the following:

 (1) Compliance with this section, The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and the regulations promulgated thereunder, the Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Act (52 P. S. §§ 1396.1—1396.19a), the Coal Refuse Disposal Control Act (52 P. S. §§ 30.51—30.66), the applicable provisions of Chapters 86—90 (relating to surface and underground coal mining: general, surface mining of coal, anthracite coal, underground mining of coal and coal preparation facilities, and coal refuse disposal), and other applicable environmental statutes and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (2) Certification under § 290.201 (relating to coal ash certification) by the Department for the intended beneficial uses.

 (3) Approval of a request submitted pursuant to subsection (b).

 (b) Request. A person shall submit to the Department a request to beneficially use the certified coal ash at a specific coal mining activity site as part of the reclamation plan under the mining permit. This request must contain the permit filing fee in subsection (c) and, at a minimum, the following:

 (1) A narrative description of the project, including an explanation of how coal ash will be placed, where and how coal ash will be stored prior to placement, identification of the sources of coal ash and an estimate of the cubic yards of coal ash to be used. For the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or additive, the proposed application rate and justification for the application rate shall also be included.

 (2) Information demonstrating that the coal ash has been certified for its intended use in accordance with § 290.201, including the identity of the generator and the Department-assigned certification identifier, as described in § 290.201(c).

 (3) A signed statement by the owner of the land on which the coal ash is to be placed, acknowledging and consenting to the placement of coal ash. This statement by the landowner shall be a recordable document. Prior to beneficial use of coal ash under this section, the statement by the landowner shall be recorded at the office of the recorder of deeds in the county in which the proposed beneficial use of coal ash will take place.

 (4) A monitoring plan that meets the requirements of Subchapter D (relating to water quality monitoring).

 (c) Permit filing fee.

 (1) A nonrefundable permit filing fee payable to the ''Commonwealth of Pennsylvania'' for the beneficial use of coal ash at a coal mining activity site is to be paid annually in the amount of:

 (i) $2,000 for each coal mining activity site approved to use coal ash until the year following final placement of coal ash at the site.

 (ii) $1,000 from the year following final placement of coal ash until final bond release has been issued for the coal mining activity site.

 (2) Money received from the permit filing fee for the beneficial use of coal ash will be deposited in the Surface Mining Conservation and Reclamation Fund and will be used by the Department for the cost of reviewing, administering and enforcing the requirements of the authorization for beneficial use of coal ash under the coal mining activity permit.

 (3) The Department will review the adequacy of the fees established in this section at least once every 3 years and provide a written report to the EQB. The report will identify any disparity between the amount of program income generated by the fees and the costs to administer these programs, and it shall contain recommendations to adjust fees to eliminate the disparity, including recommendations for regulatory amendments to adjust program fees.

 (d) Public notice. A person proposing to use coal ash at coal mining activity sites shall provide public notice under § 86.31 or § 86.54 (relating to public notices of filing of permit applications; and public notice of permit revision).

 (e) Operating requirements. The beneficial use of coal ash for reclamation purposes at a coal mining activity site shall be designed to achieve an overall improvement in water quality or shall be designed to prevent the degradation of water quality. Coal ash shall only be beneficially used for reclamation at the following locations:

 (1) The pit or area from which coal is extracted under a surface coal mining permit.

 (2) Abandoned mine lands located within the surface coal mining permit area.

 (3) Coal refuse disposal sites and coal refuse reprocessing sites.

 (4) Areas where other beneficial uses that are part of the approved reclamation plan at the coal mining activity site are being conducted.

 (f) Additional operating requirements for the placement of coal ash at permitted coal surface mining activity sites. Placement of coal ash at coal surface mining activity sites must comply with the following additional requirements:

 (1) The volume of coal ash placed at the site may not exceed the volume of coal, coal refuse, culm or silt removed from the site by the active mining operation on a cubic yard basis unless otherwise approved by the Department. The Department may authorize a greater volume of coal ash where the mine operator demonstrates that reclamation will be enhanced or water quality will be improved by the additional coal ash.

 (2) Placement of coal ash shall be accomplished by mixing with spoil material or by spreading in horizontal layers no greater than 2 feet thick unless otherwise approved by the Department. The reclamation plan of the approved mining permit must address the placement of the coal ash.

 (3) The coal ash shall be spread and compacted within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless stored in accordance with Subchapter E (relating to coal ash storage).

 (4) Where placement of coal ash is not being accomplished by mixing with spoil, the placed coal ash must achieve a minimum compaction of 90% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Modified Proctor Test, or 95% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Standard Proctor Test. The Proctor Test shall be conducted on a semiannual basis unless the Department requires more frequent testing.

 (5) For a project involving multiple refuse reprocessing sites, the Department may allow a greater volume of coal ash to be placed at an individual site than the volume of coal refuse removed from that site if the following conditions are met:

 (i) The multiple sites are a project involving the coordinated use of multiple coal refuse reprocessing sites.

 (ii) A reclamation plan is approved for each of the sites and each plan identifies the total cubic yards of coal ash that may be placed at each site.

 (iii) The total cubic yards of coal ash placed on the sites is less than the total cubic yards of refuse, culm or silt removed from the combined sites.

 (iv) The project shall be designed to achieve an overall improvement of surface water or groundwater quality at each site, where acid mine drainage is evident. If acid mine drainage is not evident, the project shall be designed to prevent degradation of the surface or groundwater quality.

 (v) Only coal ash from the project can be used.

 (vi) The project shall be accomplished in a manner that blends into the general surface configuration and complements the surface drainage pattern of the surrounding landscape.

 (6) The person shall maintain information identifying the sources and the volume in cubic yards and the weight in dry tons of coal ash used.

 (7) The site shall be monitored in accordance with the requirements of Subchapter D (relating to water quality monitoring) and any additional hydrologic tests specified by the Department.

 (8) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (g) Additional operating requirements for the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive. The following apply to the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive:

 (1) Coal ash shall be applied at a rate per acre that will protect public health, public safety and the environment.

 (2) The coal ash that is applied will be part of the approved reclamation plan of the coal mining activity in order to increase the productivity or properties of the soil.

 (3) The coal ash is not used in amounts that exceed the maximum cumulative loading rates in § 290.103(e) (relating to use as a soil substitute or soil additive).

 (4) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (h) Additional operating requirements for the beneficial use of coal ash at coal refuse disposal sites. The following apply to the beneficial use of coal ash at coal refuse disposal sites:

 (1) Placement of coal ash as part of coal refuse disposal operations permitted under Chapters 86—90 must meet the following:

 (i) The cubic yards of coal ash does not exceed the total cubic yards of coal refuse to be disposed based on uncompacted volumes of materials received at the site.

 (ii) The coal ash has physical and chemical characteristics that meet the following requirements:

 (A) Improve compaction and stability within the fill.

 (B) Reduce infiltration of water into coal refuse.

 (C) Improve the quality of leachate generated by the coal refuse.

 (2) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (i) Additional coal ash sampling. A person using coal ash at a coal mining activity site shall, each quarter that coal ash is being used at the site, sample the coal ash after it has been placed at the site and such sample shall be analyzed in accordance with § 290.201. The results of the analysis shall be submitted quarterly to and in the format required by the Department. A reduced frequency may be approved by the Department where a coal mining activity site is receiving coal ash from only one source and is located at one of the following:

 (1) On the same tract of land where the coal ash was generated.

 (2) On a tract of land contiguous to the tract where the coal ash was generated.

 (3) On a tract of land connected to the tract where the coal ash was generated by a right-of-way controlled by the generator and to which the public does not have access.

