1. Hazardous waste facilities as defined in under s. 291.01 (8), Stats., and regulated under chs. NR 660 to 679; metallic.
2. Metallic mining operations for nonferrous minerals as defined in under s. 293.01 (9), Stats., and regulated under ch. NR 182; and metallic.
3. Metallic mining operations for ferrous minerals as defined in under s. 295.41 (26), Stats., including mining wastes and mining waste sites as defined in under s. 295.41 (30) and (31), Stats., and regulated under subch. III of ch. 295, Stats.
Section 2   NR 500.03 (19) (Note), (26c), (26g), (26n), (26r), (26w), (26y), (60m), (76m), (106m), (121m), (152m), (197) (Note), (246m), (254g) and (254r) are created to read:
NR 500.03 (19) Note: CCR is an industrial byproduct that may be beneficially used in a productive manner, as defined under s. NR 538.03 (10), which means the use of an industrial byproduct that meets all of the following criteria:
(a)
Provides a functional benefit.
(b)
Substitutes for the use of a virgin material that must be otherwise obtained.
(c) Meets relevant product specifications, regulatory standards or design standards when available, and when such standards are not available, is not used in excess quantities.
(26c) CCR” means coal combustion residuals, including fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue gas desulfurization materials generated from burning coal for the purpose of generating electricity by electric utilities and independent power producers.
(26g) “CCR fugitive dust” means solid airborne particulate matter that contains or is derived from CCR, emitted from any source other than a stack or chimney.
(26n) (a) “CCR landfill” means a landfill that receives CCR, including nonmetallic mining sites under s. 295.11 (6), Stats., that receive CCR, and any area of land or excavation that receives CCR that does not meet the definition of a beneficial use under s. NR 538.02 (2).
(b) “CCR landfill” does not include a CCR surface impoundment or municipal solid waste landfill that receives CCR.
(26r) “CCR surface impoundment” means a natural topographic depression, man-made excavation, or diked area that is designed to hold an accumulation of CCR and liquids, and the unit treats, stores or disposes of CCR.
(26w) (a) “CCR unit” means any CCR landfill, CCR surface impoundment, lateral expansion of a CCR landfill, or a combination of more than one of these units.
(b) “CCR unit” includes both new and existing units, unless otherwise specified.
(26y) CCR well” means a designated well installed at a CCR landfill whose location and depth have been approved by the department specifically for monitoring purposes under Subtitle D.
(60m) “Destruction or adverse modification” means a direct or indirect alteration of critical habitat that appreciably diminishes the likelihood of the survival and recovery of threatened or endangered species using that habitat.
(76m) (a) “Existing CCR landfill” means a CCR landfill that receives CCR both before and after October 19, 2015.
(b) “Existing CCR landfill” includes a CCR landfill for which construction commenced prior to October 19, 2015, and receives CCR on or after October 19, 2015, where all of the following occurred:
1. The landfill owner or operator obtained all federal, state, and local approvals or permits to begin physical construction.
2. The landfill had a continuous on-site, physical construction program that began prior to October 19, 2015.
(106m)“Hydraulic conductivity means the rate at which water can move through a permeable medium and is also called the coefficient of permeability.
(121m) “Lateral expansion of a CCR landfill” means a horizontal expansion of the waste boundaries of an existing CCR landfill made after October 19, 2015.
(152m) (a) “New CCR landfill” means a CCR landfill or lateral expansion of a CCR landfill that first receives CCR after October 19, 2015.
(b) “New CCR landfill” includes a CCR landfill or lateral expansion of a CCR landfill that commences construction after October 19, 2015, where all of the following occurred:
1. The landfill owner or operator obtained all federal, state, and local approvals or permits to begin physical construction.
2. The landfill had a continuous on-site, physical construction program that began after October 19, 2015.
(197) Note: See EPA Publication SW-846, Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, Chapter 9 (https://www.epa.gov/hw-sw846) dated September 1986 for a discussion and examples of representative samples.
(246m)Uppermost aquifer” means the geologic formation nearest the natural ground surface of a CCR landfill capable of yielding usable quantities of groundwater to wells or springs, as well as lower aquifers that are hydraulically interconnected with the uppermost aquifer within a CCR landfill’s property boundary, as measured at a point nearest to the natural ground surface to which the aquifer rises during the wet season.
(254g) “Washout” means the carrying away of solid waste by waters of the regional flood.
(254r) “Waste boundary” means a vertical surface located at the hydraulically downgradient limit of a CCR unit and extends down into the uppermost aquifer.
