Regional Meetings

on the

Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976


March 10 and 11, 1977

San Francisco, California
EPA Regioa IX

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                        TRANSCRIPT


                  REGIONAL PUBLIC MEETINGS ON THE

          RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT of 1976

           March 10 and 11, 1977, San Francisco, Calif.
          These meetings were sponsored by EPA Region IX,
and the proceedings (SW-19p) are reproduced entirely as transcribed
      by the official reporter, with handwritten corrections
                   by the Office of Solid Waste
               U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

                                1977
                      2V I '
                      •.''•"

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An environmental protection publication (SW-19p)  in the solid waste management series.

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          UNITED  STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                             REGION IX
                       100 Caliiornia S t r e i • I
                  San  Francisco,  California  94111
                    PUBLIC DISCUSSION SESSIONS
             RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT
                             PL  94-580
                            Hoii da\  Inn
                         480 Sutler-  Street
                     San Francisco,  CaJilornia
                          March  10,  1977
                            7:10  j, .  m.

                          March  11.  1977
                            8:45  ,i .  m.
Repo r Led  by

  THOMAS  R. WILSON,  CSR, CM
  (CSR  No.  2052)

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HEARING PANEL:
     PAUL DE FALCO, JR., Administrator, Region IX,
          United States Environmental Protection
          Agency, San Francisco, California
     JAMES CHANNEL,  Chief,  Hazardous Materials
          Branch,  Region IX, United States
          Environmental Protection Agency, San
          Francisco, California
     H.  L.  HICKMAN,  JR., Director of Management
          and Information Staff, Office of
          Solid Waste, United States Environmental
          Protection Agency, Washington, D. C.
     WILLIAM SANJOUR,  Chief of Assessment and
          Technology Branch, Hazardous Waste
          Management Division, United States
          Environmental Protection Agency,
          Washington,  D. C.
     J.  NICHOLAS HUMBER, Director of Resource
          Recovery Division,  United States
          Environmental Protection Agency,
          Washington,  D. C.
                        	oOo	

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                        IMDEX

Aj3ENDA_rrEM                                         PAGE

Opening Remarks - Paul De Falco, Jr.,
  Regional Administrator, EPA Region IX                5

Overview of Resource Conservation and Recovery
  Act - H. L. Hickman, Jr.,  Director of
  Management and Information Staff, Office of
  Solid Waste, EPA, Washington, D. C.                  8

  Training/Public Information/Public Participation

Hazardous Wastes - William Sanjour, Chief of
  Assessment and Technology Branch, Hazardous
  Waste Management Division, EPA, Washington,
  D. C.                                                28

Land Disposal - H. Lanier Hickman, Jr.                50

Resource Conservation and Recovery and Overall
  Technical Assistance - J.  Nicholas Humber,
  Director of Resource Recovery Division, EPA,
  Washington, D. C.                                   62

State Program Development - H. Lanier Hickman, Jr.    76
QUESTIONS:

Larry Burch, California Solid Waste Management
  Board, Sacramento, California                       22
                                                      87

Ronald Schwegler, Los Angeles County Sanitation
  District, Los Angeles, California                   25
                                                      94

Jean Siri,  West Contra Costa Conservation League      40
                                                      74
                                                     103

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                    l^DEX  (Cont ' d)

                                                     PAGE

J. P. Hellman, California Trucking Association,
  Burlingame, California                               44

H. Clay Kellogg, Carson, California                    46

Stanley Judd, Standard Oil Company of California,
  San Francisco, California                            58

Sandra Mathias, Southern California  Association  of
  Governments, Los Angeles, California                 59
                                                       88

Russell Papenhausen, Supervisor, Plumas County,
  California                                           61
                                                       90
                                                       99
                                                     104

Clarence Kaufman, County of San Diego, California      71
                                                       74

Ariel Parkinson, Berkeley Solid Waste Management
  Commission, Berkeley, California                     72
                                                       93

Mark Harris, City of Palo Alto, California             86
STATEMENTS :

H. Clay Kellogg, Carson, California                   105

Larry Burch, California Solid Waste Management
  Board, Sacramento, California                       107

Daniel A.  Cotton, Sonoma County,  California           112
                          	oOo	

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          CHAIRMAN  DE  FALCO:    Good  evening,  ladies and




gentlemen.    I would like  to  call  the  meeting  to  order.




          My  name is Paul  De  Falco.   I  am  the  Regional




Administrator of the Environmental Protection  Agency for




Region IX.




          I would like  to  introduce  the  people at  the  head




table.




          On my far right  is  Jim Channell,  who is  the




Chief of the Hazardous  Materials Branch  here  in Region  IX.




          Next to him  is Nick Humber,  the  Director  of  the




Resource Recovery Division of the  Solid  Waste  Program  in




Washington.




          To my immediate  right is Lanny Hickman,  the




Director of Management  and Information  Staff  of the




Solid Waste Program in  Washington.




          To my left is Bill Sanjour,  Chief of Assessment




and Technology Branch,   Hazardous Waste Management Division




Solid Waste Program in  Washington.




          On October 21st, last year,  the  President




signed into law the Resource Conservation  and  Recovery




Act of 1976, known now  as Public Law 94-580.    This




significant  new environmental law provides  the opportunity

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for EPA,  the states and local governments to develop




comprehensive solid waste management programs which will




control hazardous waste, eliminate the open dump as a




principal disposal practice, and increase the opportunities




for resource conservation.




          The Act provides for broad public involvement




in its planning and implementation.  The purpose of the




public discussion session being held here tonight is to




enable the private citizen, as well as representatives of




environmental, industrial,  governmental and other organiza-




tions who are potentially affected by the new Act to offer




their preliminary views, attitudes and suggestions  for




EPA's guidance.




          The way the program will operate, we will give




you a brief  run-through of the statute and  its various




obligations.   Then we will essentially have the dis-




cussion  after each section, listen to questions  and then




listen to prepared statements following that.




          In  the  next  15 minutes,  Mr. Lanny Hickman of




the EPA's Office  of Solid Waste will  present an  overview




of the Act.   Following Mr. Hickman's presentation,




various  sections  of the Act will  be  summarized  separately.

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After each of these summaries, there will be  a  20-minute




period for questions and comment by the audience.




          In addition, a period at the end of this




evening's session has been set aside for open discussion.




We ask that anyone wishing to make a public statement  not




exceed the five-minute time limit at the end  of  the




program.




          We request that anyone wishing to raise a




question or to make a statement proceed to one  of the




floor microphones and wait to be recognized by  me.   Pleas;




state your name, your address and whom you are  represent-




ing.




          Written comments may also be submitted for




inclusion in the official transcript of this  meeting.




The comment period will remain open for approximately  two




weeks, following Friday's public discussion session.




Written comments should be received at the EPA  Office  in




San Francisco on or before March 25th, 1977,  in  order  to




be included in the official record of this hearing.




          Copies of the record will be available from




EPA's Office of Solid Waste Management in Washington,




D.C.,  upon written request.

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          An announcement stating the date that the




comment period ends and giving the addresses of the EPA




Offices in San Francisco and in Washington, D.C.,  is




available at the registration table in the rear of the




room.   Copies of the Resource Conservation and Recovery




Act, as well as a summary of the Act and other background




information materials, are also available at that  regis-




trat ion table.




          Now,  I would like to introduce Mr. Lanny Hickman.




Director of the Management and Information Staff of EPA's




Office of Solid Waste.   Lanny?




          MR. HICKMAN:   Would someone turn the slide




projector on, please.




          We are very happy to have this opportunity to




discuss this new piece of environmental legislation that




was passed in '76, and it's a major step forward in the




national effort to try to deal with the problem of solid




waste management.




          I think we should understand that the law is




somewhat different than many other environmental statutes




administered by the Environmental Protection Agency in




that it is not a step forward for the federal government

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to regulate the management of solid waste;  it  is  not



designed principally to be federal environmental  protec-
                           ^~-


tion enforcement legislation similar to  the  Air and



Water Acts.   Its  idea and  the scheme behind  all  of  it



is to build a strong partnership between  the federal,



state and local government and industry  to  deal with  the



many problems that we all face in solid  waste  management.



          Here in California, a state that's somewhat
                                -^


sophisticated in how it deals with the solid waste



management problems, perhaps part of the  Act may  not  be



as germane to the problems that you face  as  it  is  to  other



parts of the country.   But  it is a piece of national



legislation designed to deal with solid  waste  management



at the local and jstate level principally, without  a great



deal of the heavy handed jjgderal enforcement programs



that you may be familiar with in other environmental



areas.



          (Slide No. 1. )



          Now, the objectives of RCRA are to protect  the



public health, protect the environment,  conserve  valuable



material resources and conserve valuable  energy resources.



          In theory, this will be achieved  by  somewhat of

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                                                      10







a three-cornered approach, those three corners being:




          1.  To eliminate improper land disposal




practices of solid waste management and ensure that solid




wastes that go on the land are disposed of properly and




in such a way as to protect local health and the environ-




ment .




       2., To deal with a specific category of waste




referred to or called hazardous waste, which represent




significant increase in health and environmental threats,




in a more controlled manner than might be done with the




rest of the solid waste stream, and




          Thirdly, to set the bridge for the long-term




ultimate resource conservation.   That is, the maximum




amount of the solid waste that we possibly can conserve,




either through waste reduction measures, through




recycling materials and energy or new conscientious




efforts to minimize the amount of materials that go into




the many products that our affluent society depends upon.




          (Slide No. 2. )




          Now, these objectives of sound land disposal




practices, hazardous waste management and resource




conservation can be achieved through a variety of

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                                                       11
 objectives  of  the  law structured for the federal govern-




 ment  as  a partner  with state  and local government,




 industry, to do  certain things  through a variety of




 obj ect ives.




          Some of  the provisions of  the law allow




 technical and  financial assistance  to  state and local




 governments to  prepare plans and implement  those plans  to




 deal  with the  solid waste  management problems.




          To develop  the necessary manpower to  respond to




 the demands of RCRA,  which is the way  -- That's the




 acronym we  refer to for the law.




          As I mentioned,  it will prohibit  future open




 dumping of  solid waste.




          The law  is  designed to convert or close all




 existing open dumps and to put  all the  waste  in acceptable




 sanitary landfills.




          To regulate  hazardous waste.




          (Slide No.  3.)




          The law provides for  EPA to  develop guidelines




for solid waste management which will  serve as  a  basis  to




guide state  and local  governments to  improve practices.




          These guidelines are mandatory on the  federal

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                                                       12



government,  and it allows the federal government to try


to set an example by keeping its own house clean before


it asks states and local government and industry to do a
        5

good j ob.


          Provides for research and development to develop


new and improved systems for solid waste management.


          To do studies on health and environmental


effects of improper solid waste management.


          Serves as a foundation for making  sound,


intelligent decisions on what has to be done  to deal  with


the problems.


          It provides for demonstrations of  full-scale


solid waste management systems, technologies  and practices


to eliminate, or at least relieve, some of the  risk

   &.v\
taktwg of state and local government on unproven or yet
          "^-

undetermined successful systems and technology.


          It provides for a mechanism for  us  to build a


long-term program for a federal, _state and local govern-


ment and industry partnership in materials and  energy


recovery.


          It recognizes that, in order to  do  all of  this,


an informed public is the first and only  foundation by

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                                                      13
which sound governmental decisions can be made.   It




provides mechanisms for EPA to support effort to educate




the public on solid waste management problems and on the




solutions or the potential solutions to those problems.




          That's kind of a quick overview of the




objectives and the goals for RCRA.    And we have basically




five series of presentations.   The first is on public




information and public participation.




          We will talk about the hazardous waste provi-




sions,  the land disposal provisions, resource conservation




provisions and,  finally, the state and local government




development provisions of the law.




          I will move on and talk about public informa-




tion and public participation as sort of an umbrella to




give you a feel for why we are here.




          (Slide No.  4.)




          This meeting tonight, the series of meetings




that -- This is the first of a series of a meetings that




we are holding around the country to inform the public




about the new Solid Waste Disposal Act.   We hold one  in




each of our ten regional offices.   This is about the




eighth one.   They have two to go.    And we will hold  a

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                                                       14
series of other meetings.




          It's the first time that the Federal Solid Waste




Program has made a concerted effort to reach out to the




public in a formal and in an informal way to get feedback




early on before decisions are made.  This is sort of the




intent of many of the provisions of the Act.




          The Act has specific public participation




requirements that EPA must follow in order to assure there




is adequate feedback from the public on what we are trying




to do .




          And the intent of the provision is, of course,




to promote a better public understanding of solid waste




management,  its impact on the environment and the public




health,  and to develop stronger understanding for the




ways it  can best deal with problems.




          It's designed to involve the public in all




aspects  of the implementation of the law.




          It provides the materials and devices, the




mechanism by which we can cooperate with jstates and the




public can cooperate with jrtates in doing what they have




to do to meet the requirements of the law, at least




respond  to the mandates of the law.

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                                                       15
           It  provides  a  mechanism  for  the  s_tate and


 federal government  and local  government  to describe the
^

 significant data  base  which will serve as  a foundation  for


 a better understanding of  these  problems and the impact


 of what we are  doing and the  solutions so  that  the  public


 has a better  understanding of  what  it's  going to take  to


 get the job done.


           Then  it requires that  the EPA  disseminate as


 much information  as possible  as  quickly  as possible and


 requires us to  set  up  a  library  that can be utilized if


 anybody has a desire to  delve  into  the problem  of solid


 waste management  perhaps in a  more  academic way.


           We  have had  a  library  ever   since the office


 was established in  1966.   And if  you  are  familiar  with


 library systems at  all,  you know there is  a national


 network of library  interchanges where  you  can go to your


 library and,  if the publication  isn't  there,  they can


 get it from another library anywhere in  the country.    We


 are wired  to  that system.   You  can go to  your  local


 library and get something  out  of Washington on  a loan


 basis.    We have  a  computerized  information system  which


 will allow you  to tap  in at no charge  on a particular

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                                                       16
abstract or on a series of abstracts or publications  in




solid waste management to sort of screen through to get  a




feel for what you want to do.




          Now, what are the major categories that  repre-




sent the public.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          We find, of course, there are organized  groups




that represent various forces at play in the solid waste




management field.   It's very difficult to  find out who




represents the individual citizen, and so our public




participation program is designed to try to tap as many




of the different segments of the public as  possible,  both




the lay public and the technical public, to try to make




sure that everyone has a chance to know what we are trying




to do .




          Of course, you have the consumer, the environ-




mental and the neighborhood groups, which represent




probably the closest to the -- really the lay public  as




possible.  And we have a longstanding tradition with




certain organizations that represent some parts of the




lay public, which is the League of Women Voters, where we




have tried to build a stronger understanding through  their

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                                                       17
membership on what  solid waste  management  is  all  about.




          And, of course,  you have  the  standard trade,




manufacturing and labor organizations that  are  represented




in Washington by large organizations.




          And we have the  public  health,  scientific  and




professional societies which have a  strong  interest  in




solid waste management from a practitioner's  standpoint.




          And, of course,  you have  many  governmental  and




organizations -- and university associations  which  have




reasons to be concerned and involved in  solid waste




management.




          As I mentioned earlier, the law  itself  has




certain mandates on the ^federal government  and, because of




this, it's important that  the government  is equally




involved.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          RCRA provides a  mechanism  for  the public to




participate  in a very formal way  in what we are trying to




do and how we are trying to implement the  law.    We had to




issue procedures by which  the public can petition for




changes in any regulation  or guidelines that we  might




publish under the authorities of the law,  a petition  for

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                                                      18
regulations or guidelines to be written that have not been


proposed or conceived by the agency, the Administrator of


EPA then must consider these petitions and show cause for


why the agency should or should not respond to that


petition.


          The law requires us to provide an information


mechanism by which we can have participation in all

                                     o^
aspects of the planning, development ,A implement at ion of


RCRA'.   It requires us to hold -public"; formal public


hearings for the development of our regulations and


guidelines.


          It requires us to have the public involved in


talking about what sort of information programs and


knowledge of activities that the citizens  should be


involved in, what do they want from the _federal govern-


ment in the way of solid waste management  information.


          And then in just the basic decision on the


budgeting, planning and implementation of  our programs,


the public is supposed to be involved.


          (Slide No. 7.)


          RCRA requires us to  publish guidelines on  how


the public can do this, what mechanisms  can  they wire  in

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                                                       19
to us to participate in our activity.




          And then it provides  for citizen  suits  that




would allow any citizen in the  country to sue  any other




organization, individual or activity or agency  that  is




in violation -- as they perceive  it, in violation of any




guideline or regulation that the  agency may have  pro-




mulgated .




          That's fairly common  boilerplate  in  most of




the new environmental laws, the citizen-suit provisions.




          We will carry out this  program through  a variety




or mechanisms.   I mentioned we will have formal  hearings




on all the regulations and guidelines that  we  will be




promulgat ing.




          In addition,  we will  hold a series cf




conferences and meetings around the country, either




directly sponsored by our office  or EPA or  sponsored




through a variety of interest groups around the country




who have a strong and overriding  interest in solid waste




management.




          (Slide No.  8.)




          And we will hold a series of workshops, small




groups to get together and talk about specific  problem

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                                                       20
areas, specific work that we have underway, and try  to




get feedback.




          Most of the workshops will be directed  toward




more the technical type of people who have a broader




foundation in the technical and economic aspects  of  solid




waste management, but there will be workshops held with




citizens also and the lay public to talk about what  we




are doing.




          (Slide No.  9.)




          Then we will have a variety of review groups




participating with us as we develop any regulation and




guidelines and plans that we will be developing under the




law.




          We have in mind to establish a very formal




advisory group for the office, and in the interim while we




are trying to establish this formal group, we will have a




variety of ad hoc groups representing different segments




of solid waste management to sit with us and give us




guidance on what we should be doing.




          Then, our public education programs.    There




will be a variety of ways to reach out "co educate the lay




public:  publications, slides, films and exhibits.   We

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                                                      21
will work with the newspapers, television, radio, to




provide information.




          And then we will have a variety of financial




assistance programs to interest groups who, in turn, will




carry out education programs to their own membership,




such as the League of Women Voters.




          In addition to the public participation portion




of the law, Congress recognized that the new mandates




that they promulgated, that they passed in this  law, will




probably require manpower to respond to the demands of the




law.




          (Slide No.  10.)




          And they provided a mechanism by which EPA must




make a judgment through a manpower study with a  report to




the President and Congress on what needs for additional




personnel may occur because of RCRA and how the  programs




that are out there now to develop manpower might respond




to provide that manpower and what we would have  to  do to




meet any deficit of manpower needs because of the new law.




          And they provide grant contract authority to




train personnel to develop programs to develop the  sort of




manpower that the various levels of government and  industry

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                                                      22
need to carry out their solid waste programs.




          That's basically now the public participation




provisions and the manpower development provisions.   And




after each of these segments of the presentation, we will




hold the floor open for some comments or questions or




discussions from the floor.   And we will entertain that




now,  I guess.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Would those that have




questions please go to the microphone and identify your-




selves .




          MR.  LARRY BURCH  (California Solid Waste




Management Board, Sacramento, California):   Lanny, I gues:




this is a question to you, and it does affect the_s_tate




programs, but do you plan  in the _state plan development




guidelines to require the  states during the plan




preparation process to have some sort of public input




programs, such as public hearings, public sessions like




this, advisory groups or task forces?




          MR.  HICKMAN:   Well, I don't know that we have




really zerood in yet to make that kind of a decision.




It's come up in almost every one of the public participa-




tion programs like this that I have sat in on, and it seem

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                                                       23
to me -- We were in Dallas Tuesday  night  and  Wednesday




morning with the same sort of  presentation, and the point




was made by, I think someone  from one  of  the  _s_tate




goverments, that if EPA  is trying to set  an example of




public participation like we  are here  in  the  planning and




implementing of the law, it seems only fit  that thejrtates




should do the same thing and  it should follow the  same




example.




          And I am certainly  going  to  make  those sort of




recommendations to the office  that  we  provide guidance  to




the _s_tates on having the public involved  in their  phase




of implementing this law because it's  just  not  our  law.




It's really designed for the  state  and local  government




to pick up on.




          I think it would be  a very valid  thing to do.




          MR. BURCH:  One other related question.




          After the jrtate plan is developed and we  enter




the implementation phase, do  you see that the state and




local government can qualify  for some  type  of program




funds to  sustain a public information  program'




          We find it very difficult to sell this type of




a service to the Governor's office, this  year at least.

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                                                       24
          MR. HICKMAN:  I think everybody has a hard  time




selling public participation programs and training pro-




grams always because  it's so difficult to measure output.




          MR. BURCH:  That's correct.




          MR. HICKMAN:   You know, you can measure how




many cases of litigation you have  and how many  times  the




lawyers go to the --  you know, go  to the courthouse  very




effectively, but it's very difficult to measure the  level




of awareness you have created out  there with  the  public




by whatever programs  you might carry on.




          The way that the law is  written as  far  as  the




development and implementation of _sj;ate plans,  the  law




is designed so that -- We will talk  about this  later on,




about jj.tate program development,  but  I probably ought to




make the point here that the  law  doesn't visualize  that




a state plan's developed solely by the state.   It's




very specific in that that _srtate  and local  government,




through its  elected officials, must  come  to  an  agreement




on the relative share of responsibility  for  the develop-




ment and  implementation  of  a  _s_tate plan.




          And it provides  financial  assistance  from the




federal government  to do  the  development  and implement at 10

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                                                      25
of that plan.    Seems reasonable to me that  if within

that plan, part of that -- part of that plan  included

public participation and the public education program,

that the money would flow as long as there  is money  from

the federal government to help implement that plan down to

the state and local goverment to carry out  those programs.
    ^
          It seems reasonable to believe that would  occur.

There is nothing to preclude it, certainly.

          MR. BURCH:    Thank you.

          MR. RONALD SCHWEGLER (Los Angeles County

Sanitation District):   In understanding the  importance

of what you have to do in the drafting of your guidelines

and the presentation of your ability for dissemination,

dissemination of information back to the nation, I wonder

if there is going to be a chance in the future that  we

will be able to have assistance from the attorneys in the

drafting of the language so that, as we disseminate  this

information back to the public, that we will  have a  chance

because this information that goes out in case of sanitary

landfills versus the formidable dumps, we know that  the

opposition groups, the special interest groups, whenever

it comes to rest, it has to fall within their confines  and

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                                                      26
their back yards,  that we will tend to use the law and —




the law of the land as it will be written, and through




your office to their advantage, and they will find ways




of interpreting.




          And having stood before many planning directors




and talking about sanitary landfill at the end of that,




one lawyer will get up and say, "What we have been




listening to all  this time, they are talking about dumps."




          So all  I am saying is I think we have to be




very, very cautious and have assistance in the development




of this dissemination program to realizing that whatever




is being said about sanitary landfills will be used by




the opposition in need, if you will:  as we close down




the dump, we are  going to need something to take their




place.




          And I know you know that, Lanny, and we are




going to need landfills, but they will use that informa-




tion against us.




          And then a second type of thought that I know




that you know under the mandates of the law that you have




to have this dissemination program, as in the past EPA




has put out pamphlets and brochures indicating the success

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                                                      27
or the degree of the status of some programs.  And we in




the industry many times have to stand before councils and




supervisors and say, "The EPA put out -- They say that




it's possible to do these systems for X dollars and




everything else."




          There, again, it's a very cautionary note




prior to approving that we allow these systems that may




take eventually the alternatives to sanitary landfilling,




of the resource recovery alternatives that they would




have us choose, that we don't go into great dissemination




programs projected on our beliefs as what these costs can




be until these programs have a chance to prove themselves




out .




          And in our anxieties, to quickly get information




back to the public and to those little city directors,




city officials out in Spokane or someplace else, so that




they have something to choose from;  that we base it on




actual facts rather than our beliefs, Lanny.




          You can see it's a plead.    It's a true plead,




having gone through this so many times, and we need your




assistance and we need it very, very desperately out of




EPA.

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                                                      28
          MR. HICKMAN:  You aren't going to make me




respond to that?  That wasn't a question.




          I understand what you are saying.   It's




interesting, in the law it does talk about the fact that




we shall have the public participate wi'th us in the




development of our information programs.   I'm not quite




sure how we are supposed to do that and what it means.




          But we will certainly try.    We have always




tried to.   No matter how we write the  information, it's




always going to be used to suit the ends and the intent




of whoever is trying to use it.




          But we will certainly try to  be as factual  as




we can always and base it on facts and  not wishes.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Any other questions?




          MR. SANJOUR:  I am Bill Sanjour.




          (Blank slide.)




          And Mr. Hickman asked me to point out to you




that this picture on the screen is one  of our landfills




in Buffalo, New York.




          I'm going to be talking about hazardous wastes.




And here we are talking about  industrial wastes for the




most part, not household garbage.   And while perhaps only

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                                                      29
about five, ten or 15 percent of industrial wastes can be




considered hazardous industrial wastes, as a  class it has




a much greater volume of waste than household garbage.




          It is probably far more detrimental to the




environment, and yet it's a subject that most people know




almost nothing about because it's carried on, part of it,




by private companies behind fences.    The people who are




the generators of it and the people who dispose of it are




all private corporations, for the most part,  and it never




enters the public arena, so the public is almost com-




pletely unaware of it until there are outbreaks of acci-




dents and well poisonings and the like.   And they almost




never associate this with other such incidents that




happen from time to time.




          This was one of the chief interests of Congress




when they passed this law.   The other was that in the




years of active environmental legislation, we have seen




that, through the Air Act and the Water Act through




cleaning up air and water,  the materials that have been




coming out of the air and water are now being disposed of




on land.




          Congress,  by passing the Air Act and the Water

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                                                      30
Act did not ban the generation of these hazardous mater-




ials.    It only banned the disposal of them in the water




or in the air without effecting a ban -- and in the




oceans -- without effecting a ban on land.




          So they have greatly increased disposal on




land without any regulation.   In many cases, Congress




found that, in fact, what it had done was to create a




worse environmental situation than it cured.




          For this reason, then, the hazardous waste




provisions of the Solid Waste Act were passed.   They




were passed, I might say, largely modeled after what had




been done in the State of California.  Once again,  the




State of California has been a leader in  environmental




legislation in this country, and this Act is  largely




patterned after the system that  is in use right now in




the State of California.




          Let me go through  the  provisions  of  the  Act




with you.




           (Slide No.  1.)




           Section  3001  --  I'm  dealing  now with Subtitle




C.   Section  3001  calls  for  a  definition  of hazardous




wastes within  18 months.    That  is,  a  criteria must be

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                                                       31
established by the Administrator, and then  the Administra-




tor has a choice of two methods  for  defining  a hazardous




waste:




          He can either define the characteristics  of  the




waste,  or he can list specific wastes, or he  could  do




both, one or the other or both.




          In defining these wastes,  he is charged with




taking into account the toxicity, persistence and




degradabi1ity in nature,  potential  for accumulation in




human tissue -- I beg your pardon -- in tissue,  and other




related factors, such as flammabi1ity, corrosivity  and




other hazardous characteristics.




          (Slide No. 2 , )




          Section 3002 of the Act calls for standards




lor persons who generate hazardous wastes.    And, as I




said before,  these are largely manufacturing  industries




we are talking about, a very high percent dealing with




the chemical companies.




          In California, this would  probably  include a




lot oJ  oil refineries, petrochemical.




          These are also to be done  in 18 months, and




the standards for generators would include  requirements

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                                                        32







 for record keeping, reporting,  labeling  and,  most important




 of all, the manifest system.




           This is  the system  that  was  developed here in




 California to keep track of hazardous  wastes  under the




philosophy that wastes, hazardous  wastes,  have  to be




 treated as a commodity and  that  the  biggest problems




 occur with the disposal of  these wastes  in that




 unscrupulous persons will just  put  them  anywhere, just




 open up the petcock and the valve  on a truck  at night ar.d




 just dump them off by the roadside,  and  it would be




 impossible to really monitor  all the possible ways these




 wastes could be disposed of.




           And the  best way  to do it  was  to keep track of




 it.   Therefore, the generators  are  required  to keep




 track of what they generate.     And  when they ship these




 wastes, they can only be shipped to  an authorized facility.




 And this manifest  system is the  bookkeeping system for




 keeping track of it.




           And this was, as  I  say,  developed here in




 California.




           (Slide No. 3.)




           Section  3003 of  the Act  calls  for a. very similar

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                                                       33
standard for transporters  of  hazardous  wastes.    Again,




record keeping and  labeling provisions  and compliance




with the manifest system.




          (Slide No. 4.)




          Section 3004  of  the Act  are  standards for




treaters, storers and  disposers  of hazardous wastes.    And




these could be one  of  two  classes  of people:  either the




generators themselves,  il  thcv dispose  of these wastes




on their own facilities, or if they store them for any




length of time, would  come under these  provisions, or




commercial operations,  commercial  landfills or hazardous




waste storage treatment  facilities who  operate to serve a




great number of clients.




          Here the  regulations call for record keeping,




monitoring,  inspection,  location and design criteria,




maintenance of facilities, contingency  plans for emergen-




cies, for spills and the like.




          I just heard  that we just had a bad one last




week here in California, a nasty situation of generating




some poisonous gas.    And  it's precisely this kind of




thing that there has to  be plans for in the Act and also




provisions for ownership of the  facility,  for perpetual

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                                                       34
care of the facility, for financial responsibility  of




people who operate such facilities.




          Now, these are items that are explicitly  called




for in the Act.  In addition to these standards,  there




is this statement in this section, and that  is  that  the




Administrator may write standards  as may be  necessary to




protect human health and the environment,  in  addition to




these.




          Now, that's a very broad and vague  statement.




Congress conceived, based on tho  legislative  history oi




standards, that would protect ground water chiefly.




Probably also surface water.  Maybe also air.    Perhaps




noise,  odors.   All of these could be included  under that




stat ement.




          But it's a general -- It's a discretionary




statement on the part of the law  so that the  Administrator




can essentially make his own decision about  what  will be




covered.




          Now, this is where there can be  a  great deal of




public influence.   It is just in  such discretionary




areas that the public can have the greatest  influence




because it is discretionary.  If  it were mandatory  on the

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                                                       35
part of the Administrator, no matter how many  letters  he




got from the public, there is very  little  he could  do




about it.   But where it  is discretionary,  this  is  pre-




cisely where the public can have its greatest  influence




by pointing out where the Administrator should exercise




discretionary authority.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          Now, the purpose of these standards  are shown




in Section 3005 in the Act wherein  regulations have  to be




written to issue permits  for those  facilities  which  treat,




store and dispose of hazardous wastes, and the issuance of




those permits would have  to depend  on the  standards  in




the previous section.




          Now, Congress conceived that this Act  would  be




administered by the s_tates.   And this permit-granting




facility, then,  would be  done by the states if the  states




assumed the hazardous waste program.   It's not  mandatory




that they do so.




          In the event that they do not assume the program




then the permit-granting program would be  handled by EPA




at the regional level.




          There are, in addition to the permanent permits

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                                                      36
which have to be issued based on the standards of Section




3004, also provision for interim permits which can be




issued to facilities that do not meet those standards on




an interim basis.   And basically the way the Act is




written, all they have to do is apply for a permit, and




they can continue in operation with no jeopardy until a




permanent permit is issued.




          This is to basically prevent a big backlog of




permit granting.   Usually permit-granting agencies cannot




overnight issue hundreds or thousands of permits.   So




this is to provide for the interim period while they are




being issued.




          And, to a large extent, the speed at which




permits are  issued is a function of how much money  is put




into the program, quite frankly.   And if very little




money is put  in, that means that permits will be  issued




very slowly, which means that  interim permits will  be the




rule for a long time.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          Section 3006  of the  Act  is our guidelines




written by the ^federal  government .  These guidelines  inform




the  states on what constitutes  an  adequate  state  program.

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                                                       37
          In order for a  state  to  take  over  the  program,




it must apply to EPA, and EPA will  then  review  the  state




program against the  guidelines  to  see  if  the _s_tate  program




is in keeping with the guidelines  promulgated.




          Now, again, there  is  a  lot of  discretionary




authority in this part of the Act.




          In order to assume the  program,  what  the  Act




says is that the s;_tate program  must be  equivalent to  the




federal program, consistent  with  other  state programs,




and adequate enforcement with Subtitle  C.




          Now, words like "equivalent,"  "consistent"  and




"adequate" are vague terms and  subject  to  a  lot  of  dis-




cretionary interpretation on the  part  of  the Administrator.




          The phrase "consistent"  is in  there,  I think,




in order to prevent  some states from being pristine pure




to the point where they don't allow any  waste at all  to be




disposed of in their jrtate,  so  they end  up being taken to




a. dump in the nextdoor state, which is  the kind  of  thing




that's going on right now.   And  I  think  this is the  kind




of thing that Congress wanted to prevent  with the word




"consistent . "




          "Equivalent" probably means  that the  standards

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                                                       38
cannot be much tougher or much easier, but how much  is




much is a discretionary call.




          In addition to approving state programs, Congress




provided provision for interim approval because  there are




many jrtates, including California, which have existing




hazardous waste programs which are not in  line with




federal programs in some respects.    So Congress provided




that, nevertheless, these _states  could have  interim




autliorization so that their  programs  could continue  with




the _federal, as part of the  federal program, over a  period




of several years while the gjtate  and  federal programs




came into 1 me .




          (Slide No. 7.)




          Section  3010 is a  requirement that those who




generate, treat, store, dispose or transport hazardous




wastes are required to notify EPA of  that  fact within




90 days after EPA  publishes  its definition of  hazardous





wastes.




          This part of the Act  is really  no  requirement




on EPA.   It's a requirement  on  a  lot  ol other  people.




However,  we  recognize  that most of  the  people  who




generate, treat, store and transport  hazardous  wastes  are

-------
                                                       39
not going to be reading the Federal Register  and  will  not




know, in fact, that if they don't  get  the  notification




within 90 days, they could be  fined, what  is  it,  $25,000 a




day or something, so we are going  to take  great pains  to




notify those people that they  have to  notify  us.




          (Slide No. 8.)




          Section 3011 is for  providing  grant  money  to the




states to run the _state hazardous  waste  programs.




          Now, this is purely  program  grants.   This is




not the construction of equipment  or anything  like  that.




It's basically to hire people  and  to train  them to




administer the hazardous waste program.




          These grants have to be  allocated on a  special




formula that Congress has in  the Act,  which is based on




the need, hazardous waste need of  each state.   And  there




is authorized in the Act $25 million for this  purpose.




However, it has not yet been appropriated.




          (Blank slide.)




