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Indemnity Clause
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ABSORBENT |
A substance that takes up
gases or liquids into its structure. For example, a sponge absorbs
water and is an absorbent. |
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ACUTE HAZARDOUS WASTE
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Hazardous waste determined
by the EPA to be of the most severe hazard. Anyone generating these
substances is fully regulated and obligated to adhere to all generator
standards if they generate 1 kg. (2.2 lbs.) per month or more. |
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ACID |
A chemical compound which
yields hydrogen ions when dissolved in water. An acid lowers the pH
value when dissolved in water. Acids are characterized by sour taste,
turning litmus red, and neutralizing bases (alkalies) to form salts.
Solutions with a pH value less than 7 are considered acidic. |
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ACIDIC |
The property of a solution
whose pH value is less than 7. |
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ACUTE |
Brief or sudden. Frequently
used in reference to personnel exposure to chemicals. |
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ACUTE EFFECTS |
Toxic effects which occur
over a relatively short period of time (minutes and hours). See also
Chronic Effects. |
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ACUTE TOXICITY |
A quantitative measure of
the effects of a toxic agent administered once or only a few times;
the period of observation is usually short (for example, 24 hours).
See also Chronic Toxicity. |
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ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION
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A non judicial enforcement
action taken by the Administrator (or his designee) or a state. |
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ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER |
An order issued by the Administrator
(or his designee) to a violator of RCRA provisions, that imposes enforceable
legal duties, e.g., forcing a facility to comply with specific regulations.
There are four types of RCRA orders: compliance orders, corrective
action orders, monitoring and analysis orders, and imminent hazard
orders. |
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ADMINISTRATIVE
PROCEDURES ACT |
Abbreviated "APA,"
a federal statute that provides min administrative standards designed
to inform the public about the actions of federal agencies, and to
properly protect the public's interests. |
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ADMINISTRATOR |
The Administrator of the United
States Environmental Protection Agency, or his designee. |
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ADSORBENT |
A substance that takes up
gases, liquids, or other substances onto its surface. For example,
activated carbon adsorbs phenol from water and is an adsorbent. |
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AIR PAD |
The process of removing a
substance from its container by pressurizing the container with air
to force the substance out. Also referred to as "pushing material."
This process is an alternative to pumping, but strict DOT regulations
restrict its use to certain vessels having special safety devices.
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AIR PACK |
A self-contained breathing
apparatus. Air packs are intended for emergency use only and generally
have a limited supply of breathing air. |
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ALKALI (Base) |
A compound which forms hydroxide
ions (OH-) in solution. Alkalies have the ability to neutralize acids
and form salts. Their solutions are characterized by the ability to
turn litmus blue. Solutions with a pH value greater than 7 are considered
alkaline. |
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ANNUAL REPORT |
A report, issued annually
by corporations to their stockholders, which contains basic financial
statements as well as management's opinion of the past year's operations
and prospects for the future. |
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ASTM |
The abbreviation for American
Society of Testing and Materials. This is a voluntary, consensus organization
which publishes test methods for numerous materials. The significance
of ASTM test methods is that each published method includes that method's
precision and accuracy. Thus, the results of tests performed according
to the published method are admissible in court. ASTM test methods
are frequently used as referee methods in the case of a dispute. |
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BACK HAUL
|
1) Traffic moving
in the direction of light flow when a carrier's traffic on a route
is heavier in one direction than the other.
2) To haul a shipment back after a delivery over a route previously
traveled. |
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BIENNIAL REPORT |
A report (EPA Form 8700-13A)
submitted by generators of hazardous waste to the Regional Administrator,
due March 1 or each even-numbered year. The report includes information
on the generator's activities during the previous calendar year. The
owner or operator of a treatment, storage, and disposal facility must
also prepare and submit a biennial report using EPA Form 8700-1313.
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BILL OF LADING |
The written transportation
contract between shipper and carrier (or between their agents). It
identifies the freight, who is to receive it, the place of delivery,
and gives the terms of the agreement. All goods going to a receiver
at one destination in a single shipment or on one truck must be on
a single bill of lading. |
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BIODEGRADABLE |
The adjective describing a
substance which may be decomposed by organisms normally present in
the environment. |
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BOD |
The abbreviation for Biological
Oxygen Demand, which is an analytical test to measure the deoxygenating
power of a water sample. The test requires five days to complete and
is sometimes referred to as BOD5. The main use of the test
is to determine whether a water sample will injure micro-organisms.