 (4) On a tract of land separated from the tract where the coal ash was generated by only a public or private right-of-way and access between the two tracts is by crossing rather than traveling along the right-of-way.

 (j) Annual report. Prior to January 31, the permittee of a coal mining activity site where coal ash was placed in the previous calendar year shall submit a report for the previous calendar year to the Department that includes permit number, mining company contact information, the identity of each source of coal ash and its Department-assigned certification identifier, and the volume in cubic yards and the weight in dry tons for each source of coal ash that was placed at the site.

 (k) Notification to Department. A person beneficially using coal ash under this section shall notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the material does not meet the certification requirements in § 290.201.

§ 290.105. Beneficial use at abandoned mine lands.

 (a) Reclamation contract with the Department. Coal ash may be beneficially used for the purposes of reclamation at abandoned mine lands, as defined in § 86.252 (relating to definitions), only if the reclamation work is performed pursuant to a contract with the Department. The beneficial use of coal ash at abandoned mine lands will, at a minimum, be based on the following:

 (1) Compliance with this section and the applicable environmental statutes and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (2) Certification under § 290.201 (relating to coal ash certification) by the Department for the intended use.

 (3) Approval of a contract proposal submitted under subsection (b).

 (b) Contract proposal. A proposal for the use of coal ash at abandoned mine lands must contain the following:

 (1) A narrative description of the project, including an estimated beginning date and ending date for the project, an explanation of how coal ash will be placed, where and how coal ash will be stored prior to placement, identification of the sources of coal ash and an estimate of the cubic yards of coal ash to be used. For the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or additive, the proposed application rate and justification for the application rate shall also be included.

 (2) Information demonstrating that the coal ash has been certified for its intended use in accordance with § 290.201, including the identity of the generator and the Department-assigned certification identifier, as described in § 290.201(c).

 (3) Reclamation plans, including a stability analysis, when necessary, prepared by a licensed professional engineer in accordance with sound engineering practice and signed and sealed by the engineer.

 (4) A signed statement by the owner of the land on which the coal ash is to be placed, acknowledging and consenting to the placement of coal ash. This statement by the landowner shall be a recordable document. Prior to beneficial use of coal ash under this section, the statement by the landowner shall be recorded at the office of the recorder of deeds in the county in which the proposed coal ash beneficial use will take place.

 (5) A water quality monitoring plan consistent with the requirements in § 290.101(d) (relating to general requirements for beneficial use).

 (c) Public notice. As a condition of contract award, a person proposing to use coal ash for reclamation involving use of more than 10,000 tons of coal ash per acre on a project or more than 100,000 tons of coal ash in total at any project shall place an advertisement in a local newspaper of general circulation in the locality of the proposed coal ash beneficial use activities at least once a week for 3 consecutive weeks. Contiguous projects will be considered a single project for purposes of this section. The Department may require public notice for projects involving lesser amounts of coal ash if the Department determines that the proposed beneficial use activities are of significant interest to the public or site conditions warrant. If public notice is required, a copy shall be provided to the local municipality and proof of notice shall be submitted to the Department. At a minimum, the notice must contain the following information:

 (1) The name and business address of the person proposing to beneficially use coal ash.

 (2) A brief description of the location and scope of the proposed beneficial use.

 (3) The location of the public office where a copy of the contract proposal submitted to the Department is available for public inspection.

 (d) Department notification. The Department will publish a summary of each contract in the Pennsylvania Bulletin.

 (e) Operating requirements. The use of coal ash as part of the reclamation activity at abandoned mine lands must satisfy the following additional requirements:

 (1) The slope of the reclaimed area may not be greater than 2.5 horizontal to 1.0 vertical. The Department may approve a greater slope based on a demonstration of stability.

 (2) Coal ash shall be spread uniformly and compacted in layers not exceeding 2 feet in thickness unless otherwise approved by the Department. The coal ash shall be spread and compacted within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless stored in accordance with Subchapter E (relating to coal ash storage).

 (3) Surface runoff from the reclamation area shall be minimized during construction activity. Stormwater shall be managed in accordance with The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (4) Surface water shall be diverted away from the disturbed area during construction activity.

 (5) Coal ash shall be covered with 12 inches of soil, unless infiltration is prevented by other cover material.

 (6) Coal ash must achieve a minimum compaction of 90% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Modified Proctor Test, or 95% of the maximum dry density as determined by the Standard Proctor Test. Ash from each source shall be tested individually.

 (7) The offsite dispersion of dust from coal ash and other materials shall be minimized.

 (8) Coal ash used for reclamation may not be placed:

 (i) Within 100 feet of an existing intermittent or perennial stream, unless the person demonstrates to the Department's satisfaction that ash placement within 100 feet of the stream is necessary to remediate abandoned mine features located within 100 feet of the stream.

 (ii) Within 300 feet of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1 (relating to definitions), unless the person demonstrates to the Department's satisfaction that ash placement within 300 feet of the waters is necessary to remediate abandoned mine features located within 300 feet of the waters.

 (iii) Within 300 feet of a water supply unless the person obtains, in a form acceptable to the Department, a written waiver from the owner of the water supply, allowing for another distance.

 (iv) Within 100 feet of a sinkhole or area draining into a sinkhole.

 (v) Within a 100-year floodplain of a water of this Commonwealth, unless a properly engineered dike, levee or other structure that can protect the reclamation area from a 100-year flood is permitted by the Department in a manner that is consistent with the Flood Plain Management Act (32 P. S. §§ 679.101—679.601), the Storm Water Management Act (32 P. S. §§ 680.1—680.17) and the Dam Safety and Encroachments Act.

 (vi) In or within 100 feet of a wetland, other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (vii) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.

 (9) The following apply to the beneficial use of coal ash as a soil substitute or soil additive:

 (i) Coal ash shall be applied at a rate per acre that will protect public health, public safety and the environment.

 (ii) The coal ash that is applied will be part of the approved reclamation plan in order to increase the productivity or properties of the soil.

 (iii) The coal ash is not used in amounts that exceed the maximum cumulative loading rates in § 290.103(e).

 (f) Annual report. Prior to January 31, any person that placed coal ash at an abandoned mine land site in the previous calendar year shall submit a report for the previous calendar year to the Department that includes company contact information, the identity of the reclamation contract with the Department, the identity of each source of coal ash and its Department-assigned certification identifier, and the volume in cubic yards and the weight in dry tons for each source of coal ash that was placed at the site.

 (g) Notification to Department. A person beneficially using coal ash under this section must notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the material does not meet the certification requirements in § 290.201.

§ 290.106. Other beneficial uses.

 (a) The following uses of coal ash are deemed to be beneficial and do not require a permit from the Department under the act provided the uses are consistent with the requirements of this section:

 (1) The use of coal ash in the manufacture of concrete or cement. The coal ash shall be utilized within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless stored in accordance with Subchapter E (relating to coal ash storage).

 (2) The extraction or recovery of one or more materials and compounds contained within the coal ash if the following conditions are met:

 (i) Storage of coal ash before and after extraction or recovery shall be subject to Subchapter E.

 (ii) Disposal of the unrecovered fraction of coal ash shall be subject to the applicable requirements for residual waste.

 (3) The use of fly ash as a stabilized product. Other uses of fly ash in which physical or chemical characteristics are altered prior to use or during placement will be considered a beneficial use under this section if the following conditions are met:

 (i) The person proposing the use has first given advance written notice to the Department.

 (ii) The fly ash is not mixed with solid waste, unless otherwise approved, in writing, by the Department prior to the use.

