United SJtates
Environmental Protection
Agency
EPA/600/N-95/002
May 1995
&EPA
ECHNOLOGY
RANSFER
from
Office of Research and Development
New Technology Transfer Publications
[use form in back to order]
Ground Water and Leachate
Treatment Systems
(EPA/625/R-94/005)
Past disposal of hazardous and solid
waste has resulted in groundwater
contamination. At many of these waste
sites, remediation of ground water involves
extracting the ground water, then treating it
by an ex situ treatment process.
Although similar compounds and
treatment technologies may be involved,
the design considerations for ex situ
treatment of ground water or leachate
differ from those from industrial waste
treatment systems because of
• dilute concentrations of multiple
contaminants
• variable flow rates
• process-interfering colloids
• contaminant concentrations that vary
over time
This manual was developed for reme-
dial design engineers and regulatory
personnel who oversee the ex situ
groundwater or leachate treatment efforts
of the regulated community. This manual
can serve as an initial technology screen-
ing guide. More importantly, this manual
addresses technical considerations
important in the design evaluation phase.
Design considerations include flow and
contaminant concentration variability, life
cycle design, package plants, materials of
construction and compatibility, and
residuals management.
Bench, pilot, and full scale treatability
information on contaminants frequently
found on Superfund sites is provided.
The appendix contains fact sheets on
14 technologies used for treating ground
water or leachate. These sheets include
information on technology status, limita-
tions, design criteria, residuals generation,
and cost.
Seminar Publication
National Conference on Urban
Runoff Management
(EPA/625/R-95/003)
This document presents the technical
information presented at the National
Conference on Urban Runoff Management
held in Chicago, IL, on March 30-April 2,
1993. This conference was cosponsored
by the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency's Center for Environmental
Research Information and Region 5; the
U.S. Department of Agriculture's Soil
Conservation Service; the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration;
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and the
Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission.
This four-day conference addressed
many aspects of urban watershed man-
agement including
• urban watershed planning
• monitoring, modeling, and assess-
ment
• riparian and wetland issues
• state, county, and local management
programs
• federal regulatory programs
• best management practices
This document includes over 50
peer-reviewed technical papers resulting
from this conference. The papers present
a wide range of technical information that
will assist both the public and private
sectors in dealing with many of the existing
and developing urban runoff and water-
shed management programs. Authors
represent a group of national experts from
federal, state, county, and local govern-
ments; academic institutions; environmen-
tal consulting firms; and other public and
private entities.
This document addresses numerous
technical, institutional, and regulatory
issues relating to the management of
urban runoff. The information presented in
this document reflects the successes of
many urban watershed management
programs around the country. These
programs use innovative approaches to
preventing and mitigating the adverse
Printed on Recycled Paper
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water quality and ecological effects of
urban runoff.
Managing Used Oil
(EPA/625/R-94/010)
This document presents information on
how to properly manage used motor oil.
This document addresses the manage-
ment of used oil generated by changing
motor oil from automobile or truck crank-
cases and collecting used motor oil from
do-it-yourselfers (DlYs).
The purpose of this document is to help
used motor oil generators properly
manage their used oil, by giving detailed
information to assist used motor oil
generators in meeting the requirements of
the Used Oil Management Standards
finalized by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency in September 1992.
This document was developed to assist
individuals who own or work at businesses
and other facilities that generate used
motor oil. These businesses and facilities
include
• Service Stations
• Quick-Lube Shops
• Fleet Operations
• DIY Used Oil Collection Centers
• Motor Oil Retailers
This document presents, in each
chapter, a different aspect of used oil
management. The following chapters are
included:
• Chapter 1 Introduction
• Chapter 2 The Used Oil Manage-
ment System
• Chapters The Regulations
• Chapter 4 Options for Recycling
Used Oil
• Chapter 5 Choosing a Used Oil
Transporter
• Chapter 6 Onsite Management for
Used Oil Generators
• Chapter 7 Managing and Disposing
of Used Oil Filters
In addition, the document includes
several appendices that provide sources
for detailed information relating to used oil
management and summaries of several
applicable federal regulations that address
used oil management practices.