          And this is another  landfill in  Minnesota.




Sorry about that.




          Mr.  Chairman?




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:    Any questions  on this

-------
                                                      40
section?   Please come forth to the microphone and




introduce yourself .




          MS. JEAN SIRI (West Contra Costa Conservation




League):  I have a great many questions on this subject,




as I have had at the state level.




          I'm not sure whether you are aware what the




cost of enforcement  of this kind of program would be,




even just in a jrtate like California.   If you consider




the complicated chemical formulas of the material that  is




being dumped in the  dumps and the chemist is required to




do the work of enforcement and the fact that there are  as




many dumps privately owned and as much dumping on strange




manifests going on  in a _s_tate like California, the  cost




of enforcement is almost prohibitive unless there is




rather tremendous help from the federal government,  it




seems to me.




          The thing  that I find missing in this Act, and




that I find missing  in your presentation that was present




in a bulletin issued by the EPA, that was one of the more




superb bulletins you issued, was one on resource recovery




and hazardous waste.   I have heard no mention of resource




recovery of hazardous wastes nor a proposal that it  shall

-------
                                                       41
not be dumped  in  the  ground  and  shall,  indeed,  be




recovered and  used  as  stock  for  other  hazardous waste




development.   I found  that lacking.




          The  other thing that I  wonder  about  is public




ownership,  the fact that it  requires that  much  more




enforcement with  private ownership, and  with  all this




business being private, might it  not,  indeed, be a much




cheaper way to go if  it were publicly  owned,  the controls




and the treatment of  hazardous waste.




          Thank you.




          MR. SANJOUR:  Gee, I thought you would have a




lot more questions.




          MS. SIRI:    Later.




          MR. SANJOUR:   Resource recovery, Congress  did




not put in any provision whatsoever for  resource recovery




of hazardous wastes.   They decided on a purely  regulatory




program.




          I  could perhaps go into their  motivations if




you are interested in why this was the case.




          MS.  SIRI•   Go ahead.




          MR.  SANJOUR:  Unlike garbage --  Okay.   I will




go into it.

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                                                      42
          Unlike garbage,  which is generated by you and




me  in very small units,  you and I can't take advantage of




economics of scale in your processing of garbage.  We are




too small.   It takes the garbage of hundreds of thousands




of people before it's worthwhile for building a plant to




recover it.  So the recovery of the resource of garbage




has to be handled by a government agency because the




individual generators are too small.




          This is not the case with industrial wastes.




If there is a buck to be made out of industrial waste,




you can bet that the industries are making the buck.




          MS. SIRI;  Not necessarily.




          MR, SANJOUR:   I grant you you will find some




cases where it appears that they aren't, and maybe there




even are some cases where they aren't.   Any time you look




reasonably close, even when you thought they weren't, they




are.   But even if they do have the capital at the present




time, they don't have any reason to break loose with  it




because they have other things to do with it.




          MS, SIRI:  You can dump it cheaper.




          MR. SANJOUR:   That's right,  exactly.




          MS. SIRI:  That isn't necessarily what should be

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                                                      43
done by the government.




          MR. SANJOUR:  Yes.  Well, the attitude of




Congress was that the way to handle the problem was to




prevent the cheap, obscene, promiscuous dumping, and  if




you can't dump your waste at ten cents a gallon, then




maybe you will find something better  to do with it




without having the government specifically telling people




what to do.




          Your other point about public ownership of  dis-




posal sites, there is nothing in the Act about that,




either.  In fact, the Act specifically provides that  no




discrimination can be made against private ownership  of




disposal sites.




          I think you are aware that EPA did a study




several years ago of that question, and we concluded  that




it really wasn't a very efficient way to handle the




problem.




          Now, that's a rather long story in itself.   We




may have to go into it sooner or later, in any event,




because it's getting so difficult to get land disposal




sites approved of by any local authorities.   That may




come to that.

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                                                       44
          The only way we can get  anything  approved of




is to use the eminent domain process  or  to  use  federal




lands.   We are getting very close  to  that point.




          That would be done not because it is  the




efficient thing to do or the cheaper  thing  to do.   It's




neither.  It's done because it  is  the only  way  to do it.




          There is no way for local  government  to over-




come public opposition to these  public disposal sites.




          Yes, sir9




          MR. J. P. HELLMAN (California  Trucking-




Association,  Burlingame, California):  We  are here really




not to ask you a question except  that what  regulations




you propose  for transporters of  hazardous  materials,




whether they  be waste or otherwise,  when you get to your




definition stage'lS months  from  now,  we  will know a little




better about  what  you are going  to say.    But it's sort of




a plea.   Please,  fellows,  go back to Washington, talk  to




the Hazardous Materials Regulations Board and coincide




your regulations with theirs, because we have OMO — Now,




you people -- to live with.   We have the CHP in




California and the gentleman  from the Waste Management




Section of the Public Health  Department  of California.

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                                                       45







          We can be  had  coming  and going by all of these




agencies unless the  regulations are uniform for transpor-




tat ion only.




          What you do  about  the landfill,  the producer,




that's none of our business.  But  for transportation,  we




sure would  like to see you  come up with uniform regula-




t ions.




          And along  those lines,  if you are going home to




Washington, we would hope that  you would give the Hazardou




Materials Board a call prior  to Monday,  March 14th,  when




their Docket No. 145 closes  on  comments regarding




hazardous waste transportation.




          Thank you.




          MR. SANJOUR-   I  know this isn't going to




satisfy you, but we  have been talking to those people  for




years,  along with the  Department  of Transportation,




because we  have been hearing  from  the truckers for years




and that we are going  to be  talking to those people,  and




we have been talking for years  and years.




          If our regulations  don't show it,  it isn't




because we  haven't been  communicating with them.




          MR. IIBLLMAN:   Well, we  don't want to bo pulled

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                                                      46







over by the side of the road by a CHP vehicle saying  to




us,  "You are not conforming to Title 49," and go down to




the dump site and told we can't unload because California




says we don't have the right dump site or have you  tell us




that we didn't haul it in the right equipment.




          MR. SANJOUR:  We are trying.




          MR. HELLMAN:  So we are sort of up  a tree unless




there is uniformity.




          MR. SANJOUR:  We are aware of your  concern, and




we are trying to meet it.




          MR. H. CLAY KELLOGG (Carson, California):   I




just want to make one little statement early.




          A couple of people have said here  if we get




money from the government, it's going to be  less




expensive. I just don't understand that.   Just because




the government's going to help California or  help some-




body else, it's not going to be less expensive.   You are




still going to pay for it.




          But my question is on defining what is  that




hazardous waste, I think  it would be a big mistake  to




include well-processed composted sewage  sludge, which




is one of our great natural resources, and stick  it with

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                                                       47
all these monitoring things.    It would be  absolutely




impossible.




          If there are problems with  sewage  sludge,  they




can   be solved.    If it's  the pathogens or the  odors,




that can be solved.   That's easy through composting.




Talk to the Los Angeles County  Sanitation District.




          II you have got problems with the  heavy




metals, find out where they  come  from  and shut  off  the




damned source.   But I don't think sewage sludge  should be




listed as a hazardous product or waste, and  my  question




is are you going to -- are you  planning on  having that




listed as a hazardous waste?




          MR.  SANJOUR:   You  have hit upon a  very  sensitive




spot,  and there is certainly a  lot of  debate going  on on




that issue in EPA right now, and sides are  forming.   And




I think those of you who have any comments on this  subject




I strongly urge you to send  them in because  this  is  one




issue  that's going to be very much debated.




          MR.  KELLOGG:   Some of us have done that for




years.




          MR.  SANJOUR:   I happen to personally  fall  on




the other side of the issue  than you do.   So since  you

-------
gave your arguments, let me give mine, and  they  are  that




the sludge you are referring to is made up  largely of




industrial wastes.




          MR. KELLOGG:  It doesn't have to  be.




          MR. SANJOUR:  In some communities  in America,




the sewage sludge, the municipal sewage sludge,  is 90  per-




cent industrial wastes.




          Industries have two ways of  disposing  of their




waste.  They can  send  it out on a tank truck or  they can




send it down the  sewer.   Okay.   If  they  send  it  down the




sewer, it ends up  in the sewer  sludge.




          Now, in  many  large cities  in America,  the




sewage sludge consists  of 50, 60, 70  percent industrial




wastes, no different  from the industrial  wastes  being




generated by industries except  it has some household




waste mixed  in with  it.




          MR. KELLOGG-  All  right.   You  have those same




industries  filling up  their  tank  trucks  and disposing of




it  on the landfill and not  using  the sewers as a dump




because  they don't belong  there.




          MR. SANJOUR:  This Act  gives no authority over




sewers.  This Act  gives authority  over solid waste

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                                                       49
disposed of in dumps.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO.   In  response  to  your  question,




my friend is right.  This Act  doesn't,  but  there  are




several other acts that do,  and they  are being  pursued,




and we would expect  to see  a good part  of  the industrial




waste problem in sewer sludge  separated out as  soon  as




the so-called pre-treatment  regulations go  into effect,




which will exclude the dumping of those kinds of  materials




down a sewer.




          MR.  KELLOGG:  Good.  I  think  that is  good.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   There  is  a problem.    We




have to sort out the ultimate  disposal  places.




          MR.  KELLOGG:  Fine.   Fine.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO-   And hopefully we  will  weave




together the various environmental pieces  of  legislation




and other legislation and provide the kind of answers you




are seeking.




          MR.  KELLOGG:  Thank  you.    You can  sell  that




overseas like you do wheat,  the deactivated sludge.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   I don't know exactly how




we would market  it,  though.




          Any other  questions9

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                                                       50
           I would like to,  if we can, take about a ten-




 minute stretch break,  and then we will resume.




           (Short recess.)




           CHAIRMAN DE  FALCO:   May we reconvene, please,




 ladies and gentlemen.    Ladies and gentlemen, may we




-reconvene, please.




           We would like to  now get into a review of the




 land disposal elements.   Lanny, if you will.




           MR. HICKMAN:   Would someone turn the slide




 projector on, please?    I can't talk unless I am on the




 screen.




           CHAIRMAN DE  FALCO:    You can't see what you are




 talking  about.




           MR. HICKMAN:   I can't see what I am talking




 about.




           I think we should start right now on the basic




 premise  of the definitions  that RCRA has.   These are very




 germane  to the subject  of land disposal, as well as the




 rest of  the law,  and in the amendments to the law,




 Congress makes the changes  from definitions that were in




 the  1965 and 1970 amendments.




           In the old law of 1965 and 1970, "disposal" was

-------
defined in more of the generic term of solid waste




management rather than actual disposal.   In the amendments




of RCRA,  "disposal" was redefined to basically really zero




in on the placement of solid waste on land.




          And it means that :




          "The term 'disposal' means 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  such solid




     waste or hazardous waste or any constituent thereof




     may enter the environment or be emitted into the




     air or discharged into any waters, including




     ground waters."




          And then Congress went ahead and defined




"open dump."   And they define that as follows.




          "The term 'open dump' means a site for the




     disposal of solid waste which is not  a sanitary




     landfill --"




          Which means that there is nothing in between,




folks.   Either it is or it isn't, I guess.




          "— which is not a sanitary landfill within the




     meaning of Section 4004."

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                                                      52







          We are going to talk about 4004 in a minute,




so that is nothing to get excited about.




          And then they said:




          "The term  'sanitary landfill' means a facility




     for the disposal of solid waste which meets the




     criteria published under Section 4004."




          And then the last definition ana the one that's




most revealing,  is the one for solid waste.  And I am




going to tie all of these together so that you understand




what they mean.




          And Congress, in its wisdom -- And only Congress




can do this -- ordained that a solid can be liquid.  And




under the definition of solid waste now, it can be liquid




as well as solid,  and everything in between.  And,




specifically:




          "The term  'solid waste1 means any garbage,




     refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant,




     water supply treatment plant, or air pollution




     control facility and other discarded material,




     including solid, liquid, semisolid, or contained




     gaseous material. . ."




          So you tie all these defintions together,  and

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                                                       53







what RCRA is saying is that any waste that  goes  on  the




land, RCRA is concerned about, and  it's  saying  that  the




sanitary landfill now has gone one  step  beyond,  beyond




the classic and traditional land disposal  site  receiving




municipal sludge waste, compacting  it and  putting a  daily




cover on it,  because sanitary landfill could, by practice,




be a variety of land disposal practices  receiving a  host




of different types of waste from the solid  to the liquid




and all the super goo that's in between.




          So that's very important  because  what  the  law




is trying to do is, of course, close the loop that  was




created by other environmental laws, such  as the Air




Pollution Control, Clean Air Act and the Federal Water




Pollution Control Act, which cleaned up  the air  and




cleaned up the water and generated  a lot of other waste




materials,  as well as to close the  loop  of  practices  of




our normal everyday life where we discharge a variety of




unwanted materials.




          So it's a very significant step  forward in




environmental legislation.




          (Slide No. 2.)




          Okay.   Section 4004, the  magic section that  is




tied to the definition of open dump and  sanitary landfill,
                                                          J

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                                                      54
requires the Administrator of EPA within one year of the


passage, the enactment of RCRA,  which will be October 21,


1977,  must issue criteria for what is a sanitary landfill


and for an open dump, and must consider in those criteria


reasonable probability of adverse effect on various  land


disposal practices.


          And the law insinuates, although it doesn't


specifically say so, that there would be types  of sanitary


landfills and it requires that the state plans, ones
                                   "^-

developed under Subtitle D, will  see that  all solid  wastes


tnat are not recovered go to  sanitary landfills.


          (Slide No. 3.)


          Now, keep  remembering that solid waste  is  also


liquid  now, so we must keep remembering that.


          Okay.   Section 4005, upgrading  of  open dumps.


The law requires EPA to, within 12 months  after the


Administrator issues his criteria for what is a sanitary


landfill, to conduct an  inventory of all  the  sites  that


would  fall  within  the  definition  of  an  "open  dump"  --


And, by definition,  an open  dump  is  anything  that's  not


a  sanitary  landfill  -- and  publish  the  list  of  all  those


sites  that  he  finds  to fall  within  the  category of  an

-------
open dump.




          Now, the minute that list is published, those




sites are,  in effect, in violation of j_ederal law.  But,




unlike the hazardous waste provisions of RCRA where,  if




the state fails or deems not to pick up the program,  the




federal government must carry out a regulatory program  in




hazardous wastes, there is no such provision for  land




disposal, so that there doesn't appear to be a lot  of




incentive for anyone to -- for any _s,tate to get  involved




in this because there is really no regulatory --  regu-




latory thrust other  than the fact that these sites  are




in violation of federal law, subject to the citizen suit




provisions of RCRA in the Federal Court system;  and if




found on behalf of the plaintiff, court costs may be




returned to the plaintiff.




          So there is some motivation.  There is  also




some motivation for  the fact that very little money can




be provided through  RCRA authorities to local government




to do anything unless the jrtate  is involved in taking




care of these sites.




          And the ^tate plan has  to provide for  a




mechanism over a  five-year period after the list  is

-------
                                                       56







published, not to exceed five  years,  for  a  schedule  to




close or upgrade all those sites that are open  dumps,




provide a schedule for that.




          And by 1983, the law intends  for  the  practice cf




open dumping to cease in the United States.




          (Slide No .  4.)




          Now, under Section 1008  is  authority  for  the




EPA to issue guidelines for various solid waste manage-




ment practices, resource conservation,  hazardous waste




practices that might not be covered under some  regulation,




land disposal practices or whatever,  and  it  also requires




under Section 1008 to issue criteria  for  open dumping.




          Now, these guidelines are merely  guidance




documents, advisory documents, to jrtate and  local govern-




ment and industry to provide a mechanism  for them to




improve their practices.    They are mandatory on the




federal government.    The federal  government must comply




with guidelines issued under Section  1008.




          Now, this is a carryover provision from the




1970 amendments which provided authority  for EPA to  write




guidelines,  and we have issued some seven or eight




guidelines covering a spectrum of  solid waste management

-------
                                                      57
practices from land disposal to beverage containers,




resource recovery facilities, collection of commercial,




municipal,  institutional solid wastes.




          And we now have — we now have underway the




development of a revision of the existing guideline on




land disposal to accommodate the new provisions of RCRA.




          We visualize this guideline as being a suppor-




tive document to the criteria issued under Subtitle D for




open dumps and sanitary landfills, as guidance on the best




way to improve practices, and this guideline will, as




it's developed over the period of time, over the years,




it will be a gradual progression.




          We will look at various waste streams and




various types of land disposal practices and try to give




guidance on the best way to sight, design and construct




and operate those facilities.




          And we will also develop -- At the present




time, we have under development sludge disposal guide-




lines that will perhaps deal with some of the problems




and concerns that have been raised already tonight about




what's the best way to take care of sludge.




          Those are the major land disposal provisions  of

-------
                                                      58







the law.    And I realize it's a brief overview, but the




thing you have to remember now is that sanitary landfill




is no longer sanitary landfill as you conceive it as




being a place where solid waste goes that gets compacted




and covered, and solid waste is no longer just solid;




it's also liquid and just sludges, and that there is only.




in theory, two types of land disposal practices as RCRA




views it:   either an open dump or sanitary landfill.




          Now, I will entertain questions.




          MR. STANLEY JUDD (Standard Oil Company of




California):  How would you envision, with this new




series of definitions, the treatment of things such as




land farming, land spreading and weathering practices




which are used today for disposal?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Well, land farming would fall




within the provisions of the land disposal requirements




of the law.   And it could be a sanitary  landfill by




definition  if it fell within the criteria of  what was




considered  to be a sanitary landfill, something that




did not,  in effect, pollute, cause health or  environ-





mental problems.




          It might also  fall outside  the  disposal

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                                                      59
definition, into perhaps resource conservation provisions.




It's hard to say.




          It could fall within the definition of open




dump or sanitary landfill unless it's a hazardous waste.




And then, of course, it will be dealt with under Subtitle




C rather than Subtitle D.




          Subtitle C is the hazardous waste provisions.




Subtitle D is the land disposal provision and _state and




local development provisions in the law.




          Every time we have this presentation, land




farming comes up.   It's a .




          MS. SANDRA MATHIAS (Southern California




Association of Governments,  Los Angeles, California):  How




do you see the guidelines affecting the 208 process that's




going on in Southern California and across the nation,




especially as it relates to the residual waste management




program?




          MR. HICKMAN:  We will talk a little bit more




about this when we talk about state and local program




development.




          The interrelationship between 208 agencies and




other planning agencies, not all 208 agencies are doing

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                                                      60
residuals planning where, within the provisions of the




law,  there is a requirement that jjtatc and local govern-




ment  come together and reach an agreement on who is going




to do planning and who is going to do implementation.




          At that point  in time, the 208 agencies -- And




the law says be sure and consider the 208 agencies; also




the Governor and local elected officials have  the oppor-




tunity to make that decision on who  is going to do




residuals planning, at least from land disposal aspects,




whether it be done under 208 or under RCRA.




          We have been cooperating with  the  208 program in




Washington and, in fact, in the  '78  budget,  part of  the




208 budget is provided to our  office to  do  some  imple-




mentation work since,  in effect,  the 208 authority  won't




allow for implementation.




          It will be basically within  the  criteria  that




we will establish  for  identifying  regional  --  regional




areas for solid waste  planning and  subsequently  imple-




mentation of regional  programs will  be  to  call the  state




and  the  local  elected  officials as  to  who  does that within




the  criteria and  the guidelines that we  will issue.




          I  don't  think  it  really makes  a  difference to us

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                                                       61
as long as the state  and  local  government  is satisfied




and the job gets done.




          But what's  got  to  be  done  is  the state and the




locals have got to  be  happy  with  the  way  it's going to




get done.




          MR. RUSSELL  PAPENHAUSEN (Supervisor,  Plumas




County):   I think  I can be heard  without  going  to the mike




there.




          I am a Plumas County  Supervisor,  and  I attended




a meeting of CECAC  down in San  Diego,  and  the big dis-




cussion in solid waste down  there was the  fact  that you




are mandating these programs,  and they  want to  know where




they could get millions of dollars to purchase  lands to




do the very things  that you  want  to  do, because they have




created more garbage  than everybody  anticipated.   It's




about twice as much,  and  we  are running out of  land.




          The discussion  was  that you mandated  a program,




and who's going to  pay for it.    They felt they didn't




have the money to pay  for these exorbitant prices that




they would have to  pay for land.




          MR. HICKMAN:  I guess whether we mandated




something or not, you  would  still be  generating solid

-------
waste.  It would have to go somewhere.




          We could talk about the financing.  We will




talk about the financing programs the last part of  the




presentat ion.




          But throughout the law, there are  limitations




to what the financial assistance available in the  law




can be used for, and in almost all  instances, it does  not




include the purchase of land.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Any  other  questions?    Why




don't we go on, then.




          MR. HUMBER:   I'm  Nick Humber with  the Resource




Recovery Division.




          Concerning resource recovery, I'm  sure your




first question  is how much  are we going to pay  for it.




And at first, this is one of the first questions that




Congress struggled with.




          First, they were  considering a  $200 million




grant program, which became a billion dollar loan




guarantee program, and  that became  a  two  billion dollar




loan  guarantee  program.  And then the next  step, of




course, was to  have  a zero  dollar program, which  is what





the law ended up with.

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                                                      63
          It concluded that the funding at the federal




level was not necessary,  but a program of providing




technical assistance, providing research and development,




would fit the bill.




          Let's talk about some of the more specific




provisions of this bill.




          (Slide No. 1.)




          We have listed here several sections of the




Act, and I'm sure you are dazzled by all the sections of -




sections of the Act.  But the point here is that in this




law, resource conservation and resource recovery have




become legitimized as a part of the definition of solid




waste management.   And resource recovery had been in the




Act of 1970, but resource conservation had not been.




          So these provisions are the guidelines,




technical assistance and many other sections of the Act,




which you can see.




          (Slide No. 2.)




          Under resource conservation, probably the most




important part in the Act has to do with the creation of




resource recovery and conservation panels.   These are




somewhat misnamed.

-------
                                                      64
          First, they are not confined to just resource




recovery and resource conservation.                        \




          And, secondly, they are not panels.   So,




therefore,  the title is not at all appropriate.




          But unfortunately I didn't have much to  do with  :




that title.   Usually in these public mee-t'ings , people




say, "How do you get appointed to this panel?"   And




there really aren't any panels, and there is nobody to do




any appointing.




          So the idea is that they do encourage that




assistance and guidance to communities and ^states  be given,




not just by federal people, but by a wide range of people  !




with expertise and experience in resource recovery.




          And this would include those who  are foremost  in




other cities and Estates who had experience  in  resource




recovery and solid waste management, private industry,




citizen groups, environmental groups, and the  resource




recovery industry.                                         |




          So, therefore, on these, quote, panels,  when we




go  to a city such as, let's say, San Jose and  San  Jose




asked us for technical  assistance, we would first




determine vvhat area they were  interested  in, whether  it

-------
                                                       65
 had  to  do with  landfill,  collection  or  resource recovery,

 and  then we  would  bring  together  a  group  of  people repre-

 senting different  interests,  first  of all somebody who

 would establish  a  communication  between the  decision

 makers  in the city  and the  citizens.

          That's probably one  of  the most important

 parts is getting that communication, and  then  the

 different technical  expertise:   lawyers,  investment

 bankers, bond counsel, technical  people,  solid waste

 management people  and solid waste management people —

 and  solid waste management  people.

          The Act  does require that  of  the general

 authorization or   general appropriation that 20 percent  of

 it be used for this  purpose.   That  does  not mean 20  per-

 cent of the  total  funding under the Act,  but 20 percent

 of the general authorization.

          And I hope that we will go down through all

 the  funding  authorizations  at  the end so  that  is clarified

          (Slide No. 3.)

          Going back to guidelines for  plans,  require-

ments,  this  is under state  planning, state programs,  and
                     -S—               ~^~
 I'm just giving you  information about the resource

-------
                                                      66
conservation and the resource recovery aspects.


          The guidance that we give must reflect resource


recovery, resource conservation and present and existing


and new or future markets for recovered material.


          And another very specific requirement is that


no state plan can include -- Well, let me restate  that.
   ^

          It is that the _s,tate plan shall reflect  that


there are no prohibitions to communities within the


state signing 20-year contracts.  In other words,  some


states have provisions,  for reasons other than solid


waste, I guess, to prevent any kind of illegal activities


or fraudulent activities on the part of municipal


officials of making commitments for 20 years.


          The problem is that one cannot  finance  a


facility that has a 20-year life  unless you have  the


ability  to  finance  it for 20 years.    So, thus,  this


requirement was put into the Act.


          Several states have come upon this  problem  and


have  changed their  legislation  in this area.


          (SIide  No.  4.)


          On financial  aid,  this  is  for grant—aid and


it's  not  grants  for construction, but  grants  for planning

-------
                                                       67
and implementation in state programs.    They  are for




public agencies only.




          Again, the emphasis  is  on  implementation.    We




don't want to be funding planning studies  that  are




literally just that, just  studies and  not  implementation.




          We are trying, as we  have  in the past, to




provide funding for activities  that  lead to decisions on




resource recovery, either  to  issue an  RFP  or  not to




enter into resource recovery.   And this includes not only




resource recovery, but  resource conservation,  hazardous




waste management, sanitary landfill.




          (Slide No. 5. )




          The Act also  requires that  the federal govern-




ment set a good example  for the rest  of the country.




They realize that, although the federal government only




purchases about two percent of  the purchases  of materials




and goods in the country,  that  by setting  guidelines that




require recycled material  content of  these purchases,




maybe _s_tate and local government  --  maybe  even  some




corporations -- will follow  that  lead  and  set similar




standards.




          That, in two  years,  procuring agencies --  And

-------
                                                      63
this is primarily GSA and DSA, which is the DOD purchasing




agency, have requirements for purchasing products with




the highest percentage of recovered materials practical.




          And this only includes items over $10,000.




That is, purchases over $10,000.




          It extends this not only to the purchase of




goods,  but users of fossil fuels.  In other words,




boilers, federally—operated boilers.   And it, again,




requires the highest use of refuse as a fuel as possible,




as both technically and economically possible.




          And, lastly, the vendors to the federal




government must certify the recovered material content  of




the items they purchase.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          Now, as all laws, there is some issues that




weren't clear on what to do and, therefore, Congress asked




for some studies, and some of these are quite important;




some are not as important.




          The first is very important, the Resource




Conservation Committee.   And this  is a committee  com-




posed of the head of EPA and  the secretaries of several --




secretaries of several departments.

-------
                                                      69
          It requires them to study several major issues




on resource conservation.




          Other studies are listed here.   Composition of




the waste stream, setting priorities of our research




efforts, looking at small-scale technologies for resource




recovery, new technologies and systems for source




separation, sludge and mining wastes.




          (Slide No.  7.)




          Those are the two-year studies, and here are




additional studies that we were required to report on in




three years.




          (Slide No.  8.)




          A bit more about the Resource Conservation




Committee.




          There is a requirement for the committee to




complete its report in two years.   As I said, this is




composed of the EPA Administrator as Chairman, and the




Secretaries of Interior, Treasury, Commerce and Labor,




as well as representatives from the Council on Environ-




mental Quality and OMB.




          (Slide No.  9.)




          These are the major things that this committee

-------
                                                      70
will be studying.




          See, there are several impediments to resource




recovery.  In the past, one of the economic impediments




has been that landfills were really not operated at  a




real cost to society.  In other words, they weren't




environmentally  sound and, thus, we were subsidizing




inferior landfills.




          On the other side, on the sale of materials




and energy, there is still some discriminatory practices




that discriminate against resource recovery.   Depletion




allowances and capital gains favor the purchase of




virgin materials.  We are supposed to look  at those  and




other existing federal policies that  discriminate  against




the advancement  of resource recovery.




           In addition, we are  supposed to  look at  new




subsidies  or taxes or bounties  that might  be  employed.




These include such ideas  as a  subsidy for  each ton




recycled,  a subsidy  for each dollar  investment in  capital




equipment  that might be used for  facilities for  resource





recovery.




           And, lastly  --  And,  thirdly, charges on




products to reflect  waste management  costs.

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                                                       7]
          In addition, the committee  is  to  look  at  the




feasibility of product regulations  to  reduce  the amount  of




waste generated.




          (Slide No.  10.)




          Under demonstrations and  evaluations,  again,  it




runs the gamut across all solid waste  management oppor-




tunities.   The major change  is that we  can provide funds




to private organizations.  That is, we can  provide  funds




directly to companies for research.    In the  past,  we




had to fund a city or state,  which  then  issued a contract




or a grant with a company for technology.   And  that's




not a very efficient  way of doing it.    So  the law  was




changed to provide for that.




          The funding can be  up to  75  percent.




          That's the  end of the discussion  on resource




recovery and resource conservation.  Do  you have any




quest ions?




          MR. CLARENCE KAUFMAN (County of San Diego):




Nick, you mentioned earlier in your discussion that the




Act prohibits, or will do something about laws prohibiting




long-term contracts.




          As I read this, it  only pertained to long-term

-------
                                                       72







contracts for the acquisition of waste to go  into  the




sites.




          Of equal concern to us,  if not even  greater,




is state or local regulations prohibiting  long-term




contracts for the sale of materials from resource recovery




facilities.  Because we are unable to obtain private




financing, it's very important  that we  be  able to enter




into long-term contracts  for  the  sale of these materials




and, in particular, energy.




          MR. HUMBER.  I  think  that provision --  I'm  not




sure that it pertains to  that area.  That  is an important




point.   But  it also does  pertain  to the contract  for




waste disposal services.  You were saying  on the  waste




stream, the  whole waste disposal  service,  not just




acquiring the waste.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO•    Any other  questions on





this section?




          MS. ARIEL PARKINSON (Member,  Berkeley Solid




Waste Management  Commission,  Berkeley,  California):   I am




a member  of  the  Berkeley  Solid  Waste  Management




Commission  and  some  other _state and  regional  committees.




           Could  you  clarily  that statement  in the federal

-------
                                                       73
procurement table about the use of refuse  for  fuel  as  the




highest use?  Does that -- That's a rather ambiguous




statement.




          MR. HUMBER:  I will try to  find  the  exact




statement in the law.




          MS. PARKINSON:  I will sit  down,  so  I  had




better say the other thing.




          It seems to me it conflicts  with the use  of




refuse for its fiber content, or possibly  for  a  fuel.




          MR. HUMBER:  Okay.    It says under  Section




6002(B), "Agencies that generate heat,"  blah,  blah,  blah,




". .  .  from fossil fuel in systems that  have  the technical




capability of using  recovered material and recovered-




material-derived fuel as a primary or  supplementary




fuel  shall use such  capability  to the  maximum  extent




pract icable."




          Granted, it's very  ambiguous,  but the  idea  is




to encourage federal agencies to examine the  feasibility




of using refuse as a iuel source.




          In the other sections of the law, they ask




that  the federal government purchases  paper,  that they




try to set the purchasing requirements that uses the

-------
                                                       74
greatest recycled fiber content.




          So there is not a conflict here.




          MS. PARKINSON:  Well,  I would  suggest  that  the




summary statement is misleading  as  it's  unlike  the  clarity




of your other charts.




          MR. HUMBER:  Okay.  Fine.  Thank  you.




          MS. PARKINSON:    It is  not clear.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Yes?




          MS. JEAN SIRI:    I would  like  to  ask  from here,





if possible.




          I was just curious to  know why suddenly this




five percent of the  purchase price  for  tire shredders.




Are there other proposals for tires besides just shredding




them?




          MR. HUMBER:   I think  we all  share your con-




fusion.   We have no idea how that  got  in there.   That's




about  the size of a  sales tax,  and  I'm  not  sure why




anybody --  It's quite a  bit  less than  the cost  for




applying for a federal  grant and enduring all the





headaches.   So.




          MS. SIRI:  It's weird.




          MR. CLARENCE  KAUFMAN:   I  still don't  understand

-------
                                                      75
completely on the long-term contract.




          Some people are paying for sewage sludge, and




you mentioned, for example, if a private company was




buying sewage sludge from a district, is there any




limitation on the length of the contract there, because,




if there were, private industry wouldn't even touch it witt




a ten-foot pole.




          MR. HUMBER:  Okay.   The provision pertains to --




Let's say that a community wanted to enter into a  contract




with a company to provide the disposal service and




resource recovery.   In other words, they would pay just




a disposal fee at the resource recovery facility,  and




the facility would be privately operated and could be




privately financed or publicly financed, depending on




whatever.  But to get the financing, the system would




require a 20-year contract.   In other words, no one




would buy the bonds, either the corporate bonds or public




bonds, unless there was a commitment to pay the disposal




fee by the community for 20 years.




          Now, in some states, there is a prohibition for




communities entering into any kind of contract for pencils




erasers, anything, that runs for more than the  length of

-------
                                                      76
the administration or for five years or for some other




period of time.   And clearly one can't finance a recovery




facility in five years.




          MR.  KAUFMAN:  All right.  Thank you.




          MR.  HICKMAN:  You know, there are a lot of




states that do have legislative limitations on long-term




contracts that they won't allow a local government to make




contractor commitments for longer than five years.  And




so Congress, you know, tried to be ecumenical and has




written this section to cover all those _s_tates , as well as




those who may be able to enter into long-term contracts




through their permissive legislation.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Any other questions?




          We will go on to the next section.




          MR.  HICKMAN:  We have reviewed now  the RCRA




land disposal provisions and the  resource recovery and




resource conservation provisions  of RCRA.   And the key




concept now within the law, of course,  is to  develop  an




institutional mechanism to build  the  institutions




necessary to deliver  these intents of  Congress  to  state




and local government.  So we are  going to review  the jrtate





and local development authorities that are provided in

-------
                                                       77
RCRA on how this  is supposed  to  take  place  at  the_state




and local levels  and what  the^f_ederal  government's




involvement is from a  financial  as well  as,  as  was




mentioned before, a technical  assistance standpoint.




          (Slide  No. 1.)




          Okay.   Subtitle C,  which  is the  hazardous




waste provisions, and  Subtitle D, which  is jsjtate and




regional plans and implementation, provides  a  mechanism




for the state to  assume a  dominant role  in  ensuring




proper solid waste management.




          The RCRA provides a  mechanism  for  local




government to meet planning and  implementation,  their




planning and implementation needs under  the  law.   It




requires EPA by April  of  '77,  which  is next  month, to




issue guidelines  for regional  planning areas.    And within




a year after that, guidelines  for state  solid  waste




management programs.




          Now, it's not like we  are  all  new  kids on the




block.    The 1965 authorities  of the  Solid  Waste




Disposal Act include state planning  grant authority.