 (iii) The use of the fly ash results in a demonstrated reduction of the potential of the material to leach constituents into the environment.

 (iv) If fly ash is used as structural fill, the requirements of § 290.102 (relating to use as structural fill) must be met.

 (v) If fly ash is used as a soil amendment, the requirements of § 290.103 (relating to use as a soil substitute or soil additive) must be met.

 (4) The use of bottom ash or boiler slag as an antiskid material or road surface preparation material, if the use is consistent with Department of Transportation specifications or other applicable specifications. The use of fly ash as an antiskid material or road surface preparation material is not deemed to be a beneficial use.

 (5) The use of coal ash as raw material for a product with commercial value, including the use of bottom ash in construction aggregate. Storage of coal ash prior to processing is subject to Subchapter E.

 (6) The use of coal ash as pipe bedding, if the person proposing the use has first given advance written notice to the Department, and has provided to the Department an evaluation of the pH of the coal ash and a chemical analysis of the coal ash.

 (7) The use of coal ash for mine subsidence control, mine fire control and mine sealing, if the following requirements are met:

 (i) The person proposing the use gives advance written notice to the Department.

 (ii) If a project is funded by or through the Department, use of the coal ash shall be consistent with applicable Departmental requirements and contracts.

 (iii) The coal ash shall be utilized within 24 hours of its delivery to the site unless stored in accordance with Subchapter E.

 (iv) The coal ash will undergo cementitious reactions after placement.

 (8) The use of coal ash as a fuel, provided it has a minimum heating value of 5,000 Btu/lb. Storage of coal ash prior to use as a fuel is subject to Subchapter E.

 (b) A person beneficially using coal ash under this section shall notify the Department within 72 hours of any evidence that the material does not meet appropriate chemical standards or physical property requirements in § 290.201 (relating to coal ash certification).

 (c) A person subject to the requirements of this section shall retain records of chemical and physical analyses, the quantity of coal ash utilized, the location of placement and the sources of coal ash for a minimum of 3 years after the beneficial use has ceased. The records shall be made available to the Department upon request.

§ 290.107. Requests for information.

 (a) The Department may request documents and other information from a person to demonstrate that the person is conducting or proposing to use coal ash in a manner that is compliant with this subchapter and the person shall make the documents and information available to the Department upon request.

 (b) Failure to have documentation of compliance with this subchapter may lead to a presumption that the person is disposing residual waste without a permit.

Subchapter C. COAL ASH CERTIFICATION

Sec.

290.201.Coal ash certification.
290.202.Revocation of certification.
290.203.Exceedance of certification requirements.

§ 290.201. Coal ash certification.

 (a) Certification standards are as follows:

 (1) Maximum acceptable leachate levels for certification:

 (i) For metals and other cations other than selenium, 25 times the waste classification standard for a contaminant.

 (ii) For selenium, 10 times the waste classification standard.

 (iii) For nonmetals and anions other than sulfate and fluoride, the waste classification standard for a contaminant.

 (iv) For sulfate, 10 times the waste classification standard.

 (2) The pH of coal ash must be 7.0 or above.

 (3) For coal ash used as an alkaline additive, the calcium carbonate equivalency, as determined by the Neutralization Potential Test in the Department's Overburden Sampling and Testing Manual (Noll, et al., 1988) or other method approved by the Department, must be a minimum of 100 parts per thousand (10% by weight).

 (4) For coal ash used as a low permeability material, the hydraulic conductivity of the coal ash must be 1.0 x 10-6 cm/sec or less based on hydraulic conductivity testing using ASTM D 5084 (Standard Test Method for Measurement of Hydraulic Conductivity of Saturated Porous Materials Using a Flexible Wall Perimeter) or other method approved by the Department. Hydraulic conductivity testing should use compaction and other preparation techniques that will duplicate the expected conditions at the mine site.

 (5) The Department may approve the addition of lime or cement to coal ash to achieve the requirements of this subsection. Use of these conditioners must be designated as part of the request in subsection (b).

 (b) A request by the generator for coal ash certification must contain the following information on a form provided by the Department:

 (1) The name and location of the generator of the coal ash.

 (2) A designation of the beneficial use or uses for which certification is requested.

 (3) A description of the generation process specific to the generator, including the combustion process, and pollution control processes that impact the chemical characteristics or physical properties of the coal ash, the fuel sources utilized, and the expected percentages of coal ash derived from different processes that will be incorporated into the final coal ash stream to be delivered to the beneficial use site.

 (4) A description of the physical properties and chemical characteristics of any material mixed with the coal ash, the extent of mixing, and the mixing methods used.

 (5) A detailed chemical analysis on at least four representative samples spaced throughout a 2 to 6-month sampling period within the last year that fully characterizes the composition of the coal ash. The chemical analysis must include:

 (i) Total concentrations for aluminum, antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium, boron, cadmium, calcium, chromium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, nickel, potassium, selenium, silver, sodium, sulfur, thallium, vanadium and zinc using methods found in EPA's ''Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods'' (EPA Publication No. SW-846) or comparable methods approved by the Department.

 (ii) Leachable concentrations for aluminum, ammonia, antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium, boron, cadmium, calcium, chloride, chromium, cobalt, copper, fluoride, iron, lead, magnesium, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, nickel, nitrate, nitrite, potassium, selenium, silver, sodium, sulfate, thallium, vanadium and zinc using methods found in EPA's ''Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods'' (EPA Publication No. SW-846) or comparable methods approved by the Department. Leachate concentrations must be determined using EPA Method 1312, the synthetic precipitation leaching procedure, unless another leaching procedure is required by the Department.

 (iii) pH using the soil and waste pH method found in EPA's ''Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods'' (EPA Publication No. SW-846) or comparable methods approved by the Department.

 (iv) Information to show that the laboratory making a chemical analysis for the application is in compliance with 27 Pa.C.S. Chapter 41 (relating to environmental laboratory accreditation).

 (6) A laboratory analysis for optimum moisture content and dry density (Standard or Modified Proctor Test).

 (7) An analysis of hydraulic conductivity reported in cm/sec.

 (8) A determination of neutralization potential as determined by the Neutralization Potential Test in the Department's Overburden Sampling and Testing Manual (Noll, et al., 1988) or other method approved by the Department.

 (9) A detailed description of the sampling methodology used, date the samples were taken, and name and contact information of the person performing the sampling.

 (10) Other physical or chemical testing results, if required for the particular beneficial uses being proposed.

 (c) The Department will review the certification request and notify the generator in writing of the Department-assigned certification identifier or the reason that the source was not certified for beneficial use.

 (d) If the coal ash is certified, the generator shall submit regular monitoring information to demonstrate that the coal ash continues to meet the requirements for certification. This information shall be submitted on dates specified by and on forms provided by the Department. At a minimum, monitoring requirements shall consist of the following:

 (1) At least one representative sample analysis of the coal ash submitted every 3 months.

 (2) Collection of a representative sample for analysis whenever there is a change in operation of the combustion unit generating the coal ash or a change in the fuel source that could result in a significant increase in a coal ash chemical parameter or a change in physical properties that could adversely impact slope stability, compaction characteristics or site hydrology.

 (3) Prior to January 31, a yearly report that includes the weight in dry tons of coal ash produced for beneficial use in the previous calendar year, an estimate of the volume in cubic yards and the locations, such as mine sites, where the coal ash was delivered.

 (e) The coal ash generator shall notify the Department of any changes to the information filed in the certification application or of any evidence that the coal ash may not meet certification requirements.

§ 290.202. Revocation of certification.