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BOND |
Basically an IOU or promissory
note a corporation usually issues in multiples of $1,000. A bond is
a promise to pay the bondholder a specified amount of interest for
a certain length of time, and to repay the principal before or on
the expiration date. |
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BTU |
The abbreviation for British
Thermal Unit, a measure of energy in the English system of units.
One BTU is the heat required to raise the temperature of one pound
of water from 39º F to 40º
F. The quantity of heat required to raise the temperature of one pound
of water one degree Fahrenheit. It is the accepted standard for the
comparison of heating values of fuels. The term is typically used
in the hazardous waste industry in conjunction with wastes which may
be destined for fuel blending. |
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CALIFORNIA WASTES |
A group of hazardous wastes,
including those containing PCBs, heavy metals, and halogenated organic
compounds, that the EPA determined should be banned from land disposal
unless they are first pretreated in accordance with the required pretreatment
standards. |
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CERCLA |
The Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, passed in 1980 and commonly
known as "the Superfund Law." CERCLA gives the federal government
the power to respond to releases, or threatened releases, of any hazardous
substance into the environment, as well as to a release of any pollutant
or contaminant that may present an imminent and substantial danger
to public health or welfare. CERCLA established a Hazardous Substance
Trust Fund (Superfund), available to finance responses by the federal
government. |
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CFR |
The abbreviation for the
Code of Federal Regulations. The CFR comprises rules of the various
agencies of the federal government and of the executive departments.
The Code is divided into 50 titles, which represent broad subject
areas of federal regulations. The parts of the CFR that have the greatest
interest for Van Waters & Rogers are Part 21, Food and Drugs,
and Part 49, Transportation. |
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CHARACTERISTICS |
EPA has identified four characteristics
of a hazardous waste: ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity, and EP
toxicity. Any waste that exhibits one or more of these characteristics
is classified as a hazardous waste under RCRA. |
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CHEMICAL COMPOSITION |
The listing of atoms in a
molecule without regard to the bonding involved. For example, the
chemical composition of methanol is CH4O. This phrase may
also refer to the components of a mixture. |
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CHEMICAL NAME |
The name for a chemical substance
which describes that substance in words approved by the International
Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. For example, the chemical name
for muriatic acid is hydrochloric acid. |
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CHEMTREC |
The abbreviation for the Chemical
Transportation Emergency Centers, a division of the Chemical Manufacturers
Association, set up as an emergency information source for transportation
accidents. |
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CHLORINE |
A halogen element, C1; a
greenish-yellow poisonous gas, C12. |
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CHRONIC TOXICITY |
A quantitative measure of
the effects of a toxic agent administered repeatedly over a period
of time. The period of observation is usually long (for example, months
or years). See also Acute Toxicity. |
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CIVIL ACTION |
A law suit filed in court
against a person who has either failed to comply with statutory or
regulatory requirements or an administrative order, or who has contributed
to a release of hazardous wastes or hazardous waste constituents.
There are four types of civil actions: compliance, corrective, monitoring
and analysis, and imminent hazard. |
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COLIWASA |
Composite Liquid Waste Sampler
is a tubular sampling device typically made of glass or polypropylene.
It has a stopper on one end which is opened and closed from the opposite
end. This device is used to obtain a representative cross-sectional
sample of waste material for analysis prior to treatment or disposal.
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COMBUSTIBLE |
A liquid which can burn;
as defined by DOT, a combustible exhibits a closed cup flash point
greater than 100º F but less
than 200º F. See Flash Point.
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COMMON CARRIER |
A transportation business
that offers service to the general public. Interstate common carriers
must hold a franchise issued by the Interstate Commerce Commission.
This franchise limits service to a specific geographical area. Rates
also are regulated. Routes and schedules of regular common carriers
are regulated by government agencies, but irregular-route common carriers
may set their own without regulatory approval. Most states also regulate
common carriers. |
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COMPATIBILITY |
A system to determine which
products may be stored next to each other. Products are compatible
if they may be mixed together without danger of adverse consequences.
Products are assigned a compatibility code letter based on their properties.
Products of similar codes may be stored together. |
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COMPLIANCE
ORDER/ACTION |
An order or action issued
under Section 3008(a) of RCRA, requiring any person who is not complying
with a requirement of RCRA to take steps to come into compliance.
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CONTAINERIZATION |
A shipping system based upon
large, cargo-carrying containers that easily can be CONTINGENCY PLAN.
A document setting out an organized, planned, and coordinated course
of action to be followed in case of a fire, explosion, or release
of hazardous waste or hazardous waste constituents from a treatment,
storage, or disposal facility. Contingency plans are intended for
such incidents when they could threaten human health or the environment.