Several technology transfer documents
are currently under preparation and will be
available by October 1995. They are
• Manual: Land Application of Sewage
Sludge and Domestic Septage
• Manual: Surface Disposal of Sewage
Sludge and Domestic Septage
• BMP Guide for Pollution Prevention:
Slabstock and Molded Flexible
Polyurethane Foam Manufacturing
• Summary Report: Controlling
Nitrogen Dioxide Emissions from
Large Boilers by the "Reburn"
Technology
Watch for their availability in the next
issue of Technology Transfer.
On Control of Organic Air
Emissions from Tanks, Surface
Impoundments, and Containers
A series of three seminars on control of
organic air emissions from tanks, surface
impoundments, and containers will be held
in August in Philadelphia, Chicago, and
Dallas. The first seminar will be the week
of August 14 in Philadelphia, while the
other two seminars will be in Chicago and
Dallas. Technical content of the seminars
will include applicability, compliance
requirements, control technology, mea-
surement and testing requirements for air
pollution control equipment, reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, and inspec-
tion and enforcement. These seminars are
being held to disseminate new develop-
ments in control technology applicable to
the covered source categories. These
requirements are as a result of the newly
effective (June 6, 1995) regulations under
the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act that were promulgated December 6,
1994. These regulations were promulgated
because organic air emissions from
treatment, storage, and disposal facilities
are judged to cause adverse effects to
human health and the environment.
Presentations and case studies will be
used to relay information concerning the
control technology applicable to those
sources affected by the most recent set of
regulations (Subpart CC). Presenters will
include persons assisting in developing the
regulations. For more information, contact
Helen Genz or Susan Brager, Eastern
Research Group, Inc., 110 Hartwell Ave.,
Lexington, MA 02173-3198; telephone
617-674-7250 or 617-674-7347, respec-
tively. To register (at no cost for the
seminar) call 617-674-7374, or fax your
registration form to 617-674-2906.
Pollution Prevention
(Re)engineering Workshop
The Center for Environmental Research
Information is cosponsoring a pollution
prevention workshop in conjunction with
the Society for Enterprise Engineering,
June 19-22, 1995, to be held at the Airport
Hyatt in Orlando, FL. Enterprise engineer-
ing deals with that body of knowledge,
principles, and disciplines having to do
with the analysis, design, implementation
EPA is establishing a database of
GRITS/STAT users. The database will
be used to notify GRITS/STAT users of
updates to the software and potential
problems and solutions encountered in
using the software. If you are a GRITS/
STAT user, send your name, organiza-
tion, address, and phone number to the
following address:
Mary Bitney
WSTM/RCRA/GEOL
USEPA Region 7
726 Minnesota A venue
Kansas City, KS 66101
EPA is pleased to offer you software
we feel will enable you to analyze
technical data efficiently. Since the
software is currently being improved and
expanded, send enhancement ideas for
it or any problems encountered while
using it to the above address. Hotline
telephone support is available by calling
913-551-7074.
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and operation of an enterprise. As a
speciality area of consideration,
(re)engineering applications will be a focus
of this conference. These (re)engineering
practices are being conducted in one form
or another by both large and small
companies and various local, state, and
federal government organizations. This
conference is an international forum for
presenting and discussing enterprise
engineering topics pertinent to business
leaders, managers, and others engaged in
research, analysis, and practices associ-
ated with enterprise engineering. As part of
this conference, workshops and papers will
be presented to acquaint business leaders
with opportunities for examining pollution
prevention opportunities as part of their
(re)engineering applications. Experts
involved with industry applications will
explain and present case study information
on total quality environmental manage-
ment issues in such areas as industrial
ecology, life cycle analysis, design for the
environment, environmental cost account-
ing, product stewardship, and ISO 14000
standards.
For business professional contemplat-
ing (re)engineering applications and how
pollution prevention measures can be
integrated with these endeavors, this is an
excellent forum to attend to help you make
your decisions and evaluate tools and
consultants providing support to this
activity. For further information and
registration for this workshop and confer-
ence contact Mary Ellen Johnson, Society
for Enterprise Engineering, 1900 Founders
Drive, Kettering, OH, phone 513-259-4702,
fax 513-259-4343.
