1 / 19

Technical Requirements for Site Remediation

Technical Requirements for Site Remediation. Backbone of New Jersey’s Site Remediation Program. How Rulemaking is Initiated. NJ Legislature writes a bill Bill is passed by the Legislature and Assembly Bill is signed by the Governor Agency (DEP) does rulemaking.

arnon
Download Presentation

Technical Requirements for Site Remediation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technical Requirements for Site Remediation Backbone of New Jersey’s Site Remediation Program

  2. How Rulemaking is Initiated • NJ Legislature writes a bill • Bill is passed by the Legislature and Assembly • Bill is signed by the Governor • Agency (DEP) does rulemaking

  3. Administrative Procedures Act • Publish in the NJ Register • Rule proposal • Public comment period (30-60 Days) • Response to comments • Adoption (within 1 year of proposal) • 5 Year expiration (“sunset”)

  4. Technical Rules: History Applies to All Contaminated Sites • 1992 First Proposal • 1993 First Adoption • 1997 Readoption w/Amendments • 1999 Brownfield Act Amendments • 2001 Proposed Readoption w/Amendments • 2002 Adoption

  5. Who conducts remediations Person conducting remediation is: • Owner of a site • Operator of a site • Person responsible for the discharge • Volunteer not in any way responsible (prospective purchaser, developer, local government) • Department - Publicly funded remediations

  6. Remediation Milestones • Preliminary Assessment • Site Investigation • Remedial Investigation • Remedial Action Work Plan • Remedial Action Report • Monitoring of Engineering and Institutional Controls

  7. Preliminary Assessment (PA) • Purpose: Identify potentially contaminated areas • Diligent Inquiry • Site history • All materials used/produced, waste generated • Production processes • Listed areas of concern (AOC) • All federal, state, local environmental permits • Site visit

  8. Site Investigation (SI) Purpose: Sample all potentially contaminated areas identified • Sampling biased to highest contamination • Sample and laboratory methods • Building interiors • Soil • Ground water • Surface water and sediments

  9. Site Investigation • Areas specific requirements: Tanks, piping, impoundments, floor drains, etc. • Natural soil background levels - Arsenic, Thallium • Baseline Ecological Evaluation • Contaminants • Eco-receptor • Pathway • Historic contaminated fill material

  10. Site Investigation If ground water contamination is identified investigation is expedited • Determine direction of flow • Conduct well search • Identify domestic wells in 1/2 mile • Identify industrial/supply wells in 1 mile • Contact Department • Sample identified wells • Expedite Remedial Investigation

  11. Remedial Investigation Purpose: For each area of concern (AOC) • Delineate vertical and horizontal extent of contamination • Identify site characteristics • Identify migration pathways • Determine ecological impacts • Containment/stabilization needed

  12. Remedial Action Work Plan Purpose: Demonstrate the proposed remedial action is appropriate • Description of remedy • Remediation standards to be achieved • If remedy will include an engineering or institutional control • Plan for monitoring controls

  13. Remedial Action Work Plan • Area by area remediation plan • Specific area requirements -Tanks, piping, impoundments, floor drains, etc. • Quality assurance plan • Required permits • Soil and sediment erosion control • Health and safety plan • Soil reuse plan

  14. Remedial Action Work Plan • Design engineering controls • Property owner’s written permission for deed notice • Draft deed notice • Provide data for ground water classification exception area (CEA) • Cost estimate • Schedule for progress report and completion

  15. Engineering & Institutional Controls • Property is owned by individuals or corporation (the soil) • Residential soil standards • Non-residential soil standards • Engineering controls are used to reduce or eliminate exposure • Fences, capping w/soil, clay, or other materials

  16. Engineering & Institutional Controls • Institutional controls - Deed notice • Provides notice of site conditions and engineering controls • Can limit access or type of land use • Identifies person responsible for maintaining, monitoring, reporting

  17. Engineering & Institutional Controls • State holds the ground water “in trust” for New Jersey citizens • Department designates ground water use classifications • Ground water classification exception area • Type of Institutional control • Provides public notice • For specific contaminants • For a specified time frames

  18. Remedial Action Work Plan • Post remedial action requirements: • Sampling • Identify extent of soil contamination left above most stringent standards • Confirm data supporting CEA

  19. Remedial Action Report • Restore to pre-remediation conditions • Seal monitoring wells • Record deed notice • No further action required • Begin monitoring • Maintain controls • Report to Department every 2 years • Remove CEA when standards are achieved

More Related