The  1970 amendments continued that  authority,  as  well  as




expanded it to include  some authorities  for  local  and

-------
                                                      78
regional planning.




          And,  over the years, we have been developing,




providing assistance to state government to develop state




solid waste management plans.   The last couple of years,




we have been encouraging the states to do three basic




things with the financial assistance they have received




from us under the Solid Waste Disposal Act.




          1.  Get ready to have a hazardous waste regu-




latory program.




          2.  Get ready to have a decent land disposal




regulatory program and




          3.  Get yourself arranged so that you can bring




resource conservation about  in your _s_tate.




          Notice  how nicely  all those things  fit  together




in this new law.   That's just amazing how  these  things




happen.   And so  we should not have a big problem moving




from where we are now into carrying out  the finishing  up




of our plans.




          (Slide  No. 2 . )




          Okay.   RCRA  requires certain  minimum  require-




ments  for an acceptable _stat e  solid waste management  plan




Now, the planning provisions  for  both hazardous  and

-------
                                                       79
non-hazardous waste are included  in Subtitle D.




          The law must provide a  mechanism  for  —  requires




that the state and local government provide a mechanism




for shared responsibilities for planning  and implementa-




tion.   It says that the state shall,  in  concert with




local elected officials, come to  an agreement on who  is




going to do what.




          Now, : t doesn't say what constitutes  agreement,




and that will be an interesting exercise  that we will  all




have to go through here in the next few months  as  to  what




constitutes agreement.




          A plan must provide for the  elimination  of  open




dumps and/or the institution of sanitary  landfills; must




provide regulatory authority to see that  open dumps are




eliminated and that sanitary landfills are  maintained.




          We have already talked  about the  contractual




freedom, you know, that they have got  to  set up a




mechanism to review any constraints that  will not  allow




local government to enter into long-term  contracts to




provide solid waste; resource recovery  facilities,  and




it says that all solid waste, therefore,  shall, by, you




know, within the plan, either go  to sanitary landfill  or

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                                                      80
go through a resource conservation or recovery mechanism.




          All right.   Now, Section 3011 provides




financial assistance for the development and implementa-




tion of state hazardous waste management programs.   And




as Bill's already mentioned, it's a $25 million authorized




level .




          Now, that doesn't mean an appropriated  level.




That means authorized level, for both Fiscal Year 78 arid




79.   One can start to wonder.   All these things  are




supposed to be coming out, of course.  Our fiscal year




starts  in October, and the law was sort of passed in




October,  also.   And the hazardous waste guidelines for




state programs are supposed to be due out in 18 months,




which is half way through Fiscal Year 78, and the _state




solid waste management planning guidelines are supposed  to




be out  in 18 months, which is mid year  '78.




          You start to wonder, "Well, how can we  start to




give money out, or why is there money available in  '78




for these things if we don't even have the guidelines out





yet?"




          But, you know, as  I mentioned, we have  been  in




the planning business a long time.  We expect many  program

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                                                      81







to be able to move rapidly into this, and we  intend to




be very, very flexible because the intent of  the  law  is




to help state and local government do the job of  the  RCRA.




And we are going to try to do the best we can to  help




them get there.




          Of course, the hazardous waste portion  is




based on the problem areas of where  the hazardous waste




problems are rather than on some other formula  basis.




          (Slide No. 3.)




          Okay.    Section 4008(a)(l) provides financial




assistance for the development and implementation of  a




state plan.    Now, the development of and implementation




of a state plan is a shared function between  state  and




local government.




          We have had past experiences where  a_s_tate




decided this_s_tate plan would be all the counties,  and




all the counties would write a plan and they would put




them all together and staple them and say this  is our




state plan.    This  is not our  concept here.    We are




going to watch very closely on how jg.tate and  local




government come together to do this.




          This is strictly a population  formula,  and  it

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                                                      82







flows to the jrtates, and being used by the _s_tate govern-




ment, and passed through the states to the local govern-




ment, regional and local level for planning and imple-




mentat ion.




          Authorized level in  '78 is $30 million, and




in '79 is $40 million.




          (Slide No. 4.)




          Section 4008(a)(2) is authorization  for the




implementation of solid waste management programs.   And




Nick mentioned this under his  discussion of the resource




conservat ion.




          This is a concept of bridging the gap between




the  development of a plan and  the actual implementation




where it takes some catalyzing force to get all the




people together to sign the contract that  says we are




going to do  it this way.   They have got the  nice plan,




but  there is nobody to  sell the plan.  And through  our




old  demonstration grant authorities, we have  had  some




experience  in this concept of  trying to bridge this  gap.




And  this provision allows for  this money to  flow  directly




to state and local government  from EPA to  do  such things




as plans and feasibility  studies, get  consultants to help,

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                                                       83
do surveys, market  studies,  analysis,  economic  investi-




gations, technology  assessments,  and  also  to  help  local




government meet land disposal  requirements and  the guide-




lines that we might  issue.




          They have  to comply  with  any guidelines  that we




issue, if they receive a grant under  this  authority.  This




is not a formula grant; this is based on need and  on




relationships and agreements between  EPA and  the grantee.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          Okay.   There is provision  for special community




grants.    This authorizes two  and a half million dollars




in each Fiscal Year  78 and 79  for communities with




populations less than 25,000,  75 percent of the solid




waste that they are  treating and disposing of comes from




outside the community, and there are  serious  environmental




problems resulting from that.




          This is a  special provision,  sort of  like the




tire shredders, and we are not quite  sure  where it came




from, but it's in there.    And it's not on a  formula




basis.  It's a very  small grant program, though, and  it




also says only one such grant  can be  given in any  single




state.   Nobody is going to get rich  with  two and  a half

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                                                        84
million dollars.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          Okay.  Rural community assistance,  Section




4009, authorizes $25 million for each Fisal Year  78 and




79.   These are grants to assist rural communities  to




meet the Land Disposal, Clean Air Act and  Federal Water




Pollution Control requirements  that might  result  in some




solid waste problem.   It flows through  the states  down




to the rural communities.




          These are communities with  a population of




5,000 or less;  county  population of 10,000 or less, or




less than 20 persons per  square mile.




          And  then  there  is  another caveat in there about




the  -- that the income of the residents  in any of these




rural communities not  being  more than 125  percent above




the  poverty level.   It's a  very complicated  formula,  and




I  don't  think  we have  yet figured  out quite how the money




is going to f1ow.




          MR.  SANJOUR:   To  West  Virginia.




          MR.  HICKMAN:   That's  true,  I  guess.




          This is  again  to  help rural communities,  and




only if  there  is no other regional system available that

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                                                      85







they can go into and there is no existing or planned




system that they can go into the future.




          And it's based on a rural population formula,




will pay for 75 percent of the cost of complying with the




requirements of RCRA,  but it will not allow lor the




purchase of land.




          If you add all these things up and put them




all together, they spell $181 million a year in '78




authorized levels for the law, and slightly more than




that in Fiscal Year 79.




          None of this, of course, has been appropriated




yet because we are not into Fiscal Year 78.  We are still




in  '77.   But those are the basic financial assistance




programs to help jsjate and local government meet the




requirements of RCRA.




          It's a mechanism to get maximum assumption of




the hazardous waste programs, the land disposal programs




and the resource conservation programs the  law envisions




into the stale government, down through the sj,ate




government to local government on a partnership basis.




          That really sort of completes all of the --




All right.   That covers the formal part of this

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                                                       86







presentation, and I can talk about any questions  you  havs




on this now.




          MR. MARK HARRIS (City of Palo Alto):   I  just




want to ask a basic simple specific question.




          Seeing these new guidelines and  new  plans  that




are going to be developed, I'm concerned,  are  we  in




California going to have to reinvent the wheel?   In  other




words,  we have gone through this  process.    We are ready




to implement, if we can, and don't want to be  slowed  down.




          MR. IIICKMAN:  You are not unique in  your




concern.  Every jstate has, and every county and  every




local government that's in some process of completing




or implementing the solid waste plan has said,  "Gee,  are




we going to have to start all over again?"




          RCRA does not intend for anyone  to start over




again.   We have to issue guidelines on what constitutes




a regional planning area for solid waste management.   The




draft that I have seen, and the intent of  the  agency, is




to be very, very flexible and very, very liberal.   We




have spent, over $GO million in  the  last ten years with




the jrtate government  and local government  developing




plans.    We don't intend to flush those down the tubes.

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                                                       87
          We are going to try to  take maximum  advantage  of




all the work that's gone on in  the past.




          MR. HARRIS:  Good.  That's what  I  wanted to  hear.




Thank you.




          MR. LARRY BURCH (State  of California Solid




Waste Management Board)-  The guidelines  for the  regional




planning areas that is due out  in April of  '77,  can you




give us the status of that?  Is it on schedule?




          MR. IIICKJIAN:  No.




          MR. BURCH:  When can  we expect  to  see  it?




          MR. HICKMAN:  I'm not trying  to  be flippant,




you know.  It's -- I think we have been through  about




three drafts basically within the office.  We  have had




state government and some local government people sitting




with us on developing the drafts.  I think that  we




anticipate that sometime within the next  two weeks a




draft will be made available for  comment  widely  to every




state around the country, and then it will eventually,  of




course, go into the Federal Register sometime  in  April.




But I would imagine that, if you  have not  seen one as  a




state agency, you will be seeing  one, a draft,  within  a




couple; weeks.

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                                                      88
          MR. BURGH:  Okay.




          MR. HICKMAN:  I will have to say that the guys




are doing a good job.




          MR. BURCH:  I'm prepared to make a statement  for




our Board sometime tonight about what we are planning to




do under RCRA.   Whenever that is appropriate,  let me




know.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Any other questions on this




section?




          MS. SANDRA MATHIAS:  You mentioned the  total




funding of $181 million for Fiscal 78.   How much of that




do you figure will actually be available and especially




for planning stages , _s_tate , regional and local  planning?'




          MR. HICKMAN:  I will review the  '78  budget




request as it sets over in the Congress now.   The




existing budget request now is for the general  authoriza.-




tion areas, for those areas not  including  the  planning,




financial assistance program under Subtitle C  and Subtitle




D, the budget request is $42.5 million.




          Add on to  that $12 million, which  is  requested




under Subtitle D for purposes of developing  and imple-




menting state plans, and another $5 million  which  is

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                                                      89
allocated out of 208 funds for purposes of  implementation




grants for solid waste management, and that  comes  up  to




around a swelling total of $41.5 million, I  believe.




          There is no money being -- There  is  no money




in the current budget request for rural community




assistance.    There is none for the implementation  grant




authorities of Subtitle D.   There is no request in the




current budget for Subtitle D state hazardous  waste




program development grants.  There is no request for




training grants,  which is another authorization level.




There is none for tire shredders.  There is  none for




special communities in the current budget request.




          MR. SANJOUR.  May I say a word on  that.




          This is one area where the public  can be




particularly influential, in the area of budget requests.




Just a word here of explanation that t he Jgol id Jtf&st e




   ,  RCRA,  was not an administration bill.   It was  not.




The initiative for it did not come from the  administra-




tion,  it came from Congress.




          And so that these authorizations  --  these




budget requests are coming from the administration.




Congress itself hasn't spoken yet.  We haven't heard  what

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                                                       90
the opinion of Congress on this  subject  is.    And we have




yet to hear from them.




          And if you  have any  interest  in  the  subject,  I




suggest you write to  your Congressman.




          Thank you.




          MR. RUSSELL PAPENHAUSEN  (Supervisor,  Plumas




County):  I noticed there was  something  about  sludge there,




and I know that EPA has grants  for  sewer plants.    Now,




you are saying we go  into a  grant  system to take  care of




the sludge that comes out of the plants.  Is that what I




understood?




          MR. HICKMAN:  No.   I  don't  know where you saw




the word "sludge" particularly,  on  which part  of  the




presentation?




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   I  thought I  saw it in part o L'




that .




          MR. HICKMAN:  Was  it  in  mine?   Heavens, I never




talk about sludge.




          MR. PAPP^NIIAUSEN:   Well,  there  is a problem




getting  rid o I it.




          MR. HICKMAN:  There was  no  specific financing




program within  the  law  just  dealing with sludge.

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                                                      91
          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:  Well, the law  said  that we




have to take care of that, and one of them was  sludge.




          MR. HICKMAN:   Right.  But there  is no  construc-




tion grant program in this law similar to  what's  in the




Water Act, there for the construction of waste  treatment,




wastewater treatment facilities.




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:  Well, I'm just thinking that




all of a sudden there will be some laws banning  getting




rid of the sludge.  I know there  is some quite  extensive




studies going on about it.




          In other words, if we are -- I know  that  in




my particular district, I have applied for an  EPA grant




for the Town of Taylorsvi11e, and we are thinking of  a




mechanical plant that's going to  displace  sludge.   And




if we are going to get into  a sludge problem,  I  would




sure like to know it now.




          MR. HICKMAN:  If you are going to  build a




sewage treatment plant, you  are going to have  sludge.




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   That's right.




          MR. HICKMAN:  And  whether this law ib present




or not has nothing to do with the problem  you  face with




getting rid  of the sludge.    But  this law  does  not provide

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                                                       92
construction grant funds for sludge disposal facilities.




          MR. SANJOUR:  One of the reasons this law was




passed is because Congress wanted people who were building




sewage treatment plants and generating sludge  to think




about what they were going to do with their sludge.




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   That's what I am  gathering.




          MR. SANJOUR:  That's part of the process of




building a sewage treatment plant.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Paul, I guess within a construc-




tion grant program, they can build within  the  grant




program a good deal of sludge handling and treatment




processes, can't they, within the construction grant




program up to a certain point?




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   The water pollution




control construction grant program provides for the




treatment of the sewage and the disposal of the solid




remaining material, or the sludge, in a proper and




appropriate  fashion.   And  there;  is suli'icient flexi-




bility in the construction grant  program  to accommodate





those  issues.




          I  think  what's  raised here, what  the Congress




tried  to  put on the table  was the  fact  that  all too  often

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                                                      93
the design of sludge treatment facilities stopped at the




cleaning up of the water, and the disposal of sludge was




considered not a part of the process.   And what we are




trying to say here is that you have to look at the ultimati




residual management problem that you create as part of




your sewage disposal program,




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   The alpha and the omega.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   The alpha and the omega.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Right on.   The alpha and the




omega.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:    Are there any other




questions now in hindsight having gone through the whole




process that anyone wants to raise?  Yes?




          MS, ARIEL PARKINSON:   I notice in Section




8003(g) there is a statement about EPA and lobbying.  And




I also read in the National Solid Waste Report that EPA




has been in trouble for its statements on container




reuse legislation in New England.




          It seems to me that anybody who goes to a




public hearing and makes a statement is called a lobbyist.




And this disturbs m$ about the way in which EPA will be




able to present the.immensely valuable research that it's

-------
                                                      94
done in the proper forum.




          MR. HUMBER:   Yes.   Whenever we speak out on




the subject, we get in trouble.  That's all that meant




because -- In other words, it was an attempt to suppress




the truth and to write that into the legislation, but




that wasn't done.   The policy outlined in the law  is




exactly what we have been doing for the last two and a




half years.  In other words, we have been testifying at




state hearings on beverage container legislation and




explaining what a national bill would do, what the




implications would mean for litter, the economic impli-




cations, energy and the environment.




          And we will continue to do that and we will




continue to get in trouble with industry, but we won't




be violating the law nor  the spirit of the law.




          MS. PARKINSON:  Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Yes?




          MR. RONALD SCHWEGLER:  I would  like to just  talk





right from here.




          In California -- And I cannot speak for any  of




the other states -- we have local laws by the _s_tates that




you cannot implement a solid waste disposal  facility,

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                                                       95
either a transfer  station  or  landfill  facility,  without




the local approval of the  city.    So under  the  mandates  of




the state, all the counties throughout  the  state are




attempting to have state solid waste management  master




plans, yet the plan is as  good as  -- If  you  take a  county




as complicated as  -- 78 cities --  as Los  Angeles, where




you have 78 individual jurisdictions saying,  "Not in  my




community you shall not locate," to the  point where what




happens when eventually 78 cities  say  "not  here," and




the state does not have the authority  to  mandate that they




implement this program, and you — as  Lanny  indicated




earlier,  they have no jurisdiction as  in  the  hazardous




waste portion of the law.  How are we  ever  going to




resolve this problem?




          MR.  HICKMAN:  Slowly.




          Well,  it's going to have to  go  somewhere  sooner




or later, and the  law is not -- the ^federal  government




can't come out and solve all the problems.  They shouldn't




even try  to in the first place.  You know,  it's  got to




be dealt  with at the state and local level.   And sooner




or later  rational minds must prevail to  find  solutions.




          MR.  SCHWEGLER:   You haven't  been  in the garbage

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                                                       96
business long enough, Lanny.




          MR. HICKMAN:  My  point  is I  guarantee that some




dude coming out of Washington  on  a  white horse doesn't




have any better chance  of solving it  than you guys do at




the local level.  There is  just  no  way.  It's not the




intent of RCRA to usurp or  take  over  the rightful




responsibility of the state and  local  government to plan




and implement solid waste management  programs.   It's




really a supportive --  We are  in  a  supportive role.   We




can provide information.  We can,  you  know,  speak to the




issue and try to show what  is  rational and what has to be




done from a national perspective,  but  we can't make a




community change its zoning patterns  any more than anybody




else can.   It isn't proper for  us  to  do that.




          MR. SCHWEGLER:  If the  _states  do not come up




with a total wide compliance with a state solid waste




management plan, then they  are not  going to be eligible




for federal funding.    Is thai  the  stick that we will




hold over them?




          MR. HICKMAN.  Thai's true.




          MR. SANJOUR:  May I  say something?




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO.   Yes.

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                                                       97
          MR. SANJOUR:    This  subject,  of course, comes




up at every meeting.    Just  more  or  less the question is




what is the — now  that  the  federal  government has passed




this law,  what is the _f_edoral  government going to do to




create land disposal sites.    And just  like Lanny, I




share Lanny's frustration.




          Unlike other  federal  laws,  water pollution




law or air pollution law,  which  you  can claim the law




created a waste problem,  this  law creates no wastes.   All




the wastes that this law  deals with  are being generated




and they are going  somewhere.




          So I guess as  a  federal official, I really kind




of am frustrated when people ask  me  what are you going to




do to create land disposal  sites.   I  come back and ask




you where is it going now.




          MR. SCHWEGLER:   I  don't think that's fair at




all.  You have now  the  power of  the  f_gderal government to




close dumps, and as they  should  be,  but where is the




assistance to get something  open9




          MR. SANJOUR.    We  have  the  power Lo define what




is or isn't adequate disposal.   That's  the power we have.




          MR. SCHWEGLER-   I  mean  get  down to the local

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                                                       98
level and try to open a sanitary landfill.




          MR. SANJOUR:  No.   I do know.  But what do  you




expect the federal government to do about it?  What  is




the federal government's role in getting  local citizens




to approve of sites in their area?




          I don't know the answer to your question,




frankly.




          MR. SCHWEGLER:  Neither do I.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Let me try  a little to




answer your question.




          The statute puts together a total process.   It




is not a matter now of a disposal site by itself.    It




requires government,  state and local, to  get involved




from the very beginning precepts of the issue.   It




requires the public to be educated and be brought into




the process.




          We should not be confronting the issue at  the




tail end of the problem, the opening of the site but,




rather, establishing the need in the first place, the




relative alternatives that are available  to the  public




and to the government involved.




          It establishes a total process.  And I think  if

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                                                      99
we were to pursue this process, we would get better




receptivity from the public out there.   I don't think we




have pursued it in the past.   I think we have foreclosed




many of the actions and created the confrontation without




public knowledge of what was going on until it was thrust




upon them.




          MR. RUSSELL PAPENHAUSEN (Supervisor, Plumas




County):  I would like to make a statement on public lands,




trying to get them into county government, but some way or




another, there is some laws that I am told by the Bureau




of Land Reclamation and the U.S. Forest Service that they




will not knowingly give us a piece of land to put a solid




waste dump on.   They will lease it to us on a short-term




lease so that they have complete handle on it, and the




restrictions that they put on  it are so severe that for a




small county -- We are a large county area-wide, but small




in population -- the expenses  are tremendous.




          We have one right now they want us to put five




wells on, 150-feet deep, to protect the water that's




going down to China or Japan or someplace, and the costs




are just so tremendous.




          In fact, we have got three lawsuits against us

-------
                                                      100
right now by the taxpayers because we are trying to




implement what the state told us to do.   And the costs




keep mounting and mounting.




          And that's why I asked the first question:  is




there any way to help get us a piece of land?




          I tried to get a piece close.to my community so




we didn't have to haul it for 25 miles.   That was one of





the lawsuits.




          Well,  when I tried to get it within a close




proximity, then you never saw the biggest fuss.   The




town hall was absolutely packed.   Nobody wanted garbage




packed in front of their house.  They didn't even want to




see it.




          So laws, as this gentleman mentioned, too, that




we have this problem and I really don't know the answer.




But I was -- the thing that I can't understand is why the




federal government, if they have got some land, why




wouldn't they let us trade or something to get possession




of it so that we could do  something.   But they don't




trust us.   That's what we assume.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Do you want to speak  to





that?

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                                                       101
          MR. HICKMAN:  The Bureau of Land Management,  as




I understand what they perceive their mission  to be  is




they are holding the national ownership of land  in trust




for all citizens and are not allowed under their laws to




sell that land.   They do hold it in trust.    They can




only lease it since their charter --




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   They have just made a law




where they can do it for recreation purposes,  though.




          MR. HICKMAN:  They can sell it?




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:  Yes.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Maybe you should get a law so they




can sell it for land disposal sites, too, I guess.




          I wasn't aware that they had that, but I do know




that that's the way they view their mission:   they hold




the land in trust for the entire population of the




country.




          But as far as land disposal practices on any




leased piece of property you have that's on the federal




establishment,  that land disposal practice has to be in




conformance with the guidelines that we have issued.




          Now,  that's the law.




          MR. PAPENHAUSEN:   Well, then,  we hired private

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                                                      102
geologists to do a plan that cost something like $7,000,




and then the Forest Service had their geologist, so they




are fighting.  They don't agree with themselves.




          So we are at a standstill.   We don't know.   We




are liable to end up with a lawsuit on that now because




one geologist says the other guy doesn't know what he is




doing.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  I can only suggest to you




that your problem is going  to become more difficult in the




next few years because this statute makes the federal




agencies subject to not only the federal regulations, but




also the state regulations.   So they are going to be much




more stringent than they have in the past,  and  they are




going to create some problems.




          But in terms of the purpose, the  purpose is to,




in fact, protect the public and the public  health.   And




I think we have to keep that in mind.    And just because




it's j^ederal land doesn't mean there isn't  a  need  to




protect the  public health on federal land,  just  as  there




is in your community,  and no one wants that garbage




dumped  nextdoor.   The same can be  said  of  f_ederal  lands.




          We have another question?  Yes,  Jean?

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                                                      J03
          MS. JEAN SIRI:   It really isn't a question,




except insofar as these questions have dealt just with




dumps and, you know, where are we going to put all this




junk.   And it seems none of you up there have given  a




response that if you really get into resource recovery,




you may not need as many dumps.




          For example, Berkeley now is disposing  of 30 per-




cent of its waste not in a dump and assumes  that  the  per-




centage will go up.   And with a little concentrated




effort, it seems to me that we could get  into something




more advanced than just putting it  in  the ground.




          MR. HUMBER:   That's true.   But even with  a




hundred percent recovery from  household refuse, which is




impossible, at least  in the  foreseeable future, being




20 years or so, there still  are other  wastes that must be




disposed of.   Construction  wastes, demolition wastes --




          MS. SIRI: That's true.




          MR. HUMBER:   -- still need  site  fill.    There




would  still  be that problem.




          There  is  also a problem  of  siting  a resource




recovery  facility.    There was a  fairly sound plan  for




St.  Louis that was  granted because they couldn't  site a

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                                                      104
transfer station.   They just couldn't site a transfer




station, which was in an industrial area.   There was not




a home within a mile of that area.




          So there will continue to be siting problems on




all dimensions of solid waste management.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Yes?




          MR. RUSSELL PAPENHAUSEN:   On  that recycled




bit again,  I had to go to the Federal Register to find




out -- I'm trying to get a piece of land from the U.S.




Forest Service.  So when I'm reading the Federal Register.




I found out that you can only store recyclable, I guess,




merchandise for, I think it was, either  30 or 90 days.




          So the Forest Service says, "Hey, look.   After




so many days this cannot be here.  It's  got to be gotten




rid of."




          So that threw a stumbling block when we wanted




to put in some way to store this stuff so we could  get a




truckload or whatever to take it away or sell it or




dispose of it, see.




          So that's another problem we have got.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  I have indications from




six people that  they would  like to present short

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                                                      105
statements.    I would like to call on them in order now.




          Would you please limit your statement to five




minutes.    We will take the full statement if you will




submit it to us and include it in the record in its




ent irety.




          Hi Kellogg?




          MR. KELLOGG:  I will send my statement to you




in the next two weeks.




          The main point I wanted to get across is that




we have been in marketing sewage sludge for 52 years




successfully in Los Angeles County, and it can be done




elsewhere.   But we -- the kind of help we need is a




positive  attitude and not one of negative.  We cannot




live with people saying, "I have no proof it is not




harmful,  therefore. . ."




          Now, as far as -- I have no argument with the




EPA because we need them just like we needed OSHA, because




of abuses that have taken place here and there.




          But the sanitation  districts I think should be




responsible  for the composting of the materials and having




the odor problems eliminated  and the pathogens, etc.




That's the only way to do it.

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                                                      106
          Sanitation districts should not be allowed to




go ahead and remove the sludge from the water; then turn




around and have some guy,  some trucker somewhere, be




willing to take it for X dollars a ton and dispose of it,




because what happens,  if it isn't properly processed --




And here we have been, as I say, over 50 years success-




fully -- In fact,  we have it on allocation in Los Angeles




County.   He goes out  and maybe it is processed properly,




so out comes an article in the paper that salmonella is




found in sewage sludge.   So that's a reflection on us,




and it doesn't exist with Los Angeles Sanitation District




sludge because they process it properly.




          Now, back to the hazardous waste.  I don't even




like to call it a hazardous waste.  That's a negative




attitude.  It shouldn't be listed as a hazardous waste,




and those problems that many people feel exist, like on




the heavy metals,  we should make a point to see they




aren't in the sludge.    After that's done, then private




industry in a lot of areas can go ahead with positive




help from you people.




          And that's extremely important.   Extremely




important.   And,  like I said earlier, the -- those three

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                                                       107
problems can be solved, and you could look at  this  as  a




natural resource, which it is, because  in 20 to  50  years,




that's the only place you have got to go, and  you just as




well start now.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Thank you.




          Mr. Ronald Schwegler?




          MR. SCHWEGLER:   Pass.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Barbara Vincent?




          MS. BARBARA VINCENT:  I didn't want  to speak.




Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Jean Siri?




          MS. JEAN SIRI:  I think I have spoken  my  share.





Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:  Fine.




          Larry Burch?




          MR. LARRY BURCH:  Mr. De Falco, I just wanted  to




summarize our agency's comments very briefly tonight.    We




will prepare a written statement and supply this to you.




          Al Marino, the Executive Officer, has  been in




contact,  of course, with the EPA staff  at headquarters,




and we have had several EPA regional briefings here.




Basically our agency is pleased to see  the new ^federal

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                                                      108
legislation.    It strengthens both the solid waste programs




at the federal level and at the jstate and local level.




          We do have some reservations, though, about some




of the methods of implementing this law and, of course,




the finances of this legislation.




          The state agencies are now actively  looking at




the law trying to figure out what it's going to do to




California citizens.  We are somewhat optimistic  that it's




going to cause a lot of improvements and not be detri-




mental .




          We basically -- I'm speaking for  the State




Solid Waste Management Board, but also carrying a message




from the State Health Department.   Our two agencies  are




attempting to correlate our two  programs and will be




delivering a single state plan to the _f_ederal  government.




We are not going to come out with two  state plans from




California.




          We are going to start  with the county solid




waste management plans; also  the _s_tate program plan  that




was developed  in 1970, and  the policies and standards and




resource recovery program that has  been adopted by  our




Board in 1974.   We will use  these  as  a framework of

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                                                       109
preparing the_s_tate plan under RCRA.




          We certainly don't want to either  obsolete  or




restudy the work that's been done on the  county  plans.




There's been a lot of discussion about  the county  solid




waste management plans in California,  that they  aren't




as perfect as some people thought they  would be.    We




think that a lot of this has to do  with certain  oversights




that were in SB 5, California's enabling  law for county




plans.   We are attempting  to  correct  some of those




oversights this year with new  legislation.




          We also think that some of these delays,were




due to lack of proper funding  at the local level,  and




even at the _s_tate level.  And  we see that this lack of




adequate funding in RCRA may cause  the  same  type of thing




to occur in the nation.




          We are planning to coordinate our  existing




implementation programs with the RCRA  program.  We are  not




just waiting to start our program after we have  got the




state pi an done.




          You should know that  AC 2439  was adopted this




Summer by the Legislature and  signed by Governor Brown.




This starts us now into one of  those phases.   That's

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                                                      110
enforcement of conventional solid waste management




pract ices.




          We have had the hazardous waste progr im for




several years, and we are fully hopeful that the State




Health Department's program can be certified as being




compatible with RCRA.




          We have another major bill that was passed this




last Summer, and that's SB 1395.   That enters  us into  a




demonstration program of energy recovery from solid wastes,




and that hopefully can be combined in with the  new state





plan .




          Some just miscellaneous comments.




          We, of course, in California are quite a




diverse state, from big cities to very small counties.




We are hopeful that the landfill standards can  be broad,




especially the daily covered type provisions.   Perhaps




Alpine County does iot have to have an everyday cover.




          We concur that there are financial hardships  in




rural counties, and we are glad Lo see that  there is some




money at least authorized in the bill, but sorry to  see




there is not more appropriated at this time.




          We are concerned that the late deadline for  the

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                                                      Ill
state plan guidelines may impact on the preparation of our




plan.   At this moment, we are attempting to put together




an interim document that may be finished by the end of




this Summer so that we can at least get the hazardous




waste programs certified and start to set the framework




up for receipt of monies and channeling that into the




local counties starting next Fall.




          We will be interested in many of the special




studies that were listed in the Act.   These are programs




that are, of course, of interest to the California




citizens, policy makers, and we do not want to have to




duplicate those.




          Basically, it comes down to money.  We have




looked at the present  appropriations that are in President




Carter's program.   We feel that that is not enough




money.   We would like to get on the bandwagon to try to




get some more support.   And, of course, I think you




will see our agency get a little bit more involved again.




          We in California, just the State Solid Waste




Management Board, over the last two years have plowed




$725,000 just into  four areas of the state for resource




recovery planning.  That's just barely the tip of the

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                                                       L12







iceberg for attempting to sidetrack that kind of wastes




from landfills.




          Basically, 99 percent of California's waste




goes right into the landfill every day.




          Next year we are planning to expend over




$1.4 million just here in the Bay Area to do additional




resource recovery and landfill planning studies.




          I just want to leave the message that the




State Solid Waste Management Board fully intends to move




ahead as the leading agency in California to help




implement RCRA, and that we are confident that we are




going to have a good program here in the future.




          Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO :   Thank you.




          Daniel A. Cotton?




          MR. DANIEL A.COTTON (Sonoma County):  I have




some responses here to that issues for discussion that




was in the packet.




          The EPA should encourage local environmental




groups involved in recycling education by making grants




available to them for expanding and upgrading their




programs.  There is a crucial need for this  funding

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                                                       113
because most local recycling  agencies  do  not  generate




enough revenue to support extensive  education  programs




needed to reach the community  at  large.    If  funds  were




made available by EPA for local recycling  entities  to




develop community-wide education  programs,  there  would be




a dramatic increase in public  participation in resource




recovery.




          Without such help,  the  EPA's  hope of widespread




participation in solid waste  planning  will  not materialize




With it, local groups will  come up with many  innovative




education schemes designed  to  be  effective  in  their




communities.   Thus, the EPA,  by  supporting public




education at the local level,  will receive  return in:




          1.  Increased local  participation and




          2.  New ideas that  will be converted to




regional,  national and -- regional,  srtate  and  national




education programs.




          As far as manpower  development,  the  EPA's




manpower development activity  should be directed  towards




creating jobs at the local  community level.    Being an




environmentally conscientious  bureaucracy,  the local




jobs EPA develops should be related  to  environmentally

-------
                                                      114
appropriate technologies.




          The EPA can accomplish this by supporting local




recycling agencies with small developmental grants, small




program grants.   A small program development grant can




provide work experience, jobs, plus create or expand




ongoing resource recovery programs without large invest-




ment .




          The EPA could identify established recycling




programs throughout the country and give them first




consideration for this grant money, thus assuring




successful use of most of this money granted.




          However, the EPA should also help start  new




innovative programs where they have not been tried




before to expand recycling and to give new ideas a chance.




          Manpower development at the managerial and




operations level can be accomplished by the aforementioned




grant support, grant money for supporting expanded




recycling programs while giving much needed work




experience to the recipients.   The EPA would then be




able to identify capable managers and operations experts




by reviewing the success or  failure of each grant  or




project.

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                                                      115
          Resource conservation and recovery issues.




          Resource conservation should play a central




role in any solid waste management program.  If waste




generation can be reduced by conservation measures, we




will be well ahead of the game.




          A series of short-range activities within a




long-range program.   The easiest and most environmentally




hazardous waste should be considered first with the




rest following in order of importance.   The Resource




Conservation Panel should first identify the materials




which are in crucial need of conservation and then  do




the planning work necessary to achieve the conservation.




The panel should be entirely comprehensive in their




identification and planning approaches.   We are past




the point where material can be left out, any material




can be left out of the conservation program, and conserve




all materials to ensure the economic health of our




resource-dependent industry.




          The Panel's long-range goal should be to




completely eliminate disposal of reusable materials.




This goal must be set on a realistic timeframe.    It




takes a great deal of social, political  and economic

-------
change.




          Local programs have -- Local programs should




have complete freedom to accomplish the policy goals




set by state and national agencies.   EPA should not




interfere with local programs unless they blatantly




disregard the law.




          Recognition for the unique situations must be




fixed for each locality.  No two local programs will or




should be alike.




          The mandatory regulations -- mandatory regula-




tions should not -- should be avoided and should only be




used as  a measure of last resort.




          Economic incentives should be used first




whenever possible,  extending them to the general public




as well  as to industry.