Annual Symposium on
Bioremediation of Hazardous
Wastes: Research, Development,
and Field Evaluations
The Seventh Symposium on
Bioremediation of Hazardous Wastes:
Research, Development and Field
Evaluations will be held August 8-10,
1995, in Rye Brook, NY. This 2 1/2-day
symposium is being sponsored by EPA's
Biosystems Technology Development
Program. The Biosystems Technology
Development Program strives to balance
research on degradation processes with
engineering activities that contribute to
environmental cleanups through assess-
ment of health and ecological impacts.
The purpose of this symposium is to
present and discuss the research, devel-
opment, and field evaluations of
bioremediation projects undertaken in
1994 and 1995 by EPA's Biosystems
Technology Development Program.
Bioremediation projects conducted by
EPA's Hazardous Substance Research
Centers also will be presented. Topics to
be discussed cover the in situ treatment of
the surface and subsurface and the ex situ
treatment of aqueous and gaseous phases
and soils. Presentations and poster
sessions will be beneficial to leading
researchers and field personnel in
bioremediation from federal, state, and
local agencies; industry; vendors; contrac-
tors; and academia.
To register for this symposium please
call Eastern Research Group, Inc. (ERG),
at 617-674-7374.
1995 A WWA Annual Conference
The EPA Offices of Research and
Development (ORD) and Groundwater and
Drinking Water (OGWDW) will again
cooperate in an exhibit at the June 18-22,
1995, AWWA Annual Conference and
Exposition in Anaheim, CA. Approximately
11,000 state and utility personnel along
with consultants, manufacturers, and
academicians regularly attend this
meeting. This is the tenth successive year
in which ORD and OGWDW have collabo-
rated to provide a joint EPA exhibit.
As part of the exhibit, ORD and
OGWDW display and make available to
participants many publications that are
pertinent to the Agency's Drinking Water
Program. At last year's meeting almost
3,500 ORD publications were requested by
visitors to the booth.
Several EPA research scientists are
participating in the conference's technical
program by presenting papers.
1995 A WMA Annual Conference
EPA is sponsoring a booth at the Air
and Waste and Management Association
(AWMA) Annual Meeting in San Antonio,
TX, the week of June 18, 1995. As part of
the Annual Meeting, AWMA always has an
exhibition. EPA has participated in the
exhibit for many years, displaying graphics
of the various research projects underway
in the Office of Research and Develop-
ment, disseminating literature on the
technology and regulations, and providing
information on the person to contact for
additional, detailed information. In recent
years we have added demonstrations of
various software available both on disk
and through downloading from electronic
bulletin board systems. More recently,
some of the databases are available on
CD, as well as floppy disk. In recent years,
attendance has topped 5,000. Come see
what we have in store this year! The EPA
exhibit is to be in Booth 1106 in the San
Antonio Convention Center exhibition hall
on June 20-22, 1995.
1995 WEF Annual Conference/
Exposition
For the past 18 years EPA has spon-
sored a technology transfer/outreach
exhibit at the annual WEF Conference/
Exposition. The WEF Conference is the
largest international environmental
conference in existence. Registration at
last year's conference in Chicago, IL,
exceeded 15,000. This year's conference/
exposition will be held in Miami Beach, FL,
at the Miami Beach Convention Center
from October 22-27, 1995.
The WEF Conference/Exposition
encompasses all aspects of the water
environment. This includes water quality
management, wet weather flow, ground-
water and nonpoint source control, wetland
and ocean issues, and topics related to
pollution prevention. Additionally, the
majority of the attendees at the WEF
Conference/Exposition are also involved in
the management and control of hazardous
and solid waste activities.
The EPA exhibit is Booth 3401, and
many types of information will be available
for the taking or by ordering.