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CONTINGENCY PLAN |
A document setting out an
organized, planned, and coordinated course of action to be followed
in case of a fire, explosion, or release of hazardous waste or hazardous
waste constituents from a treatment, storage, or disposal facility.
Contingency plans are intended for such incidents when they could
threaten human health or the environment. |
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CORRECTIVE ACTION |
An order EPA issues that requires
corrective action under RCRA Section 3008(h) at a facility when there
has been a release of hazardous waste or hazardous waste constituents
into the environment. Corrective action can be required beyond the
facility boundary and can be required regardless of when the waste
was placed at the facility. |
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CONTRACT CARRIER |
A company that engages in
for-hire transportation of property under individual contract or agreement
with one or a limited number of shippers. |
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CORROSIVE MATERIAL |
A substance which causes
gradual decomposition upon contact; as defined by DOT, a regulated
substance which is destructive to human skin upon contact or which
corrodes steel more rapidly than 0.25 inch per year. Corrosive materials
must bear the white DOT diamond. |
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CRIMINAL ACTION |
prosecutorial action taken
by the United States government or a state toward any person(s) who
has knowingly and willfully not complied with the law. Such an action
can result in the imposition of fines or imprisonment moved between
trucks, trains, and ships without rehandling the contents. |
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DEMURRAGE |
Detention of a freight vehicle
or container beyond a stipulated time. Also the payment made for such
delay. |
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DESIGNATED FACILITY |
A hazardous waste treatment,
storage, or disposal facility which has received an EPA or state permit
to operate (or has interim status) and has been designated on the
manifest by the generator as the facility to which the generator's
waste should be delivered. |
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DISCHARGE OR HAZARDOUS |
The accidental or intentional
spilling, leaking, pumping |
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WASTE DISCHARGE |
pouring, emitting, emptying,
or dumping of hazardous waste into or on any land or water. |
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DISPOSAL |
The discharge, deposit, injection,
dumping, spilling, leaking, or placing of any solid waste or hazardous
waste into or on any land or water so that any constituent thereof
may enter the environment or be emitted into the air or discharged
into any waters, including ground waters. Commonly referred to and
thought of as a process of treating a hazardous waste so as to minimize
the environmental risk associated with these activities (treatment,
incineration, recycling, etc.). |
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DISPOSAL FACILITY |
A facility, or part of a facility,
at which hazardous waste is intentionally placed into or on any land
or water, and at which waste will remain after closure. Commonly,
these facilities conduct processing of waste (treatment, incineration,
etc.) to minimize environmental risk. Facilities conducting these
activities require a permit to do so. |
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DOT |
The abbreviation for the U.S.
Department of Transportation, a cabinet-level department of the executive
branch of the federal government. |
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DOT HAZARDOUS |
The appropriate DOT description
which appears on the shipping papers |
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CLASSIFICATION |
and determines the proper
placard to be displayed on the transport vehicle during shipment.
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DOT SHIPPING NAME |
The specific product name
which must be used on the bill of lading when shipping hazardous materials.
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DUN & BRADSTREET(D&B)
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A credit rating service bureau
generally used by corporations to qualify customers before granting
credit terms and conditions for sale of product. |
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EP TOXICITY |
The characteristics of toxicity
in hazardous wastes as adopted by the EPA under the RCRA regulations.
"EP" refers to a specific extraction procedure (40 CRF). |
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EPA |
The abbreviation for the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, a regulatory agency of the federal
government. |
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EPA IDENTIFICATION |
The unique number assigned
by EPA to each generator or transporter |
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NUMBER |
of hazardous waste, and each
treatment, storage, or disposal facility. |
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EP TOXICITY TEST |
A test method, called the
Extraction Procedure (EP), that is designed to identify wastes which
have the ability or tendency to leach hazardous concentrations of
particular toxic constituents (e.g., heavy metals) into the ground
water as a result of improper management. These toxics have been determined
to be harmful at specified levels. |
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EXCEPTION REPORT |
A report that generators who
have had waste transported off-site must submit to the Regional Administrator
if they do not receive a copy of the manifest signed and dated by
the owner or operator of the designated facility to which their waste
was shipped within 45 days of the date on which the initial transporter
accepted the waste. |
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EXISTING FACILITY |
A facility which was in operation
or for which construction commenced on or before November 19, 1980.
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FACILITY |
All contiguous land, structure,
other appurtenances, and improvements on the land, used for treating
storing, or disposing of hazardous waste. A facility may consist of
several treatment, storage, or disposal operational units, e.g., one
or more landfills, surface impoundments, or a combination of them.