          As can be seen from the success of the




aluminum recycling programs, offering economic incentives




to the general public can be successful.   Federal, state




and local governments should be leaders in prime con-




servation measures.  They should also be leaders in




developing markets for recycled goods by purchasing




recycled products.

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                                                      117
          It is important that the government set a good




example in providing the ground lor recycling programs,




to be a provingground  for recycling programs.




          There is a crucial need for leadership in




changing the established practices of our society's




wasteful use of natural resources.




          I was quite impressed by some of the things




it seemed like the J^ederal government is looking to, some




of the issues that I stated here, but I'm concerned




being from a small community that the EPA is  not looking




on the small -- on a small enough scale, looking towards




appropriate technologies in recycling, source separation,




and mostly looking towards the large plans,  sinking




forty, eighty, hundreds of millions of dollars into




these plans, and most of the ones that have  been tried




out so far haven't been too successful.




          Source separation is immediately implement able,




and with small amounts ol grant money support at a  wide




base, I'm sure that could prove to be much more




successful over the next ten to 20 years than the  large





resources plans.




          Thank you.

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                                                      118
          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:   Thank you.




          Are there any other statements?




          I would like to make an observation or two




before we bring the meeting to a close.




          The process we are going through tonight is




essentially a discussion-briefing meeting of the public.




And by "the public," we mean the general public, the




vested publics, the special interests, state and local




governments.   This is preliminary to our getting




involved in the regulatory process, the spelling out or




defining the interpretation of the statute in a series




of regulations, the first of which I think is due  in




April.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Yes.




          CHAIRMAN DE FALCO:    I would ask that each and




every one of you representing specific interests go back




to your interest groups and keep a weather eye peeled on




the process.




          The statute wa.s developed by  the Congress.  It




is being interpreted by EPA with public involvement.  We




would prefer that your public involvement be in the




formative stages of the process, and as these regulations

-------
                                                       119
are posted in the Federal Register, they are  normally




proposed.   There are public hearings held.   There are




comments received, reviewed before a final  regulation  is




actually processed and placed on the books.




          That is the place for involvement on  the part




of the public so we can, an fact, have a meaningful




interpretation of the statute.




          Now, you have heard the statute  interpreted  by




people who have been involved in this program for a number




of years.  That doesn't make them any more  expert in the




interpretation of the work of the Congress  than you are




as individual citizens.  Yes, they do have  technical




competence, but there are implications in  the statute




vis-a-vis the citizenry of this country and their desires




as expressed through their Congress.   Your role is to




make sure that our interpretations meet some  of your




interpretations at least half way.




          I would prefer frankly as a Regional  Adminis-




trator -- And I think the Administrator of  the ^agency




would prefer -- that we reconcile these differences




before we finalize regulations rather than  having the




issues resolved in courts of law after the  fact, and

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                                                       120
sometimes on a very constrained view.




          We have had an experience  in the implementation




of the Air Act and the Water Act where we have wound up




implementing court stipulations, sometimes much more




constrained and less conducive to effective administra-




tion than if we had had a better understanding of  the




public's attitude toward the Congressional mandate.




          So I solicit your interest and your  involvement




beyond tonight's meeting to pursue this process.   This




statute in particular, although it may be a federal




statute, it's been pointed out it really spells out  a




state-local governmental process.    And to be  meaningful,




you have got to be involved in the development of  that




process.   So I would ask your assistance by pursuing




this as we go through the process.




          The transcript for the session will  be  held




open until March 25th.   If you have any additional




comments to write into the record, would you please




provide them to the EPA office here  in San Franicsco on




or before March 25, and we will be sure that they  are




included in the record.




          If there aren't any other  comments or  any  other

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                                                       121







issues, I would like to thank you all for coming and




bring the session to a close.




          There will be a repeat of this program tomorrow




morning.   It will be essentially the same program of




presentations, so there is no need for a duplication on




your part.




          Thank you very much.




          (Whereupon the session was recessed  at




9 : 50. o'clock p.m. )




                       	oOo	

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                                                123
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                  REGION IX
            100 California Street
       San Francisco, California 94111

                  	oOo	
          PUBLIC DISCUSSION SESSION
    RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT
                   PL 94-580
                  Holiday Inn
               480 Sutter Street
           San Francisco, California
                March 11, 1977
                  8:45 a. m.

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                          INDEX

Opening Remarks, Mr. James Channel,  EPA  Region  IX     125

Overview of Resource Conservation  and  Recovery  Act
and Training/Public Information/Public Participation
 - H. L. Hickman, Jr., EPA,  Washington,  D.  C.          128

Hazardous Wastes - William Sanjour,  EPA,  Wash.,  D.C.  144

Land Disposal - H. L. Hickman,  Jr.                     L80

Resource Conservation and Recovery and Overall
  Technical Assistance - J.  Nicholas Humber,  EPA,
  Washington, D. C.                                    196

State Program Development -  II.  L.  Hickman,  Jr.         224

QUE_ST KINS :

Nat Haseltine, Chevron USA                             138

Jerome Tarmann, Sutter-Yuba  Health Department          141

Wesley Bradford, US Geological  Survey                  143

Gilbert Bendix, San Francisco  Fire Department          155

Terry Harrison, Consulting Engineer                    158

Dave Ridinger, Magma Copper  Company                    159

Daniel Klipper, Zero Waste Systems               161,  177
                                                  206,  241

J. P. Valinski, McDonnell-Douglas                      165

William Lewis, Arizona House Natural Resources
  and Energy Commission                                107

Vita Simon, Federal Highway  Administration             171

Jean Bahr,  W. A. Wahler & Associates                   172

Michael Brown, Consulting Engineer                    174

Thomas Williams, Engineering Science              175,  212

-------
Jeff Haltner, Environmental  Impact  Planning
  Corporation                                     178,  209

Thomas Dunbar, State of California  Regional
  Water Quality Control Board,  N. Coast  Region        190

Edward Sparks, Garden  States  Paper  Company            205

Keith Mcllouten, Occidental Research Corporation       208

Garrett DeBell, Yosemity Park & Curry  Company    215,  219

George Ososke, US Brewers Association                  217

Ed Dunn, Haight-Ashbury Recycling Center              222

Anne Bell, Cal-OSHA Reporter                           243

John Langford, Mono County                             248

Walter Clark, Fresno County                            250

Rodney Lind,  Edwards Air Force  Base                   251

James Witt, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii                       253

STATEMENT^:

H. E. Knowlton, Chevron Research Company              191

Yvonne San Jule, Association  of Bay Area
  Governments                                          235

David Storm,  California Department  of  Health,
  Hazardous Waste Management                           237

Richard Anthony, SCS Engineers                         246

Sandra Mathias, Southern California Association
  of Governments                                       255


                          	oOo	

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                                                        ICG
          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Well, I guess we should




get going now.   I want to apologize for the short delay,




but people have still been coming in, and we are getting




off a few minutes behind schedule.




          I am Jim Channell.  I am the Chief of the




Hazardous Materials Branch in the Regional Office here  in




San Francisco.  I'm sitting in right now for Paul De Falco




the Regional Administrator, who we do expect to be here




later in the morning.




          I would like to introduce the others at the




head table.   They are all from the Office of Solid Waste




in Washington.




          On the far right is Nick Humber.  He's Director




of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Division.




          On my immediate right is Lanier Hickman.   He's




Director of the Management and Information Staff.




          And on my left is Bill Sanjour.  He's Chief of




the Assessment and Technology Branch in the Hazardous




Waste Division.




          We are here to talk essentially about the




briefing, a briefing on the Resource Conservation and




Recovery Act.   This Act was signed by President Ford on

-------
October the 21st, and is Public Law 94-580.   This




significant new environmental law provides the opportunity




for EPA, the states and local government to develop




comprehensive solid waste management programs which




control hazardous waste, eliminate the open dump  as  a




principal disposal practice, and  increases the oppor-




tunities for resource conservation.




          The Act provides  for broad public involvement




in the planning  and implementation.   And  the purpose  of




this public discussion  session being held  is to  enable the




private citizen, as well as  representatives of environ-




mental, industrial, governmental  or other  organizations




who are potentially affected by  the law  to offer their




views, attitude  and suggestions  for EPA's  guidance.




           In the next 15 minutes, Lanny  Hickman  will




present an overview of  the  Act.   Following Mr.  Hickman's




presentation, various sections of the Act  will bo




summarized separately.   These summaries will  take  about




ten minutes; and after  each one  of  the  summaries, we have




allowed a  20-minute period  for questions or  for  comments




on that sect ion.




           In addition,  a period  at  the  end of  the session

-------
                                                      -t <~> p
has been set aside for open discussion; and at that time




the audience is welcome to comment on specific sections of




the Act or the Act itself.




          The procedure we will follow is that, during




the questioning session after each of the gentlemen have




spoken on the section, people having questions or a




statement should come to one of the microphones and, when




recognized,  give us their name and affiliation and make




their statement.   It's very important that we get the




names for the record.




          Now, written statements can be entered  into the




record, and the comment period for these will  remain open




for two weeks following Friday's public discussion




session.   That's today.    Written comments should be




received at the EPA Office in San Francisco on or before




March 25th in order to be included in the official




transcript.




          And copies  of the official transcript will be




available from EPA's  Solid Waste Office in Washington




upon request.   And there is a sheet back there with the





addresses on  it.




          Copies of the Resource Conservation  and Recovery

-------
Act, as well as a summary of the Act, are also back on the




table if you didn't get them when you came  in.




          Well, that finishes the overview.   Now, I would




like to present Mr. Lanny Hickman.   He will start off




with the overview of the Act, and then he will go on into




the first session on public participation before we have




our first comment period.




          Lanny?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Could I have somebody turn the




slide projector on for us, please.   Thank  you.




          The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,




referred to by us as RCRA, is the first amendments to the




Federal Solid Waste Disposal Act since 1970 and represents




probably four years of Congressional study  and evaluation




and a series of hearings held over these four years




represents a real major step forward in trying to bring




to state and local government the sort of resources and




assistance necessary to improve solid waste management




practices.




          (Slide No. 1.)




          Now, the objectives of RCRA are to achieve




improved solid waste management practices for the

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                                                     I3-J
protection of public health and environment, to conserve




valuable mineral resources and energy resources.   This is




achieved primarily through a three-prong approach within




the law, which is improving land disposal practices,




trying to remove the obstacles and constraints which




prevent increasing resource conservation and to place more




extensive control over that segment of the waste stream




which represents significant health hazards and environ-




mental hazards to the public in general.




          (Slide No. 2.)




          Now, these objectives will be  carried out




through a variety of authorizations within  RCRA.




          RCRA provides authorization for technical  and




financial assistance to state  and  local  government  to plan




and implement comprehensive solid  waste  management  plans;




provides  for  assistance to develop manpower necessary to




meet  the  requirements of  the law.




          It  prohibits future  open dumping  of  solid waste.




          It  provides for the  conversion or closing of




all existing  open dumps,  and all  the waste, that  will




eventually  go into  sanitary  landfills only.




          It  provides for the  regulation of hazardous

-------
wastes.




           (Slide No.  3. )




           It provides EPA with  authority  to  issue  guide-




lines  for  solid waste management  practices  as  the




mechanism  to provide  guidance and assistance to state  and




local  government.




           It provides for EPA to  conduct''research  and




development for new and  improved  solid  waste management




systems and technologies.




           It provides demonstration  grant authority to




construct  full-scale  demonstration facilities  to eliminate




the risk-taking to a  certain  extent  on  the  part of local




government to  adopt new  and  improved systems.




           It provides for a  mechanism to  set up a  federal/




_state/local government / industry relationship in materials




and energy recovery.




           It provides a  wide  range of mechanisms to




educate the public on the problems of solid waste  manage-




ment and the mechanisms  by which  those  problems can be




solved.




           The  public  education  portion,  of  course, we




refer  to principally  as  public  participation,  and  there

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                                                        132
are a wide range of authorities within  the  Act  to  get  the




public involved  in the  implementation of  this  law.    This




represents a major step  forward in  environmental  legisla-




tion in that the law  itself  specifically  requires  EPA  to




do a variety of  things  to  get  the public  involved.




          (Slide No.  4.)




          One of the  most  important  and significant  ways




that the public  can become better informed  and  become  more




involved in solid waste  management  is to  have  a stronger




awareness of solid waste management  through a  very  strong




and outreach program  of  information.




          Now, the intent  of  the  information and  public




participation provisions of  RCRA, it's  to promote  a  better




public understanding  of  solid  waste  management,  to  involve




the public in all aspects  of  solid  waste  management,  so




that the decisions that  are  made  between  the federal,




_s_tate and local  government partnership  are  made based  on




what the public  wants,  not necessarily  what the




bureaucrats want.




          It provides a  mechanism for cooperation  with




the states, to help _state  government build  their  programs.




          It allows EPA  to develop  a significant  data base

-------
to serve as a foundation for a better understanding by the




public on the problems, the impact of those problems and




what the solutions are.




          And the law requires EPA to provide a mechanism




to disseminate information that has been gathered  in a




rapid way and to establish a library that  can be utilized




by anyone who has a particular interest  in pursuing solid




waste management in more detail.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          Now, what are the public sector  groups that we




are trying to impact upon and trying to  get involved in




implementing this law?




          There are, of course, the normal consumer,




environmental and neighborhood groups.     These  groups




probably represent most of the lay public, and  that's




probably the most viable group to get  involved  in  the




public  sector.   It's  very difficult to  get the  lay public




involved because no one really represents  the  citizen on




the street, but through the environmental, consumer and




neighborhood organizations, those that  are basically




tapped  into the private citizen, we hope that  we can be




more  effective  in communicating with the public.

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	-O'x





                                                       133






           And,  of  course,  the trade and manufacturing and




 labor  organizations  will  always have representation,




 primarily  in  Washington,  through their own organization to




 interact with us.




           And the  public  health and scientific and




 professional  communities,  which by nature are involved  in




 solid  waste  management and have organizations that we can




 work with.




           Finally,  you have the government and the




 universities, which  by nature are involved in solid waste




 management.




           RCRA requires certain things of the ^federal




 government  in improved solid waste management practices,




 so  they need to be involved also in the decision making




 processes  that we  have.




           (Slide No. 6.)




           RCRA provides a mechanism for the public to




 formally  impact on the agency in its decision—making




 process.   The provision within the law in Section 7004




 requires  EPA to establish a mechanism by which the public




 may petition for change of any regulation or  guideline




 that  the  agency has promulgated, or to petition  for  a  new

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guideline  or regulation to be prepared.   And  it's the




responsibility of the EPA Administrator to show cause




why he should or should not respond to that petition.




          RCRA provides a requirement that EPA  have the




public involved in the planning, development and  imple-




mentation of all aspects of its program.    It  specificall




requires public hearings and development of regulations




and guidelines under Section 1008, Subtitle C,  which is




the hazardous waste provisions, and Subtitle D, which  is




the land disposal and date and local program development




provis ions.




          It requires EPA to sit with the public  and




discuss what sorts of information needs to be developed




and what can be most helpful at the level , the  local




level, for problem solving, and it requires EPA to bring




the public in to the whole program planning and imple-




mentation portions of the law.




          (Slide No.  7.)




          EPA is required to publish guidelines on how




the public can participate with us and what mechanisms




will be available.   These will be developed and  will  be




made available within the next four to six months.

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                                                       1-3S
          EPA requires,  or provides, a mechanism within




RCRA for citizen suits,  where any citizen can sue any




organization or individual that that individual judges to




be in violation of any regulation, guideline or rule that




has been promulgated by EPA.  This would be within the




Federal Court system.




          And the mechanisms that we are trying to get




the public involved  in,  all these various segments, such




things as meetings such as we are holding here, which  is




a series of meetings around the country to brief the




public on the provisions of the law.   This is not a




formal public hearing of the type where we are trying  to




gain information on  a specific regulation or guideline,




but to try to give you a mechanism  to have a better




understanding of the law and to give any feedback that




we can get from you  now as  to how you perceive this law




should be implemented.




          The law does require us to hold formal public




hearings on all regulations and guidelines developed under




RCRA.   We will hold a series of  conferences sponsored




not only by EPA, but by various organizations  around the




country where we will discuss various aspects  of  the law,

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with smaller workshops activities where we really




specifically focus in on one aspect of what we are doing




to get as much feedback as we can.




          (Slide No.  8.)




          We will establish formal and informal work




groups and review groups to sit with us on all the




regulations and guidelines that we are writing.    These




will be not only meetings held in Washington, but around




the country, to discuss particular activities that we have




underway.




          We hope to establish a formal advisory group




which will represent hopefully the various segments of




solid waste management to sit with us on an annual and




continuing basis to discuss what we are doing.




          And then, of course, through our public educa-




tion program, we will try to continue to provide to the




best possible way we can publications, slides, slide




packages of information, films and exhibits to create a




better understanding and bring more information out to the




public.   Use media programs of television and radio to




communicate in various ways with the public.




          And then we have had a longstanding activity

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with various interest groups with training grants, such as




the League of Women Voters, National Association of




Counties, and other such groups as that, to set up a




mechanism to provide educational training and information




to their membership.   And this is another mechanism that




we will try to build the bridge with the public so that




they can give us feedback.




          RCRA also provides some requirements on EPA




related to manpower development.




          (Slide No. 9.)




          Congress perceives that RCRA will require more




manpower of different types in order to meet the mandates




of the law and, therefore, they have required the




Administrator of EPA to conduct a manpower study to try




to make the judgment on what sort of additional personnel




will be needed to meet the RCRA, the ability of existing




manpower development programs to develop those necessary




resources, and any obstacles that would prevent us from




having a sufficient number of personnel of different types




and professional needs that would be necessary to meet




the law, and make such a report to the Congress and to




the President.

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                                                       L30
          And then they authorize grants and contracts




to train, to provide assistance to train personnel to




meet the requirements that would be identified within the




manpower study.




          And these grants, of course, will go to non-




profit groups.  The law specifically prevents grants to




profit-making groups, but we can make contracts  to profit-




making groups for purposes of providing  services.




          That is a very quick summary of public




participation, of manpower development provisions of the




law.   And, as Jim said, we will entertain  discussion for




a short period of time between each of these presentations




And, again, if we don't get to you or if you can't think




of something now and you want to hold off,  we will have an




open session at the end also.




          Are there any comments now?




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Any questions or  comments




on this section?   Please, your name, sir?




          MR. NAT HASELTINE (Chevron USA):   I'm  not




authorized  to make company comments, but  I  would like to




make a personal comment, being very much  interested  in




this subj ect.

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                                                      140
          One, I'm concerned about manpower development.




So many regulations that have come through the EPA have




eventually drifted down to where the state operates their




own program,  which I believe is the ultimate goal.  We




are all concerned about the fast-growing size of the




federal government, and I note that the State of




California is developing rapidly their own guidelines on




this system.    And I wonder if the EPA couldn't work




diligently to develop state manpower now so that they




don't develop a vast federal organization that they don't




know what to do with when the state takes over.




          It's so much easier to hire them than1 it is to




get rid of them.




          MR. HICKMAN:   Well, of course, the law  is




designed to maximize _s_tate-local implementation of the




law rather than at the federal government level.    The




whole structure of RCRA and the financial and technical




assistance programs that are within the law are designed




to get the state government to assume the planning and




imp]ementation responsibilities of the law.   It's not




something that we take and then pass on to the_f_ederal




government -- to state government as some of  the  other

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laws that EPA administers, but we only take over certain




portions of it, the hazardous waste portion, only  if  the




state will not.




          MR.  HASELTINE:   I see.




          ME.  HICKMAN:   And the rest of the law,  if  the




states don't take it over effectively, no one will  take  it




over because we can't, either.   And  I just do  sort of




want to allay some of your concerns about a large  growing




bureaucracy to implement the law at the federal  level.   We




have received a sum total of 35 new positions to implement




the law.  And of those, 25 went to the regions  to  work




directly with thejstates.   And that's all we anticipate




in the way of increase.




          The flow of financial assistance is to develop




state and local government manpower,  not f_ederal manpower.




          MR.  HASELTINE:   Splendid.




          One more comment.   I presume that you all  are




well aware of the Department of Transportion regulations




on hazardous materials and that, to sort of make a  verbal




cartoon of that half-million word regulation, you  can




hardly walk across the street with a  hazardous  material




in your pocket without an explosive label on your  forehead

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                                                      142
          This is a needed regulation -- No question




about it -- but I would like to see all of your progress




in the development of disposal regulations tied very




closely to what already is existing in the Department of




Transportation regulations.    They have 1800, approxi-




mately, hazardous materials already listed.   And  it would




be a shame for you to develop an entirely different list




of hazardous materials and to worry a great deal about




how it's transported since somebody else is already doing




that .




          MR. HICKMAN:  Well, we are going to cover the




hazardous waste provisions of the law right now.   Bill




Sanjour is going to do that.   And there are some  very




closely required linkages within the law between us and




what DOT is doing, has done in the past and is doing now.




          I think after he gets through his presentation,




you might have a better feel for what we will be doing as




it relates to DOT.




          MR. HASELTINE:   Thank you very much.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes, we have a question in




the back.




          MR. JEROME TARMANN (Sutter-Yuba Health

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Department):  Just a short question.




          A lot of us have programs and ideas that we




wish to have implemented.   And I'm just referring to




Section 7007(a) and (b), grants or contracts for  training





proj ects.




          The big question is, of course,  the money.   How




realistic are these grants for small counties,  small




departments?  What is the procedure and some of the method




we have to go through to get  them?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Well, we haven't developed any of




the administrative procedures yet that's necessary to  get




these new financial assistance programs underway.    We




are just now starting the development of them.




          No authorizations are in the  '77  fiscal year.




They are all in '78, and, of  course, the  '78 budget has




not been appropriated yet.




          Our fiscal year starts October 1.   We  will




have our grant regulations and whatever funding that's




available in place and well described before that




October date.




          Of course, we have  been funding  the states




anyway under previous authority that the state  level,

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and that will continue until we pick up  the  new  authoritie




under RCRA.   But it will be -- it will  be some  time  yet




before we  get our procedures out where people  will  know




how they can go about doing it.




           MR. TARMANN:   Thank you.




           CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Any other questions  or




comments on this section of the Act?   Yes?




           MR. WESLEY BRADFORD  (United States Geological




Survey):   Can you hear me from where I  am?




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes.




          MR. BRADFORD:  All right.  I don't need a mike.




           I'm Wesley Bradford with the US Geological




Survey,  but I'm speaking as a private citizen  at the




moment.




          Are there any provisions in the Act  for manpower




grants or demonstration grants to the private  sector?




          MR. HICKMAN:   Well,  the contract mechanisms




that are available under the training programs could  be




made available to private — to the private sector, but




not grants.   It will have to be contract arrangements.




          MR. BRADFORD:  I see.   Do they follow a




different procedure from a public agency in obtaining such

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monies and assistance?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Yes, they would, just because of




the fact that a granting program always has a matching




mechanism.    A contract program is normally a hundred




percent financing.   Contracting work is done on a




different competitive basis than a grant and a granting




program.




          So they do go through different administrative




procedures.   But you will  still achieve the same purpose,




though.




          MR. BRADFORD:   Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Any other questions or




comments?




          All right.   Then we will move along to the




hazardous waste section of  the Act and  Bill Sanjour's




presentation.




          MR. SANJOUR:  Thank you, Mr.  Channell.




          The hazardous wastes we are referring  to are




largely industrial wastes.   We are not talking  about




household garbage here; we  are talking  about chemical




wastes and  industrial wastes for the most part,  some  small




fraction  of  which can be considered hazardous.

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          The disposal problems of these kinds of wastes




are generally in the hands of private persons, and both




the generation and the disposal of these wastes take




place on private property behind fences, and the public




and public agencies are almost never involved in it.




          So, as a result, there is really very little




knowledge of the subject on the part of the general




public, and yet there is far more industrial waste




generated in America than there is ordinary household




wastes.




          And the environmental problems caused byc these




wastes are far greater.   To add to this problem, in




recent years, the passage of many environmental laws for




cleaning up waters and the air has caused an even greater




increase in the generation of these wastes because these




laws have not stopped the generation of wastes, they have




merely redirected where they would be going.




          And for the most part, they have been going  to




the land and there have been no laws or regulations at




the federal level to control this waste disposal.




          So, as a result of these factors, Congress




put in this Act Subtitle C far  the control of  hazardous

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wastes through largely a regulatory program, and the




program was designed to be administered by the states if




they chose to take it over.   But if the jrtates would not




take it over, then it would be administered by the federal




government.




          And let's go through the provisions of Subtitle




C of this Act.




          (Slide No. 1. )




          Section 3001, Subtitle C, defines a hazardous




waste.




          The Administrator of EPA is given 18 months to




come up with this definition.   That's 18 months from the




passage of the Act, which was last October.




          He is required to promulgate criteria for




hazardous wastes, and he's given two ways to actually




identify it.




          First of all, to give either the characteristics




of the waste, that is, its toxicology or hazardous




properties,  or to list the actual wastes.




          He could use one or the other, or both of




these techniques, in identifying a hazardous waste.




          Let me read to you what the Act says he  is to

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take into account.




          The Administrator is to take into account




toxicity, persistence,  and degradability in nature,




potential for accumulation in tissue, and other related




factors such as flammability,  corrosiveness and other




hazardous characteristics.




          (Slide No. 2.)




          Section 3002 of the Act is for standards --




for JEPA to write standards for persons who generate




hazardous wastes.   This would be largely industrial




firms.




          These standards, these regulations, will include




standards for record keeping,  reporting and labeling of




containers.     And the chief part of this provision of




the Act is this manifest system.




          The Congress patterned Subtitle C of this




Act largely after the system that's presently in existence




in California where this problem was recognized and




treated long before most of the other country, the rest




of the country, and this manifest system was introduced




here in California.    It's essentially a bookkeeping




way of keeping track of where hazardous wastes go.

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          The generator is required to keep  track of  his




wastes, to fill out a trip ticket when they  are  sent




somewhere else, and they can only be sent  to  an  authorized




permanent facility for receiving them.   And  this trip




ticket, that is mailed back to thejrtate and  compared




with the original to make sure that the waste  did,  in




fact, go where it was supposed to go.




          Congress has mandated this system  on  a national




basis in Section 3002 of the Act.




          (Slide No. 3.)




          Section 3003 is very similar to  the  previous




one, standards for transport of hazardous  wastes.     You




have similar requirements for record keeping,  labeling




and compliance with the manifest system.




          Congress also, as the gentleman  pointed out,




required that we collaborate with the Department of




Transportation so that the paper work, trip  tickets,




registration, etc., that has to go with this,  that  we




minimize the amount ol duplication that's  required  between




the Department of Transportation requirements  and the




Environmental Protection Agency requirements,  that  we




try to use the same paper work, the same definitions,

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                                                      ICO
the same labeling, etc.   And to the extent that is




possible,  we are collaborating with the Department of




Transportation on that.




          (Slide No. 4.)




          Section 3004 are standards for persons who




treat,  store or dispose of hazardous wastes.




          Now, in many cases, this will be the same




people who are generating the waste.




          These standards, also due in 18 months, are




for record keeping,  bookkeeping, monitoring, location,




design and construction of facilities, maintenance of




facilities,  contingency plans in case things go wrong --




And they very often do at these facilities -- and lor




some means of assuring responsible ownership of such




facilities:   perpetual care, bonding, etc.




          In addition to these explicit requirements,




Section 3004, there is a more general requirement that




the Administrator may write standards as may be necessary




to protect human health and the environment, which is a




very general statement which was meant to include such




things as ground water protection, perhaps surface water




protection,  air protection, air pollution, maybe even

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odors,  noise.   They could all conceivably come under




this section of the Act.




          It is discretionary authority which can be




used by the Administrator in a very wide or narrow sense,




as he chooses.    And this is one area where there could




be considerable public  influence since the authority is




discretionary.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          In Section 3004, we lay down the standards for




these facilities.   In  Section 3005, we have to write




guidelines for granting permits to such facilities.




          Now,  Congress required that facilities that




treat,  store or dispose of hazardous wastes must receive




a permit.    It did not  lay down that same requirement on




persons who generate or transport hazardous wastes.




          Now,  very often they will be the same people.




However,  the different  activities, some require a permit




and some don't.   Regardless of whether the permit is




required, I ho, standards must be mot.




          The permit program would be administered by




the states if the js,tates  had an approved hazardous waste




program.   Otherwise, they would be administered by the

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federal government at the regional level.




          Now, provisions are also made  for interim




permits for facilities which are in existence when the




Act was passed and have notified the federal government




once regulations are promulgated in 3001.   They can




receive an interim permit to continue operation




essentially as they are without needing  the standards




until the permit-granting agency gets around to  issuing




them a permit.




          So  they will continue in business and  not go




out of business while the government gets  around to doing




its business.




          (Slide No.  6.)




          Section 3006 of the Act is for guidelines for




the states as to what constitutes an approved program




such that the states can take over the hazardous waste




program.




          And Congress provided three ways of measuring




a state program.




          It  required that  it be equivalent  to  the




federal program, consistent with other_s.tate programs




and adequate  enforcement must be provided.

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          As  you  can  see,  these  are  vague  words:




"equivalent,"  "consistent,"  and  "adequate,"  subject  to




considerable  interpretation.




          The  "consistent"  provision was put in there to




prevent the practice  which  is  occurring  in some states




today of some  states  almost  completely banning any kind of




disposal of hazardous wastes  so  that they  are forced to go




to other states which have  less  stringent  laws so that




one state is  essentially  dumping  all their bad stuff in




another state.    That provision  was  put  in there  to




prevent that  sort of  practice, of  some states becoming




dumps and other states becoming  pristine pure at  their




expense.




          The  provision for equivalence has  to do with




the stringency of the regulations, and Congress very often




in some acts has  requirements  that the state program can




be no more stringent;  in  other acts,  they  have that  it




can be no less stringent, and  in  this one,  they have




something that's  slightly different:   it  must be




equivalent,  which means it can be  a  little bit more




stringent or a little bit less stringent.     And  just  how




much is subject to interpretation.

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          Congress also provided for interim authorization,




recognizing that many sjates already have, or will shortly




have, hazardous wastes programs, such as California, and




that the laws will not necessarily have been written in




a way that would correspond to the federal laws, since in




many cases they are being written before the federal law.




          So Congress provided that sjates could have




interim authorization, even if their laws did not




correspond to the federal law, to allow for several years




to adjust and bring the laws into agreement, and in the




interim period, the states could continue to administer




their own programs.




          (Slide No.  7.)




          Section 3010 requires that those who  generate,




transport, treat, store or dispose of hazardous wastes




notify the federal government, EPA, of their existence




within 90 days of promulgation of regulations under




Section 3001.   That  is the definition of hazardous




wastes.




          So it's actually not  a requirement on EPA.




However, we  recognize  that most people who will be in




jeopardy under  this portion of  the Act don't read  the

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Federal Register and would not be aware of their jeopardy,




so we are going to great pains to notify those people




that they have to notify us.




          (Slide No.  8.)




          The Act also provides for grant assistance to




the states.    This will be program grants, not constructio




grants.   This is grants to the states to run the  hazardou





waste program.




          And there is an allocation formula  in the Act




which is based on the  hazardous waste needs of the state




rather than on a population basis.   It probably isn't




very different from population.




          There is $25 million authorized in  the Act for




this purpose.  Nothing has been appropriated  yet.   We




have yet to hear from  Congress about how much they are




actually going to appropriate  for this purpose.




          (Blank Slide.)




          I will end my presentation with a picture of




a hazardous waste disposal facility in Buffalo.




          Are there any questions?  No questions?  I'm





getting away free.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes?

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          MR. GILBERT G. BENDIX (San Francisco Fire




Department):  In San Francisco, as in many other local




jurisdictions, the Fire Department is responsible for the




management of any kind of a hazardous spill.   Now, in




San Francisco, this is written into our County Emergency




Plan .




          And I would like to give you some idea of how




this works as it comes in over the Fire Department radio




and as I hear it.




          "Engine Company 57 to A and B Streets.   Wash




down a chemical spill."   End of message.




          This one was phoned in by a truck driver.




          Here's another one.   This was a response to a




box alarm.




          "It's some sort of a poison.  We are going to




wash it down the sewer."




          Well, fire fighters do what they are trained




to do, and our people are trained to attack a problem




with a hoso, a nozzle and water.




          In the light of this, I would like to comment




on a few of the questions that you asked in your dis-




cussion topics.

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                                                       157
          You asked what are the manpower development




needs.  We need to train fire fighters to handle hazardous




spills.




          You asked for parameters in defining a hazardous




waste.  Please remember that any hazardous substance is




only one accident away from being a hazardous waste.




          In a recent case, there were a number of glass




gallon jugs of TDDVP pesticide stored on a loading dock




in a drayage firm, and it only took time until somebody




was unloading pipe onto that loading dock, and these




jugs got knocked off, and there was a spill of a hazardous




substance, which presumably now was hazardous waste.




          So any hazardous substance is a potential




hazardous waste and should be treated with the same amount




of caution as if it were a waste already.




          You asked about manifests and labeling.




Manifests should, first of all, be legible and, second of




all, they should be informative.




          And I hope you will keep in mind that the lives




of our men are more important than proprietary information




of a shipper.  And I think that California area regula-




tions are lacking to some extent on these points.

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                                                       -f r;n
                                                       -u „ J
          Your leaflet that you were kind enough to  send



me indicates that you plan to achieve the objectives  by



providing technical and financial assistance  tojrtate



and local government for developing an  implementation of



solid waste plans and providing training grants  in  solid



waste occupations.



          I will submit a written statement  from Andy



Casper, Chief of the San Francisco Fire Department,



requesting that  funding for training fire fighters  and



dealing with hazardous spills be provided and indicating



that the San Francisco Fire Department  would be  ready to



submit guinea pigs  for such a training  program.



          Finally,  I would  like to point out that  your



agency is about  to  fund hundreds of millions of  dollars



worth of secondary  treatment  facilities for  the  City and



County of San Francisco's wastewater system.    I  think it



would be a wise  investment  for  a small  training  fund to



prevent some sort of poison from being  washed into that



wastewater system and  knocking  out  the  expensive waste-



water  treatment  facilities.



          Thank  you.



          CHAIRMAN  CHANNELL-    Any  other questions or

-------
comments7   Yes, sir?




          MR. TERRY HARRISON:  I'm a consulting engineer.




          The emphasis on the program seems to be entirely




toward disposal. Is there any provision for the develop-




ment of techniques for recycling hazardous wastes which




would eliminate the need for disposing of them, or




technical assistance or development of new techniques?