 (a) The Department will revoke certification for a source of coal ash if any of the following occur:

 (1) The generator fails to comply with monitoring requirements as described in § 290.201(d) (relating to coal ash certification).

 (2) The coal ash exceeds certification standards and the generator fails to make an acceptable demonstration as described in § 290.203 (relating to exceedance of certification requirements).

 (3) There are physical or chemical characteristics that make the coal ash unsuitable for beneficial use.

 (b) If certification is revoked, the coal ash cannot be used at a coal mining activity site or an abandoned mine land site in this Commonwealth unless the generator requests recertification under subsection (c) and the coal ash is recertified by the Department.

 (c) The generator of coal ash that had its certification revoked may request recertification. For certification to be reinstated, the generator shall demonstrate to the Department's satisfaction that:

 (1) A detailed chemical analysis on three recent monthly representative samples establish that the coal ash meets the certification requirements.

 (2) There are no other physical or chemical characteristics that make the coal ash unsuitable for beneficial use.

§ 290.203. Exceedance of certification requirements.

 (a) If the coal ash sample analysis results exceed any certification standard, the generator shall submit to the Department within 30 days of receiving the results of exceedance the following:

 (1) In the case of laboratory error, documentation and an explanation from the laboratory of the type of error. This information shall be accompanied by a corrected sample analysis or additional sample results demonstrating that the coal ash meets the requirements in § 290.201(a) (relating to coal ash certification).

 (2) A demonstration that the sample analysis is anomalous by providing the following:

 (i) A comparison of the anomalous sample with prior coal ash samples.

 (ii) Additional sample results demonstrating that the coal ash meets the criteria.

 (iii) A plan for temporary increase in coal ash monitoring.

 (iv) An explanation of the cause of the exceedance and how further exceedances will be avoided.

 (b) If the generator demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Department that the exceedance is an anomaly, the coal ash may continue to be beneficially used. Failure to provide this demonstration will result in revocation of beneficial use certification for the source.

Subchapter D. WATER QUALITY MONITORING

Sec.

290.301.Water quality monitoring.
290.302.Number, location and depth of monitoring points.
290.303.Standards for wells and casing of wells.
290.304.Assessment plan.
290.305.Abatement plan.
290.306.Recordkeeping.
290.307.Interim water quality monitoring requirements.

§ 290.301. Water quality monitoring.

 (a) A water quality monitoring plan shall be submitted to the Department for approval prior to placement or storage of coal ash when required under this chapter.

 (b) At a minimum, the water quality monitoring plan must include the following information:

 (1) The location and design of downgradient and upgradient monitoring points.

 (2) A minimum of 12 background samples from each monitoring point taken at monthly intervals prior to placement of coal ash, unless a greater number or frequency is required by the Department.

 (3) The samples to be taken quarterly after approval from each monitoring point, unless a greater number or frequency is required by the Department.

 (c) The person taking the samples and the laboratory performing the analysis required under this seciton shall employ the quality assurance/quality control procedures described in the EPA's ''Handbook for Analytical Quality Control in Water and Wastewater Laboratories'' (EPA 600/4-79-019) or ''Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste'' (SW-846).

 (d) The analytical methodologies used to meet the requirements of this section must be those in the most recent edition of the EPA's ''Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste'' (SW-846), ''Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes'' (EPA 600/4-79-020), ''Standard Methods for Examination of Water and Wastewater,'' prepared and published jointly by the American Public Health Association, American Waterworks Association, and Water Pollution Control Federation or a comparable method approved by the EPA or the Department. The laboratory making any chemical analysis for water quality monitoring must be in compliance with 27 Pa.C.S. Chapter 41 (relating to environmental laboratory accreditation).

 (e) Samples shall be analyzed for pH (determined in the field and in the laboratory), temperature (determined in the field), specific conductance (at 25° C; determined in the field), alkalinity, acidity, sulfate, chloride, fluoride, nitrate, nitrite, ammonia, and total suspended solids without filtration.

 (f) Samples shall be analyzed for total and dissolved aluminum, antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium, boron, cadmium, calcium, chromium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, magnesium, manganese, mercury, molybdenum, nickel, potassium, selenium, silver, sodium, thallium, vanadium, and zinc. In addition, the static water elevation for monitoring wells and the flow for springs, seeps and mine discharges must be measured.

 (g) Additional parameters may be required by the Department based on conditions at the site and the specific characteristics of the coal ash being beneficially used.

 (h) Water quality monitoring shall continue quarterly for a minimum of 5 years after final placement or storage of coal ash at the site, and annually thereafter from the end of year 5 through 10 years after final placement or storage of coal ash at the site. The Department may require more frequent or longer water quality monitoring if the results of water quality monitoring indicate that contamination may be occurring.

 (i) Water quality monitoring data shall be submitted quarterly to and in the format required by the Department. Water quality monitoring data shall be submitted to the Department annually from the end of year 5 through 10 years after final placement or storage of coal ash at the site.

 (j) The person required to develop and implement a water quality monitoring plan in accordance with § 290.101(d) (relating to general requirements for beneficial use) shall demonstrate attainment with applicable groundwater or surface water remediation standards as required in the event of groundwater or surface water degradation attributable to the placement of the coal ash. The applicable groundwater remediation standards are identified in §§ 290.304 and 290.305 (relating to assessment plan; and abatement plan).

§ 290.302. Number, location and depth of monitoring points.

 (a) The water quality monitoring system shall accurately characterize groundwater and surface water flow, groundwater and surface water chemistry and flow systems on the site and adjacent area. The system must consist of the following:

 (1) At least one monitoring point at a position hydraulically upgradient from the coal ash placement area in the direction of increasing static head that is capable of providing representative data of groundwater not affected by placement of coal ash, except when the coal ash placement area occupies the most upgradient position in the flow system. In that case, sufficient downgradient monitoring points shall be placed to determine the extent of adverse effects on groundwater from the coal ash placement.

 (2) At least three groundwater monitoring points hydraulically downgradient in the direction of decreasing static head from the area in which coal ash has been or will be placed. The Department at its discretion may accept two downgradient monitoring points on small sites that can be well represented by two points. The Department may allow one or more springs, seeps and mine discharges to substitute for wells if these points are hydraulically downgradient from the area in which coal ash has been or will be placed and if these points will be as effective or more effective at monitoring the coal ash placement area than wells. Downgradient monitoring points must be hydrologically connected to the area of coal ash placement, and must be located and constructed so as to detect any chemical influence of the coal ash placement area. The downgradient points must be proximate enough to detect contaminants within the life of the placement operation. All monitoring points must be developed and protected in a manner approved by the Department.

 (3) Surface water monitoring points where surface water monitoring is likely to show any chemical influence that the coal ash placement area may have on the hydrologic regime.

 (b) The upgradient and downgradient monitoring points shall be:

 (1) Sufficient in number, location and depth to be representative of water quality.

 (2) Located so as not to interfere with routine operations at the site.

 (3) Located within 200 feet of the coal ash placement area or mining activity area, except as necessary to comply with subsections (c) and (d). The Department may approve location at a greater distance based on the hydrology of the coal ash placement and adjacent areas.

 (c) In addition to the requirements of subsection (b), upgradient monitoring points shall be located so that they will not be affected by effects on groundwater or surface water from the coal ash placement area.

 (d) In addition to the requirements of subsection (b), downgradient monitoring points shall be located so that they will provide early detection of effects on groundwater or surface water from the coal ash placement area.

 (e) Wells drilled under this section shall be drilled by drillers licensed under the Water Well Drillers License Act (32 P. S. §§ 645.1—645.13).