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FAHRENHEIT |
A thermometer scale based
on the temperature at which water freezes and boils, 32º
F and 212º F, respectively. |
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FEDERAL REGISTER |
A publication of the U.S.
Government Printing Office, in which all rules, regulations, and notices
of all governmental bodies are printed. Publication in the Federal
Register serves as official notification to the public. Abbreviated
FR. |
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FIFRA |
The abbreviation for the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act, which is administered
by the EPA. |
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FLAMMABILITY RANGE |
The range of temperatures
at which a chemical will ignite under normal atmospheric conditions.
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FLAMMABLE SUBSTANCE |
A substance that will burn;
as defined by DOT, a liquid is flammable if it exhibits a closed cup
flash point less than 100º F
(see Flash Point). A solid is flammable if it burns so vigorously
when ignited that it creates a transportation hazard or if it is spontaneously
combustible. A compressed gas is a flammable mixture if its flammability
range is wider than 12 percent. A flammable substance must carry the
red DOT diamond. |
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FLASH POINT |
The lowest temperature at
which the vapors of a liquid form a flammable mixture with air. Flash
points are reported as "closed cup" or "open cup"; closed cup measurements
are used to determine DOT flammability. |
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FOOD-CHAIN CROPS |
Tobacco, crops grown for human
consumption, and crops grown to feed animals whose products are consumed
by humans. |
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FORCE MAJEURE |
A phrase used in legal proceedings
to mean an event that cannot be reasonably anticipated or controlled,
an "act of God." |
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FREEBOARD |
The vertical distance between
the top of a tank or surface impoundment dike and the surface of the
waste contained therein. |
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GENERATOR |
Any person who first creates
a hazardous waste, or first makes the waste subject to the Subtitle
C regulations (e.g., imports a hazardous waste, initiates a shipment
of a hazardous waste, or mixes hazardous wastes of different DOT shipping
descriptions by placing them into a single container). |
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GROUND WATER |
By convention, the term for
all underground water such as subsurface aquifers or deep wells. |
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GUIDANCE DOCUMENT |
The document issued primarily
to elaborate and provide direction on the implementation of regulations.
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HALOGENATED |
A group of organic compounds
that include one or more atoms of a halogen |
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HYDROCARBONS |
(for example, chlorine or
bromine) in their molecular structures. A typical product of this
kind is any of the Freon blends. See also Chlorinated Hydrocarbons.
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HALOGENS |
The nonmetallic elements in
the seventh group of the periodic chart: fluorine, chlorine, bromine,
iodine, and astatine. |
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HAMMER PROVISION
(Hard Hammer and Soft Hammer) |
Statutory requirements that
go into effect automatically if EPA fails to issue regulations by
certain dates specified in the statute |
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HAZARDOUS MATERIAL |
A substance that meets the
DOT definition or is listed in Part 172, and which requires DOT hazard
labeling on packages and placarding on trucks. |
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HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCE |
A substance that meets the
EPA definition or is listed in CFR 40 under CERCLA section 101(14),
and is listed in the appendix to 172.101. |
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HAZARDOUS WASTE |
As defined in RCRA, a solid
waste (which the regulations define as a liquid or solid), or combination
of solid wastes, which because of its quantity, concentration, or
physical, chemical, or infectious characteristics may:
A) Cause or significantly contribute to an increase in mortality or
an increase in serious irreversible, or incapacitating reversible,
illness; or
B) Pose a substantial present or potential hazard to human health
or the environment when improperly treated, stored, transported, or
disposed of or otherwise managed. As defined in the regulations, a
solid waste is hazardous if it fulfills one of four conditions:
1. Exhibits a characteristic of hazardous waste (40 CFR Sections 261.20
through 262.24);
2. Has been listed as hazardous (40 CFR Sections 261.31 through 261.33);
3. Is a mixture containing a listed hazardous waste and a nonhazardous
solid waste (unless the mixture is specifically excluded or no longer
exhibits any of the characteristics of hazardous waste); or
4. Is not excluded from regulation as a hazardous waste. |
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HAZARDOUS WASTE FUEL BLENDING
|
The phrase is typically used
to refer to the activity of blending a minimum of 5,000 BTUs) to meet
a given specification for burning to beneficially utilize the heat
contact of the waste. (Otherwise, the burning of these wastes is considered
as going for destructive incineration.) Much of these blended waste
materials go to cement kilns or industrial furnaces. These facilities
must obtain a permit and are regulated as a Transporter/Storage/Disposal
Facility (TSDF). |
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HEAVY METALS |
The group of metallic elements
which are precipitated from solution by hydrogen sulfide; generally,
those metals with atomic numbers greater than 24. |
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HM |
The abbreviation for hazardous
material. Frequently used in reference to hazardous material as defined
in RCRA (see also Hazardous Material). |
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HSWA |
The Hazardous and Solid Waste
Amendments of 1984 (Public Law 98-616), which significantly expanded
both the scope and the coverage of RCRA. |
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HYDROCARBON |
An organic compound containing
only hydrogen and carbon. Hydrocarbons can be aliphatic or aromatic.