          MR. SANJOUR:  First of all, the emphasis is not




on disposal; the emphasis is on regulation of treatment




and storage and disposal, all three.




          The feeling of Congress is that, in the area of




industrial wastes, the most practical way of encouraging




recycling is by preventing cheap promiscuous disposal.




Once you cannot get rid of the stuff for three cents a




gallon or down the sewer -- As the gentleman from the




Fire Department just pointed out, an awful lot of




industrial wastes go down sewers, go onto roadsides,




into canals and ditches, most anywhere.   The nearby




woods around cities are just full of hazardous waste,




industrial waste, which is promiscuous disposing.




          The feeling on the part of Congress was to




prevent that from happening.   And once you have prevented

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that from happening, firms will have to recycle.   Then




the proper disposal becomes quite expensive to  do it




right.




          There are some provisions in other parts of the




Act for recycling in general, which Mr. Humber  will




address.  But in Subtitle C, there is no specific




provision for recycling.  It's a regulatory program  aimed




at preventing bad practices.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  We have a question  in  the




back, I believe, before, didn't we'




          MR. DAVE RIDINGER  (Magma Copper  Company):   I




have a question on the definition of hazardous  waste.




          Under the Act, it was referred to as  a  solid




waste.    What is the definition of solid waste?




          MR. SANJOUR:  Well,  first of all, it's  not a




solid.    Let me read it to  you as soon as  I can find my




copy of the Act.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Definition of  solid waste?




          MR. SANJOUR.  Yes.




          "The  term  'solid  waste' means  any garbage,




     refuse, sludge  from a  waste  treatment plant,




     water  supply  treatment plant, or  air  pollution

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     control  facility  and  other  discarded  material,




     including  solid,  liquid,  semisolid, or contained




     gaseous  material  resulting  from  industrial,




     commercial, mining, and  agricultural  operations,




     and from community  activities,  but does  not




     include  solid or  dissolved  material in domestic




     sewage,  or solid  or dissolved  materials in




     irrigation return flows  or  industrial discharges




     which are point sources  subject  to permits  under




     Section  402 of the Federal  Water Pollution  Control




     Act.   .  . "




          Basically, what  that means  is that a solid




waste is any waste that is not covered by  some other




law, some other federal law.   If it  is discharged  into




a water system, then it's  covered by  the Water Pollution




Act, or into the air, by the  Air Pollution Act.




          MR. RIDINGER:    If  it  is  a  point discharge,




it's under 92-500,  is that correct?




          MR. HICKMAN:    That's  right.




          MR. SANJOUR:   1C it's  an  air discharge, it's




also theoretically under 92-500, but  no regulations have




been promulgated.

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          MR. RIDINGER:   Question No. 2.   Under 3001,




3002,  identifying and setting standards, those are both




18-month periods, but they are simultaneous; is that




correct?




          MR. SANJOUR:   Correct.




          MR. RIDINGER:   To identify and set?




          MR. SANJOUR:  Actually, nothing happens in that




Act until regulations under 3001 -- and promulgated until




the definition of hazardous waste is promulgated.




          MR. RIDINGER:   The identification?




          MR. SANJOUR:  Yes.




          MR. RIDINGER:  But then are the standards set




after  that 18 months or before?




          MR. SANJOUR:  They are all supposed to be done




at the same time.    If a deadline is slipped, the




deadlines for all the other sections don't mean anything




until  the deadline for 3001 is met.    That's the bottle-





neck area.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  The gentleman in the second





row .




          MR. DANIEL KLIPPER (Zero Waste Systems):   I




am indebted to Terry for bringing up the subject that  I

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wanted to raise.




          Zero Waste Systems is a hazardous chemical




recycler, and has been so for about three years.   And




what I'm curious about is -- And it's a question partially




to you and partially to Mr. Humber -- since Section C




does not mention anywhere within it the concept of




resource recovery, even though it's the Resource




Conservation and Recovery Act.   It's only  1008(a)(l)




and (3) and 1008(b) that makes any mention  of  it.




          And what we found in the field of hazardous




waste recovery, that we are kind of in the  position of




the cousin of the family that doesn't drink and doesn't




smoke and doesn't go out with women and doesn't use bad




language, and everybody speaks very highly  of  them, but




nobody invites them to the party and no one wants  to  spend




any time with them.




          And this has kind of been something  we have




experienced, as we see it, as people who are doing




hazardous chemical recycling.




          There's basically two  needs that  the field  has




to become a viable alternative,  and one  is  in  the  State




of California already being started, which  is  comprehensiv

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surveys of generators.




          And the other, where we are now, is kind of




where the auto industry was before Henry Ford.   We are




operating on a small scale, and we know that what we are




trying to do is theoretically possible on a much larger




scale.   The problem is getting from here to there.




          And my question addresses is, is this possible




by means of the following vehicle, which would be some-




thing along the lines of a research institute that would:




          a.  Work with industries on source reduction




and on modifying their procedures so as the hazardous




wastes they produce are most accessible to recovery, and




also will be more acceptable probably to  safe disposal.




          2.  Simply researching  various  problems, of




which there are just thousands of things  which are




potentially very valuable which could be  recovered, but




we just haven't developed the technique,  and  there is  no




one in the  field who's  got the resources to  do  this,  and




          3.  Working on the marketing, finding  a  use  for




the material that you are recoving, which we have  found is




often a very vital item.




          And what I am saying is that where  under this

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                                                       •
                                                       j	)
Act,  where under the purview of this Act, would this




kind of research institute fall?




          You asked for suggestions on how we perceive




the law should be implemented.   This is our perception.




Does it agree with yours?




          MR. SANJOUR:  Well, me personally or me EPA?




          MR. KLIPPER:   EPA.




          MR. SANJOUR-  I'm not sure that EPA has an




opinion on the subject as EPA.   You will find within




EPA,  the Office of Research and Development, which does,




indeed, do research in developing processes for industry,




which is what you are suggesting.




          And there is some grant money available in the




Office of Research and Development for that purpose.




          The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act




does not specifically address these kinds of plans, so




there is more to the solid waste program, and there is




more to EPA than this Act, and the kind of things you




are suggesting have been going on and are going on within




EPA,  but they are not specifically part of this Act, at




least not that I have seen, in any event.




          One of the chief reasons for this Act is that

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                                                      163





persons like yourself who are responsible treaters and




disposers of hazardous wastes -- I know you are a




responsible treater, because irresponsible treaters and




disposers never show up for these meetings -- have been




telling Congress and EPA for years that, if there are




only laws which prevented the irresponsible disposal of




these wastes, then  industry could pick up the ball and




handle it responsibly; we need the laws to prevent the




bad practices; that the technology and the know how were




there, in fact, to  do it right and to do it well, but  it




wasn't going to happen until the bad practices were out-





lawed .




          Well, Congress has now outlawed the bad




practices, and my attitude would be the ball  is now in




your  court.  Of course,  if it's not enforced, you have




got a case.  But if we can,  in fact, prevent  the bad




practices,  I would  look  to industry itself, which has  the




technological  know  how,  to figure out how to  solve  these





problems.




          CHAIRMAN  CHANNELL:  Yes?




          MR.  J. P. VALINSKI  (McDonnell-Douglas):   Indus-




tries that  are now  under PL  92-500  and  operating  a

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wastewater treatment system, are they going to be




required to get another permit for that kind of a system




under this new law and, if  so, are these permits going  to




be completely different requirements?




          MR. SANJOUR:   Well, my answer is yes, no and




maybe.




          A wastewater treatment facility ' itself does




not require any additional  permit to what  you already




have .




          MR. VALINSKI:   But it is a treatment --




          MR. SANJOUR:  The residuals generated by this




wastewater treatment,  the sludge, in other words, if  it




is a hazardous waste,  then  the operator of the treatment




plant is a hazardous waste  generator by virtue of that




sludge.




          If it's not  a hazardous waste, then there is




nothing required.   And if  he is going to  then dispose




of that sludge or treat it  in any way, then he needs  a




permit for treatment and disposal of that  sludge.




          We are hoping that the permitting will be




integrated  with the NDWS permits so that  you won't have




to deal with two different  people and two  different kinds

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of permits.   How successful we are depends on  a  lot  of





things.




          For one thing, these, in many cases,  the  permits




are handled by the states.  I think they are  in California





Isn't that correct?




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes, sir.




          MR. SANJOUR:   So it's really up to the jrtates




whether it be integrated,  not up to the ^federal  govern-





ment-.




          In those areas where the federal government




will be handling the permit systems, it may very  well be




up to the Regional Administrators about how well  the




programs are integrated.    So we at the _fgderal,  at  the




Washington level, can hope and suggest, but I'm not sure




we have that much influence over how it's going to  go.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes, in  the back?




          MR. WILLIAM LEWIS (Chairman, House  Natural




Resources and Energy Committee, Phoenix, Arizona):   I




guess what I'm going to  say IH more ol a statement  and




an observation than it  is a qucstJon.   However,  if you




would like to comment,  I would appreciate  it.   But don't





feel that you have to.

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          I notice that one of the things in the law as




you just explained this section of it is that Congress has




once again abandoned its responsibility and, instead of




setting down rules and regulations, have foisted it off




on someone else, which makes it suspect to every John and




Joe and Jane, makes them insecure to foist upon the public




again,  or try to, some sort of a regulation that will




ensure their perpetuation in their job by making them




more important and giving us one other thing to put up




with .




          I think the main problem that we have had in the




past ten years since I have been in sj,ate government, the




main gripe that we have had with the feds, if you will,




has been in this area where Congress has abrogated their




own responsibility and passed it off to the various




agencies and said, "Okay.   You set up -- We will set your




agency up and give you broad guidelines.   And then you




come down and get to the nitty-gritty, and don't blame it




on u.s.    That way we can go back to our constituents and




we can say,  'well, I didn't do that.   I set up the agency,




but I  didn't require you to put up with all these




different regulations.'"

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          I just issue this as a word of caution and




hopefully as a v/ord of pleading to you'  Be careful what




you make the states do and industry do and the cities and




towns because we are dealing in a situation here, as I




see it, with hazardous wastes, their disposal and their




recycling,  if you will, and I think it's something that




we have to be very careful about or else we are  going to




come up with some regulations which are highly untenable




and are put on Arizona and California and Montana and




the other states from an ivory tower back in Washington




by people who perhaps have not been on the ground and




seen the actual problems as they do exist within the




states.




          I pray that you will give us some latitude to




work under when you make your final regulations.




          MR. SANJOUR:   I would appreciate it if you




would, at your leisure, put your thoughts down in writing




in some detail about more specifically what you  had in




mind.  It doesn't have to be today but, you know, think




about  it.   Your words are nice, but they are rather




general, and if you can get down to specifics.




          MR. LEWIS:   I will get down  to one specific.

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          MR. SANJOUR:  It doesn't have to be now.



          MR. LEWIS:  I will get down to one specific



right now.



          Your smelter smokestack regulations,  for



instance.   We are spending -- The mines, not we.   The



mines are spending millions of dollars  now to bring  their



smelters into conformance.   And in our jrtate,  all of



them have except for one.   That one is so old  that  it



is almost impossible.  Well, it is impossible for  it to



be done in a viable way.



          Now, we have asked, as a state legislature,
                                   -zfZ*


for relief for that particular situation.   Phelps-Dodge,



who'happens  to be the operator of that  smelter,  has  asked



for it, and  so far, although there have been a  couple  of



postponements in the date that they have to comply,  there



still has been no thought of trying to  give any kind of



an exemption or leniency  in that case.



          And we are talking about a whole city of 15,000



people which will go down the tubes if  they do  close down



that smelter.



          It will also put  two mines out of operation,



copper mines.

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                                                      17 L





          And it's located in a situation where there is




no other town or living creatures anywhere within, or




concentration of them, at least, anywhere within  a 50-mile




radius that -- The smoke that's been coming out for  years




certainly is hazardous.  I wouldn't argue with that  a bit.




And it certainly is a waste product.




          But under those circumstances, there should be




more leniency and it, in my opinion, shouldn't be somebody




sitting in Washington saying, "No,  there is not going to




be any variations and this is it."   I  think  each case




has to be decided on  its own merits.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Any other questions or




comments?   Yes, in the far back?




          MS. VITA SIMON (Federal Highway Administration):




Under Section 3003, the Administrator of EPA  is to




consult with DOT for  the addition of hazardous materials




into the existing DOT Act, the  way  I read that.




          MR. SANJOUR:  That's  correct.




          MS. SIMON:  Do you envision separate regulations




or do you intend your regulations to be incorporated into




the hazardous materials regulations and do  you envision




separate enforcement, or would  that be  done by the

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Bureau of Motor Carrier Safety?




          MR. SANJOUR:   We would prefer  in  both  cases  to




use existing DOT laws and existing DOT  enforcement




mechanisms.   And we are working out with  DOT  right  now




to try to do that.   If it cannot be done,  then we will




use the authorities we have under this  Act.




          But we certainly would prefer to use the DOT




mechanisms and DOT would prefer us to  do  it,  too.




          But what sometimes  happens is that,  although  we




would both like to do it one  way, their laws may  not




allow it to be done the way our law wDuld  call for  it  to




be done.   We are working that out now.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL   Yes, we  have a question  over





here.   Yes?




          MS. JEAN BAHR (W. A. Wahler  and  Associates):   I




have a quick question of clarification  of  the definition





of solid waste.




          You say that it covers mining wastes,  which  I




would assume would be mine taiLings.    Does that  also




include uranium tailings, or  is  that  covered by the





Atomic Energy Act?




          MR. SANJOUR:  I believe  it  does, yes.

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          MS.  BAHR:   It does?




          MR.  SANJOUR:  I believe radio -- Well, it covers




radioactive wastes that are not covered by the Nucle?r




Regulatory Commission.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  I believe the answer to that




is the existing uranium, existing operating uranium mills




that are under license by the Nuclear Regulatory




Commission, their tailings piles, now and after they close




down,  will be under NRC regulation.    We have a number,




some 17 to 20, inactive abandoned tailings piles in the




West that have escaped from the license in the past and




really are not regulated by anybody.  It's questionable




who regulates these.




          MR.  SANJOUR:  I don't think we regulate those.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  No one regulates them now,




but it's questionable whether they might come under the





Act .




          MS.  BAHR:  Do you anticipate putting down some




regulations during this 18-month period that would deal




with uranium tailings piles'?




          MR.  SANJOUR:  No, not really.   The whole issue




of how to handle mining wastes  is  frustrating us.

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          MS. BAHR:  All right.




          MR. SANJOUR:   Congress called for a study in




this Act of mining wastes, and the purpose of that study




was to determine whether or not mining waste really can




be regulated in the same fashion that industrial manu-




facturing wastes are regulated.




          So I don't really think we are going to come




out with any regulations of mining wastes until we have




completed the study on whether it's even practical to do.




          MS. BAHR:   That would go for other kinds of




mining wastes, too?   Coal mining?




          MR. SANJOUR:   In general, yes.




          The trouble with mining wastes, you know, is




you can't move the stuff; you  can't bring it to a




hazardous waste facility.  It's half the country, you




know .




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes?




          MR. MICHAEL BROWN  (Consulting Engineer):   You




said  that the hazardous  waste  management program  can be




administered by the state  if  they have  an approved




hazardous waste management program.  Does that  hold  true




for territories as well,  territorial governments?

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                                                       i'i'G
          MR.  SANJOUR:  I guess.




          MR.  HICKMAN:  By definition of the law, there




are 56 states now.   Just by definition of the law, a




solid is a liquid and vice versa.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes?




          MR.  THOMAS WILLIAMS (Engineering Science):  I




was wondering, do you make a distinction between stored




hazardous materials, which may be in the form of a  large




pile, versus a hazardous waste?




          MR.  SANJOUR:  Well, the law only covers wastes,




not hazardous materials.   And I grant you there's  going




to be a fine line between when a material is a waste.




And we are certainly going to have to address that  in the




regulations, and  it will have to be addressed even  further




among those people who have  to  issue permits and interpret




the regulations.




          MR.  WILLIAMS:  Within  the State of California,




I think there is  a distinction between industrial




materials storage areas and  solid waste landfills.




          MR. HICKMAN:  I don't  think they can hear you,




sir.   That's why we  have a  microphone out in the  middle.




Don't feel overwhelmed by it.    Feel free to use  it.

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That way everybody can hear what you say.




          MR. WILLIAMS:   One of the problems that I see




is that, in the State of California, there are distinc-




tions made between stored industrial materials which may




be hazardous and solid waste hazardous materials which




are stored in similar types of situations, i.e., an




earthen fill area, that many of the materials, as the




economic situation changes, will, in fact, become




economically viable for source materials.   Therefore,




the waste at one place will become a resource for another




industry at a later date when the economies change.




          Therefore, some industrial managers may choose




to store their materials as industrial materials rather




than hazardous wastes.




          So how would you make a distinction on that?




          MR. SANJOUR:   Well, on the one hand, we do not




want to give any impediment to legitimate recycling of




wastes, and those we would tend to exclude from the




definition of a waste.




          On the other hand, we don't want to give people




a very easy loophole to avoid the consequences of the




law just by calling a waste a material.

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                                                       173
          All right.    That's the philosophical base.




We are not going to have to interpret things a great deal




in that light, and I  would hope that people who have




specific examples of  these kinds of bordeline cases would




mail them to us.   We could write much better regulations




that walk this tightrope if we know what the tightrope




is, if we know the specific cases that we are going to




have to deal with.   We could write better regulations by




dealing with  them in advance of the regulations than after




we have written the regulations.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes, sir, you have another





comment?




          MR. DANIEL KLIPPER:   I'm still Dan Klipper,




and I am still  from Zero Waste.




          My  comment.   It took me a moment to think  about




your answer that  the ball is in industry's court now,




and I'm tempted to be very  generous and  say  does that




mean that EPA will no longer be funding  pyrolysis




research and  landfill research  and  so on and so forth,




which obviously it won't.




          And really what  I  am  saying is that  it  is




proof of the  cousin theory  once again,  that  EPA spent

-------
something —  And I may be wrong by a million or so




dollars,  but I believe it spent something about $7 million




on a pyrolysis center in Palo Alto.




          And I would merely point out that about half




that money would set up this kind of institute for about




five years.




          MR. SANJOUR:  As I said before, there is more




to EPA and the Solid Waste Office than this Act, and we




have and will continue to fund resource recycling facili-





ties.




          And my comment about the ball being in your own




court was largely the attitude of this Act itself.   If




I can extend that to your analogy of the cousin,




basically the attitude of Congress is we have taken the




ladies of the evening off the street; now you are on your




own    The competition is out of the way.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   You have a question?   Yes,




sir?




          MR. JEFF HALTNER:   I am with the Environmental




Impact Planning Corporation.




          What is EPA's current feeling in regard to




municipal sludges and incinerator wastes as regards to

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                                                        .-J
their being Included as a hazardous material?    Is  there




any feeling towards that right now?




          MR. SANJOUR:   There is a great deal of feeling.




Depends on who you talk to.




          This is a very hot issue in EPA.   In  a sense,




EPA has become both the sponsor of municipal sludge  and




the regulator of municipal sludge, and whenever  a govern-




ment agency has a vested interest in the very thing  it's




regulating, it causes all kinds of problems, as  we  have




seen historically with the Atomic Energy Commission.




          There is feelings on both sides of this issue.




We could recapitulate the discussions.   I'm not sure you




want to hear that now.




          I think what would be best from your point of




view is that, if you have any feelings on this issue, is




to apprise EPA of what your feelings are since this  is




an issue that's being discussed in EPA, and there are




many,  many opinions on the subject, and it will  probably




ultimately be decided by the Administrator.   The more




public input there is to this subject, the better feeling




the Administrator can get about what the consequences o L'




the decision are.

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          Does anybody feel that they want some kind of a




recapitulation on what the arguments are on this hot





issue?




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Any other questions or





comments?




          Let's take about a 15-minute break now.   Let's




try to get back at ten after 10:00, please.




          (Short recess.)




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Well, let's come back in




session again.




          We  have got seats in front if there  is anybody




standing back there outside.   We have got a half dozen




seats or so.




          The next section of the Act we will  be dis-




cussing, Lanny Hickman will be discussing  the  land




disposal aspects of the  Act for  that ten minutes, and  we




will have questions and  comments on that portion.




          Lanny?




          MR. HICKMAN:   Thank you,  Jim.




          Could  I have somebody  turn the  slide projector




on, please?   That's  part  of the public participation  that




we are  trying to carry on  here.

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          (Slide No. 1.)




          We arc going to spend a few moments now and




discuss the land disposal provisions of the law, that's




basically within the sections of the law, Section 1008




and Subtitle 1), which is directed at sjate and  local




program development.




          In order to understand the land disposal




provisions,  we need to look at four key definitions in




the law and relate to how this has changed the  whole




thrust of the solid waste management field, at  least as




it applies to implementation of RCRA.




          The first definition is "disposal."   Under the




old law that was amended in 1976 by RCRA, disposal was




used more in a generic term of management, covering all




aspects of solid waste from generation to the ultimate,




indeed, disposal in the lands, collection, treatment,




incineration, processing or whatever.




          Well, in the 1976 amendments, "disposal" was




narrowed down to be confined primarily to the aspect of




placing waste on the land.   I would like to read it to




you, at least part of it, so that you understand what the




definition says.

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          "The term 'disposal' means the discharge,




     deposit, injection, dumping, spilling, leaking,




     or placing of any solid waste or hazardous waste --"




          And we have already defined the  fact that  a




solid waste can now be liquid.




          "— into or on any land or water so that such




     solid waste or hazardous waste or any constituent




     thereof may enter the environment or  be emitted into




     the air or discharged into any waters, including




     ground waters."




          So RCRA is trying to address the problem of




the disposal of any waste on the lands where it may




impact in any way on health or the environment.




          We go on to look at the definition of "open




dump," which is a new definition that was  not in  the




old amendments, but are in the 1976 amendments.   The




definition itself doesn't mean much until  we talk about




Subtitle D.




          "The term 'open dump' means a site for  the




     disposal of solid waste which is not a sanitary




     landfill within the meaning of Section 4004."




          That is where we have to define  "sanitary

-------
landfill," so that implies, of course, there is only two




mechanisms of disposal:  either open dumping or sanitary




landfill as far as placing the waste upon land.




          The third definition is "sanitary Landfill."




And that definition means:




          "The term 'sanitary landfill' means a facility




     for the disposal of solid waste which meets the




     criteria published under Section 4004."




          So Section 4004 appears like it's a pretty




important section of the law, and we will get to that in




a minute.




          And then the last definition which Bill read to




you, the definition of "solid waste."   What you have got




to think about now is sanitary landfill no longer falls




within the classic consideration ol municipal solid waste




being compacted on a daily basis and given daily cover at




the end of the day or other intervals of time.   That is




no longer what a  sanitary  landfill  is by definition of




the law.




          By definition now,  a sanitary landfill is an




acceptable method of disposal of solid waste, and that




can be liquid or  solid and anything in between.

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          Okay.   Now, let's look at the magic Section




4004 .




          (Slide No.  2 . )




          What Section 4004 says is that within one year,




the Administrator shall issue criteria for what is a




sanitary landfill, and it implies types of sanitary land-




fills in the terminology, and that criteria would be  for




classifying what is a sanitary landfill, what is an open




dump.    And, by definition, what is a sanitary landfill




is not an open dump and vice versa, and that that criteria




should consider the reasonable probability of adverse




effects from different land disposal practices.




          And  it says then that the disposal of solid




waste will be  required in sanitary landfills only and




the_state plans must provide for same.




          (Slide No.  3.)




          Section 4005 goes on to require the Administra-




tor to conduct an inventory within 12 months after the




issuance of the criteria for sanitary landfill or for




all those sites that are open dumps and publish a list  of




those open dumps.




          Now, this is an inventory of all open dumps




throughout the country.   We had discussions about mining

-------
wastes, and there are a lot of wastes that are considered




now solid waste, and disposal practices that will have to




be inventoried.




          So the whole problem in issue of how much can




be done within 12 months, where the resources are going  to




come from to do it.   Are we really going  to include




mining wastes when we are supposed to do a study on mining




wastes, which obviously is supposed to point us in some




direction, but the inventory of whatever sites there  are




that we list, those sites on that list immediately become




in violation of federal law, because the law says that




there shall be no open dumping, only sanitary landfills.




          And those sites are subject to suit in the




Federal Court system by any individual out there who




wishes to take exception to the practices  of that




particular site.




          And we talked about the citizen  suit regulation




provision which provides a mechanism for any individual




out there to ping into the federal system, Federal




Court system, on a violation.




          Now, the federal government itself -- It's  not




an EPA enforcement action.  It's a _s_tate/local government/




citizen mechanism to bring these sites into compliance.

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          Now, how can we protect these operators and




owners of these sites where all of a sudden one day they




wake up and here is this big list in the "San Francisco




Examiner," and their site's on the list.




          Well, the law provides a mechanism for those




sites to be closed or converted within  a five-year time




period after the list is published.  And that's in 1983.




          And  if the _sjtate -- And the jrtate is to require




or develop a plan and a schedule for those sites to come




into compliance, be converted or closed.




          So this umbrella of planning  protects the




site operator  for the period of time it would take for




that site to come into compliance or be closed.




          (Slide No. 4.)




          All  right.   Section 1008 provides authority  for




the Administrator of EPA to promulgate  guidelines for




solid waste management.   This is an extension of




previous  authorities that were in the  -- that was in  the




law that  was  amended.




          And  those guidelines are mandatory requirements




on the ^federal  government.  All  federal agencies must




comply with requirements for  the guidelines  issued  under

-------
1008.


          Under the old authorities, we  issued  some


seven or eight guidelines.  We had  one on  land  disposal.


We had one on beverage containers.   We  had  one on


resource recovery facilities.   Collection of municipal,


commercial and institutional solid  wastes.


          And the federal government is  now  beginning  to


implement these guidelines, and they are still  in effect.


They are merely advisory at the state and  local government
                               -^5-

or to any grantees under certain  -- most of  the authorities


of the law,  except for one unique grant  program where


they will have to comply with the guidelines.


          At the present time, we are beginning work  to


take the existing land disposal guidelines that are  in


effect and modify these guidelines  to reflect the new  law.


These guidelines would be used primarily as  a supportive


document for the land disposal, sanitary landfill criteria


that we have to issue as guidance to owners  and operators


of disposal sites as to ways in which they might upgrade


or convert their sites to meet the  requirements.


          And as these guidelines develop  over  a period  of


time, they will deal with different waste  streams and

-------
different types of land disposal practices.




          Wo have started the work now as  developing  a




sludge, municipal sludge guideline, which  will  be




available in late Fiscal Year  79.   So by  nature  what




we are doing, I guess we are sort of phasing  into  this




whole activity anyway by developing the inventory.




          The theory, of course, is to have the state




government do the inventory rather than the federal




government.    The logic to that  is pretty  strong.   In




fact, we want the state government, which  they  already




are in most _states, the regulator and enforcement  on




land disposal practices, to continue to do  that.    And




it's -- They know where the sites are, and  the  criteria




are -- we are going to try to design criteria in  such a




way that much of the judgment on the acceptability of




that site will be made by state  government  based  on  the




unique conditions of that state:   its own  climatological




and geological and demographic differences  rather  than




trying to have one uniform standard that Maine  and




California and Omaha and Galvoston can all  have to live




within because it's just almost  impossible  to write  one




standard.  The criteria will allow judgments  to be made  by

-------
state government  and  local  government  related  to  their




own unique particular circumstances.




          Well, that's basically  the provisions of  the




land disposal part of the law.    You can  see here the




linkages that are starting  to be  built  now  between  the




various sections.





          You have the hazardous  waste  provisions which




focus in on those waste streams and provide for a




mechanism of controlling them from cradle to the  grave.




And whatever is not covered under that  umbrella of




hazardous wastes  falls within the rest  of the  requirements




of the law and Subtitle D.




          And we  see that whatever has  not been handled




under the hazardous waste provisions will move to




acceptable land disposal sites regulated or controlled by




state government  and operated by  local  government and




industry.




          And I will entertain questions now on these




provisions.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  First,  before we start the




questions,  I  would like to introduce Paul De Falco,  the




Regional Administrator of EPA, who joined us at the break.

-------
          MR. DE FALCO:  Good morning.


          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Now,  any  questions?    Come


to the microphone, please.


          Yes, sir?


          MR. THOMAS DUNBAR  (State of  California  Regional


Water Quality Control Board, North Coast  Region):    The


EPA will promulgate guidelines for sanitary  landfill.


Does the EPA anticipate requiring federal  permits for
                                  -^

landfills similar to NPDES?


          MR. HICKMAN:  No,  the  law  does  not  require that.


That's not a provision of  RCRA.   The concept  is,  of


course, that EPA will issue  criteria.    The  law requires


us to develop criteria for sanitary  landfills,  and  the


law says that all disposal will  be in  sanitary  landfills.


          That will fulfill  that criteria, but  it does


not require EPA and does not permit  EPA  to set  up any


sort of a regulatory program.  It places  that responsi-


bility on state government.


          Now, that's diJfcrent  than the  hazardous  waste


part where,  if the state doesn't pick  up  the  hazardous


waste program, the permitting and enforcement program,


EPA must.

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                                                       iC'2
           There  is  no  mechanism for  EPA and no authority


 for  EPA  to function in this  area in  the land disposal of


 non-hazardous  wastes.


           The  driving  force,  of course,  is to have the


 state  get  involved  because  the  sites that  are not in
-^,

 compliance with  the criteria  are subject to violation of


 federal  law.   And  most of  the  financial assistance


 programs that  could be made  available under RCRA will not


 flow down  to  state  and local  government unless the state


 has  a  planning process underway to get these sites into


 comp1iance.


           But  there is no  federal regulatory role in this


 portion  of the law.


           CHAIRMAN  CHANNELL:    Questions or comments?  Yes


 sir?


           MR.  H.  E.  KNOWLTON (Chevron Research Company,


 Richmond,  California):  We  have a statement to make on


 land disposal.


           I am employed by  the  Chevron Research Company,


 Richmond,  California,  where my  professional responsibili-


 ties involve  corporate-wide refinery environmental control


 activities.   I'm also  a member  of the Solid Waste

-------
Management Committee of the American Petroleum Institute.




And we are preparing a written statement on various




topics for submission later.




          To keep within the five minutes that you




indicated you would allot me on this subject of land




farming, I have this following statement.




          We define land farming as -- The  land farming




process consists of controlled application  and cultivation




of wastes on soil in a properly engineered  site and using




soil microorganisms to decompose the organic fraction  of





the wastes.




          Soil conditions,  water runoff, percolation  and




odor,  if any, are monitored and controlled  as  appropriate.




          The most  common wastes supplied  are  oily




sludges or biological  solid wastes, or both.




          We have these  additional  comments, then,  on





land  farming.




          Our refinery experience with  land disposal




of solid waste goes back  30 years.   In  the  past  two years,




we have been developing  resource recovery  methods in  our




refineries to minimize the  oil  content  in  oily solids.




Object:   recover  valuable  oil,  energy  resource,  and

-------
minimize the oily solids that are land farmed.




          3.  We visited and discussed with various




refiners other than Chevron in various parts of the




United States and Canada their successful use of land




farming of oily solids and biosolids.




          4.  We have had ongoing research studies on




land farming at the Rutgers University in New Jersey




and at Chevron Research in Richmond for the past several




years.   Based on this, we would like to make this




conclusion.




          From this extensive background of practical




experience  and research, we state land farming of oily




solids and biosolids is the optimum treatment method




available today, both ecologically and economically.




          Chevron strives to use the most economic methods




of solving  environmental problems so that less energy is




used and the cost we must pass on to our customers is




minimized.




          We have additional comments on the  other topics,




on your other topics that you have listed for this




session, and we will contribute  them directly to the





EPA.

-------
          Also we will contribute indirectly through the




API Solid Waste Management Committee.




          Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Thank you, sir.




          MR. SANJOUR:  May I ask the gentleman a




quest ion?




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes.




          MR. SANJOUR:  Do you mind if I ask you a




quest ion?




          MR. KNOWLTON:   Go ahead, Bill.




          MR. SANJOUR:  Is it Chevron's  intention to




grow crops on these land farms?




          MR. KNOWLTON:  No, Bill, there is no intention




to grow crops.




          MR. SANJOUR:   Good answer.




          MR. KNOWLTON:  It is our intent, though, Bill,




to do a good job on resource recovery so that we minimize




the area which is used for land farming  and keep it




tightly controlled.




          MR. HICKMAN:   Do you consider land farming a




disposal method?   That's me asking up here.




          MR. KNOWLTON:  Oh.  Yes.

-------
          MR. HICKMAN:  By definition of the law that we




have here,  do you consider that a disposal technique




falling within the purview of the definition of disposal




as the law here defines it?




          MR. KNOWLTON:  You have only one topic called




land disposal.   You do not talk at any point in your




written material of land farming, which we feel is  a




different type of thing.




          MR. HICKMAN:   But do you view it as a disposal





technique?




          MR. KNOWLTON:  Oh, yes.   A treatment and




disposal because we will convert -- All the oil that  does




remain after we have recovered what is economically




recoverable, we will treat the rest of it to biodegrade




it into CO?  and water,  in which case we have solved the




problem very ecologically and, as far as we can tell  at




this point in time, better than any other competing




process.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Any other questions  or




comments?    Any others?




          We will go on to the next section of the agenda




on the resource conservation and recovery aspects  of  the

-------
Act .




          Nick Humber.




          MR. HUMBER:  Usually the first question I get




at meetings such as this on resource recovery is what is




the federal funding.




          The bill includes resource recovery,   source




separation and resource conservation systems.    I would




like to go over a little bit about the progress or the




history of this with the Congress.




          It started off with a $200 million grant program




and then became a billion dollar loan guarantee program,




and that shortly became a two billion dollar loan guaran-




tee program, and then some people asked the question,




"Well,  why is there a need for federal financing?  Can




these projects be financed locally?"




          In fact, several had been financed locally,




about $300 million by my count, and they were financed




without federal funding, and thus the final law has no




construction grant provisions for resource recovery.




Instead, they have a program that I will outline with you




here .




          (Slide No. 1.)

-------
          Resource recovery and resource conservation are




mentioned throughout the Act in several areas.    And this




is a listing of the major areas.   I will discuss each of




these in a bit more comprehensive manner.




          (Slide No. 2.)




          Now, this section, which calls for technical




assistance in solid waste management problems, it's a




complete misnomer because it's -- first of all, it is not




confined to resource recovery and resource conservation.




