Texas Register, Volume 9, Number 66, Pages 4703-4756, September 4, 1984 Page: 4,710
4703-4756 p. ; 28 cm.View a full description of this periodical.
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Appendix I A generator shall designate only those
storage, processing, or disposal facilities which are
authorized under the RCRA, Subtitle C, or an approved
state hazardous waste program This requirement pre-
viously appeared in 335 64(c) The statement re-
garding authorized facilities and the requirement to in-
clude EPA Identification numbers in manifests that are
prepared by generators of hazardous wastes were in-
corporated into 335 10 from 335 64(b) and (c) As
reflected in the amendments to Subchapter C, the pro-
posal incorporates these requirements into 335 10
and therefore makes 335.64 redundant For that rea-
son, 335 10(q) is deleted because it references
335 64
The proposal amends 335 11 to substitute the term
"manifest" for the term "shipping ticket" throughout
the provision to c< nform to the new EPA regulations
In addition, 335 11 (b)(1) includes language clarifying
that transporters who transport Class I industrial solid
waste out of the United States shall indicate the date
the Class I waste left the United States under the item
labeled "Special Handling Instructions and Additional
Information" on the manifest
The proposal amends 335 12 by substituting the
term "manifest" for the term "shipping ticket" where-
ver it appears In addition, the proposal deletes the
phrase stating that 335 12(b) requires the EPA Iden-
tification numbers, generator's certification, and
signatures on a shipping paper received by facilities
from a rail or water (bulk shipment) transporter of
Class I waste because the required information is
previously specified under 335 10(b)
The proposal also deletes subsection (c) and adds a
new 335 12(c) that establishes reporting procedures
for unresolved significant discrepancies in manifests
received by facilities accepting all Class I industrial
solid waste This provision, which appeared as
335 1 72 in the hazardous waste regulations, is in-
corporated into Subchapter A and therefore requires
facilities receiving Class I wastes to note significant
discrepancies on each copy of the manifest or shipping
paper and to report significant discrepancies in mani-
fests for nonhazardous as well as hazardous Class I
industrial solid wastes
The proposal amends 335 13 by deleting the refer-
ence to exception reporting by generators under
335 72 In 335 13(d) and incorporating the provi-
sions of 335 72 Into 335 13 as new subsection (e)
and subsection (f) This amendment now requires
generators of both hazardous and nonhazardous Class
I industrial solid waste to submit exception reports to
the department if a signed copy of the generator's
manifest is not returned to the generator from the des-
ignated facility within a specified length of time The
proposal also substitutes the term "shipping ticket"
with the word "manifest" wherever it appears
The proposal amends 335 14 to reflect the changes
In terminology from "shipping ticket" to "manifest "
The proposal amends 335 15 to clarify that the re-
quirements of the provisions do not apply to owners
and operators that store, process, or dispose of ClassI waste on-site and do not receive Class I waste from
off-site sources The word "manifest" is substituted
for the term "shipping ticket" throughout the provi-
sion Under proposed 335 15(b), the owner or oper-
ator of the facility shall prepare a monthly summary
that would include the method of storage, processing,
and disposal of each Class I waste shipment received,
as referenced by the appropriate abbreviations from
Subchapter B, Appendix I, Table 1 and Table 2,
regarding units of measure and handling codes Un-
der proposed 335 15(c), the information to be includ-
ed in monthly reports is listed, as incorporated from
335 176 and extended to all Class I industrial solid
waste Since 335 176, concerning waste reports,
becomes redundant when incorporated into
335 15(c), the reference to 335 176 will be
repealed under Subchapter H
New 335 16 introduces the appendix to Subchapter
A The appendix includes a copy of the uniform haz-
ardous waste manifest form and continuation pages
for use in the manifesting of Class I industrial solid
waste Copies of these forms may be obtained from
the Shipping Control and Effluent Reports Unit, Solid
Waste and Spill Response Section, Enforcement and
Field Operations Division, Texas Department of Water
Resources, Stephen F Austin Building, 1700 North
Congress Avenue, Austin (mailing address P O Box
13087, Austin, Texas 78711) The appendix also in-
clude Table 1, which lists the abbreviations to be used
for types of containers The table of abbreviations for
containers appeared in the March 20, 1984, issue of
the Federal Register (49 FedReg 10503)
Mike Hodges, Fiscal Services Section chief, has de-
termined that for the first five-year period the rules
will be in effect there will be fiscal implications as a
result of enforcing or administering the rules The ef-
fect on state government for the first five-year period
the rules will be in effect is an estimated additional
cost of $20,154 in 1985 There is no estimated cost
for the years 1984 and 1986-1988 There is an esti-
mated reductio , in cost of $2,120 each year from
1985-1988 There is no estimated reduction in cost
in 1984 There is no anticipated economic effect on
local government or small businesses
Mr Hodges also has determined that for each year of
the first five years the rules as proposed is in effect
the public benefit anticipated as a result of enforcing
the rules as proposed is the improvement of the state's
ability to assure protection of human health and the
environment, including ground and surface water re-
sources, from the threat of contamination by Class
I industrial solid wastes by establishing more uniform
standards for the manifesting of Class I wastes The
manifest is a very important component of the "cradle
to grave" regulation of hazardous wastes under the
RCRA, for the manifest must be prepared by genera-
tors who transport, or offer for transportation, hazard-
ous waste for off-site treatment, storage, or disposal
The manifest is a control and transport document that
accompanies the waste from its point of generation
to its destination The manifest system is designed
to ensure that a waste actually reaches its destination.September 4, 1984
Texas
Register9 TexReg 4710
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Texas. Secretary of State. Texas Register, Volume 9, Number 66, Pages 4703-4756, September 4, 1984, periodical, September 4, 1984; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth243620/m1/8/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.