Styrene and hexane are hydrocarbons. |
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IDENTIFICATION NUMBER
|
A number used in reference
to DOT regulations for shipping hazardous materials. Identification
numbers have been assigned to hazardous materials based on the characteristics
of the material. The numbers are intended to improve the capability
of emergency personnel to identify hazardous materials and to ensure
immediate access to emergency response information in the case of
an incident. Identification numbers have a "UN" prefix or an "NA"
prefix. The "UN" prefix is associated with hazardous material descriptions
which are acceptable for international or domestic shipment. The "NA"
prefix is associated with hazardous material descriptions which are
acceptable for domestic shipments only. The Hazardous Material Regulations
require the identification number be placed on all shipping papers
and on all bulk tanks. Additionally, the identification number must
be placed on all packages containing hazardous materials and on all
chlorine ton cylinders. |
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IMMINENT HAZARD ORDER |
An order the agency with
relevant jurisdiction uses under the authority of RCRA Section 7003
to make sure steps are taken to clean up hazardous waste problems.
An imminent hazard order is directed at the person contributing to
an imminent and substantial endangering of human health or the environment
caused by the handling of nonhazardous or hazardous solid waste. |
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INCINERATOR |
Any enclosed device using
controlled-flame combustion that neither meets the criteria for classification
as a boiler nor is listed as an industrial furnace. This device is
a means of thermal treatment of hazardous waste. |
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INTERIM STATUS |
Regulatory status that allows
owners and operators of TSDFs that were in existence, or for which
construction had commenced, prior to November 19, 1980, to continue
to operate without a final permit after that date. Owners and operators
of TSDFs are also eligible for interim status on an ongoing basis
if the TSDF is in existence on any other effective date of regulatory
changes under RCRA that cause the facility to be subject to Subtitle
C regulation. Owners and operators in interim status are subject to
and must comply with the applicable standards in 40 CFR Part 265.
Interim status is gained through the notification process and by submitting
Part A of the permit application. |
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KILOGRAM |
A unit of mass in the metric
system: one thousand grams, equal to 2.2046 pounds; abbreviated kg.
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LAND BAN REQUIREMENTS |
A set of regulations governing
a list of hazardous wastes which prohibits the wastes specified from
being placed into or on land for disposal purposes without being treated
to specified treatment levels. |
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LANDFILL (Class I) |
A disposal facility or part
of a facility where hazardous waste is placed in or on land and which
is not a land treatmen facility, surface impoundment, or injection
well. |
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LAND TREATMENT FACILITY
|
A facility or part of a facility
at which hazardous waste is applied onto or incorporated into the
soil surface. Such facilities are disposal facilities if the waste
remains after closure. |
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LEACHATE |
Any liquid, including any
suspended components in the liquid, that has percolated through or
drained from hazardous waste. |
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LINER |
A continuous layer of natural
or man-made materials, beneath or on the sides of a surface impoundment,
landfill, or landfill cell, which restricts the downward or lateral
escape of hazardous waste, hazardous waste constituents, or leachate.
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LEACHATE |
A solution of contaminants
produced by water flowing through materials such as organic matter,
soil, or landfills. |
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LONG-TERM LIABILITY |
Any claim or obligation to
make payments at dates over one year in the future. |
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L/T/L (Less-than-Truck
Load) |
A shipment of less than 40,000
pounds, delivered via truck. |
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MANIFEST |
The shipping document, EPA
Form 8700-22, used for identifying the quantity, composition, origin,
routing, and destination of hazardous waste during its transportation
from the point of generation to the point of treatment, storage, or
disposal. |
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METRIC TON |
One thousand kilograms, or
2,200 pounds. |
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MONITORING
AND
ORDER ANALYSIS |
An administrative
order used to evaluate the nature and extent of a substantial hazard
to human health or at a TSDF. It can be issued either to the current
owner or to a past owner or operator if the facility is not currently
in operation, or if the present owner could not be expected to have
actual knowledge of the potential release. |
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MATERIAL SAFETY DATA SHEETS
|
Abbreviated MSDS or MSD sheets.