Our efforts will cover the full gamut of solid waste




management activities, including collection, disposal and




treatment and disposal of hazardous wastes.   So that's




not correct.




          And, secondly, we are not having panels.   That's




a word which was used for some reason that escapes me.




          Several people have asked me, "How do you get




appointed to these panels?"   And there really is no




appointment process because there are no panels to be




appointed to.   The idea is that we will bring together




expertise from several groups, and we will be more the




manager of this technical assistance activity to local




government.

-------
                                                       ICO
          Let's say, for example, the City of San Jose




wanted some help in source separation and they asked us




to provide this help.   Well, we would bring together,




first of all, people in the area who might be buying the




secondary materials; we would bring together citizen




groups that would help support participation, bring




together the solid waste management people in that area,




both the public and private people, and possibly consul-




tants who might have expertise in this area.




          The idea  is to bring together quite a wide




range of expertise  and to help communities help them-




selves .




          The legislation calls  for 20 percent of the




general authorization for the Act.   And that term




"general authorization" is a confusing one because you




have to see the full funding of  the Act, and that will




come at the end.




          But the general authorization can be as high  as




$35 million, so that would say that $7 million could be




spent for technical  assistance efforts.




          (Slide No. 3.)




          The sections  in the 4000  series  have to deal

-------
                                                       200
with the establishment of state plans and for state




program activities.   And the important thing to notice




in the resource recovery area is that thejstate plans




must call for resource recovery or call for addressing the




issue.   It must address the'resource conservation  issue.




          It does not mean that they have to  include




plans for resource recovery or resource conservation,




but they must determine  if this is appropriate  or  not;




must also include an evaluation of existing and probable




future markets  for recovered materials  in the state.




And this must be a part  of the _s_tate plan.




          Now,  there is  one provision that the  law




requires that _state plans eliminate, if it exists,  and




this  is a provision in some _s_tate  constitutions or




legislative  rules  that there  is a  prohibition against




20-year contracts  or long-term  contracts.




          In other words, a  community --  Let's  take




San Jose again  --  cannot sign  a 20-year contract  for a




service, in  this case  being  a  solid  waste management




service.    In  the  case of building a large  solid  waste




management  system  that will  operate  for 20  years  and




maybe  cost  some $5 million  to  $50  million,  there  is a

-------
                                                       201
need for a 20-year contract  between  the  city  and a private




organization  in order  to  finance  the system.    And because




there are these prohibitions,  at  least  in  sorae_s_tate




activities, the state  plans  must  require that these be




removed, at least  in pertaining  to  solid wastes.




          (Slide No. 4 . )




          Now, the financial aid  that comes under the




_state section, that  is  the 4000  series  section in the law,




calls for financing  of  implementation grants  to public




agencies only.   And the  emphasis is on  implementation




rather  than planning.




          That is  putting together  a technical -- a




market  and a  financial  package that  leads  to  an action,




whether it be a collection system or new disposal system




or new  source separation  system.    These funds are not




to be used for construction.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          Now, the Act  calls for  the federal  government




to take an active  role  in resource  recovery and resource




conservation.   And  the most prominent  way that it can




do this is through the federal procurement process.   And




it requires that EPA issue guidelines for recommended

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                                                      202
practices and that within two years, that procuring




agencies — And this is essentially the General Services




Administration and the Defense Supply Agency, who do most




of the procuring for the federal government -- purchase




the highest percentage of recovered materials in their




items that they buy.




          And this is highest in the sense of being




economically and technologically feasible.




          This pertains only to items of purchases that




are greater than $10,000.




          It also requires that the ^federal government,




in purchasing fuels for the operation of its boiler




systems, use the highest percent of reiuse-derived fuel,




again to the extent that it's technologically and




economically feasible.




          And this provision also provides -- pertains to




vendors of the federal government.  That is that they




have to procure products that contain recycled materials.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          This section calls, and the next slide will




call, for a series of studies for issues that are not




quite resolved as far as the Congress is concerned.   The

-------
most prominent is the Resource Conservation Committee,




and I will talk a bit about that in the subsequent  slide.




          There are other studies that pertain to




composition of the waste stream, setting research




priorities within the EPA, looking at small scale,  looking




at source separation systems.   There are  quite  a range





of studies.




          (Slide No.  7.)




          And this is an additional four studies.    These




have to be done over a  three-year period.




          (Slide No.  8.)




          Now, back to  the Resource Conservation




Committee.  It's a cabinet-level committee.   The




Administrator of EPA is the chairman.




          And it should be noted that most committees  are




out of the day-to-day operations of agencies.    That is,




they are blue ribbon committees or citizen advisory




committees that report  possibly to the White  House,  but




they are not  a part of  a major  department  or  major  agency.




And this is an exception.  I  think it's an important




exception, and it's very  important.




          It's a two-year study, and  it requires --

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                                                       204
          Getting back to the participants, they are the




Secretaries of Treasury,  of Interior, Commerce and Labor.




And these are the departments that would be most affected




by any kind of actions that were taken to stimulate




resource recovery, such as regulatory or economic incen-




t ives.




          (Slide No. 9.)




          And these are the areas that are to be studied




by this group of people.




          The first is the effect of existing federal




policies on resource recovery and resource conservation.




There are policies that really are disincentives for




recovery, and some of the policies that have been accused




of being this are the capital gains treatments and




depletion allowances that are, it is accused, to encourage




us to use virgin resources vis-a-vis secondary resources.




In other words, the government is subsidizing the pro-




duction of virgin resources.




          It is to also look at new taxes or regulations




or bounties.    And some of the ideas that have been




proposed are subsidies for each ton recycled, subsidies




for each new dollar investment in facilities that would

-------
utilize recovered materials or would produce recovered




material.   And, lastly, charges on products to reflect




waste management costs.




          And the third major area are product regula-





tions.




          (Slide No. 10.)




          We have in the past had demonstrations  and




evaluation -- demonstration capabilities under the  law.




This is additive evaluation.   It is felt  it is cheaper




for the federal government  to evaluate a system that's




been privately  constructed  than  to construct it and pay




for the construction itself.  So we are switching to  do




more evaluations and fewer  demonstrations.




          It also emphasizes  the importance  of doing




demonstrations  in the  source  separation area and  the  new




area of resource conservation or techniques  that  would




reduce waste generation.




          Okay.   That  summarizes the  resource recovery




and conservation activities.  And I would  like very much




to discuss with you  your  feelings on  these issues.




          CHAIRMAN  CHANNELL:   Yes?   Any questions  or




comments?   Yes, sir,  the  gentleman  in the back.

-------
          MR. EDWARD SPARKS (Director of Procurement




Logistics,  Garden States Paper Company):  I have a comment




Nick.




          Our company is the world's largest consumer of




recycled newspaper.   My company consumes more than




500,000 tons of old newspapers each year.   A substantial




portion of this supply comes to us through contracts with




over 40 municipalities having source separation programs




to recover this valuable resource.




          I am also a member of the Executive Committee




concerned with paper stock conservation of the American




Paper Institute.   This group represents recycling and




converting mills which consume almost 14,000,000 tons of




waste paper annually.




          Garden States' 15 years  in the recovery and




recycling of waste newspaper on both a  national and




international basis has given us a hands-on knowledge




and experience of  the dos, don'ts  and pitfalls of resource




recovery.   We feel it  important  for the Environmental




Protection Agency  to draw  on the experiences  and expertise




of companies such  as Garden States and  associations  such




as the American  Paper Institute to achieve  a  successful

-------
                                                       on 7
                                                       ».u {
implementation of this Act.




          While we are not looking for a position on your




non-panel, I am here to offer the assistance and exper-




iences of both Garden States Paper Company and the Paper




Stock Conservation Committee of the American Paper




Institute to the Environmental Protection Agency, and




specifically Region IX, in the implementation of the




Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976.




          MR. HUMBER:  Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?




          MR. DANIEL KLIPPER:  Just a question of




clarificat ion.




          You were discussing Section 4008, and that was




financial aid,  financing of implementation, and this is




grants to public agencies only in the field of resource




recovery, conservation, hazardous waste management.   And




then you said not for construction.




          And how do you define implementation of a




program separate from, say, construction of a transfer




facility?  I didn't understand that.




          MR. HUMBER:   I can see that ambiguity.   The




idea is -- The original intent was to distinguish

-------
                                                       fir ~>
                                                       f-'U J
implementation-oriented activity from planning activity.


          In other words,  I think the first problem is


the planning activities have a bad name in Washington.  It


seems to be a way to make consultants rich, but not to


take any action.


          But try to go a step further, and let's go back


to the example of a source separation system.    It would


be the activity, whether it would be a staff activity of


a go-vernment or the hiring of a consultant, to develop


the final implementation activity, let's say, to define


the contract for the recycled materials, to set up the


routing system for the collection vehicles, to enter


into -- to develop the contracts to hire the legal


expertise to develop the contracts and if  any financing


were required, to hire the financial advisors.


          But it all leads to a proposal to the decision-


making body to say, "Yes,  let's go ahead with it."


          I guess if you see the end result as a  final


proposal, to say, "Let's go  to  him."   That's what we  are


aiming for.


          MR. KLIPPER:   Thank  you.


          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?  Yes,  sir,  in  the  back?

-------
                                                      200
          MR. KEITH MC HOUTEN (Occidental Research


Corporation):   In the past, the agency's work, and much


of the interest of people interested in resource recovery,


has been aimed at some of the technical aspects of


resource recovery.   I should like to urge that, in the


new life that we have got ahead, that the agency addresses


itself, gives priority to some of the institutional


aspects that you touched upon in your talk:  the legal


aspects of the institution of resource recovery, the


financial problems involved, such things as regionaliza-


tion,  to get the economic tonnage.


          I should just like to see that they are given


priorities in your plans.


          MR. HUMBER:  Thank you.

                                         9^
          I think his comment is well ta/iken.   We are


really moving.   Although there is a great deal of


technological work to be done, the major problems right


now are moving into some of the institutional arrangements


and that prohibition against or the elimination of pro-


hibitions against 20-year contracts is an institutional


problem that some communities have faced.


          That's an example, and the marketing and the

-------
                                                       210
financial issues are also other institutional problems.




          Now, we worked for about the last three years




in communities in overcoming some of these, and in some




cases, we have helped communities to get financing.    In




other words, just to prepare a. proposal that was sound.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?   Yes, sir, in the




back?




          MR. JEFF HALTNER  (Environmental Impact Planning




Corporation):  I'm still trying to get a handle on some




of your defintions.




          In regards to our resource conservation, I'm




interested in the potential for recycling solid wastes




to land as a fertilizer or  soil conditioner.




          And do I understand by your term  "sanitary




landfill" here that this will also now pertain to




agricultural lands upon which solid waste may be used  as




a fertilizer or soil conditioner; and, if so, will the




same regulations that apply to a sanitary landfill now




apply to agricultural lands?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Well, this has been a goal of




discussion within the agency, and with people who are




involved in the application of waste on the lands for

-------
disposal or for beneficial purposes.   As to where that




falls, when is it disposal and when perhaps is it a




beneficiation of soil as a soil conditioner or whatever.




Frankly, at this point in time we don't know where it




ought to fall ourselves.




          I would appreciate what you think it ought to




be.  Do you think it ought to be outside  the purview of




the definition of disposal and sanitary landfill?




          If you read the definition of disposal,  it




would imply, indeed, that if you put waste on  lands, it




must fall within the definition for disposal.




          And there is only two types of  disposal:  open




dump or sanitary landfill.   But there  is certainly no




intent  on the part  of the agency to try to put  an  umbrella




over every  activity that goes on in the agricultural




field as  it  relates to  the utilization  of soils  and




organic products.




          We just don't  know where  it  falls  yet.    It's




an area of  real  concern  and consideration right  now by




the  agency  and  the  outside people  who  are working  with  us




on it .




          CHAIRMAN  CHANNELL:  Yes,  sir?

-------
          MR.  HALTNER:   I just have one more comment on




that .




          One of the reasons I am concerned is that there




is a __ there seems to be a tendency toward regulation




which seems to be occurring to almost go towards an anti-




septic approach to this whole thing, and I am afraid if




things come down from just strictly a national Level,




that we will just sort of end up sort of burying




everything and getting rid of it and, you know, not




take into account some of the, you know, site localities,




special things that may occur on a much smaller level




so that that was why I was addressing that.




          MR. HICKMAN:  I made the point earlier about




the fact that, in writing the criteria, we want to  try to




be as flexible and broad as possible to allow states and




local government to take into consideration local con-




ditions that there is no way that we can do on some kind




of a broad national basis.   Common  sense has got to




prevail sometime, and we hope that we will try to do that.




          (Laughter.)




          You don't believe that the feds can exercise




common sense, do you?

-------
          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?




          MR. SANJOUR.  Let me just comment on that




comment .




          As you recall, I asked the gentleman from




Chevron whether they are growing crops on their land




farms.




          FROM THE FLOOR:  I can't hear you.




          MR. SANJOUR:  You recall that I asked the




gent.leman from Chevron whether they are growing crops on




their land farms, and he said no.   There is a little




method in why I asked that question.   The  advocates of




sewage sludge seem to be saying that, if they are growing




crops,  they are doing something beneficial  and, therefore,




should not be a disposal.




          Now, if the Chevron was to grow crops on its




farms,  does that also exempt it from the provisions of




the Act?   That's also the other side of the coin.




          MR. C. THOMAS WILLIAMS (Engineering Sciences):




A comment on your comment.




          We are presently under contract to treat




approximately 40 acres of artichoke and lettuce land down




in Monterey with treated sanitary effluent.   Would you

-------
                                                      214
consider that an open dump since it's not a sanitary




landfill?




          If the pilot project is successful, it would




have rather broad implications, both for the Monterey




area and other areas for the use of treated sanitary




effluent on agricultural croplands for human consumption.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Hey, you don't know that that's




not a sanitary landfill.   Now, if that's effluent, you




know, if that's just straight sewage, that's a different




issue.   That's got to be covered under FWPCA.




          You remember I started out the discussion on




land disposal problems to stop making every sanitary




landfill as a compacted municipal solid waste site with




daily cover.   It is now an acceptable environmental




method of disposal of solid waste which, by definition,




now is a solid or a liquid.




          MR. WILLIAMS:   So it would be a controlled




landfill?




          MR. HICKMAN:  No.  I don't know what  it  would




be.  But it might, indeed,  be  a sanitary landfill  if  Lt




met the  criteria.




          MR. SANJOUR:  The issue  is this:   Should we

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                          a
exempt utilization of sludfe --


          MR. WILLIAMS:  Or treated sanitary sludge.


          MR. SANJOUR:  -- period, or should we regulate


or define what is adequate and inadequate utilization.


That's the issue.


          MR. WILLIAMS:  That's right.


          MR. SANJOUR:   We can include sludge utiliza-


tion in the definition of disposal and define what  is


environmentally sound and unsound utilization.  All  right?


That's one road.


          The other road is to completely exempt  the


utilization and not even consider it under  this Act.


That's the other road.


          Now, I pointed out  that, if you were to go  the


second road, that would bring in certain illogical


inconsistencies, such that people who are land farming


wastes would have to be considered as a waste disposal;


but if they grow something on it and people eat those


crops, then they are exempt from the law.


          That's the kind of  dichotomy that first road


brings about.


          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?  Other questions  or

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                                                       21G
comments?   Yes?




          MR.  GARRETT DE BELL (Yosemite Park ana Curry




Company):   We operate the prime concession in Yosemite,




and we are very happy to see the direction of this Act




furthering the direction of resource recovery and




recycling.




          Over the past couple of years, we have operated




a recycling program aimed at recycling the different




types of solid wastes.   We have been extremely pleased




with our relationship with the Environmental Protection




Agency.




          Over the past year, as we implemented a pilot




beverage container deposit program which upped the return




rate of  the beverage containers from about four percent ,




which it was the year we had a voluntary recycling program,




to approximately 70 percent after we put the nickel




deposit  on it.   And we haven't found anybody who didn't




believe  in recycling, but the nickel incentive talked a




large number of believers into practitioners, which we




were very happy to see.




          We feel that this may have broader applications




as the Act stipulates in that some sorts  of economic

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incentives of one sort or another will be very helpful in




getting people to move from the more old fashioned,




less environmentally sound means of waste disposal into




the future of recycling or other means of resource recoverj




          For instance, we have some energy recovery in a




fairly strange system where our solid wastes in our




larger restaurants go down the garbage disposal, down the




sewer into the sewage treatment plant, then ups the




BTU content of the sludge, reducing the amount of  fossil




fuel they need to incinerate the sludge.




          And we feel that this is the kind of thing that




needs to be looked at very much case-by—case because




that happens to be a beneficial situation in our case,




and in many other cases  it would not be beneficial.




          And there is a very  important need to tailor




these things to the particular circumstances.




          One thing we think would be interesting  to




businesses that are considering going this way  is  that,




in spite of the various  labor  costs and handling costs




and a modest amount of capital equipment, that  this




system, subsidized in part by  the  salvage value of the




materials, is coming  extremely close  to being  a break-even

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                                                       o-' n
                                                       /,.i_O
operation, and we intend to continue extending it until




we virtually eliminate the waste stream.   We anticipate




we can do this at very close to a break-even operation




throughout.




          In the same spirit of the Garden States




Company, we would be happy to have representatives of




EPA continue to wprk with us or try out ideas or experi-




ments that are appropriate to our operation with us.   And




we would be happy to invite people from industries that




operate retail or hotel or similar type facilities come




take a look.  We would be happy to show them how it  works




with a very low technology—type approach  to recycling




sol id wastes.




          Thank you.




          MR. HUMBER:  Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Thank you.




          Any other  questions or comments on the resource




recovery?  Yes, sir?




          MR. GEORGE OSOSKE  (United States Brewers




Association):   I just would like to make a comment




relative  to the message  that the last  speaker  gave




concerning Yosemite  on the matter of return  of  containers.

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                                                       <"v n
                                                       >-_*. J
          As we should realize, Yosemite Park  is  a




concentrated area with almost a monopolistic situation




where the stores and all are controlled by the Curry




Company.




          Our industry is deeply concerned about




recycling, and our industry, of course, is doing  a  con-




siderable amount of work in recycling.   But I just feel




that we cannot actually accept a captured tourist group




based upon a deposit system that would stand up as  a, let




us say, image of what other industries, or rather what




other communities should do.




          I think that it would be very difficult to




induce that type of a system in large cities and  large




communit ies.




          There are other answers that are available  and




I think could be used.




          But Yosemite, in the controlled area, was




responsible for 70 percent, as they say, of a  return  of




the containers, now, it should have been a hundred  percent




in a controlled area.




          Now, we must remember, too, that the individual




consumer  would be paying, for example, on a six-pack  of

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                                                       220
beer,  $1.85 compared with Los Angeles and San Francisco




of $1.55.    But the Yosemite pack would be plus 30 cents




on a deposit.




          And you must also consider that there were




30 percent of the people who did not reclaim their




deposit and that deposit, of course, was captured by




the Curry Company operating the facility there.




          Thank you very much.




          MR.  HUMBER:  Of all the comments today, I think




the US Brewers' comment  is unique, and it's telling us




why we can't do something.  And fortunately most of the




people in resource recovery are trying to figure out ways




to achieve recovery and  reuse.   And, unfortunately, you




are telling us why we can't.




          I guess I disagree with your philosophy.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes?




          MR. DE BELL:   Obviously, the beverage container




issue is a very serious  one and -needs to be debated and




discussed in public forums before a decision is made.




          Our situation  is, of course, unique, as every




situation is unique.




          People have brought up  the  fact that we have  a

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controlled situation where we operate all of the stores,




which isn't exactly true, but it's fairly close to true.




We feel that this further proves -- or not this, but the




fact that we are in a Rational jDark with a visiting




population -- The average person stayed there two and a




half days, and over that time period, had to learn about




the deposits and decided to participate in it.    This,




we feel, made it a particularly stringent test,  and still




we achieved a 70 percent return  rate, which  is  comparable




to spates which have a more stable population.




          Part of our population is controlled  in the




sense they live there all the time.   We have checked the




return rate in our employee dining facilities,  for




instance, and it does range very close to a  hundred




percent,  which shows, I  think, that it's easier to




operate a beverage container  thing with a stable




population than a visiting  population.




          But, again, these are  issues that  neither  I nor




anybody in this room can dictate the  answer  to.  They




need to be discussed and debated in public  forums.   And




we thought that experiments  in this would  help  to




determine the viability  of  the program.

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                                                       ooo
          The public acceptance by the park visitor was




extremely high.   The most frequent comment we heard all




Summer was,  "This is great.   They should do it every




place."




          We generated a spinoff economic industry in




Yosemite.  The people who used to panhandle in previous




years decided that their economic return on their labor




was higher if they went out scavenging containers and




picking up papers.  The phenomenon of panhandling was




virtually eliminated.




          These are just the factors as I perceive them




in this case.   The argument to the -- to the point that,




if people had a choice, they would go to the store across




the street,  that's nothing we can comment on in great




detail, but we do have one case in the Wawona area where




there are two stores about a mile apart.




          A store operated by Jane Nester and the Wawona




Pines market, which is about a mile down the road.   Jane




Nester did not notice any drop in sales or preference of




people going to the other store.   She indicated to me




that maybe three percent of the people had some sort of  an




adverse reaction to the program, but a similar number of

-------
people, mainly local residents from the Wawona area,




which is a private in-holding within the park, pre-




ferentially shopped at her store because they felt this




was a good environmental program and they wan-ted to




participate in it.




          If there are other further questions, I would




be happy to entertain them.




          Again, the issue will be different  in different




places.   But the aluminum can versus returnable bottles




with regard to relative merit does have some  geographic




meritability, and I think these need to be  further dis-




cussed as decisions are being made.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes, sir?   The gentleman




in the back.




          MR. ED DUNN (Haight-Ashbury Recycling Center,




San Francisco):   I happened to see today on  the Morning




Show describing the success of your program in Yosemite.




And at the tail end of the program, it said something




that the government was going to extend this  program to




all their installations, J_ederal buildings  and Army




bases and Naval bases.




          Is that true?

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          MR. DE BELL:  Let the EPA comment on that.


          MR. HUMBER:  I can comment on that.

                                                O
          That is correct.    All beverages sold /n federal


facilities will, as of a certain implementation date,


within roughly a year, contain deposits.  And, in addition,


the Park Service, because of the success in Yosemite, has


decided that by April 1st,  all of the Park Service


activities throughout the country will have -- require


deposits on beverage containers.


          And this is something they did independently  of


the guidelines to some extent.


          MR. DE BELL:  One other thing.   Just with  a


room full of environmentally aware people, I would  just


like to see the hands raised of all those people who


would participate in recycling stuff in their own house-


holds .


          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes.   Other questions  or


comments on  recycling?


          We will move on to the last section of the


Act, and this is on  sj;ate program development, by Lanny


Hickman again.   He's also going to talk  about money,  so


this ought to keep your  interest.

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          Lanny?




          (Slide No. 1.)




          MR. HICKMAN:  RCRA provides a variety  of




technical and financial assistance programs  to help jrtate




and local government develop and implement comprehensive




solid waste management plans.




          Subtitle C, which  is the hazardous  waste pro-




vision; Subtitle D, which are the _state and  local program




development provisions of the law, are designed  to provide




a mechanism for the states to assume  the  dominant role  in




assuring prosper solid waste  management, to pass  down  to




the sjtate government the sort of tools and financial




capabilities to take on a comprehensive resource conserva-




tion, land disposal and hazardous waste regulatory pro-




gram.




          And then FCRA provides, through a  variety  of




mechanisms, ways for local government to  meet the planning




and implementation needs that RCRA asks of them.




          In order to get this underway,  there are certain




things that EPA must do, and then there are  certain  things




that state government is invited to  do.




          State government doesn't have to play  under the

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law.    There is no mandate that the state doe^ a thing.




There is no mandate that the local government does a




thing.   They can walk right away from the law and not do




a thing about it.




          We have to issue within six months of the




enactment of the law, which will be April of this year,




April '77, guidelines for how regional areas for -- solid




waste management areas will be established, and then




state government must take those guidelines and, in




concert with local government, come to some decision  on




how they are going to share the planning responsibilities




and what will constitute a regional solid waste planning




area .




          Within 18 months of the enactment of  the law,




which will be April  '78, we are to issue guidelines for




what  is ajstate solid waste management program.




          Now, this  is similar to what is required under




Subtitle D, of course, for hazardous wastes.   These  two




combined will define in clear terms what the federal




government considers to be acceptable  for a state —




comprehensive state  solid waste management program.




           (Slide No. 2.)

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          Then the law goes on to require certain things




as minimum requirements for an acceptable state program.




And one of the first things that the jstate government must




do, must get together with local elected officials  and




determine the relative roles and responsibilities for




each level of government for purposes of developing  and




implementing a_s_tate plan.




          Now, the law does not say what constitutes an




agreement between state and local elected officials.   And




this is going to be a very interesting  area  as  time  moves




on here as to how state government and  local  government




will come together and agree on how state solid waste




plans will be developed and implemented.




          Now, this implies, of course, that  a jstate plan




necessarily must not be done by a^srtate.   It could  be




done in cooperation, part of it done by local government




and part of it done by thejstate government.    There is




nothing that demands that all planning  for the  state be




done by the state.




          The plan must include mechanisms for  the  closing




or conversion of all open dumps and  for the  establishment




of only sanitary landfills in the future.

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           The plan must provide a regulatory authority




 program which would allow for the open dump and sanitary




 landfill provisions to be met.




           Nick mentioned earlier about the elimination of




 any  contractual constraints that would prohibit long-term




 contractual arrangements between local government and




 resource recovery facilities for the provision of solid




 waste to that facility.   Although this may not exist in




 California, there are states that the srtate legislator --




__s.tate legislators and permissive legislation of_s_tate




 government prohibits cities from entering into contracts




 beyond five years.




           This, of course,  is very prohibitive when you




 are  starting to finance a large-scale capital iacility




 that would take 20 to 30 years to pay off over some sort




 of  a financing program.    And if you can't guarantee a




 waste stream to that facility, there is just --- it is just




 not  going to get financing.




           And, last, the law says that the s_tate plans




 shall provide that all solid waste that is not covered




 under the hazardous waste provisions shall either go




 through some mechanism for resource recovery, resource

-------
conservation, or shall go to sanitary landfills.




          Okay.   There is a financial assistance  pro-




vision to the state and local governments  for  purposes  of




developing and implement ing _state plans.   Section  3011,




which Bill has already mentioned, provides for financial




assistance to develop state hazardous waste programs.   And




there is $25 m.illion authorized in  each  of the fiscal




years 78 and 79.




          Now, the Xederal fiscal year starts  October  1




each year, and so we are  in Fiscal  Year  78 --  Fiscal




Year 77.   Fiscal Year 78 starts  this coming October.




So there is  no money yet  authorized within the law for




this fiscal  year's  activities under these  authorities.




          (Slide No. 3. )




          Section 4008(a)(l)  provides  financial assistance




for the development  and  implementation  of  _s_tate plans.




It authorizes  $30 million  in  Fiscal Year 78 and




$40 million  in  Fiscal Year  79.    And this  money goes




to J3,tates for _state  and  local use for  the  development  and




implementation  of the s_tate  plan  on a  population formula




basis,  strictly  a very  formulized basis  based on the




1970 census  of  population.

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          (Slide No. 4.)




          Section 4008(a)(2) Nick has already discussed




to some degree.  That provides for implementation of solid




waste management programs.   This is for assistance to do




planning and feasibility studies, plan feasibility




studies beyond the original planning, bridge the gap,




consultation, surveys, technology assessment.   This is




to local and state governments.   It has to meet the land




disposal requirements in the guidelines issued by EPA, so




there are certain restrictions to the guarantees of this




money.




          It is not on a. formula basis.  It is on a need




basis and a. negotiated basis.




          And there is $15 million authorized in each of




the Fiscal Years  78 and  79.




          (Slide No. 5.)




          Section 4008(e) is a real  strange little section




of the law that authorizes special community grants,




two-and-a-half million dollars each  year,  '78 and  '79,




for communities who have populations of less than 25,000;




75 percent of their solid waste  comes in from outside




their boundaries and  serious environmental  problems  that

-------
they can't deal with.




          This is a no-formula grant, also.   It's




obviously a special -- It was written especially for some




Congressional district that we don't know about.




          And -- Well, you know, I talked to the




Congressman's administrative aide that put this in, and




I told him that, "Gee, you know, there is not any money




in the '78 budget for this."




          And he got very excited that the pork barrel




wasn't being filled.




          (Slide No. 6.)




          Rural community assistance.   This is money to




go to rural communities, which are basically community




populations of 5,000 or less, or a county population of




10,000 or less, or that have less than 20 persons per




square mile.




          And there is another little twist in this about




the economic income level can't exceed 125 percent of the




poverty level established by someone, and we don't quite




know how all this goes together to formulize the money




out, but it goes to grants, it goes tojstates to assist




these rural communities.   And there is $25 million

-------
authorized in each of the Fiscal Years  78 and '79.   And




this is to assist rural communities to meet the open




dumping restrictions of RCRA; any demands that the Clean




Air Act would have,  which is basically the elimination of




open burning, any demands from FWPCA where open dumps




may be causing water pollution problems, and only  if there




is no regional system available that they could get into




or none in the planning stages, and it could go up to




75 percent of the cost, but you can't buy land with the




money.




          And those are the limitations on that authoriza-




t ion .




          Okay.   -If you add all these numbers up, you




say how much do they really authorize for Fiscal Year  78




in all different aspects of the law.   And if you  include




the general  authorizations as well as the financial




assistance programs, the state and local government and




the demonstration grant authorities, they authorize for




Fiscal Year  78 $181.25 million.    That's FY 78




authorization, and  it goes up a little bit in  '79.




          Now, the  law has some wording  in there  that




money cannot be funded for purposes of  implementation  of

-------
state and local programs.   That money cannot be used for




salaries after December 1, 1979.   So it would imply that




the Congress intended for a lot of this money to stop




very early.




          And we have gotten a lot of feedback from




people that say, "Well, I'm not going' to get involved in




a program.   It's just like so many jfederal programs.  You




get us started, and then you cut the cord before we have




had a chance to stand on our own feet."




          And there is an interesting article prepared by




Senator Randolph that addresses this particular issue,




and he states in that article that it is not the intent of




Congress to let everybody sit around waiting for the other




shoe to drop; that they intend to do something with this




provision, but it was -- it was an expedience at the




time to make sure that the Taw did not get vetoed, because




there was strong resistance to this law on the part of




the past administration, strong resistance toward con-




tinuing financial assistance programs that never stopped.




          There is some rationale over a period of time




trying to wean away so that you are not depending on the




federal dollar and the whims of the federal bureaucrats,

-------
                                                        2G4
  so that provision will probably  be  modified.




           We are already thinking about  the  next  year's




  amendments to the law, and  it's  just been  passed  almost




  six months.




           That covers the financial assistance programs




  and the^jstate and local program  development.   [  will be




  happy to entertain questions about any of  the provisions




  or how they  should apply,  anything about the budget or




  any other aspects you have an interest in  talking about.




           CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes.    Questions or




 comments? Yes,  sir?




           MR.  L.  HOLGREN  (Mendocino  County):  Ii  this




jstate,  there's  been  quite  a push in  recent years,  which I




 am sure you  are  familiar  with,  to get  rid of open and




 burning dumps,  and  yet the  funding in  the provisions for




 rural  communities  are for  getting rid  of  open damps, so




 it looks  to me  like  it's  about  three years late.




           And I'm wondering  if  there is  any provision




 made for  how that could be  stretched to  say we  are still




 having  problems because three years  ago,  we got  rid  of  an




 open dump.   Do we still have any line on some  of  the




 funding?

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          MR.  HICKMAN:  Well, you have to recognize the




law wasn't written just for California.   A lot of you




folks might not think that problem exists, but there is




a lot of places that are still open dumping.




          MR.  HOLGREN:  You misunderstand.   Because we




were three years ahead of the rest of the country, you




are then spending the money on the rest of the country




and not here.




          MR.  HICKMAN:  Well, you will get your share of




it on a formula basis, because it is based on population.




And the state, in concert with local government, will be




able to make judgments on how that money can best be




spent.




          It may be that there are still communities here




in California that do have land disposal problems, rural




communities that would still qualify for assistance.




          And, of course, there may be a tendency to try




to help some of these rural communities move toward a more




regionalized basis, helped by this assistance.




          You are going to get your share based on a




formula, if any is appropriated.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes, ma'am?

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          MS. YVONNE SAN JULE (Association of Bay Area




Governments):  I am representing the Association of Bay




Area Governments, a comprehensive regional planning agency




that has been planning for solid waste management for the




Bay Area under HUD 701 and comprehensive planning certifi-




cation and under Clean Water Act 208 designation.




          I want to thank you for the opportunity to make




some suggestions about modifying the draft guidelines for




implementation of Public Law 94-580, specifically to




suggest that the guidelines for identification of regions




and of states arid regional agencies to carry out solid




waste management planning recognize and take advantage  of




the sstate-regional-local solid waste planning structures




that are already well established in some  states, as well




as the existing nationwide strong substate comprehensive




planning framework that's been fostered by the federal




government ever since 1962.




          Pursuant to legislation related  to  the




Department of Transportation, to the Department  of  Housing




and Urban Development, to the Clean Water  Act arid




administrative acts of the Office of Management  and




Budget, more than 44 states have designated  substate

-------
districts in consultation with local elected officials  in




order to identify one common set of uniform planning areas




for comprehensive planning, transportation planning and




water quality planning.




          There are more than 600 multifunctional agencies




which have been formed pursuant  to these acts,  and 90 per-




cent cf them have the governing  bodies consisting of a




majority of locally elected officials, which are in some




of the criteria that are cited in this act.




          To repeat the process  for purposes of this act,




except under most extraordinary  circumstances,  would be




redundant, time consuming and costly.    To repeat it in




states which have an established statutory state-regional-




local solid waste management planning and  implementation




structure would compound the duplication and inefficiency.




          ABAC recommends that the guidelines  for desig-




nation of regions and state and  regional solid  waste




planning agencies be flexible enough to provide for a




shortened and simplified designation process for regions




which have already been recognized under federal planning




programs and for state solid waste management  agencies




established by statute and for existing multifunctional

-------
regional planning agencies formed pursuant to federal




legislation.




          Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes, sir?




          MR. DAVID STORM (California Department of




Health, Hazardous Waste Management):   I guess this is




as good a point as any to make a prepared statement aboit




hazardous waste management.




          The California State Department of Health is




pleased that the federal government has enacted the




Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976, or RCRA.