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Ground Water Protection
Rural America is 95% dependent on
groundwater sources. Fifty percent of the
nation's water supply is dependent on
ground water. Contaminated ground water
means costly treatment facilities or
alternative sources that may or may not be
available. EPA's Wellhead Protection
Program is voluntary and works with the
National Rural Water Association in local
land use control with unanimous local
government and citizen support.
As a direct consequence of workshops
and publications developed and presented
by the Center for Environmental Research
Information, the Office of Ground Water
and Drinking Water, and the National Rural
Water Association since the beginning of
the program in 1991, over 1,340 wellhead
protection plans, providing protection for
the drinking water supply of 2,681,400
people were able to put in place by the end
of December 1994. The number of
systems presently active in the Ground
Water Program are 2,053, representing a
population of 3,985,510. The publications
compile and supplement the material
presented during the past few years in
over 70 workshops. These workshops
have to date taken place in 27 states with
more than 2,500 attendees.
While the first publication, EPA/625/
R-93/002, presents the technical
information given at the workshops, the
second, EPA/625/R-94/001, is potentially
useful to anyone responsible for delin-
eating the boundaries of a wellhead
protection area, identifying and evaluat-
ing potential contaminants, and identify-
ing wellhead management options. It is
divided into two parts: (1) Wellhead
Protection Area Delineation, and (2)
Implementation of Wellhead Protection
Areas.
Information acquired through these
groundwater program field activities has
been used to better educate water
systems, local decision makers, State
Primacy Agencies, and Regional EPA
staff. These workshops and publications
facilitated the adoption of state groundwa-
ter protection plans as well as allowing the
communities themselves to put wellhead
protection programs in place. Significant
cost savings resulted.
For a schedule of future workshop
activities, contact David Streeter, National
Rural Water Association, PO Box 1428,
2915 South 13th Street, Duncan, OK
73534, phone 405-252-0629; or Jim Smith,
EPA-CERI, Cincinnati, OH 45268, phone
513-569-7355.
U. S. EPA's Internet Access: HTTP://WWW.EPA.GOV
The EPA World Wide Web Server (WWW) is run as a prototype system to
provide public access to EPA information. If you have any questions or
problems with the WWW server, please feel free to use our on-line feedback
form or send e-mail to internet-Support@unixmail.rtpnc.epa.gov. Information
is available on the following subjects:
• Press releases, calendars, announcements, speeches
• EPA offices and regions
• Consumer information
• EPA initiatives, policy, and strategy documents
• Rules, regulations, and legislation
• EPA standards
• Science, research, and technology
• Information about grants, contracts (RFPs), and job vacancies
• Newsletters and journals
• Software and databases
The following programs have links to this EPA home page:
• Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (EMAP)
• Gulf of Mexico Program
• National Estuaries Program
• Great Lakes Information Network
• Government Information Servers
Coming soon to the this home page:
• EPA's Office of Research and Development
-------
EPA's Office of Research and Development Reorganized
EPA's ORD has begun a major reorganization, the result of a
comprehensive review and assessment of EPA's scientific and
technical support mission and organization. This study was called
for in EPA's fiscal year 1994 Congressional Appropriation Report
and was consistent with the National Performance Review and
the Administration's goals of reinventing government. The study
was conducted under the oversight of the Deputy Administrator by
an EPA Laboratory Study Steering Committee consisting of senior
officials from across the Agency. The National Academy of Public
Administration, EPA's Science Advisory Board, and the MITRE
Corporation were engaged to assist in the review. This effort
resulted in a report from the committee to the Administrator,
entitled "Research, Development, and Technical Services at EPA:
A New Beginning," EPA/600/R-94/122. Subsequently, the
Administrator directed the Assistant Administrator for ORD to
propose a reorganization plan responsive to the recommenda-
tions of the study.
The Administrator's decisions called for the realignment of
ORD's 12 laboratories and seven field stations into three National
Laboratories and one National Center focusing on a redefined
EPA science mission based on the risk assessment/risk manage-
ment model of the National Academy of Science. A complemen-
tary decision called for enlarging ORD's partnership with the
extramural scientific community through an expanded program of
research grants, fellowships, and other related activities resulting
in the formation of a second National Center. The underlying
factor of the Agency's redefined science mission is the reduction
of uncertainty through increased scientific research and the
reduction of risk through new technology. As the Agency's lead
office for integrating technical knowledge that will aid in forming
policy for environmental protection, ORD has the principal
responsibility for achieving the Agency's redefined science role.