A document prepared by the product's manufacturer which describes
the product's properties, safe handling and storage procedures, first
aid measures, and labeling requirements. MSD sheets are required under
the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 and must be available
for personnel to review at each branch. |
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NA NUMBER |
An identification number used
in reference to DOT regulations for shipping hazardous materials.
The "NA" prefix is associated with hazardous material descriptions
which are acceptable for North American shipment only. See also identification
number. |
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NEW FACILITY |
A TSDF which began operation
or for which construction commenced after November 19, 1980. |
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OPEN DUMP |
Any facility or site where
solid waste is disposed of, which is 1) not a sanitary landfill that
meets the criteria listed in 40 CFR part 257 (Subtitle D Criteria),
and 2) not a facility for the disposal of hazardous waste. |
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OPERATOR |
The person responsible for
the overall operation of a facility. |
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OWNER |
The person who owns a facility
or part of a facility. |
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ORGANIC |
Containing carbon (except
carbonates, bi-carbonates, and cyanides). |
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ORM-A |
The abbreviation for Other
Regulated Material - Class A. Used in reference to the DOT hazard
classification of chemicals whose transportation is regulated by the
Hazardous Materials Regulations. An ORM-A material is one whose properties
would cause extreme annoyance or discomfort to passengers or crew
if it leaked during shipment. Carbon tetrachloride is an example of
ORM-A. |
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ORM-B |
The abbreviation for Other
Regulated Material - Class B. See also ORM-A above. An ORM-B material
is one capable of causing significant damage to a transport vehicle
if it should leak during transport. Anhydrous ferric chloride is an
example of ORM-B. |
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ORM-C |
The abbreviation for Other
Regulated Material - Class C. See also ORM-A above. An ORM-C material
is one whose characteristics do not fit the ORM-A or ORM-B classification
but nonetheless make it unsuitable for shipment unless properly identified
and packaged. Uncleaned or used burlap bags are an example of ORM-C.
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ORM-D |
The abbreviation for Other
Regulated Material - Class D. See also ORM-A above. An ORM-D material
is one which may be subject to DOT regulations but which presents
a limited transportation hazard due to its form, quantity, and packaging.
ORM-D materials are materials for which exceptions have been provided
in the Hazardous Materials Regulations and which are consumer commodities.
Specific quantity and packaging details required for ORM-D classification
are given in the Regulations. |
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ORM-E |
The abbreviation for Other
Regulated Material - Class E. See also ORM-A above. An ORM-E material
is hazardous waste of a material not included in any other hazard
class. |
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OSHA |
The abbreviation for either
the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 (PL 91-596) or the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which is a branch of
the Department of Labor. Since the Act established the Administration,
the references are interchangeable. The Act requires employers to
assure safe and healthful working conditions for their employees.
The Administration administers the regulations of the Act. The Act
provides for inspections and penalties for noncompliance. It also
regulates personnel exposure to toxic substances in the workplace.
Early inspection activity was primarily directed toward workplace
safety; recent activity has been directed toward occupational health.
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OSHA HAZARD CATEGORIES
|
As given by OSHA in definitions
for determining OSHA-defined hazardous substances: Ignitable, Sudden
Release, Reactive, Immediate Effect, and Delayed Effect. |
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OXIDIZER |
A material capable of oxidizing
another material; a material that readily yields oxygen, or that removes
hydrogen from another compound, or that attracts electrons. For example,
hydrogen peroxide. |
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PART B |
The second part of the TSDF
permit application process, which included detailed and highly technical
information concerning the TSDF in question. There is no standard
form for Part B. Instead, the facility must submit information based
on the regulatory requirements. |
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PARTIAL CLOSURE |
The closure of a discrete
part of a facility in accordance with the applicable closure requirements
of 40 CFR, Part 264 or 265. For example, partial closure may include
the closure of a trench, a landfill cell, or a pit, while other parts
of the same facility continue in operation or will be placed in operation
in the future. |
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PERMIT |
An authorization, license,
or equivalent control document issued by EPA or an authorized state
to implement the regulatory requirements of Subtitle C, Parts 264
and 265, for TSDFs. |
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PERMIT-BY-RULE |
A provision of Subtitle C,
whereby a facility is deemed to have an RCRA permit if it is permitted
under the Safe Drinking Waster Act, the Clean Water Act, or the Marine
Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act, and also meets a few additional
Subtitle C requirements as specified at 40 CFR Section 270.60. |
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PERSON |
An individual, trust, firm,
joint stock company, corporation (including a government corporation),
partnership, association, state, municipality, commission, political
subdivision of a state, or any interstate body. |
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POINT SOURCE |
Any discernible, confined,
and discrete conveyance, including but not limited to any pipe, ditch,
channel, tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure, container, rolling
stock, concentrated animal feeding operation, or vessel or other floating
craft, from which pollutants are or may be discharged. This term does
not include return flows from irrigated agriculture. |
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POLICY |
A document that specifies
operating procedures that must be followed. Policies are used
by program offices to outline the manner in which pieces of the RCRA
program are to be carried out. |
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pH |
A measure of the acidity
or alkalinity of an aqueous solution. The pH scale ranges from 0 to
14; zero represents the most acidic, and 14 represents the most basic;
7.0 is neither acidic nor basic but neutral. The pH scale is a logarithm,
so pH 2.0 is ten time more acidic than pH 3.0. All pH values below
7.0 are acidic, while all values above 7.0 are basic. |
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PPM |
The abbreviation for part
per million; one part in one million parts or 1/106. See
also PPB. |
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PROPER SHIPPING NAME |
The name of a product as
defined by DOT. The proper shipping name must be written on the bill
of lading, in addition to its common name, if it is sold under its
common name. For example, the proper shipping name for muriatic acid
is hydrochloric acid and for Chlorothene SM is 1, 1, 1-trichloroethane.
