38 M.R.S.A. §413(1-B) or the "Maine Subsurface Waste Water Disposal Rules,"
10-144 CMR 241.
If at any time the department learns that a Class V well has violated Sections 3(A) or 3(B) above, the department may:
§§ 144.7 and 146.4.
Closure options include, but are not limited to, sealing the drain to prevent further discharge, connecting the floor drains to a municipal sewer system or connecting to a holding tank and disposing of the holding tank contents, if allowed, through a publicly-owned treatment works or with a hazardous waste contractor. Closure options also include converting the well to another type of Class V well as described in Section 3(E)(1)(c). Allowing pollutants to discharge to the ground surface, otherwise known as "daylighting," is not a closure option. The owner or operator shall also dispose or otherwise manage any soil, gravel, sludge, liquids or other materials removed from or adjacent to the motor vehicle waste disposal well in accordance with all applicable federal, state and local regulations.
The use of a temporary plug as the means to segregate waste is not sufficient to convert a motor vehicle waste disposal well to another type of Class V well.
NOTE: New large-capacity cesspools were prohibited by federal Underground Injection Control regulations (64 FR 56546), effective April 5, 2000. Federal UIC regulations are in accordance with 40 CFR, Parts 9, 144, 145, and 146, as amended at 64 FR 68566 (Dec. 7, 1999) and 67 FR 39593 (June 7, 2002).
Closure options include, but are not limited to, conversion to a subsurface wastewater disposal system or connection to a municipal sewer system. Domestic wastewater must be managed in accordance with "Maine Subsurface Waste Water Disposal Rules," 10-144 CMR 241. The owner or operator shall also dispose or otherwise manage any soil, gravel, sludge, liquids or other materials removed from or adjacent to the cesspool in accordance with all applicable federal, state and local regulations.
06- 096 C.M.R. ch. 543, § 3