 (f) The well materials shall be decontaminated prior to installation.

§ 290.303. Standards for wells and casing of wells.

 (a) A monitoring well shall be cased as follows:

 (1) The casing must maintain the integrity of the monitoring well borehole and be constructed of material that will not react with the groundwater being monitored.

 (2) The minimum casing diameter must be 4 inches unless otherwise approved by the Department in writing.

 (3) The well must be constructed with a screen that meets the following requirements:

 (i) The screen must be factory-made.

 (ii) The screen may not react with the groundwater being monitored.

 (iii) The screen must maximize open area to minimize entrance velocities and allow rapid sample recovery.

 (4) The well must be filter-packed with chemically inert clean quartz sand, silica or glass beads, unless otherwise approved by the Department. The material must be well-rounded and dimensionally stable.

 (5) The casing must extend at least 1 foot aboveground, unless the Department has approved flush mount wells.

 (6) The annular space above the sampling depth must be sealed to prevent contamination of samples and the groundwater.

 (7) The casing must be designed and constructed to prevent cross contamination between surface water and groundwater.

 (8) Alternative casing designs for wells in stable formations may be approved by the Department.

 (b) Monitoring well casings must be enclosed in a protective casing that must:

 (1) Be of sufficient strength to protect the well from damage by heavy equipment and vandalism.

 (2) Be installed for at least the upper 10 feet of the monitoring well, as measured from the well cap, with a maximum stick up of 3 feet, unless otherwise approved by the Department in writing.

 (3) Be grouted and placed with a concrete collar at least 3 feet deep to hold it firmly in position.

 (4) Be numbered for identification with a label capable of withstanding field conditions.

 (5) Protrude above the monitoring well casing.

 (6) Have a locked cap.

 (7) Be made of steel or other material of equivalent strength.

§ 290.304. Assessment plan.

 (a) A person shall prepare and submit to the Department an assessment plan within 60 days after one of the following occurs:

 (1) Data obtained from water quality monitoring by the Department or the person indicates statistically significant degradation. Statistical evaluation of water quality monitoring data shall be made using one or more of the methods in 40 CFR 258.53(g) and (h) (relating to ground-water sampling and analysis requirements).

 (2) Laboratory analysis of one or more public or private water supplies indicates groundwater or surface water contamination is occurring that could reasonably be attributed to the coal ash placement.

 (b) An assessment under this section must consist of chemical data and a supporting narrative, if one of the following applies:

 (1) Within 10 working days after receipt of sample results indicating groundwater or surface water degradation, the person resamples the affected monitoring points and analysis from resampling shows, to the Department's satisfaction, that groundwater or surface water degradation has not occurred.

 (2) Within 20 working days after receipt of sample results indicating groundwater or surface water degradation, the person demonstrates that the degradation was caused by seasonal variations or activities unrelated to coal ash placement.

 (c) The assessment plan must specify the manner in which the person will determine the existence, quality, quantity, areal extent and depth of groundwater or surface water degradation and the rate and direction of migration of contaminants. An assessment plan shall be prepared and sealed by a professional geologist licensed to practice in this Commonwealth. The plan must contain the following information:

 (1) For wells, lysimeters, borings, pits, piezometers, springs, seeps, mine discharges and other assessment structures or devices, the number, location, size, casing type and depth, as appropriate. If the assessment points are wells, they shall be constructed in accordance with §§ 290.302 and 290.303 (relating to number, location and depth of monitoring points; and standards for wells and casing of wells).

 (2) The sampling and analytical methods for the parameters to be evaluated.

 (3) The evaluation procedures, including the use of previously gathered groundwater or surface water quality and quantity information, to determine the concentration, rate and extent of groundwater or surface water degradation from the facility.

 (4) A biological assessment of surface water, if required by the Department.

 (5) An implementation schedule.

 (6) Identification of the abatement standard that will be met.

 (d) The assessment plan shall be implemented upon approval by the Department in accordance with the approved implementation schedule, and shall be completed in a reasonable time not to exceed 6 months, unless otherwise approved by the Department. If the Department determines that the proposed plan is inadequate, it may modify the plan and approve the plan as modified. If the groundwater or surface water assessment indicates that contamination is leaving the coal ash placement site, the person shall notify, in writing, each owner of a private or public water supply that is located within 1/2-mile downgradient of the coal ash placement area that an assessment has been initiated.

 (e) Within 45 days after the completion of the assessment plan, the person shall submit a report containing the new data collected, analysis of the data and recommendations on the necessity for abatement.

 (f) If the Department determines after review of the assessment report that implementation of an abatement plan is not required under § 290.305 (relating to abatement plan), the person shall submit a revised water quality monitoring plan to the Department for approval that contains any necessary changes to the plan and an application for permit modification, if applicable. The person shall implement the modifications within 30 days of the Department's approval.

 (g) This section does not prevent the Department from requiring or the person from conducting abatement or water supply replacement concurrently with or prior to implementation of the assessment.

§ 290.305. Abatement plan.

 (a) The person that is required to conduct water quality monitoring as part of coal ash beneficial use or storage shall prepare and submit to the Department an abatement plan whenever one of the following occurs:

 (1) The assessment plan prepared and implemented under § 290.304 (relating to assessment plan) shows the presence of groundwater or surface water degradation for one or more contaminants at one or more monitoring points and the analysis indicates that an abatement standard will not be met at the compliance points.

 (2) Monitoring by the Department or person shows the presence of an abatement standard exceedance from one or more compliance points even if an assessment plan has not been completed. The person is not required to implement an abatement plan under this paragraph if the following apply:

 (i) Within 10 days after receipt of sample results showing an exceedance of an abatement standard at a point of compliance, the person resamples the affected monitoring points.

 (ii) Analysis from resampling shows to the Department's satisfaction that an exceedance of an abatement standard has not occurred.

 (3) A biological assessment of surface water implemented under § 290.304(c)(4) shows a detrimental effect on biota is occurring.

 (b) An abatement plan shall be prepared and sealed by a professional geologist licensed to practice in this Commonwealth. The plan must contain the following information:

 (1) The specific methods or techniques to be used to abate groundwater or surface water degradation at the facility.

 (2) The specific methods or techniques to be used to prevent further groundwater or surface water degradation from the facility.

 (3) A schedule for implementation.

 (c) If abatement is required in accordance with subsection (a), the person shall demonstrate compliance with one or more of the following standards at the identified compliance points:

 (1) For constituents for which Statewide health standards exist, the Statewide health standard for that constituent at and beyond 500 feet of the perimeter of the coal ash placement area or at and beyond the property boundary, whichever is closer.

 (2) The background standard for constituents at and beyond 500 feet of the perimeter of the coal ash placement area or at and beyond the property boundary, whichever is closer. Load-based standards at groundwater discharge points are acceptable if a permit was issued under Chapter 87, Subchapter F or Chapter 88, Subchapter G (relating to surface coal mines: minimum requirements for remining areas with pollutional discharges; and anthracite surface mining activities and anthracite bank removal and reclamation activities: minimum requirements for remining areas with pollutional discharges).

 (3) For constituents for which no primary MCLs under the Federal and State Safe Drinking Water Acts (42 U.S.C.A. §§ 300f—300j-18; and 35 P. S. §§ 721.1—721.17) exist, the risk-based standard at and beyond 500 feet of the perimeter of the coal ash placement area or at and beyond the property boundary, whichever is closer, if the following conditions are met:

 (i) The risk assessment used to establish the standard assumes that human receptors exist at the property boundary.