This law will strengthen at least two aspects of our




present hazardous waste management program.




          First of all, resource recovery, indirectly




resource recovery and also our enforcement efforts.




California's Hazardous Waste Control Act, a  pioneering




piece  of state legislation enacted  in 1972,  places little




emphasis on  resource recovery, and  it establishes no




significant  penalties  for disobeying the  law.   The




requirements specified in RCRA have already  enabled the




Department to  initiate_state legislation  proposed to




correct these  deficiencies.

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          Under the authority of this legislation, the




Department of Health plans to assume leadership  in resource




recovery of hazardous wastes and to expand and vigorously




enforce its present statewide program.    Implementing thes<




plans will require the expenditure of considerable time




and manpower, and California is unable to provide the




total necessary funds.




          The Department is concerned that Congress will




not appropriate all of the funds authorized by RCRA to




start or upgrade jstate hazardous waste management programs




If these funds are not appropriated, Congress may be




compelled to establish a prohibitively expensive ongoing




national hazardous waste management program to carry out




the will of the people.




          And I would like to reiterate  also what was




said previously, that I think that many jstates ,  talking




with the persons from other states, that  other jrtates are




going to be very hesitant to get into this hazardous




waste control effort if there is any possibility that




funds may stop in 1979.    I think that  this has been one




of the greatest detriments or problems involved  in getting




state programs established is money.     I know that the

-------
California Hazardous Waste Act was passed, just barely




squeaked through in 1972, because there was a provision




put in that law that the program had to be self-supporting.




We had to support ourselves on fees.  Otherwise the progran




never would have flown, and I know that in other states




their program or the legislation has been in some cases




very restricted because the state governments have been




hesitant to start funding of rather very  ambitious and




expensive pollution, environmental protection programs.




          In regard to the enforcement provision, this  is




probably one of the most expensive aspects of s:ate




hazardous waste management control.   You need your




planners, you need your policy makers, but the program




simply won't exist unless you have field  people in the




field, either local and state, probably both, and regional




enforcing the regulations.   To put an inspector in the




field with the equipment and backup, travel, will cost




you as much as a high-pay planner or manager in the




on ice .




          So it does cost money, and the _s_tates are going




to need some kind of guarantee that they  are going to  have




the proper funding one way or the other past 1979.

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          MR.  HUMBER:   Okay.  I have a question for you.




          I have heard the comments several times that our




hazardous waste program does not have any provisions or




incentives or inclusion of resource recovery, and you are




saying -- I have heard it said that the California




program did not originally, either.




          Could you be specific on what changes are




proposed to the original legislation to include more on




recovery?




          MR.  STORM:  Well, first of all, as was stated by




Mr.  Sanjour, we believe that more stringent regulations,




No.  1, are going to encourage more recycling.   As dis-




posal is proper, environmentally sound, disposal becomes




required and more practiced, it's going to encourage the




industry to seek alternatives to very expensive land




disposal.  I think that's going to be one of the big




items right there.  That's the stick, so to speak.   The




carrot we are still working on.




          We would like to encourage and work with the




industry to inform them to  find alternatives to land




disposal, providing or working with other -- with industry,




maybe providing lists of recyclable wastes.  Perhaps one

-------
                                                       JM2
possibility,   again going back to the stick, is to, once




the waste has been -- a market for a hazardous waste has




been well proven and established, restrict, severely




restrict, if not prohibit, disposal of that was:e on the




land .




          MR. HUMBER:  Okay.   Thanks.




          MR. HICKMAN:  I want to make clear one thing




about  the financing.   The limitation on the December 31st,




'79, applies only to thos programs funded under Subtitle D,




which  is the state-local program development, not Subtitle




C, the hazardous waste program.   It's only those programs




funded under Subtitle D.




          I would also point out that, in the current




time,  in the FY 79 budget funds, there are  no funds




requested under Subtitle C, the  hazardous waste program.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Do we have any other




questions or comments on the last section before we get




to the general comment and discussion period?




          MR. DANIEL KLIPPER:    Could you clarify  your




last statement on the fact that  there are no funds  under




Section C and also give just an  overview on wh:.ch  funds




you expect to be appropriated rather  than  simp:.y authorize

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          MR. HICKMAN:  The current budget request you




can break into three categories.




          The first one is a $24.5 million budget  request,




which covers all the general authorizations  sections of




the law, demonstrations, technical assistance,  etc.,




etc.,  etc.




          Under Subtitle D, there is a budget  request of




$12 million, and that money will be to s_tate government




for -- and to local government  for the development and




implementation of the _sjtate solid waste plans,  which




will include all aspects of solid waste management, and




for the conduct of the inventory.




          And then there is designated $5 million  in the




208 budget,  which will be used  for solid waste  implemen-




tation, and basically to fund implementation grant fund




programs under Subtitle D, that  implementation  section of




the law.




          So you add $24.5 million and $12 million, and




another $5 million is $17 million, and it's  $41.5  million




will be available in  '78 under  the current budget  requests




for solid waste management from  the federal  government to




implement RCRA.   That's out of  $180 million  roughly.

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          Now,  that's up from the Ford budget some.  The




Ford budget was $5 million less than that.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Yes?   Any more questions on




program and development funds?




          MS. ANNE BELL (Cal-OSHA Reporter):  Does that




mean the balance of $180 million for Fiscal Year 78 is




for hazardous waste?




          MR. HICKMAN:  There is no balance.  That's all





there is.  There is no more.




          MS. BELL:  You mean there is no money allocated





for Subpart C?




          MR. HICKMAN:  That's  right.




          MS. BELL:  How peculiar.  Why  is  that?




          MR. HICKMAN:  That's  the way the  budget  came





out .




          MR. SANJOUR:  I  think we ought  to clarify what




numbers we are  talking  about  here.   What we  are  talking




about  is what the  administration  is  asking  Congress  for.




          MR. HICKMAN:  Right.




          MR, SANJOUR:   We  are not  talking about  what




Congress has voted upon.   This is  a  big distinction.




          MR. HICKMAN:  The  logic  prevails  that you

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develop the plans before you implement the programs.  Now,




within that $12 million, the current federal level of




support to state government for their programs is




$3 million.  That $3 million.is still in that twelve.




So that any program in theory that's receiving financial




assistance now at the state level now will receive no




less, but they will probably receive no more for purposes




of implementing more intensified hazardous waste programs




unless the Congress installs more money in the budget.




          MR.  SANJOUR:    In other words, the President




has not asked specifically for any funds for hazardous




wastes Congress may very well have its own opinion on




the subject since Congress originated this bill, not the




President, not the White House.




          This was a bill where the  initiative came




from Congress, not from the administration.   So that's




why the administration probably hasn't asked for much




money.  And I  think the place to influence the funding




of this bill is in Congress, not with the administration.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Any more on the funding?




          Well, this is the period for those that wish to




make prepared statements that have not already done  so to

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do so.    I would like to make a couple of announcements




before we start.




          One is a reminder that written statements can




be included in the record if they are received at our




office here in San Francisco by the 25th, two weeks from




today.




          And also the records of the transcript can be




received from headquarters, when they are available,




upon request.   There is an announcement back on the




table outside that gives the particulars, the individual




and the mailing address for this.




          Although we haven't announced  it before, we are




incorporating a mailing list for solid waste materials




and for notifications of various regulations, proposed




rulemaking, etc., of the Act.   Anyone that would like to




be on the mailing list for this can sign up at the




registration table before you leave.




          Now, we have some 15 cards here that indicated




a desire to speak, or possibly speak.  A number of these




have done so already.   We will run through the ones that




have not spoken yet, and then the ones that ha^e spoken




and see if they have any more to say, and then any others

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can be included.




          Mr. Bill Lewis, do you have any further comment?




          MR. LEWIS:  No, sir.  Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Thank you.




          Garrett De Bell, do you?




          MR. DE BELL:  No.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Michael Anderson  from




Santa Rosa Recycling.   Michael Anderson?




          J. 0. Prize, I believe it is,  from Watson




Energy Systems?   Prize?




          Keith McHouten from Occidental  Research?




          MR. MC HOUTEN:  No.   Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Richard Anthony  from




SCS Corporation?




          MR. ANTHONY:  Yes.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Mr.  Anthony?




          R. Burke  from California Manufacturing




Associat ion'




          Oh, Mr. Anthony.




          MR. RICHARD ANTHONY  (SCS Engineers):   I  really




don't have  a question or  anything.   I just  have  a  state-




ment .

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          I would just like to invite the people to come




here to San Luis Obispo on April 4th where you can witness




an implementation program in action in the field of




resource conservation.  It is the implementation of




Project Source, which is the separation of office and




residential trash.  It will be a source separation,




public participatory program where bottles, mixed metals,




mixed glass and newspaper will be put out on curb sides




for separate collection.




          The whole town is participating in it.   And




after five months of planning, we look forward to our




implementation date of April 4th, and it looks like it




will be a very successful program.




          Thank you.




          MR. HUMBER:   Yes, thanks for mentioning that.




I encourage people to take a look at it because it will




be unusual in that a lot of the source separation, at




least as I understand it, will be from apartments; is




that correct?




          MR. ANTHONY:  Multiunit dwellings.




          MR. HUMBER:  Right.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Daniel Klipper,  do  you  have

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anything further?




          MR. KLIPPER:  No.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  H. E. Knowlton  from Chevron?




          MR. KNOWLTON:  Nothing more.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Nothing more.




          Edward Sparks from Garden State?




          Gilbert Bendix from the San Francisco  Fire





Department?




          Nat Haseltine from Chevron?




          Yvonne San Jule from ABAC?




          David Storm has already spoken.




          Are there any people in the audience that would




like to make a statement that are not --




          Yes, sir?




          MR. JOHN LANGFORD (Mono County):  Yes,  I have  a




quest ion.




          Not too much has been said about  source




reduction.   It seems like this will minimize  a lot of




problems if we could minimize waste generators,  if we




can stop the wastes from being generated  before  they are




generated.    We don't  want to eliminate  that all together




because you will be out of a job.

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          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  No danger.




          MR.  HUMBER:    How do you suggest we compromise




that?




          MR.  LANGFORD:  One possible suggestion.   Manu-




facturers and corporations, that kind of thing,  indi-




viduals,  is it possible -- Maybe it's too much problem




involved -- that they be responsible for the waste they




eventually generate?   They would be responsible them-




selves for disposing of it.




          MR.  HUMBER:   I'm not sure why they should be




any more responsible than you and I are for the  waste we




generate.   That's an  idea, I suppose.




          MR.  LANGFORD:  I just wondered.




          MR.  HUMBER:   I'm not sure why they should be




more accountable than  you or I should be.




          But the general question about the waste




reduction aspects of the bill, we have  got current




activities implementing the __federal guidelines  for




beverage containers deposit systems.  And  I should add




that these are not just to encourage reuse, but  to also




encourage recycling.   And we see in Yosemite  that that's




quite a  possibility.   And  the Resource  Conservation

-------
                                                       251
Committee is  looking at other  approaches  for  waste




reduct ion.




          MR. LANGFORD:  The other  thing  I  was  thinking,




though, is a  lot of wastes  are  eventually  --  a  lot  of




wastes come from expensive  materials  and  that maybe they




wouldn't be — maybe that would encourage  producers to  be




a little more selective in  their methods -of manufacturing




and packaging and that sort of  thing.




          MR. HUMBER:  Yes, I  agree.   The  same would be




true for you  and me.




          Yes , sir?




          MR. WALTER CLARK  (Fresno  County):   Fresno County




along with the other seven  counties in California who




have gone through a two- or three-year period of developin




county plans  for solid waste management working in  conjunc




tion with the _s_tate, how does California's  program  fit




in the program that you have mentioned briefly?




          MR. HICKMAN:   Well, of course,  this question




comes up in any jrtate that's well into a  regional planning




mode or finishing up their  plans for  some,  you  know, for




the state and at the local  and  regional levels.




          The lady back in  the  back from ABAC made  a

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comment about the draft guidelines that we have to  issue




identifying regions for purposes of planning.   And our




intent, of course, is to make those guidelines flexible




enough so that we can utilize to the maximum possible




extent any planning that's been done in the past and is




underway now.




          We are not new in the solid waste planning




field ourselves.   The original act of 1965 provided




state planning grant assistance.   The 1970 amendments




included state planning grant assistance as well as




regional and local planning grant assistance, and we




don't want to go back and start all over again because




there is no reason to.




          We hope the way we write the guidelines and




with the state and local government coming to agreement  on




how they are going to do it, we will not duplicate  or




repeat anything.   We will take maximum possible




advantage of whatever is presently in place.   That's  our





desire and wish and intent.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL.  Yes, sir?




          MR. RODNEY LIND  (Edwards Air Force Base):  My




personal understanding of  the bill is that the s_tate

-------
requirements would be leveled on federal reservations.




My question is is this correct?




          MR. HICKMAN:  The law says that the Executive




Branch, which means the federal government Executive




Branch, will comply with all federal, _s_tate  and  local




regulations and standards, both substantively and  pro-




cedurally.  That's what it says.




          MR. LIND:  All right.   Has  your department




discussed this with the Department  of  Defense?




          MR. HICKMAN:   We have discussed it with all




the departments, not only DOD, and  there is  a lot  of




discussions and consternations about which standard or




regulation has precedent, you know,  in an area where,




let's  say, a _sj;ate regulation might be more  stringent




than a federal requirement, what are our guidelines,  or




vice versa, which  one applies.




          We don't know.   That's an area of real  strong




concern for us and the ^federal establishment and _state




government, too.   We are trying to work out all these




things so we can satisfy  the  intent of the  law.




          MR. LIND:   This will be  specifically  addressed





in the --

-------
          MR. H1CKMAN:  It will be addressed somewhere  in




some sort of a mechanism for us to state exactly how  it's




going to be done.   We just don't know yet.   We are  still




cogitating over it.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes, sir?




          MR. JAMES WITT (Pearl Harbor, Hawaii):   I work




for the Navy, but do not represent the Navy.




          I have a related question.  What  is the  appli-




cability of this Act to _federal facilities  located on




foreign soil, such as in Philippines and Japan, and also




for the Island of Midway?




          MR. HICKMAN:  Well, I can't remember  exactly




what's in the law.   Under the old law and  the  way we




wrote our guidelines, we excluded federal  installations




on foreign soil.   We figured that they should  comply with




whatever is going on over  there.




          Now, the law includes,  for purposes of planning




and implementation, as I mentioned earlier, 56  states




now.  It wil] apply in 56  states, and  I don't know where




Midway falls in that, if it's part of the  Marianas or the




trust territories or whatever it  is.




          MR. WITT:   It's  all by  itself.

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          MR.  HICKMAN:   If  it's  all  by  itself,  it  probably




 is  excluded  then.    I  don't  really  know then  where it




 would  fall.    Is  it  considered a trust,  commonwealth,  or




 how does  it  belong to  us?    Do we own  it?




          MR.  WITT:  It's a  military base.




          MR.  HICKMAN:   We  own it as what?    Just  a  piece




 of  real estate like  Yosemite?




          MR.  WITT:  It  is  a military  base  right in  the




 middle of the  ocean.




          MR.  HICKMAN:   Is  it like Yosemite Park?    It's




 owned by the federal government?




          MR.  WITT:  I would say so.




          MR.  SANJOUR:   Are  the  natives  citizens of  the




 United States?




          MR.  WITT:  There are no natives.




          MR.  HICKMAN:   I don't  know.    I am  going to




write that one down and  find out.   Thank you very much




 for bringing that to our attention.




          MR.  SANJOUR:   There is a nasty disposal problem




going on there.   We have gotten some anonymous letters




from some of the military personnel  living there sending




us pictures of all the bad disposal  practices that are

-------
going on at Midway.   Some people are concerned.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Yes, ma'am?




          MS. SANDRA MATHIAS (Southern California




Association of Governments):   I hate to beat a dead




horse, but I also want to urge that whatever guidelines,




regulations, that come out of this Act do not duplicate




any effort that's going on in the State of California,




and particularly the Southern California region since we.




too, have 208 designations, AQMP designations, 201




facility plants and related programs.




          And also I would like to say that usually at




meetings such as this, an elected official would be here




to give this presentation, but we are now in the midst of




holding our general assembly, and they regret they are




not able to be here to represent their areas.    But they




will be sending their comments the next couple of weeks.




And, of course, as the guidelines come out and the




regulations come out, we will be making comments also.




          Thank you.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:  Thank you.  We are looking




forward to receiving those.




          Any further comments?   Questions?

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                                                        f-'-J/
          MR. JAMES  CUTLER  (Contra  Costa  County);   I  would




just like to comment  a  little  differently,




          I'm speaking  for  myself now  as  an  individual,




but there are a  lot  of  designations.    The  regional




agencies have some prerogatives  in  solid  wastes,  local




government has others,  in the  State of  California.    Every




s_tate is mandated to  come up --  every  county  in  the  srtate




is mandated to come  up  with  its  own solid waste  management




program.   And in most  of the  counties  this has  now  been




completed and is undergoing  state review  and  they  have




set up enduring  institutions to  continue  that  on.




          And I  just  think  it  should be one of the things




considered when  guidelines  are formulated on  who's going  to




do the work.




          CHAIRMAN CHANNELL:   Any  other  statements?




          Well,   if there are no  other statements, then we




will adjourn the meeting now.  Thank you  for  coming.




          (Whereupon  the session concluded at  the hour of




11:43 o'clock a.m.)

-------
       STATE OF  CALIFORNIA       )
                                  o  ss.
City and County  of  San  Francisco )
          I, THOMAS  R.  WILSON, hereby certify  that  the

proceedings  in  the Public Discussion Sessions  on  Resource

Conservation and  Recovery Act, PL 94-580,  held by the

United States Environmental Protection Agency,  Region IX,

San Francisco,  California,  at the Holiday  Inn,  480  Sutter

Street, San  Francisco,  California, on March  10-11,  1977,

were taken down  in shorthand by me, a Certified Shorthand

Reporter and a  disinterested person, at  the  tiir.e  and place

therein stated,  and  that the proceedings were  thereafter

reduced to typewriting  under my supervision  and direction.

          I  further  certify that I am not  counsel or

attorney for either  or  any of the parties  to the  said

proceedings, nor  in  any way interested in  the  event of

this cause,  and  that I  am not related to any of the

parties thereto.

          IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto  set my hand

and affixed  my  seal  of  office this 15th  day  of March,

1977.
          OFHCIAL SEAL
  ^^ THOMAS R. WILSON
       H°™!" PUBLIC CALIFORNIA
         iriiiicir-AL OFFICI: IN
        SAN FnAHCIbCO COUNTY
 My Commission Expires February 28, 1978
NOTARY PUBLIC  in  and for the
City and County of  San Francisco,
State of California

-------
                     WEST  OCA/IN A
          1444 WEST GARVEY AVENUE • 9179O • AREA CODE 213 • 962-8631
     March 17,  1977
     Environmental Protection Agency
     Region 10 - Hazardous Materials Branch
     100  California Street
     San  Francisco, CA.  94111

     Attention:   Diane Clardy (A-3)

     Dear Ms.  Clardy:

     Within the last several weeks considerable discussion has
     evolved around the Resource Conservation Recovery Act of
     1976, Public Law No.  94-580.   In reviewing this law,  it is
     apparent to me that the attempt by the Environmental  Protection
     Agency is to control  the production as well as the disposal
     of hazardous and non-hazardous materials on a nation-wide
     basis.  As you know,  the State of California currently has
     laws in effect that require rather strict controls of these
     materials.

     The  City of West Covina contains within its jurisdictional
     boundaries, a 583-acre sanitary landfill that is eligible to
     receive all hazardous and non-hazardous waste, short  of radio-
     active materials.  This landfill has been in existence in
     this city for better  than 14  years.  Within the last  couple
     of years, a considerable amount of revision to the conditions
     of operation have been made.   In 1976 the latest conditions
     were approved by the  City Council.  Attached please find a
    *copy of these conditions.

     In the implementation of the conditions we have had a consid-
     erable amount of cooperation from the operator of the landfill,
     who  has demonstrated  a willingness to work with us to provide
     a necessary disposal  site and, at the same time, address the
     concerns of the surrounding residents.

     While many of the conditions may be home-grown and not of a
     technical nature, they have worked for the City of West Covina
     and  we envision that  they will continue to work to address
     the  concerns of the residents of West Covina.  It would seem
     to me that if a landfill of a similar site and circumstance
  I  *Resolution  No.  5245—A resolution of the  City Council of the  City
 /  of  West  Covina  amending unclassified use permit no.  71,  revision 5
/   (Amendment)  .(B.K.K. Company)  (as  adopted by  City Council  Resolutions
 I   No. 4914  5040 and 5P111  Anyone  desiring  copy of resolution should
 I   obtain from  City or West'Covina.   Resolution submitted to.aDECOpriate
/   EPA-OSW  office  responsible  for preparing criteria tor sanresty
1	landfills.

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EPA
                          -2-
                                              March 17, 1977
had similar conditions applied to it, that such a landfill
could co-exist with surrounding users.   I offer this list of
conditions for your consideration and if you have any questions
or desire further information, please feel free to contact me.

                                 Very truly yours,
MLM:lb
Encl.
                                 Michael L. Miller
                                 Public Service Director

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                Southern California Edison Company

                           P 0 BOX 800
                      2244 WALNUT GROVE AVENUE
                      ROSEMEAD CALIFORNIA 91770

                        March  25,  1977


Environmental Protection Agency, Region IX
Hazardous Materials Branch
100 California  Street
San Francisco,  California  94111

Attention:  Diane Clardy  (A-3)

Gentlemen:

Subject:  PL94-580, Resource Conservation and
          Recovery Act
The public discussion sessions held in San Francisco on March 10
and 11, 1977, were for the purpose of explaining the provisions
of the Act and to obtain public response prior to the formula-
tion and adoption of guidelines and regulations.  Although a
member of my staff was in attendance, we did not make any pre-
sentation or submit any written statement at that time.

We would now like to submit our views on land farming.  Land
farming practices, i.e., aerobic biodegradation of oily waste
and municipal sludge with crop uptake, are methods of disposing
of waste that have been practiced and found to be technologically
and environmentally safe.  These kinds of practices can then be
defined to have a beneficial use, i.e., in terms of the conser-
vation of available sanitary landfill capacity.  The present
definition of disposal is too restrictive.  It calls for sani-
tary landfill disposal or the classification of the facility
as a landfill; needlessly subjecting it to the permits and
regulations of a hazardous waste program.

Defining land farming practices as a beneficial use  also pro-
vides a means to implement the Act's objectives relating to
the national research and development program for improved
solid waste management techniques and environmentally safe
disposal of nonrecoverable residues.  Through this program,
other hazardous wastes found to be biodegradable through land
farming practices can be implemented, eliminating disposal at
landfill sites.   Land farming and the defined beneficial use
should, however, be done on a not-too-restrictive basis.  That
is, it should be based on natural or even chemically stimulated
degradation of the hazardous waste and not entirely on whether
crops are grown on the facility.

-------
                              -2-
Hopefully,  general guidelines can be developed for each kind
of land farming practice.  These guidelines should encourage
and implement the technique while making it technologically
and environmentally safe.

In summary, it is hoped that the guidelines and regulations
being promulgated by the EPA will not preclude existing and
future land farming practices from utilizing this natural
treatment process.

We appreciate the opportunity to express our views prior to
the promulgation of the guidelines and regulations.

                                   Sincerely yours,
                                   E. W. Schultz

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               ASSOCIATION OF BAY AREA GOVERNMENTS
                       STATEMENT TO THE
                ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
                  PUBLIC DISCUSSION SESSION
             RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT
                         March 11, 1977

Thank you for the opportunity to suggest modification of the draft guide
lines for implementation of Public Law 94-580.   Specifically, we suggest
that the guidelines for identification of regions and of state and regional
agencies to carry out solid waste management planning recognize and take
advantage of the state-regional-local  solid waste planning structures that
are already well established in some states, as well  as the existing nation-
wide strong substate comprehensive planning framework that has been fostered
by the Federal  government since 1962.
     o  The Federal Highway Act of 1962 required, and provided funds for,
        comprehensive regional  planning as the  basis  for distributing Feder-
        al  grants for transportation planning.
        This legislation was followed by:
     o  HUD legislation providing "701" grants  for comprehensive regional
        planning.   Solid waste  and resource recovery  planning are eligible
        programs for "701" funds.
     o  Office  of Management and Budget Circular A-95 designating compre-
        hensive planning agencies to review, for consistency with regional
        planning,  applications  for Federal assistance under more than 250
        categorical grant programs.
     o  The Federal Water Pollution  Control Act amendments of 1972 (s 208),
        providing funds for regional water quality planning.  In this act,

-------
        the required wastewater management plans must include controls to
        be established for the disposition of residual  wastes that could
        affect water quality, and controls for the disposal  of pollutants
        on land or in subsurface excavations to protect ground and surface
        water quality.  The act defines "wastes" broadly to  include "all
        solid, liquid and sludge substances from man's  activities  in the
        urban, agricultural, mining and industrial environments remaining
        after collection and necessary treatment."  The end  product of
        each of these s 208 planning processes will be  a regional  plan and
        a recommended implementing agency (or agencies).

Pursuant to these Federal legislative and administrative actions,  more than
44 states have designated substate districts, in consultation with local
elected officials, to identify one set of common and uniform planning areas
for comprehensive planning, A-95 review, transportation and  water  quality
planning.  More than 600 multifunctional agencies have  been  formed, 90%
of them having governing bodies consisting of a majority of  local  elected
officials.
Existing 208 agencies and comprehensive planning agencies receiving HUD "701"
funds, whose governing bodies have a majority of elected officials, already
have met the requirements of RCRA for consultation with local elected offici-
als and the composition of the qoverninq body.   Further, RCRA clearly states
that existing s208 aqencies should be considered for designation where feasible.
When such s208 aqencies are also 701  comprehensive planninq  aqencies and are
doing solid waste planninq under either or both federal  programs,  to repeat
the designation process for the purposes of this act, exdept under the most
extraordinary circumstances, would be redundant, time-consuminq and costly.
To repeat it in states which have an established statutory state -regional-

-------
local solid waste management planninq and implerentation structure would com-
pound the duplication and inefficiency.
ABAG recommends that the guidelines for designation of regions and regional
solid waste planning agencies be flexible enough to provide for a shortened
and simplified designation process for regions which have already been recog-
nized under Federal planning programs and for existina multifunctional re-
gional planning agencies formed pursuant to Federal legislation.
Some states have already designated agencies for statewide solid waste manage-
ment planninq and implementation.   Others have identified state agencies to
be responsible for hazardous waste management.  California has had a state
solid waste management agency responsible for a state-local  solid waste manage-
ment structure and process since ennabling legislation was enacted in 1972.
Starting in 1972, a series of bills authorized the State Department of Health
to regulate hazardous waste management operations throughout the state.
ABAG recommends that the RCRA guidelines recognize established state solid
waste and hazardous waste management agencies and processes, by providing for
shortened and simplified designation and funding procedures in states which
have already assumed responsibility for waste management and resource recovery.

-------
                                                   ALTERNATIVE
                                                   ENERGY
                                                   COMPANY
                                                   P.O. BOX 2231- SAN LEANDRO
                                                   CALIFORNIA 94577
                                            "anb 23, V)T
-'nvircn!, -T. tal Protsctixi A-,,/>  H=ji3n IX
H:i3cT'J o'io ;ViH torials -rario i
100 T-tlif'jrni-i Str >•:••;
S-.:\ JY--mi-no, 7.\ r'-1111
SsfTrrir.; tu th? I Larch 10 anl 11 Dlaoussion S^ss.Lon on Vv- T -•;;o>i;-.;o
Oona-nrvation & R^uov^ry lot of 1976. (Public Low 9-1-530),  sp^\fio«ill;'
r.!fjrriii,i to "Special Studies: Pln.ns for ?i33-e-),rch, Dov?l^^r.ent and
Dfirior.strstiors" 3->o. 3002,  Iton (',.) TIX3S .

itta'sh^d is a triof outline cf t'l'- protloin, findings, jotsn^iila and
aolutiono to t,li-» v-nt source 01 ^n^rjy and ra',r ii.it^riilT ii "JT3^ mi\TD
                          •11

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                   ALTERNATIVE ENERGY PROGRAM
THE PROGRAM'S PURPOSE:
          TO UTILIZE THE VAST SOURCE OF ENERGY MOW BEING DISSIPATED,
          OR IGNORED, THAT IS AVAILABLE IN THE HUGE SUPPLY OF USED
          AND DISCARDED TIRE CARCASSES.
THE PROGRAM SUPPLIES:
          ENERGY FOR PRODUCING ELECTRICITY, HEATING, POWER and
          ULTIMATELY THE RECLAMATION OF RAM MATERIALS IN THE
          FORM OF CARBON BLACK, OIL  and STEEL.
THE PROGRAM'S BUSINESS:
          ACCUMULATING,  STORING, SUPPLYING AND SHIPPING CHUNKED
          RUBBER TIRES TO CONVERSION PLANTS.
THE PROGRAM:
          UTILIZES A VAST SOURCE OF (DISCARDED)  ENERGY.   AIDS
          ENVIRONMENTAL PROGRAMS.  CREATES EMPLOYMENT.
                            REMEMBER
     MAN IS THE ONLY DISSIPATOR OF THE EARTH'S NATURAL RESOURCES.
                     DISCARDED TIRES ARE PRODUCED
                                from
                           NATURAL RESOURCES

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  -  •>  . ,  -^ntinuins COUM? <.,•" ~cr. p^-'i -"..vv»r  r,jT  ,., .-.j-^-/  -•"•  -  '-
  •.  ,,  -  -.1!   As  we havi sshovM  ir.  tho potei: v,idl ar.^  "o:.p-.iri. en j..A;p
  ,j j   ^'"':  >:'.<.  tii^riSi  en's  ^.o inn o _  •jc***^'1  1^,0  AT  w'• :\'^ r •'.'    -  ^ '^ '
                  TH3  H?iTia^ pRooaa:  is BAS^D  C.K •"tK'cn  ".'AST^D

                  AOT  DI3CAR33:3 IJAT^RHLS  ATrD  CCrTV33TTNG THIS

                  '.VAST1! INTO A TJNTP03U, ^AL?A^LT F^?rTTC'".

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                                                                 '  I       '  I f
               STATEMENT BY:  Edward P. Sparks,                     /  L. ,:i
             Director of Procurement & Logistics                        "'* //
              Garden State Paper Company, Inc.

                      Presented at:
          Environmental Protection Agency Public Meeting
               To Discuss Resource Conservation and
                    Recovery Act P.L. 94-580

              San Francisco, California at Holiday Inn

                           March 11, 1977
My name is Edward Sparks.  I am the Director of Procurement &
Logistics for the Garden State Paper Company, the world's largest
consumer of used newspaper for recycling into fresh newsprint.
My company consumes more than 500,000 tons of old newspaper each
year.

A substantial portion of this supply comes to us through contracts
with over 40 municipalities having source separation programs to
recover this valuable resource.

I am also a member of the Executive Committee concerned with Pa-
per Stock Conservation of the American Paper Institute.  This
group represents recycling and converting mills, which consume
almost fourteen million tons of waste paper annually.

Garden State's fifteen years in the recovery and recycling of
waste paper on both a national and international basis has given
us a hands-on knowledge and experience of the do's and don'ts and
pitfalls of Resource Recovery.  We feel it important for the En-
vironmental Protection Agency to draw on the experiences and ex-
pertise of companies such as Garden State and associations such
as the American Paper Institute to achieve a successful implemen-
tation of this act.

While we are not looking for a position on your non-panel, I am
here to offer the assistance and experience of both the Garden
State Paper Company and the P^-per Stock Conservation Committee of
the American Paper Institute to The Environmental Protection
Agency; and specifically, District 9 in the implementation of the
Resource Conservation & Recovery Act of 1976.

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    STATEMENT AT RCRA PUBLIC DISCUSSION MEETING
                   MARCH 11, 1977                 	,(;()
THE CALIFORNIA STATE DEPARTMENT CF HEALTH (DOH)' IS PLEASE!)"  'x
THAT THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS ENACTED THE RESOLE  '  'i''H''?'
CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT OF 1976 (RCRA).  THIS LAW
WILL STRENGTHEN AT LEAST TWO ASPECTS OF OUR STATE'S
PRESENT HAZARDOUS HASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM:  RESOURCE
RECOVERY AND ENFORCEMENT.  CALIFORNIA'S HAZARDOUS WASTE
CONTROL ACT, A PIONEERING PIECE OF STATE LEGISLATION
ENACTED IN 1972, PLACES LITTLE EMPHASIS ON RESOURCE
RECOVERY, AND ESTABLISHES NO SIGNIFICANT PENALTIES FOR
DISOBEYING THE LAW.

THE REQUIREMENTS SPECIFIED IN RCRA HAVE ALREADY ENABLED
THE DEPARTMENT TO INITIATE STATE LEGISLATION PROPOSED TO
CORRECT THESE DEFICIENCIES.  UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF THIS
LEGISLATION, THE DOH PLANS TO ASSUME LEADERSHIP IN RESOURCE
RECOVERY OF HAZARDOUS WASTES AND TO EXPAND AND VIGOROUSLY
ENFORCE ITS PRESENT STATEWIDE PROGRAM.  IMPLEMENTING THESE
PLANS WILL REQUIRE THE EXPENDITURE OF CONSIDERABLE TIME AND
MANPOWER, AND CALIFORNIA IS UNABLE TO PROVIDE THE TOTAL
NECESSARY FUNDS.  THE DEPARTMENT IS DEEPLY CONCERNED THAT
CONGRESS WILL NOT APPROPRIATE ALL OF THE FUNDS AUTH r!ZED BY
RCRA TO START OR UPGRADE STATE HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGE; iNF
PROGRAMS.  IF THESE FUNDS ARE NOT APPROPRIATED, CONGRESS MAY
BE COMPELLED TO ESTABLISH A PROHIBITIVELY EXPENSIVE, ONGOING
NATIONAL HAZARDOUS WASTE MANAGEMENT PROGRAM TO CARRY OUT THE
WILL OF THE PEOPLE.
                           Dr. David L. Storm
                           Vector  & Waste Management (State of  Calif.)
                           Berkeley, Calif.

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 RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT OF 1976  (PL 94-580)




 It appears that the provisions of RCRA fall short of providing




 the framework for strict,  enforceable regulations requiring




 resource conservation (read source reduction)  and resource




 recovery (read recycling).   Source reduction and recycling




 of materials are indeed the true spirit of this law.