Section 3   NR 500.035 is created to read:
NR 500.035CCR landfill requirements. (1) The CCR landfill requirements included in chs. NR 500 to 538 apply to an owner or operator of a new or existing CCR landfill, including any lateral expansion of a new or existing CCR landfill that disposes or otherwise engages in solid waste management of CCR generated from the combustion of coal at electric utilities and independent power producers. Unless otherwise provided in chs. NR 500 to 538, these requirements also apply to any disposal unit that is not a CCR surface impoundment located off-site of the electric utility or independent power producer. The CCR landfill requirements in chs. NR 500 to 538 also apply to any CCR disposal practice that does not meet the definition of a beneficial use of CCR.
(2) The CCR landfill requirements included in chs. NR 500 to 538 do not apply to any of the following:
(a) A CCR landfill that ceased receiving CCR prior to October 19, 2015.
(b) An electric utility or independent power producer that has ceased producing electricity prior to October 19, 2015.
(c) Any waste, including fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue gas desulfurization materials, generated at a facility that is not part of an electric utility or independent power producer, such as a manufacturing facility, university, or hospital.
(d) Fly ash, bottom ash, boiler slag, and flue gas desulfurization materials, generated primarily from the combustion of fuels and fossil fuels other than coal, for the purpose of generating electricity unless the fuel burned consists of more than 50 percent coal on a total heat input or mass input basis, whichever results in the greater mass feed rate of coal.
(e) A practice that meets the definition of a beneficial use of CCR.
(f) CCR placement at active or abandoned underground or surface coal mines.
(g) A municipal solid waste landfill that receives CCR.
(h) A CCR surface impoundment.
Section 4   NR 500.05 (intro.) is amended to read:
NR 500.05 General submittal requirements. Unless otherwise specified, all submittals for review and approval of any initial site report, feasibility report, plan of operation site investigation report, remedial action options report, construction documentation report, or closure plan, or any modifications to those plans, shall include all of the following:
Section 5   NR 500.08 (4) is amended to read:
NR 500.08 (4) Exemptions from solid waste rules. Exemptions from the requirements of chs. NR 500 to 538 may be granted in writing by the department in special cases except as otherwise provided. A person may apply for an exemption by providing the department with a written request along with the appropriate documentation which that demonstrates that the proposal will not cause environmental pollution as defined in under s. 299.01 (4), Stats. The department shall take into account such factors as the population of the area being served, the amount of waste being generated, the geologic and hydrogeologic conditions at the facility, the design of the facility, the operational history of the facility, the physical and chemical characteristics of the waste, and any other information which that may be appropriate. The department shall review and make a written determination on the exemption request within 65 business days after receipt of a complete request and the appropriate review fee under ch. NR 520 unless a different time period is provided by law. An exemption may not be granted if it will result in noncompliance with the minimum federal requirements under Subtitle D.
Section 6   NR 504.02 (1) is renumbered NR 504.02 (1) (a) and amended to read:
NR 504.02Applicability. (1)(a) Except as provided in par. b and except as otherwise provided, this chapter governs all landfills as defined in under s. 289.01 (20), Stats., except landspreading including all CCR landfills and expansions as defined under s. NR 500.03 (26n), and (121m).
(b) This chapter does not govern any of the following:
1. Landspreading facilities regulated under ch. NR 518, small demolition waste landfills regulated under ch. NR 503, hazardous waste facilities as defined in under s. 291.01 (8), Stats., and regulated under chs. NR 660 to 679; metallic.
2. Metallic mining operations for nonferrous minerals as defined in under s. 293.01 (9), Stats., and regulated under ch. NR 182; and metallic.
3. Metallic mining operations for ferrous minerals as defined in under s. 295.41 (26), Stats., including mining wastes and mining waste sites as defined in under s. 295.41 (30) and (31), Stats., and regulated under subch. III of ch. 295, Stats.
Section 7   NR 504.10 (intro.) is amended to read:
NR 504.10Alternative design criteria for landfills accepting high volume industrial wastes. This section applies to landfills designed principally for high volume industrial waste, wood residue and minor amounts of other wastes as approved by the department. This section applies to all new landfills and to the expansion of existing landfills for which the plan of operation was approved after February 1, 1988. This section also applies to new and existing CCR landfills and lateral expansions of a CCR landfill.
Section 8   NR 504.10 (3) (g) is created to read:
NR 504.10 (3) (g) For new and existing CCR landfills and any lateral expansion of a CCR landfill, a demonstration that the alternative design meets the federal requirements located under 40 CFR part 257 Subpart D dated April 17, 2015 (80 FR 21468), as amended at 83 FR 36451, July 30, 2018.