 (ii) The level is derived in a manner consistent with the health risk assessment portions of the Department's Land Recycling Program Technical Guidance Manual (253-0300-100) or other standard procedures commonly used in the environmental field for assessing the health risks of environmental pollutants.

 (iii) The level is based on scientifically valid studies conducted in accordance with good laboratory practice standards (40 CFR Part 792 (relating to good laboratory practice standards)) promulgated under the Toxic Substances Control Act (15 U.S.C.A. §§ 2601—2692) or other scientifically valid studies approved by the Department.

 (iv) For carcinogens, the level represents a concentration associated with an excess lifetime cancer risk level of 1 x 10-5 at the property boundary.

 (d) For measuring compliance with secondary contaminants under subsection (c)(1) or (3), the Department may approve a compliance point beyond 500 feet on land owned by the owner of the coal ash placement area.

 (e) The abatement plan shall be completed and submitted to the Department for approval within 90 days of the time the obligation arises under this section unless the date is otherwise modified, in writing, by the Department.

 (f) If the Department determines that the proposed plan is inadequate, the Department may modify the plan and approve the plan as modified or require the submission of an approvable modification.

 (g) The abatement plan shall be implemented within 60 days of approval by the Department in accordance with the approved implementation schedule.

 (h) If, after plan approval or implementation, the Department finds that the plan is incapable of achieving the groundwater or surface water protection contemplated in the approval, the Department may issue one or more of the following:

 (1) An order requiring the person to submit proposed modifications to the abatement plan.

 (2) An order requiring the person to implement the abatement plan as modified by the Department.

 (3) Another order the Department deems necessary to aid in the enforcement of the acts.

§ 290.306. Recordkeeping.

 A person subject to the requirements of this subchapter shall retain records of analyses and evaluations of monitoring data and groundwater elevations required under this subchapter for a minimum of 3 years after water quality monitoring ceases and make the records available to the Department upon request.

§ 290.307. Interim water quality monitoring requirements.

 This section applies to sites where coal ash has been stored or placed for beneficial use prior to December 11, 2010, and continues to be stored or placed for beneficial use following December 11, 2010.

 (1) For sites not previously subject to water quality monitoring requirements:

 (i) A water quality monitoring plan meeting the requirements of § 290.301(b)(1) and (3) (relating to water quality monitoring) shall be submitted to the Department by December 12, 2011.

 (ii) The water quality monitoring plan shall be implemented within 1 year of the Department's approval of the plan.

 (2) For sites previously subject to water quality monitoring requirements:

 (i) New monitoring points and replacement wells constructed after December 11, 2010, must comply with the requirements in §§ 290.302(b)—(f) and 290.303 (relating to number, location and depth of monitoring points; and standards for wells and casing of wells).

 (ii) All water quality monitoring after March 11, 2011, must include the parameters in § 290.301(e) and (f) and any parameters added by the Department based onsite conditions in accordance with § 290.301(g).

Subchapter E. COAL ASH STORAGE

Sec.

290.401.Design and operation.
290.402.Duration of storage.
290.403.Surface and groundwater protection.
290.404.Areas where coal ash storage is prohibited.
290.405.Storage piles—general requirements.
290.406.Storage piles—storage pad or liner system.
290.407.Storage piles—leachate and runoff control.
290.408.Storage impoundments—scope.
290.409.Storage impoundments—general requirements.
290.410.Storage impoundments—design requirements.
290.411.Storage impoundments—operating requirements.
290.412.Storage impoundments—failure.
290.413.Storage impoundments—inspections.
290.414.Storage areas—closure.
290.415.Interim requirements for sites where coal ash has been stored.

§ 290.401. Design and operation.

 (a) A person storing coal ash shall employ best engineering design and construction practices for all phases of construction and operation.

 (b) A person may not store coal ash in a manner that exceeds the design capacity of the storage facility.

 (c) The Department may require a person to install a water quality monitoring system in accordance with Subchapter D (relating to water quality monitoring) if storage of the coal ash has the potential to cause groundwater degradation.

 (d) A person storing coal ash shall routinely inspect the facility, its equipment and the surrounding area for evidence of failure and shall immediately take necessary corrective actions. The person shall maintain records of inspections and corrective actions that were taken for a minimum of 3 years, and make the records available to the Department upon request.

§ 290.402. Duration of storage.

 (a) Coal ash may not be stored as follows:

 (1) For more than 1 year unless a minimum of 75% of the volume of the coal ash being stored is used or processed for beneficial use in the previous calendar year commencing on January 1st.

 (2) For more than 90 days unless it is stored on an impermeable floor or pad and either in an enclosed facility or in an area where runoff is collected and treated. The Department may waive or modify, in writing, this requirement if there is no runoff from the storage.

 (b) The Department will presume that a person storing coal ash contrary to subsection (a) is operating a waste disposal facility and is subject to the applicable requirements of the act and regulations thereunder for waste disposal.

 (c) A person that stores coal ash shall maintain for a minimum of 3 years accurate operational records that are sufficiently detailed to demonstrate to the Department that coal ash is being stored under subsection (a). The records shall be made available to the Department upon request. The presumption in subsection (b) may be overcome by the operational records required by this subsection.

§ 290.403. Surface and groundwater protection.

 (a) Surface water runoff from storage areas shall be minimized. Stormwater shall be managed in accordance with The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

 (b) Surface water run-on to storage areas shall be minimized.

 (c) Coal ash may not be stored in a manner that causes groundwater or surface water degradation.

§ 290.404. Areas where coal ash storage is prohibited.

 (a) Coal ash storage areas, other than areas where the coal ash is totally enclosed and stored on an impermeable floor, temporary coal ash storage piles or storage impoundments, may not be operated as follows, unless otherwise authorized by the Department in writing:

 (1) Within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream, other than exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1 (relating to definitions).

 (2) Within 300 feet of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (3) Within 300 feet of a groundwater water source.

 (4) Within 1,000 feet upgradient of a surface drinking water source.

 (5) Within 25 feet of a bedrock outcrop, unless the outcrop is properly treated to minimize infiltration into fractured zones.

 (6) Within 100 feet of a sinkhole or area draining into a sinkhole.

 (7) Within 100 feet of a wetland, other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (8) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.

 (b) Coal ash storage impoundments may not be operated as follows:

 (1) In the 100-year floodplain of waters of this Commonwealth.

 (2) In or within 100 feet of a wetland other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (3) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.

 (4) In an area where the operation would result in the elimination, pollution or destruction of a portion of an intermittent stream or perennial stream.

 (5) Within 100 feet of an intermittent stream or perennial stream, other than exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (6) Within 300 feet of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (7) In areas underlain by limestone or carbonate formations, where the formations are greater than 5 feet thick and present at the topmost geologic unit. These areas include areas mapped by the ''Pennsylvania Geological Survey'' as underlain by these formations, unless competent geologic studies certified by a professional geologist licensed to practice in this Commonwealth demonstrate the absence of limestone and carbonate formations under the site.

 (8) Within 900 feet measured horizontally from an occupied dwelling, unless the owner of the dwelling has provided a written waiver consenting to the coal ash storage impoundment being closer than 900 feet. A waiver shall be knowingly made and separate from a lease or deed unless the lease or deed contains an explicit waiver from the owner. A closed coal ash storage impoundment that submits an application to reopen and expand shall also be subject to this paragraph.

 (9) Within 100 feet of a property line, unless the current owner has provided a written consent to the coal ash storage impoundment being closer than 100 feet. The waiver shall be knowingly made and separate from a lease or deed unless the lease or deed contains an explicit waiver from the current owner.