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RCRA |
The abbreviation for the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, PL 94-580. The purpose of this
Act is to ensure that hazardous wastes are disposed of in environmentally
sound ways and to encourage resource recovery by recycling materials.
RCRA is administered by the EPA. EPA requires generators, stores,
transporters, and treaters of hazardous wastes to register their facilities
and submit reports. |
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RCRA |
The acronym for the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976. What we commonly refer to as
"RCRA" is an amendment to the first piece of federal solid waste legislation,
called the Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965. RCRA was amended in 1980
and most recently on November 8, 1984, by HSWA. |
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REGIONAL ADMINISTRATOR
|
The highest-ranking official
in each of the ten EPA regions. |
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REGULATION |
The legal mechanism that
spells out how a statute's broad policy directives are to be carried
out. Regulations are published in the Federal Register and then codified
in the Code of Federal Regulations. |
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REPRESENTATIVE SAMPLE |
A sample of a whole (e.g.,
waste pile, lagoon, ground water, or waste stream) which is expected
to exhibit the average properties of the whole. |
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RESOURCE CONSERVATION
|
Reduction of the amounts
of solid waste that are generated, reduction of overall resource consumption,
and utilization of recovered resources. |
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RESOURCE RECOVERY |
The recovery of materials
or energy from waste. |
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RECYCLE |
To recover saleable products
from sludge, spent material, or other contaminated products. Recycling
generally involves processes such as filtration, distillation, and
drying, and is usually applied to organic solvents. |
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RESPIRATOR |
A device which is worn over
the nose and mouth to protect the wearer from breathing chemicals.
Respirators have replaceable cartridges which filter out a given class
of chemicals from ambient air, which the wearer is breathing. Respirators
should not be worn in areas of very high vapor concentrations (greater
than two percent). Respirator cartridges are available for many chemical
classes and are only effective when used with the appropriate chemical
class. |
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RQ |
The abbreviation for reportable
quantity. Used in reference to spills of chemicals regulated by EPA
under RCRA. The RQ is dependent upon the nature of the chemical. The
RCRA requires that a spill of a regulated chemical in excess of the
RQ be reported to the EPA. Specific RQ values are listed in the appendix
to 172.01 in the DOT Hazardous Materials Regulations. The symbol RQ
must be placed before or after a product's shipping paper description
if any single container of that product has a content weight equal
to or more than the RQ weight. |
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SARA |
The abbreviation for regulations
requiring "community-right-to-know" steps, including the filing of
OSHA hazardous product lists, quantities and plant locations, each
March 1 with local and state agencies. |
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SHIPPING DESCRIPTION |
A rigid formula required by
DOT for describing products on shipping papers. As specified in 172.200,
etc., the descriptor must be arranged in the following order: DOT
product name, our name--if different--DOT hazard class, UN or NA number.
