Large Quantity Generator Hazardous Waste Workshop presentations from April 18, 2013:
Hazardous Waste Identification
[PDF - 52 MB]
Large Quantity Generator Requirements
[PDF - 18 MB]
Land Disposal Restrictions
[PDF - 1.5 MB]
Used Oil and Used Oil Filter Requirements
[PDF - 44 MB]
Universal Waste Requirements
[PDF - 7.9 MB]
What is a Hazardous Waste?
The definition of a hazardous
waste starts with the definition of a solid waste. A solid waste is any
solid, liquid or contained gaseous material that is discarded by being;
disposed of, incinerated, or recycled. A solid wastes can also be the
by-product of a manufacturing process, a commercial product that is used
in a business or home, garbage, etc.
A hazardous waste is a solid
waste which because of its quantity, concentration, physical, chemical, or
infectious characteristics may:
(i) cause, or significantly
contribute to an increase in mortality or an increase in serious illness;
or
(ii) pose a substantial hazard
to human health or the environment when improperly treated, stored,
transported, or disposed of, or otherwise managed.
Hazardous waste are divided
into two categories:
a) Listed waste
A solid waste is a hazardous
waste if it appears on one of four lists published in the Code of Federal
Regulations (40 CFR 261). These hazardous waste are called listed
hazardous waste.
b) Characteristic wastes
A solid waste that is not a
hazardous waste may still be a characteristic hazardous waste. There are
four properties used to classify a characteristic hazardous waste:
-
Ignitable - It catches fire under certain conditions
(i.e. it supports combustion at or below 140F).
- Corrosive - It accelerates the corrosion of metals
or has a very high(>12.5) or low(<2.0) pH.
-
Reactive - It is unstable and explodes or produces toxic fumes,
gases and vapors when mixed with water or under conditions
such as heat or pressure.
- Toxic - It is harmful or fatal when ingested or absorbed;
or it leaches toxic chemicals into the soil or
groundwater when disposed of on land.
The hazardous waste universe
is divided into two categories. The first category is those individuals or
companies that generate hazardous waste. This category is regulated by the
Compliance Section of the hazardous waste program. The second
category is those facilities that manage the hazardous waste generated by
others. This category is regulated by the Permitting Section of the
Hazardous waste Program.
Permitting Section
The management of hazardous
waste generated by others requires a specific authorization (permit) from
the State of Florida. The issuance of a permit requires review of
information about the location of the facility, the type of activities
conducted at the facility (i.e. storage in tanks, containers, treatment or
incineration), operational practices at the facility, and the closure
plans.
The permitting section is also
responsible for reviewing applications for Mercury Recovery and
Reclamation Facilities, and Used Oil Processors. It should be noted that
Used Oil by its nature is not a hazardous waste, but improper management
practices could cause it to become a hazardous waste.
The Department uses a permit
application tracking system to monitor the permit process.
Compliance/Enforcement Section
Compliance inspections are
conducted at all generators, transporters, treatment, storage, and
disposal facilities to determine their compliance with Federal and State
regulations.
Inspections are our main
source of information. Legal enforcement is taken for violations detected
during inspections. The main purpose of enforcement actions is to ensure
that the facilities return to compliance. This return to compliance may
involve doing remediation to soil and groundwater to remove contaminates
which have been released due to operations at these facilities.
In addition to our compliance
and enforcement activities, technical assistance is provided to the
public, facility owners, consultants and law enforcement officials. This
assistance is disseminated in various ways, such as; answering compliance
question on the phone, forwarding documents of various hazardous waste
issues, giving public seminars to various segments of the regulated
community, and giving both specific and general presentation before school
groups and civic organizations.
Data Bases used:
Hazardous Waste Compliance
& Enforcement Tracking - CHAZ
Compliance and Enforcement
Tracking (Other Programs) - COMET,
Legal Case Tracking System -
LCT
Florida Division of
Corporations (Lookup) - SS