 (10) Within 1/4 mile upgradient, and within 300 feet downgradient, of a private or public water source, except that the Department may waive or modify the isolation distances to a private water source if the person demonstrates and the Department finds, in writing, that the following conditions have been met:

 (i) The owners of the private water sources in the isolation area have consented, in writing, to the location of the proposed the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (ii) The person storing coal ash and each water source owner have agreed, in writing, that the person will construct and maintain at the person's expense a permanent alternative water supply of like quantity and quality at no additional cost to the water source owner if the existing source is adversely affected by the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (iii) The person storing coal ash has demonstrated that a replacement water source is technically and economically feasible and readily available for every private water source in the isolation area.

 (11) Within 900 feet of the following:

 (i) A building that is owned by a school district or school and used for instructional purposes.

 (ii) A park.

 (iii) A playground.

 (12) In areas that serve as habitat for fauna or flora listed as ''threatened'' or ''endangered'' under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (7 U.S.C.A. § 136; 16 U.S.C.A. §§ 4601-9, 460k-1, 668dd, 715i, 715a, 1362, 1371, 1372, 1402 and 1531—1543), the Wild Resource Conservation Act (32 P. S. §§ 5301—5314), 30 Pa.C.S. (relating to the Fish and Boat Code) or 34 Pa.C.S. (relating to the Game and Wildlife Code), unless the applicant demonstrates compliance with applicable Federal and State requirements that would allow operations in those areas.

 (c) Temporary coal ash storage piles may not be operated as follows:

 (1) Within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream, other than exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (2) Within 300 feet of exceptional value or high quality waters as defined in § 93.1.

 (3) Within 100 feet of a wetland, other than an exceptional value wetland.

 (4) In or within 300 feet of an exceptional value wetland.

§ 290.405. Storage piles—general requirements.

 (a) A person storing coal ash in piles shall minimize the dispersal of coal ash by wind or water erosion.

 (b) The coal ash being stored shall be separated from the water table by at least 4 feet without the use of a groundwater pumping system. The Department may waive, in writing, this requirement.

 (c) A person storing coal ash in a pile, other than a temporary coal ash storage pile, shall design, install and maintain berms around the storage area and other structures or facilities to collect and, when necessary, treat runoff or leachate, or both, from the storage area. The Department may waive, in writing, the berm requirement when other collection methods are in place.

 (d) For storage piles without a liner system or storage pad, the Department may require the person to install and implement water quality monitoring in accordance with Subchapter D (relating to water quality monitoring) where site conditions warrant.

§ 290.406. Storage piles—storage pad or liner system.

 (a) A person that installs a storage pad or liner system to prevent groundwater degradation shall meet the requirements of this section. This section does not preclude a person from using other means to prevent groundwater degradation, such as enclosure in a building.

 (b) The storage pad or liner system must meet the following requirements:

 (1) Prevent the migration of leachate through the storage pad or liner system.

 (2) May not be adversely affected by the physical or chemical characteristics of coal ash, coal ash constituents or leachate from the coal ash storage piles.

 (3) Be designed, constructed and maintained to protect the integrity of the pad or liner during the storage of coal ash.

 (4) Be designed to collect leachate and runoff.

 (5) Be constructed of nonsolid waste and noncoal ash material.

 (6) Be no less permeable than 1 x 10-7 cm/sec., as demonstrated by field and laboratory testing.

 (7) Be inspected for uniformity, damage and imperfections during construction and installation.

 (c) The person shall install and operate a monitoring system capable of verifying whether coal ash or leachate has penetrated the pad or liner, if required by the Department.

 (d) Coal ash may not be stored where continuous or intermittent contact could occur between the coal ash and groundwater or surface water.

§ 290.407. Storage piles—leachate and runoff control.

 (a) A person that installs a storage pad or liner system shall collect leachate and runoff from the coal ash pile and divert it into a leachate storage or treatment system.

 (b) A leachate storage system must consist of a collection tank or surface impoundment. The tank or impoundment must be:

 (1) Sized for the anticipated leachate and runoff flow, including a 30-day reserve capacity.

 (2) Chemically compatible with the leachate.

 (3) Of sufficient strength to withstand expected loads.

 (4) Equipped with cleanouts, if necessary.

 (5) Sealed to prevent the loss of leachate and runoff.

 (c) Collected leachate shall be treated or disposed in a manner that complies with the act, The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001), and the regulations promulgated thereunder.

§ 290.408. Storage impoundments—scope.

 (a) This section and §§ 290.409—290.415 apply to persons that store coal ash in surface impoundments prior to beneficial use.

 (b) This section and §§ 290.409—290.415 do not apply to the storage impoundments that are designed for the express purpose of storing stormwater runoff and that store runoff composed entirely of stormwater. Impoundments that store stormwater runoff must comply with the applicable requirements of The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001), section 13 of the Stormwater Management Act (32 P. S. § 680.13) and Chapters 92a, 102 and 105 (relating to national pollutant discharge elimination system permitting, monitoring and compliance; erosion and sediment control; and dam safety and waterway management).

 (c) For purposes of this section, ''stormwater'' means drainage runoff from the surface of the land resulting from precipitation or snow or ice melt.

§ 290.409. Storage impoundments—general requirements.

 A person that operates a storage impoundment to hold coal ash shall meet the following conditions:

 (1) Hold a valid permit from the Department for the storage under sections 308 and 402 and other applicable provisions of The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001), Chapter 91 (relating to general provisions) and other applicable regulations promulgated thereunder, and shall comply with the permit.

 (2) Comply with Chapter 105 (relating to dam safety and waterway management).

§ 290.410. Storage impoundments—design requirements.

 Impoundments used to store coal ash must meet the following minimum design criteria:

 (1) The liner system for a coal ash storage impoundment must include the following elements:

 (i) The subbase, which is the prepared layer of soil or earthen material upon which the remainder of the liner system is constructed.

 (ii) The leachate detection zone, which is a prepared layer placed on top of the subbase and upon which the liner is placed, and in which a leachate detection system is located.

 (iii) The composite liner, which is a continuous layer of synthetic material over earthen material, placed on the leachate detection zone. The upper component is no more permeable than 1.0 x 10-7 cm/sec. based on laboratory testing. The composite component is no more permeable than 1.0 x 10-6 cm/sec., based on laboratory testing and field testing.

 (iv) The protective cover and leachate collection zone, which is a prepared layer placed over the liner in which a leachate collection system is located.

 (2) The bottom of the subbase of the liner system cannot be in contact with the water table without the use of groundwater pumping systems.

 (3) The subbase must meet the following performance standards. The subbase must:

 (i) Bear the weight of the liner system, coal ash, and equipment operating on the coal ash storage impoundment without causing or allowing a failure of the liner system.

 (ii) Accommodate potential settlement without damage to the liner system.

 (iii) Be a barrier to the transmission of liquids.

 (iv) Cover the bottom and sidewalls of the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (4) The leachate detection zone must meet the following performance standards. The leachate detection zone must:

 (i) Rapidly detect and collect liquid entering the leachate detection zone, and rapidly transmit the liquid to the leachate treatment system.

 (ii) Withstand chemical attack from coal ash or leachate.

 (iii) Withstand anticipated loads, stresses and disturbances from overlying coal ash and equipment operation.

 (iv) Function without clogging.

 (v) Prevent the liner from puncturing, cracking, tearing, stretching or otherwise losing its physical integrity.

 (vi) Cover the bottom and sidewalls of the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (5) The liner must meet the following standards of performance:

 (i) The liner must prevent the migration of leachate through the liner to the greatest degree that is technologically possible.