Note: The code of federal regulations may be obtained at www.ecfr.gov. Copies of 40 CFR part 257 Subpart D dated April 17, 2015 (80 FR 21468), as amended at 83 FR 36451, July 30, 2018 are available for inspection at the offices of the department of natural resources and the legislative reference bureau.
Section 9   NR 504.12 is created to read:
NR 504.12 Minimum design and construction criteria for CCR landfills.
(1)Applicability. In addition to ss. NR 504.04 to 504.10, applicable to all landfills or landfills accepting high volume industrial waste, this section includes design criteria that are applicable to the construction of a new or existing CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill.
(2)Run-on and run-off controls. An existing or new CCR landfill or any lateral expansion of a CCR landfill shall be designed, constructed, operated, and maintained with a run-off and run-on control system in accordance with the requirements under s. NR 504.09 (1) (f) and (g) and all of the following:
(a) A run-on control system shall prevent flow onto the active portion of the CCR landfill during the peak discharge from a 24-hour, 25-year storm.
(b) A run-off control system from the active portion of the CCR landfill shall collect and control, at a minimum, the water volume resulting from a 24-hour, 25-year storm.
(3)Liner Design. (a) A new CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill shall be designed, constructed, operated, and maintained with a composite liner that meets the requirements under s. NR 504.06 (2) and (3) or s. NR 504.06 (7) and a leachate collection and removal system that meets the requirements under s. NR 504.06 (5) and all of the following:
1. The leachate collection and removal system shall be designed, constructed, operated, and maintained to limit the leachate head level on the liner to one foot or less.
2. The leachate collection and removal system shall be constructed of materials that exhibit all of the following properties:
a. Chemically resistant to the CCR and any non-CCR waste managed in the CCR landfill and the leachate expected to be generated.
b. Of sufficient strength and thickness to prevent collapse under the pressures exerted by overlying waste, waste cover materials, and equipment used at the CCR landfill.
3. The leachate collection and removal system shall be designed and operated to minimize clogging during the active life and during the long-term care of the landfill.
4. A liner that utilizes a GCL and soil barrier layer in accordance with s. NR 504.06 (7) shall be designed to have a liquid flow rate no greater than the liquid flow rate through 2 feet of compacted soil with a hydraulic conductivity of 1 x 10-7 cm/sec. The liquid flow rate comparison shall be made using the following equation, which is derived from Darcy’s Law for gravity flow through porous media:
Q/A = q = k (h/t + 1)
Where:
Q = flow rate (cubic centimeters / second).
A = surface area of the liner (squared centimeters).
q= flow rate per unit area (cubic centimeters / second / squared centimeter).
k = hydraulic conductivity of the liner (centimeters / second).
h = hydraulic head above the liner (centimeters).
t = thickness of the liner (centimeters).
(b) A new CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill shall be designed and constructed with a subbase grade that is located no less than 5 feet above the upper limit of the uppermost aquifer, or shall demonstrate that there will not be an intermittent recurring or sustained hydraulic connection between any portion of the base of the CCR landfill and the uppermost aquifer due to normal fluctuations in groundwater elevations, including the seasonal high water table.
Note: A new CCR landfill or lateral expansion of a CCR landfill is also required to comply with s. NR 504.06 (2) (b) or (4) for zone-of-saturation landfills. The definition of an uppermost aquifer can be found under s. NR 500.03 (246m).
(c) A new CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill may not be constructed over a closed CCR surface impoundment.
(4)Final cover system. (a) A new or existing CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill shall be designed and constructed with a final cover system that meets the requirements under s. NR 504.07.
(b) The owner or operator of a new or existing CCR landfill or a lateral expansion of a CCR landfill may propose an alternative final cover system design within a written closure plan in accordance with s. NR 504.10 and all of the following:
1. The permeability of the final cover system shall be less than or equal to the permeability of any bottom liner system or natural subsoils present or shall be no greater than 1 x 10-5 cm/sec, whichever is less.
2. The design of the final cover system shall include an infiltration layer that achieves an equivalent reduction in infiltration as the layers specified under s. NR 504.07 (4).
3. The design of the final cover system shall include an erosion layer that provides equivalent protection from wind or water erosion as the topsoil layer specified under s. NR 504.07 (7).
4. The disruption of the integrity of the final cover system shall be minimized through a design that accommodates settling and subsidence.
Section 10   NR 506.02 (1) is renumbered NR 506.02 (1) (a) and amended to read:
  NR 506.02Applicability. (1)(a) Except as provided in par. b and except as otherwise provided, this chapter governs all solid waste disposal facilities as defined in under s. 289.01 (35), Stats., except hazardous including all CCR landfills and expansions as defined under s. NR 500.03 (26n) and (121m).
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