 RCRA gives EPA an excellent opportunity to stress the true




 spirit  of  this law in the  development of guidelines and in




 the approval of the state  Solid Waste Management Plans.   In




 the implementation of RCRA,  EPA has an opportunity to




 demonstrate truly enlightened solid waste management practices




 by addressing the cause of  our solid waste problem and not




 the symptoms    EPA can and should be the lead advocate




 and educator in source reduction programs and  in energy




 efficient  recycling systems.   EPA can and should lobby for




 tax reforms which would offer economic incentives for our




 business community to become  more actively involved in recycling.




 Our government should realize that carrots work better than




 sticks.








 I  realize  that EPA only has  a certain degree of statutory




 authority  based on laws  enacted by the Congress,  but EPA can




 and should assert sound  environmental ethics in the process




of administering  and  implementing  these  laws.   It  is  a good

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page two


thing that RCRA outlaws the open dump, but it would indeed

be a tragedy and a complete failure of this act if all open

dumps merely became replaced by sanitary landfills!!!
Edward Miller

1905 Laguna Street #307
San Francisco, CA   94115

A Concerned Citizen

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                           ENERGY SYSTEMS, INC.
                        3435 W1LSH1RE BOULEVARD SUITE 1500
                          LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90010
                                (213) 386-5930
                           March 2,  1977
 Paul De Falco,
 Regional Administrator
 Region IX
 United State Environmental Protection Agency
 100  California Street
 San  Francisco, California   94111

 Dear Mr. De Falco:

 Thank you for your kind consideration in sending an invitation to
 attend the San Francisco meetings on March 10th and llth concern-
 ing the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.  I will be in at-
 tendance on the morning of 11 March,  if all goes as planned.

 There is no need for one to use your valuable time to make a state-
 ment.   However, a reminder is in order  of some serious discussion
 at the  E. P.  A. meeting in Dallas,  Texas.  It is this:  Experience has
 shown that when a  resource recovery operation is planned,  an area
 immediately adjacent to the site or on the site  should be protected
 to facilitate the landfill of refuse during those periods when the
 system may be down for mechanical maintenance and repair or  to
 stockpile topsoil, glass cullett,  ash,  or ferrous metals during market
 slumps, and a space to accumulate volumes sufficient for comparative
 shipping rates.

 The  reasons for this I think are sound.  First - the City and the hauler
 should be protected as much as possible from costly trips to alternate
 dumping areas, particularly when signed contracts  are in effect.
 Second - some resources,  i.e. yard dirt and most fractorables, are
 not necessarily in  demand on a daily basis but are required in large
 volume during certain periods.  Third - many operations will not be
 able to survive the economics of the recovery  field  unless they are
 allowed  sufficient area to store materials until the ever-moving market
 price strikes a level that will show a profit.

 The  above is  respectfully submitted  for your evaluation and action prior
 to the final draft of the Resource  Conservation and Recovery Act.  Thank
you for the opportunity to be heard.
                                            James O.  Frisz
                                            Vice President - EngiaCe/lng
JOF/pc

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RESPONSE TOi ISSUES FOR DISCUSSION
SUBMITTED TOi
United States Environmental Protection Agency
SUBMITTED BYi
 Daniel A. Cotter
 Sonoma County Environmental Center

       RESOURCE CONSERVATION 4 RECOVERY SESSION
                  March 11, 1977

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                       PUBLIC!  INFORMATION/PUBLIC  PARTiqiPATION .ISSUES

      The  EPA should encourage local  environmental  groups involved  in recycling
 education by making small  grants  available  for expanding and upgrading their
 programs.   There  is a crucial need for  this funding  because most local recycling
 entities  do not generate enough revenue to  support the extensive education programs
 needed to effectively reach out to the  community at  large.

      If funds were  made available by the EPA for local recycling entities to develop<
 community-wide education programs, there would be  a  dramatic increase of public
 participation in  resource  recovery.  Without such  help the EPA's hopes for wide-
 spread participation in solid waste  planning will  not materialize.

      Local groups will come up with  many innovative  education  schemes designed to
 be effective in their communities.   Thus, the  EPA, by supporting public education
 at the local level  will receive in return!  I/  increased local  participation, 2/new
 ideas that can be converted Into regional and  national education programs.

                                   HAN POWER DEVELOPMENT

      The  EPA's manpower development  activities should be directed  toward creating
 jobs  at the  local community level.   Being an environmentally conscientious bureau-
 ocracy, the  local jobs EPA develops should be related to environmentally appropriate
 technologies.  The  EPA can accomplish this  by  supporting local recycling entities  with
 small program development  graiti.

      Small program  development grants would provide  work experience jobs, plus create
 or expand ongoing resource recovery  programs without large investments.  The EPA could
 identify  established recycling programs throughout the country and give them first con?
 sideration for this grant  mone'y, thus,  ensuring  successful use of  most of the money
 granted,   However,  the EPA should also  help start  new innovative programs where they
 have  not  been tried before, to expand recycling  and  give new ideas a chance.

      Manpower development  at  the managerial and  operations level can be accomplished
 by the aforementioned grant support.  The grant  money would support and expand recycling
 programs  while giving much needed work  experience  to the recipients.  The EPA would
 then  be able to identify capable managers and  operations experts by reviewing the
 success or failure  of each granted project.

                           RESqURgE_CONS_ERVATIO_N  4  RECOVERY ISSUES

      Resource conservation should play  a central role in any solid Baste management
 program    If waste  generation can be reduced by  conservation measures we will be well
 ahead of  the game.   The a'pnroach should be  a series  of short-range activities within
 a long range program.  The easiest or most  environmentally hazardous wastes should be
 considered first, with the rest following in order of importance.

     The resource conservation panels should first identify materials which are in
 crucial need of conservation,  and then  do the  planning work necessary to achieve their
 conservation.  The  panels  should be entirely comprehensive in  their identification and
 planning approach.  We are past the point where  any  material can be left out of a  con-
 servation  programs  to  conserve all materials is  to insure the  economic health of our
resource dependent  industries

     The  panels long  range goal should  be to completely eliminate  the disposal of  use-
ful materials.  This goal  must be set on a  realistic time frame.   Zero disposal will
take a great deal of  social,  political  and  economic  change.

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     Local programs should have complete freedom to accomplish the policy goals sat
by the state or national agencies.  The EPA should not interfer with local programs
unless they blatantly disregard the law.  There must be recognition of the unique
situations faced in each locality.  No two local programs will, or should, be alikB.

     Mandatory regulations should be avoided, and used only as a measure of last
resort   Economic incentives should be used first whenever possible, extending them
to the general public as well as to industry.  As can be seen from the success of
aluminum recycling programs, offering economic incenStives to the general, public
can be successful.

     Federal, state and local governments should be leaders in applying conservation
measures.  They should klso be leaders in developing markets for recycled goods by
purchasing recycled products.  It is important that government set a good example
and be the proving ground for recycling programs.  There Is a critical need for leader-
ship in changing the established order of cur society's wasteful use of natural resources.

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                     CITY AND COUNTY OF SAN FRANCISCO

                SAN FRANCISCO  FIRE  DEPARTMENT
                                                               2OO GOLDEN GATE AVE

                                                              SAN FRANCISCO CA 9-41O2
                 STATEMENT BY SAN FRANCISCO FIRE DEPARTMENT
at United States Environmental Protection Agency Public Discussion Sessions
      on the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act *Public Law 94-580*
                           March 10 and 11, 1977


      In any traffic collision or spill of hazardous materials of any kind,
the local fire department is expected to respond and to abate the hazard.
If the hazard is caused by flammability or actual fire, the fire department
is normally the most competent agency to handle the contingency.  If, however,
the hazard is due to the presence of toxic chemical or etiologic agents, the
fire department is ill prepared, both as to training and equipment, to deal
with such an emergency.

      The problem we face is two-fold: from a selfish point of view, we are
endangering the lives of our firefighters, who may lack the proper protective
attire for the particular exposure; from the broader community point of view,
our actions may cause greater damage to the environment we are trying to pro-
tect.   The firefighter has little or no knowledge about the chemical he en-
counters on the pavement and even less knowledge about what happens after  he
flushes said chemical down the sewer.

      Everybody expects the fire department to face the emergency.  Nobody
faces  our lack of preparedness.   We request that your agency direct its at-
tention to training and equipping the front line troops of the hazardous spill
battle.  If you are prepared to fund a pilot program along this line, the  San
Francisco Fire Department would be happy to cooperate in such an endeavor.
                                                                   ft
                                             Andrew C.  Casper
                                             Chief of Department

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                                                              3/ithj
SOURCE SEPARATION AS VS PYROLYSIS AS A SYSTEM
SUBMITTED TOi
United States Environmental Protection Agency
SUBMITTED BYi
Michael Anderson
Sonoma County Recycling Association

Dennis Burgess
Santa Rosa Recycling Center

Daniel A. Cotter
Sonoma County Environmental Center
    RESOURCE CONSERVATION & RECOJVER* SESSION
               March 11, 1977

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                       RESOURCE CONSERVATION & RECOVERY
       SOURCE SEPARATION AS COMPARED TO PYROLYSIS/CENTRAL SEPARATION AS A SYSTEM
                       SOURCE SEPARATION AS A SYSTEM
     Community source separation recycling is an immediatly implementable system based on
appropriate technology.  When combined with community educational efforts and source sep-
aration legislation it will provide the short and long range solutions to our solid waste
problems.  This will be accomplished by community involvement in conserving natural re-
sources, thus, making for a better informed citizenry.  In turn this more informed citizenry
will promote legislation favorable to the expansion of source separation and waste re-
duction   This grass roots strength and involvement is needed to solve the waste generation
problem, and its related natural resource and energy depletion crises.
     As our society approaches an age of dimishing resources and more environmentally appro-
priate lifestyles, reusing natural resources will become increasingly important.  Also,
secutity from depletion of natural resources is important in order to maintain a basic level
of production for industry and to help alleviate our society's over-dependence on foreign
resources-
     Source separations lack of dependence upon any particular type of waste is important in
that it makes this system very flexible.  The unpredictability of future rates of waste
generation indicate that flexibility will become an important feature of any solid wasse
management system.
     The short term goals of source separation is to reduc e the depletion of our natural
resources,  and to educate the citizenry about the importance of a more environmentally
compatible lifestyle.   Its long term goal is to conserve and reuse natural resources, and
to lower the costs of goods and services offered to the consumer by increasing the supply
af secondary materials,
                                 PYROLYSIS AS A SYSTEM
     High technology pyrolysis systems appear to be economically inflexible & environmentally
unsound.   The system's reliance upon current or expanded volumes of wastes can only lead to
sconomic and environmental disturbances.  The extremely rapid rate of technical change in
;he solid waste field makes large investments in pyrolysis systems a high economic risk.
"he high cost of these systems make them very inflexible to change and innovation.  Also to
3e considered is that because of their hlghtcapital costs, outside money and industry will
lave to be  used to bring about the pyrolysis systems.   Local areas will loose control over
•,he direction of their solid waste management programs as these programs become increasingly
:entralized.
     The pyrolysis system that is being considered in the Bay Area is a prime example of
;his economic and environmental inflexibility   A pyrolysis system for the Bay Area would
:ost upward of 80 million dollars to build which would be a financial drain on the Bay
irea community   Furthermore,  pyrolysis systems have high operating and maintenance costs

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2/

wnich  are not  considered  in  the  initial "building  costs.   For  all  this tremendous cost
pyrolysls will still only furnish approximately 9$ of the 1979  energy needs  for the Bay
Area even if it were to pass air quality  standards, which is  highly questionable.
     The pyrolysis method also perpetuates the throw-away ethic and its  resulting increase
in societies flow of garbage  This kill  come about because pyrolysis plants need a guar-
anteed flow of garbage to Maintain their  energy supply.   As the needs for these plants
increase, the  need for more  and  more garbage will increase.   One  may  find an Industry which
is dependent upon a flow  of  garbage as a.  source of fuel,  fighting and lobbying  against waste
reduction legislation such as reduced packaging laws and  returnable container bills.
     In terms  of resources and energy savings, material recovery  is clearly  preferable to
energy recovery  Materials  can  be burned only once, whereas  recovered material asm be used
over and over  again.
                    Energy saved by recycling      Energy value in  *
                    Paper fiber              _     Paper  eopbustion
                    12 0  (10° B.~T7u7]~      ~      15.5 (10°  B.T.u. 7~
     If one multiplies the energy savings from material reuse only a  few times,  it far out
weighs energy  cieated by  energy  conversion.  Burning paper for  fuel will only realize five
to  eight dollars a ton whereas recycling  paper products will  bring in from ten  to  two
hundred dollars per ton.
     A pyrolysis system would have an adverse economic effect upon source  separation  re-
cycling entities.   Approximately two-thirds of the material volume and two thirds  »f  the
income received by community recycling entities comes from paper  fiber.   Under  the pyrolysis
system, instead of reusing this  paper fiber the fiber would be  burned.   Whore does that leavi
the recycling entities cash flow picture?  It would be a  crtppling blow  to many of our state
recycling programs
     Also to be considered is the loss of an important environmental  education  medium.  If
source separation recycling programs are  eliminated and the public is allowed to forget
about  the solid waste problem, because it is being taken  care of  for  them  by high  technology
systems, a serious blow to the ethical issues being presented in  regards to  planned
obsolescense,  over consumption,  over packageing and the throw away ethic would  result.
     We believe that the United  States Environmental Protection Agency should take a
positiin in support of the appropriate technologies of source separation recycling by
giving more EPA grants and assistance to  ongoing  community based  source  separation entities.
Also, technical and financial support shluld be given to future source separation  systems
that are environmentally compatible with  society.   More source separation  education programs
directed towards -the consuming public must be provided.    Community involvement  and support
is needed to implement the necessary resource conservation measures that are needed for dfhe
future  An involved and knowledgeable citizenry will make source  separation  systems feasible
and viable

*  Resource Conservation through  Community Involvement, Pefftland Recycling Team  August, 75-

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                     (213)  S30-22OO                  (213)  775-2222
                      23924 SOUTH FIGUEROA ST. CARSON, CALIF 9O745

COMPLETE FERTILIZER SERVICE
                              March 23, 1977
United States Environmental
  Protection Agency
100 California Street
San Francisco, CA   94111

Subject:  Sewage Sludge Solids

Gentlemen:

     I attended your Thursday night meeting dated March 10, 1977
where you explained the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
No. 94580.  It was not only informative but rewarding to see the
patience you have before making any final decisions and the ability
to recognize sometimes such decisions should be altered.

     I realize most of the decisions have been made by the time
such public meetings are held, but there was one area which was
discussed where experts on both sides disagreed and no conclusion
has been reached.  That area is whether to include sludge from
sewage treatment plants as a hazardous waste.

     To include sewage sludge as a hazardous waste would be one
of the most disastrous decisions that could be made.  Such a
decision would leave a black cloud for decades hanging over the
utilization of one of our greatest natural resources, "sewage
sludge".  Our departments in government, such as yourselves,
should be using a positive approach by recommending and advising
how the composted sewage sludge can be utilized, emphasizing its
benefits rather than what might be wrong with the material if_ it
isn't processed properly.  The negative attitude of "I have no
proof it is not harmful" is wrong.  That is like saying "I feel
more like I do now than I did when I got here".

     The areas of most concern with the use of sewage sludge are:

     1)  Objectionable odors

     2)  Pathogens and viruses

     3)  Heavy metals

All of these problems can be solved if the effort is made.  Some
municipalities in the United States have already made great pro-
gress toward eliminating the three main areas of concern.  Los
Angeles County Sanitation District is one.

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
March 23, 1977
Page Two


     You start out with a stabilized sludge and compost it
properly.  Not only will this process eliminate the odors, but
the pathogens and viruses will be destroyed within the three-foot
deep compost piles in just a matter of a few days because of the
high temperatures reached.  Detailed records on how this is suc-
cessfully being done are at the Los Angeles County Sanitation
District in Whittier, California.  The City of Milwaukee is pro-
cessing their activated sewage sludge by artificial drying which
is another way; which is expensive.  It is very important that
no sludge be made available to manufacturers, such as ourselves,
until a Sanitation District has processed the sewage sludge by
artificial heat drying or composting methods.  Otherwise, you
will end up with materials in the hands of people not qualified
or equipped to process the sewage sludge properly.  This is
happening now in many areas.

     The area which has been most difficult to correct is in the
case of heavy metals.  While uptake of heavy metals in some plants
has occurred and the plants were consumed by human beings or
animals, there has never been any evidence of harm.  Still, the
fact that heavy metals are present should be of a concern to every-
one, and money spent by the EPA would be well directed toward this
goal rather than on surveys to find out if composted sludge can be
sold.  The answer to that is yes, if you do not label processed
sewage sludge as a hazardous waste.  Any restrictions on the use
< F    cessed sewage sludge should be based on fact and not on
      dos, ifs, or maybes.

        the meantime, the long range solution should be that no
      ry be allowed to use the sewers as a dumping ground for
       aste which actually contain detrimental heavy metal;,.
^>'    .ndustry using the sewers should be required to get a permit
ana be subject to inspection at any time but never less than once
a year.   The industries which are known to disperse detrimental
heavy metals in their waste should be cut off from the sewers,
other than their restrooms and cafeterias, and told to dispose of
their own problem by collecting these residues and seeing they
are delivered to the Landfill by their own trucks or rented
equipment.  This they would do and many times would find a use for
their residues.  At that time, local government bodies at the
landfills can see to it that such wastes are disposed in a proper
manner, in the proper place, and records can be kept.

     If you see that the above is done, then the problems of odors,
pathogens, viruses, and heavy metals will be solved; thereby taking
the burden off of your back as well as removing the burden from
the Department of Health of making impractical guidelines for using
composted sewage sludge.  (Monitoring the end users would absolutely
be impossible, e.g. homeowners.)

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U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
March 23, 1977
Page Three
     In most areas of the United States, particularly the East,
sewage sludge has not been successfully marketed; therefore, it
has been treated as a plague rather than a resource.  Here in
Southern California we have been marketing stabilized, composted
sewage sludge for more than 50 years and currently have it on
allocation because there hasn't been enough finished, composted
material produced.  We sell over 40,000 dry tons per year.

     Just recently, Edwin M. Wheeler, president of the Fertilizer
Institute in Washington stated that natural gas shortages have
curtailed production of nitrogen fertilizers  throughout the
United States.  I hope mankind doesn't have to wait until we are
out of fossil fuels before we discover that we should have been
using processed sewage sludge as a fertilizer material.  Composted
sewage sludge is also an excellent soil conditioner.

     In conclusion, it is important we move forward with a positive
attitude about the use of processed sewage sludge.  By eliminating
the problems I have mentioned in the manner I have stated, you will
have confidence that you have done the correct thing.  We need all
of our natural resources, and processed, composted sewage sludge
is one of the most important.

                              Sincerely,

                              KELLOCJG SUPPLY, INC.
HCK:wjc
     Paul De Falco, Jr.
     Sheldon Meyers
     Harvey Bershman
     Peter Navarro
     Dr.  John Walker
     John Parkhurst
     Walt Garrison
     Bill Davis
     Richard Duesterhaus
     Dr.  A.  L.  Page
     Robert Bastian
     Glenn Anderson
     Alan Cranston
     S.  I. Hiyakawa
     Peter A.  Rogers
     Robert M.  Pratt
                              H. Clay Keli'ogg'f'Or.
                              General Manager
Dr. Jack M. Sheneman
William Jopling
Donald Lollock
Henry C. Hyde
Charles T. Bourns
Lawrence A. Burch
Ariel Parkinson
Mariann J. Thomas
John P. Lehman
Dr. David L. Storm
Richard G. Burau
Bruce Weddle
Dr. Epstein

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10^7 Bush Street / Apartment Three    San Francisco 94109     March 11, 1977

Environmental Protection Agency, Region DC   FROMi  Christina Groth
Hazardous Materials Branch
100 California Street / San Francisco 9^111  ABOUTi  EPA Hearings Karch 10,
Attentioni  Diane CLardy (A-3)                       and comments appending
While recovery and conservation appear incidentally in the various printed and
verbal elements of EPA and other incidental government overtures, no solid ad-
vance short of excruciating cost elucidates, government purchases/markets for
reclaimed materials notwithstanding.  That conservation barely made it to the
printed page verifies the reluctance of government to deal with necessities in
contrast to heavy subsidies to conspicuous and extravagant waste.

It seems to me that preventive aspects need emphasis particularly to CONSERVE.
Excess in either waste or utilization by any form of waste material properly
resides for cost with those users overloading regardless of material or streams
receiving it.  Enforcement probably would do more good than vast sums of monye
to clean up messes entirely preventable.

When "hazard" is "unknown" or "not provable" by neglect or precondition or trsi-
ditional condescension, no excuse exists to cater to careless or negligent han-
dling.  As in the case of cow feed poisoned or brand name pesticides or herbi-
cides ~ where quality control people individually properly retain responsibi-
lity for acts of mishandling or misrepresentation.  If this means taking on the
unions whose workers very likely packed the cow feed, cite where acts occurred
and pursue unrelentingly.

No reason exists for any government work by/for any agency to be done by any tax
exempt and/or nonprofit organization.  To the extent this includes any/all uni-
versities maintaining professors in conflict of interest, through full time per-
sonal business and professorial ties — do they get all the overhead at company
cost but charge it to clients for a double take? — this practice requires stopping.
Private individuals could do as wells only because government panders to hand-
holding, not resourcefulness and genuine information and dispersal of it, can
such malign, costly routines survive.

Do not aim at any big government agencies for anything.  What government and this
agency must do resides with the fact that to the extent any government funds go
into any waste handling at all there is overpopulation and overuse and total dis-
regard for anything and/or anyone.  No reason exists to purchase land to dump out
of sight offal of derelicts — and the people who brought us overpopulation, le.,
excess progeny over parental costing, repeatedly underscore this fact.  No reason
exists, either, to purchase "government" land for recreation purposes regardless
of management, or for "disposal".  EPA needs to concentrate on making single oper-
ators, as with even relatively small farijlrs and groups, functionally capable of
handling their own significant wastes in modes conducive to the long term ajipli-
cationand at reasonable costs.  This is possible.  But not so long as "treatment"
presides and government "funds" the entire debacle,

EPA does some excellentyihings, highly commendable and properly against the graini
onthat score, CHEERSl

An inventor is doing some data collection in the east bay dealing with sulphur de-
riviti«es, excess oxygen, and other processing events related to sewage which may
hold mare than passing interest.  But consultants do NOT respond to what needs doing
— why does EPA continue to hire them at great price and perpetuity?

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STATEMENT OF GARRETT DE BELL, ENVIRONMENTAL ADVISOR OF
YOSEMITE PARK AND CURRY CO.,  BEFORE THE UNITED STATES
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY PUBLIC DISCUSSION SESSIONS
ON RESOURCE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY ACT - THURSDAY AND
FRIDAY,  MARCH 10 AND 11. 1977
My name is Garrett De Bell; I'm representing the Yosemite Park and Curry

Co., an MCA subsidiary.  MCA is a Los Angeles-based entertainment and

leisure time recreation company.  YP&C Co. operates the prime concession

of Yosemite National Park.  We are pleased to see the direction of this

legislation placing increasing emphasis on resource recovery,  which is

recognized by environmentally-concerned individuals  and organizations as

the best solution to the problems of solid waste disposal and the challenge

of conserving natural resources.


Over the past two years, we have implemented and expanded a recycling

program aimed at virtually eliminating the solid waste stream, channeling

it primarily into resource recovery through recycling and, to a lesser degree,

energy recovery.  We have  enjoyed very much our association with the

Environmental Protection Agency in implementing our pilot beverage container

deposit program in Yosemite.  This is now being required  at all Federal

facilities.  While beverage containers are only a part--although a  significant

part--of the solid waste stream, we think the experience in showing that a

nickel  incentive was enough to boost the return rate from approximately

four per cent (4%) to approximately seventy per cent (70%)  to be very

enlightening.

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                                   - 2 -
Other incentive-type systems for all types of solid waste seem a way of




encouraging more development in this direction and should be  explored.  We




are continually working to the goal of eliminating solid waste which would




otherwise go to the Mariposa landfill and are currently working on getting




office paper recycling throughout our operation as  the latest material added




on to the list of currently-recycled materials, including cardboard,  chipboard,




newspaper,  computer  cards, glass, aluminum, tin, bi-metal, cooking oils,,




and crankcase oils.  Our experience has been that, in spite of the additional




labor costs of sorting  and handling materials to be recycled, there  is some




revenue gained in the price paid for the  materials and reduction in solid




waste disposal charges.   Therefore, our overall system has come close to




being a break-even operation.  We would be pleased to have representatives




of the EPA or of  companies that operate facilities  similar to ours visit us.




We would be happy to give them an inside look at how one relatively low-




technology type approach to recycling diverse types of waste operates.

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                                    . .cirri
United States
'"iiviroiiiuunt.il Protection Agency
100 California street
c;an "rancisco, '.ilif ornia 'Mill


           Viewpoints of one  of many  'Miiall  businesses

     '1e of L an you Uunip consider ourselves as  a  Public  ".ervice
and wonder greatl} about 11,is Protection bit.

     In the first place, people need  a  place  to iuup aay  and
all sorts of trash.  To you by one  minute believe  you  can
stop road side dumping if you do  away with  open Dumps?
"elieve in the humane nature  part of  life,  and  you will  find
our by-ways looking like a public "'Jump".   ".'e entered  the
dump business about seven (7) years ago.  ''lien  this canyon
Dump was in the process of being  opened we  cleaned up  about
3,0(iO yards of waste material that  had  been dumped along  and
on the county road.  This was all within a  one  ami one-half
(li) miles of road.  i'ave jou any idea  what this dump  has
meant to thousands of our local business men  and individuals
who have come to us for disposable  of trash of  all sorts?
"e have returned to use r.tany  iteius  of household, business and
pleasure products that would  have been  buried long ago in
some off-road canyons.  iielieve ne  when I say that too nuch
regulation is like none at all.   Ypu  think  that your ideas
are perfect but at the sane time  look at -jour own  back yard:
I'll be willing to say that 90°^ of  you  have material that is
more of a threat to your neighbors  that our dump site  is  to
anyone.  You have wonderful ideas for more  populated areas  than
ours, but you should also be  flexible enough  to understand  that
the desert is something different.  "e  don't  want  to destroy
any more than the next.  but  we do  believe  we have the right
to govern our owi Comities.   Thousand of dollars are spent
each year for services we are getting from  government  people.
"hat are those services worthjthat  you  can't  do it, or that
is out of our jurisdiction, or call your local  sheriff who
in return refers you back to  the  people you called  in the
first place.  Public services don't live up to  their name bv
an awful lot.

        Don't put down open dumps;  they are needed as  much  as
police, fire and dog catcher. This  country  of ours would  look
Like my neighbors' back yard  in less  than a year and, believe
me, that is one hell of a mass.
                            -I-

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     "}\is  jinst jcar,  fru...  .Taaunr;,  1st   to ''eeer.Lrr  2],  1V7
have liuriod  128,178 jarJs  of Iras]!.    e'ut of t'.al trash :^
«old TtrfletTiajl o tui Iwi^c  at  1 5, 524 .'JO.   r;i.i.s njulu  oulj Ij
on aii open Dump sit,;, at a prict- that  one could  afford.
again, a reason for f
                                         Yours trul} ,
                                        '""} "  '      (

                                         liill Davis
                                         1674 rtewart  "t.
                                         T"eno, .Nevada  89502

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GEO W OSOSKE
Vice President
               United  States  Brewers  Association,  Inc.
                                  WESTERN DISTRICT  HDQ.
                                   235 MONTGOMERY STREET
                                SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA 94104
California Division
  (415)421-1747
                             Members of the United States Brewers Association
               Western  Region and industry representatives attended the E.P.A.
               Public Discussion Session on the  Resource Conservation Recovery
               Act,  PL  94-580 in San Francisco on March  10 and 11,  1977.

                             Questions from the audience were exploratory and for
               clarification relating to the Act.

                             At no time did anyone in the audience of approxi-
               mately 125 people on March  10 and approximately 240 people on
               March 11, stand up and eulogize a program sponsored by the E.P.A.
               or any other organization,  until  Gary Curran, working for Yosemite
               Disposal, Camp Curry of Yosemite National  Park, arose.   Mr. Curran
               spoke at  length of the great success of the Yosemite deposit system
               sponsored by the E.P.A. as a pilot test program.  He stated that the
               Yosemite program should be adopted in other areas besides military
               posts and national parks.

                             It was my feeling that Mr. Curran's comments were
               without facts or substance 0   I therefore responded to Curran's comments
               relating  to Yosemite with specific and factual data,  pointing out that
               the E.P.A. experiment in Yosemite National Park was not a success
               but a  failure.  My comments were substantiated with factual reference
               such as:

                             1.  The statement was made that Yosemite had a 70%
               success.  This means that 30% of the containers were not returned.
               Consequently, the 5
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                                                  Page 2

             4.  Popular-priced beer in Yosemite costs $1.85 a 6-pack,
plus a 30(J deposit,  making a total  cost of $2.15; while the same brand or
brands sell for a total of $1.65 a 6-pack in San Francisco and Los Angeles.

             5.  There is no substantial documentation regarding the con-
tainers causing litter before the deposit was put into effect in Yosemiie.

             6.  Curry Company employees stated that consumers were not
necessarily returning the containers for the deposit, but rather they were being
returned by children or professional container-gatherers chasing cans.  Some
youngsters spend their whole vacation  going  through garbage cans looking for
beverage containers.  From all factual evidence, from employees in the retail
stores, from  Park employees, it was the concensus that it is not the  consumer
who returns the containers for the deposit, but rather the can-gatherers.

             7.  The Public Relations Director of the  Park stated thai the
average stay of a visitor is two and a  half days.   Because of the short time
most visitors are in  the Park, most  throw their containers in the garbage cans.

             8,  Regardless of the widespread publicity of the  program,
most visitors either  ignore the signs or do not bother with the deposit.  The
visitors either leave the containers on the tables, throw them away, or give
them to children to return.  The garbage can, as before the deposit system,
is still the outlet used by many consumers.

             Following the conclusion of my comments, J.  Nicholas Number,
Director of Resource Recovery Division,  E.P.A., Washington,  D.C., stated
that Yosemite was a success and that the deposit system would be activated
in other state parks as well as in military installations.

             Mr.  Number went further to state that the United States Brewers
Association always  takes a negative position  while others are working and co-
operating with the  E.P.A.  Mr.  Number was  subsequently told by me that he
provided no facts supporting his comments about the container issue in Yosem-
ite Park,,  He was further told that his arrogant,  uncalled-for statement against
the USBA was strongly resented by me, and that I found it alarming that a gov-
ernmental representative of the E.P.A. would make this public, unprcvoked
accusation because an industry representative attempted to clarify misleading
information.

              In accordance with the introductory statement by the Chairman
of the meeting,  Paul De  Falco, Jr. of E.P.A. Region  IX7 the meeting was to
be confined  to the  laws of the Resource Conservation and Recoveiy Act,  rather
than to develop into a self-appraisement forum.

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                                                Page 3

             It is well known that the USBA and its member companies
have made a tremendous effort over the years in resource recovery, recycling,
energy conservation, environmental educational programs, as well as fully
cooperating with all public and private agencies in local,  state and federal
levels.

             With the above exceptions and the unwarranted accusation
of the U.S0B.A., it was felt that the E.P.A.  discussion sessions were
constructive.
                                   GEO. W. OSOSKE
                                     Vice President
GWO:db
March 15,  1977

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                                                                              MAR 2 5  1977
                                                             ^m
           CITY      OF      BERKELEY
SOLID   WASTE  MANAGEMENT   COMMISSION            (415)  644-6468
2180 MILVIA      STREET            BERKELEY,  CALIFORNIA            94704
                                  March 22, 1977
        Mr.  H. Lanier Hickman, Jr.
        Director of Management and Information Staff
        Office of Solid Waste
        AW-462 Environmental Protection Agency
        Washington, B.C.  20460

        Dear Mr. Hickman:

        Thank you for the opportunity to comment  on the Resource-Conservation and
        Recovery Act of 1976.  We listened with considerable interest to the
        Environmental Protection Agency presentation  of material in San Francisco
        on March 10.  The Berkeley Solid Waste Management Commission would like to
        submit the following comments.

            1.  First and foremost,  we agree with Mr. Dan Cotter of the Santa Rosa
                Recycling Center that your presentation and interpretation of the
                Act needs strengthening in the area  of low-capital, low or middle
                technology options for waste management.  Mr. Humber  commented
                at one point that significant municipal resource recovery will have
                to be done on a "huge scale", and is 20 years off.  We submit as an
                enclosure a plan developed for the City of Berkeley, designed to re-
                move up to 30% of City wastes from landfill within the next couple
                of years.  We expect this plan to be complemented by a back -end
                system that will reduce land disposal even more — within several years.

                So far, EPA support  for this kind of program has lagged far behind
                EPA effort in technically more complex, and expensive ventures.
                Berkeley's program would have been inestimably benefited by a very
                modest EPA grant for public education which it applied for and did
                not receive.  Aggressive,  wide-spread, skilled implementation of
                waste reduction and  source grouping, could and should determine to a
                great extent the character and structure of the "final solution".

            2.  We second Mr.  Kellogg's comments on  a constructive federal approach
                to sludge management.   Although  the  EPA expert on hazardous wastes
                said "This act has no authority  over sewers", he also pointed out
                that some sludges are "90% hazardous waste", which  is  covered by
                the Act.   With the common goal of maximum use of valuable resources,
                federal guidelines for the use,  or restrictions on the use of sludge ,

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                                       -2-
        must be accompanied by federal requirements for pre-treatment of toxic
        discharges to sewers.  A letter from this Commission describing a
        parallel situation in California is also enclosed.  The kind of operation
        carried on by Mr. Kellogg should be encouraged and expanded — not pro-
        grammed out.

    3.  Finally, we give our strong support to full funding of the Act.  The
        amount proposed in this year's budget is manifestly inadequate.  Both
        the hazardous wastes program and the program for implementation for
        State plans should be funded — particularly if EPA takes our construc-
        tive suggestions on the art of the possible.

In general, the EPA presentation was full and authoritative.  It should serve as
a model for State and County presentations of policies, plans, and laws — so
far, in California, this presentation has been very inadequate.
                                        ARIBL PARKINSON
                                        Berkeley Solid Waste Management Commission
AP/jr
Enclosures
     President Carter
     Senator Alan Cranston
     Senator S. I. Hayakawa
     Congressman Ron Dellums
Shelf No.  596

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