 (ii) The effectiveness of the liner in preventing the migration of leachate may not be adversely affected by the physical or chemical characteristics of the coal ash or leachate from the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (iii) The liner must be resistant to physical failure, chemical failure, and other failure.

 (iv) The liner must cover the bottom and sidewalls of the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (6) The protective cover must meet the following performance standards. The protective cover must:

 (i) Protect the primary liner from physical damage from stresses and disturbances from overlying coal ash and equipment operation.

 (ii) Protect the leachate collection system within the protective cover from stresses and disturbances from overlying coal ash and equipment operation.

 (iii) Allow the continuous and free flow of leachate into the leachate collection system within the protective cover.

 (iv) Cover the bottom and sidewalls of the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (7) The leachate collection system within the protective cover must meet the following performance standards. The leachate collection system must:

 (i) Ensure that free flowing liquids and leachate will drain continuously from the protective cover to the leachate treatment system.

 (ii) Withstand chemical attack from leachate.

 (iii) Withstand anticipated loads, stresses and disturbances from overlying coal ash and equipment operation.

 (iv) Function without clogging.

 (v) Cover the bottom and sidewalls of the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (8) An onsite leachate storage system shall be part of each leachate treatment method used by the person. The storage system must contain impoundments or tanks for storage of leachate. The tanks or impoundments must have a storage capacity at least equal to the maximum expected production of leachate for a 30-day period. No more than 25% of the total leachate storage capacity may be used for flow equalization on a regular basis. Leachate storage capacity may not be considered to include leachate that may have collected in or on the liner system.

 (9) Leachate may be collected and handled by one of the following:

 (i) Onsite treatment and discharged into a receiving stream under a permit issued by the Department under The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and regulations thereunder, if the Department approves this method in the permit.

 (ii) Direct discharge into a permitted publicly-owned treatment works, following pretreatment, if pretreatment is required by Federal, State or local law or by discharge into another permitted treatment facility.

 (iii) Transport to an offsite treatment facility that is operating in compliance with The Clean Streams Law (35 P. S. §§ 691.1—691.1001) and regulations thereunder, and is otherwise capable of accepting and treating leachate from the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (10) Impoundments must be designed, constructed, operated and maintained in accordance with the following:

 (i) An impoundment must have sufficient freeboard to prevent overtopping, including overtopping caused by the 24-hour precipitation event in inches to be expected once in 25 years. The freeboard may not be less than 2 feet.

 (ii) The dike must have sufficient structural integrity to prevent failure. The liner system of the impoundment may not be considered in determining the structural integrity of the dike.

 (iii) The inside slope shall be designed and constructed with sufficient protective cover to prevent wind and water erosion, and to preserve the structural integrity of the dike.

 (iv) The dike must be capable of withstanding anticipated static and dynamic loadings with a minimum safety factor for the most critical failure surface of 1.5 for static loading and 1.2 for dynamic loading.

 (v) The outside slopes of the dike may not exceed 25% unless the following requirements are met:

 (A) A horizontal terrace with a minimum width of 10 feet is constructed at each 20-foot vertical rise of the slope, or the Department approves in the permit a terrace with different dimensions.

 (B) Surface water on the terrace is collected and discharged so that it does not erode or otherwise adversely affect the stability of the dike.

 (C) The final slope does not exceed 50%.

 (vi) Dikes and berms must be free of burrowing mammals and plants with root systems capable of displacing earthen materials upon which the structural integrity of the dikes or berms is dependent.

 (vii) An impoundment must be surrounded by structures sufficient to prevent surface runoff from a 25-year, 24-hour precipitation event from entering the impoundment.

§ 290.411. Storage impoundments—operating requirements.

 (a) At least 8 feet shall be maintained between the bottom of the subbase of the liner system and the top of the confining layer or the shallowest level below the bottom of the subbase where groundwater occurs as a result of upward leakage from natural or other preexisting causes. The integrity of the confining layer may not be compromised by excavation.

 (b) The edge of the liner shall be clearly marked.

 (c) A fence or other suitable barrier shall be maintained around the coal ash storage area, including impoundments, leachate collection and treatment systems sufficient to prevent unauthorized access, unless the Department approves, in the permit, an alternative means of protecting access to the area that afford an equivalent degree of protection.

 (d) The person shall implement fugitive air contaminant control measures and otherwise prevent and control air pollution in accordance with the Air Pollution Control Act (35 P. S. §§ 4001—4015); Article III (relating to air resources) and § 289.228 (relating to nuisance minimization and control). Minimization and control measures must include the following:

 (1) Ensuring that operation of the coal ash storage impoundment will not cause or contribute to an exceedance of an ambient air quality standard under § 131.3 (relating to ambient air quality standards).

 (2) Minimizing the generation of fugitive dust emissions from the coal ash storage impoundment.

 (e) The person shall implement water quality monitoring, as required under Subchapter D (relating to quality monitoring).

 (f) A person that stores coal ash in a coal ash storage impoundment shall remove coal ash from the impoundment as follows:

 (1) Without damage to the impoundment.

 (2) Inspect the liner to ensure its integrity, and make necessary repairs prior to returning the impoundment to service.

 (3) Provide for the beneficial use of the removed coal ash in accordance with this chapter.

 (4) Removal from the impoundment shall be sufficient such that the coal ash is not accumulated speculatively.

§ 290.412. Storage impoundments—failure.

 (a) If a coal ash storage impoundment fails, the person storing coal ash shall immediately:

 (1) Stop adding coal ash to the impoundment.

 (2) Contain any discharge that has occurred or is occurring.

 (3) Empty the impoundment in a manner approved by the Department, if leaks cannot be stopped.

 (4) Notify the Department of the failure of the impoundment and the measures taken to remedy the failure.

 (b) A coal ash storage impoundment that has been removed from service due to failure may not be restored to service unless the following conditions are met:

 (1) The impoundment has been repaired.

 (2) The repair has been certified to the Department, in writing, by a registered professional engineer.

 (3) The Department has approved, in writing, the restoration of the impoundment to service.

 (c) If a storage impoundment fails and the impoundment or surrounding area cannot be cleaned up in a manner that is satisfactory to the Department, the impoundment shall be closed in accordance with this section.

§ 290.413. Storage impoundments—inspections.

 The Department will inspect storage impoundments in accordance with the Dam Safety and Encroachments Act (32 P. S. §§ 693.1—693.27).

§ 290.414. Storage areas—closure.

 Upon cessation of coal ash storage, the person storing coal ash shall remove coal ash and materials containing coal ash, and provide for the beneficial use or disposal of the coal ash and materials under the act and the regulations promulgated thereunder. The person shall also regrade and revegetate the site as required by the Department.

§ 290.415. Interim requirements for sites where coal ash has been stored.

 For storage sites previously subject to rescinded § 299.153, which pertained to storage and containment of coal ash, the requirements of this subchapter must be met by December 12, 2011, unless the person storing the coal ash demonstrates to the Department's satisfaction through water quality monitoring data that the existing storage is protective of public health, safety and the environment.

 (Editor's Note: The rescinded version of § 299.153 (relating to storage and containment of coal ash) appears at Pennsylvania Code pages 299-18 and 299-19 (serial pages (273866) and (273867)).

CHAPTER 299. STORAGE AND TRANSPORTATION OF RESIDUAL WASTE

Subchapter A. STANDARDS FOR STORAGE OF RESIDUAL WASTE

TYPES OF WASTE

§ 299.153. (Reserved).

[Pa.B. Doc. No. 10-2359. Filed for public inspection December 10, 2010, 9:00 a.m.]



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