Note: The symbol RQ, if needed, goes in front of the DOT product
name, and any required container exemption number goes in front of
everything. |
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SITE |
The land or water area where
any facility or activity is physically located or conducted, including
adjacent land used in connection with the facility or activity. |
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SLUDGE |
Any solid, semisolid, or liquid
waste generated from a municipal, commercial, or industrial wastewater
treatment plant, water supply treatment plant, or air pollution control
facility, exclusive of the treated effluent from a wastewater treatment
plant. |
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SMALL QUANTITY |
A generator who produces
less than 1,000 kg. of hazardous waste per |
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GENERATOR |
month (or accumulates less
than 1,000 kg. at any one time) or one who produces less than 1 kg.
of acutely hazardous waste per month (or accumulates less than 1 kg.
of acutely hazardous waste at any one time). The ceiling of small
quantity generators was lowered to 100 kg. per month of hazardous
waste, effective March 31, 1986. |
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SOLID WASTE |
As defined in RCRA, any garbage,
refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant, water supply treatment
plant, or air pollution control facility, and other discarded materials.
Solid waste includes solid, liquid, semisolid, or contained gaseous
material resulting from industrial, commercial, mining, or agricultural
operations, and from community activities. The term does not include
solid or dissolved materials in domestic sewage, or solid or dissolved
materials in irrigation return flows or industrial discharges which
are point sources subject to permits under the Clean Water Act. Nor
does it include special nuclear or byproduct materials as defined
by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. |
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SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL ACT
|
See "RCRA" OF 1965. |
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STATE |
Any of the 50 states, the
District of Columbia, the commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands. |
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STATUTE |
The law as passed by Congress
and signed by the president. |
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STORAGE |
The holding of hazardous
waste for a temporary period, at the end of which the hazardous waste
is treated, disposed of, or stored elsewhere. This can take place
on-site or it can involve transportation to another TSDF. |
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SUPERFUND |
See "CERCLA". |
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SUPPLEMENTAL FUELS |
Used to refer to wastes being
used as fuel blending material. |
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SURFACE IMPOUNDMENT |
A facility or part of a facility
that is a natural topographic depression, man-made excavation, or
diked area formed typically of earthen materials (although it may
be lined with man-made materials) and designed to hold an accumulation
of liquid wastes or wastes containing free liquids, and which is not
an injection well. Examples of surface impoundments are holding, storage,
settling, and aeration pits, ponds, and lagoons. |
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SLUDGE |
1) Solid or semisolid material
which settles out of a solution. 2) Spent material which has been
used in a chemical process and is intended for recycling or disposal.
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SOLID |
A substance of definite shape;
matter in its most concentrated form. A solid does not take the shape
of its container. |
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SOLVENT |
The substance which dissolves
a solute to form a solution. |
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SPECIFIC GRAVITY |
A measure of density of a
liquid compared to water, the specific gravity of which is defined
as 1.000; abbreviated sp.g. |
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TANK |
A stationary vessel designed
to contain an accumulation of hazardous waste. |
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THE ACT |
A short name for the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act. |
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THERMAL TREATMENT |
The treatment of hazardous
waste in a device which uses elevated temperatures as the primary
means to change the chemical, physical, or biological character or
composition of the hazardous waste. Incineration is an example of
thermal treatment. |
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TOTALLY ENCLOSED TOXIC
SUBSTANCES |
A facility or device for
the treatment of hazardous Chemicals which are subject to the regulations
issued under the Toxic Substances Control Act by the EPA (40 CFR);
this term is also used in a generic sense to mean "toxic chemicals"
or "toxic agents." |
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TOXIC WASTES |
Those hazardous wastes which
meet the characteristics of EP toxicity as defined in the RCRA regulations
by the EPA (40 CFR). See also EP Toxicity. |
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TOXICITY |
A quantitative assessment
of the capacity of a toxic agent to kill or cause harm; either acute
toxicity (short-term) or chronic toxicity (longer-term exposure or
action). |
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TRANSPORTER |
An organization formally
designated by the EPA, and certain states, under RCRA as permitted
to transport hazardous wastes. |
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TRANSFER FACILITY |
Any transportation-related
facility, including loading docks, parking areas, storage areas, and
other similar areas where shipments of hazardous waste are temporarily
held during the normal course of transportation. |
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TRANSPORTER |
Any person engaged in the
off-site transportation of hazardous waste within the United States,
by air, rail, highway, or water, if such transportation requires a
manifest under 40 CFR Part 262. |
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TREATMENT |
Any method, technique, or
process, including neutralization, designed to change the physical,
chemical, or biological character or composition of any hazardous
waste so as to neutralize it or render it nonhazardous or less hazardous,
or to recover it or make it safer to transport, store, or dispose
of. Treatment also includes making hazardous waste amenable to recovery,
storage, or volume reduction. |
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TSDF |
Under RCRA, the abbreviated
EPA term for treatment, storage, or disposal facility. |
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VECTOR |
A carrier, usually in insect,
that is capable of transmitting disease from one organism to another.
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