For the purposes of this chapter, hazardous waste facilities are broken down into five basic categories:
Examples include but are not limited to such facilities as:
-Fire or explosion, or both.
An example is, but not limited to:
-Treatment in tanks.
-Fire or explosion, or both.
Facilities which have the potential for discharging only steam, air, nitrogen, or other nontoxic materials could be classified as Category I or II, providing they meet all other requirements for those categories. Heated storage tanks or rail cars which use steam in an outer shell or coils, for example, could be classified as Category I, even if it was periodically necessary to vent steam to the atmosphere.
In order to qualify for Category III, all tanks, containers or ancillary storage devices associated with processes must be in an area which meets the "containment" requirements specified for Categories I and II above.
An example is, but not limited to:
-Incineration.
For the purposes of siting, the consequences of loss of control in Category III are:
These facilities need not meet the "containment" requirements specified for facilities in the three categories above in order to be classified in this category.
"Above ground" in this category means that the hazardous waste is all contained at or above the level of the ground where it is located. This qualification is based on providing a reasonable opportunity to see or become aware of a leak without depending on groundwater analysis. For example, this category could include a metal tank which rested directly on a cement pad (i.e., without support legs) even though part or all of the cement pad was actually below the ground, so long as the bottom of the tank was above ground level. If the bottom of the tank were below ground level resting directly on a manmade or earthen support such that the bottom of the tank could not be routinely inspected externally for leaks, the unit would qualify for Category V. In this latter example, if the tank were in a pit but was elevated from the base of the pit in such a manner as to allow routine inspection of the bottom to detect leaks it could be classified in Category IV. The use of underground piping by itself would not cause necessarily a facility to be classified in Category IV or V.
An example is, but not limited to:
-Land treatment.
For the purpose of siting criteria, the consequences of loss of control are:
Facilities in this category would include all land disposal methods which did not involve destroying the waste or otherwise eliminating its hazardous characteristics before disposal.
This category would also include the use of such facilities as impoundments, lagoons, evaporating ponds, underground tanks, or other underground units as part of a treatment, storage or disposal process, providing that they are intended to contain hazardous waste. For this purpose, the term "underground" means that all or part of a unit is buried such that it cannot be routinely inspected for leaks or defects.
An example is, but not limited to:
-Land disposal.
For the purposes of siting criteria, the consequences of loss of control are:
In making its determination of which category is appropriate for a proposed hazardous waste facility, the board shall consider the intent of each category as well as the specific descriptions above.
9 Va. Admin. Code § 20-50-60
Statutory Authority
§§ 10.1-1434 and 10.1-1436 of the Code of Virginia.