The comprehensive course of action approved by the Administra-
tor, which requires this reorganization effort, will strengthen ORD
research activities and enhance the application of science in
environmental decision making.
The figure on page 6 depicts ORD's new organizational
structure. The resulting structure has two field components. The
first, supporting the intramural research program, involves the
merging of all 12 laboratories and seven field stations into three
National Laboratories (the National Exposure Research Labora-
tory, RTP, NC, the National Health and Environmental Effects
Research Laboratory, RTP, NC, and the National Risk Manage-
ment Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH) and a National Center
for Environmental Assessment, Washington, DC, organized
around the National Academy of Science's Risk Assessment/Risk
Management paradigm. This structure organizes research around
principles for presenting and developing risk information, a
common language for addressing a variety of issues and con-
cepts, and a flexible analytical system that accommodates the
diversity of scientific information and policy perspectives that
characterize the risk assessment process. It also fosters integra-
tion among human and ecosystem protection by avoiding institu-
tional separation of these research areas, as has been the case
under the present structure, while recognizing important distinc-
tions between risk assessment and risk management processes.
The new structure is better suited to dealing with multimedia
pathways and risks than an organizational scheme focused on
individual media or program offices.
The second field component, the National Center for Extramu-
ral Research and Quality Assurance, Washington, DC, is pro-
posed to implement the strengthened partnership with the
extramural scientific community primarily through grants for
research projects, fellowships, and the Environmental Research
Centers program. In addition, the center will provide support to
technical programs that require cross-agency coordination, such
as the Quality Assurance Management Program, implementation
of peer review policies, technology development, and the Environ-
mental Monitoring Management Council. While these functions
support ORD's research mission, ORD believes that the overall
program will be more successfully administered by a separate
center than by the three national laboratories and the Risk
Assessment Center.
The reorganization also includes abolishing eight of the current
nine Headquarters Offices and establishing three new offices: the
Office of Resources Management and Administration (ORMA),
the Office of Research and Science Integration (ORSI), and the
Office of Science Policy (OSP), and modifying the Immediate
Office of the Assistant Administrator (IOAA).
The Phase I establishment of the National Laboratory/Center
structure will strengthen ORD's customer focus by
• concentrating on the science and technology needs of
program and regional offices,
• supporting the agency's mission through short- and
long-term research,
• enhancing responsiveness to OMB, OSTP and Congres-
sional requests at the National Laboratory/Center level, and
• building improved partnerships in science and technology
among Agency program and regional offices, academia, the
private sector, and environmental programs of federal, state,
local, and tribal governments.
EPA, through the Agency-wide Research Leadership and
Focus Subcommittee, is currently redesigning the research
planning process with specific emphasis on supporting the
Agency's mission and customer satisfaction. The results of this
effort will be incorporated into ORD's operations.
With this reorganization, ORD will increase customer focus in
two ways. First, reducing the number of field components to five
and placing responsibility and accountability for research planning
with the National Laboratory/Centers reduces the probability of
customer dissatisfaction resulting when all of the necessary
parties are not involved in the negotiations. Second, the formal
commitment to a goal of $100 million in investigator-initiated
grants and the graduate fellowships program makes ORD's
commitment clear to its extramural customers in the academic
research community with respect to its commitments to fostering
extramural environmental research. The reorganization will
improve the opportunities for EPA/ORD and the academic/
scientific communities to build strong working partnerships across
a broad front of environmental science and technology areas and
also to work closely with other federal scientific agencies to
ensure coherent and integrated research programs.
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ORD Reorganization
Office of Resources
Management &
Administration
Carl Gerber*
AA
DAA/Science
DAA/Mgmt.
Staff
Office of Research &
Science
Integration
Peter Preuss
Office of Science
Policy
Dorothy Patton
Key
I I Headquarters
i.:..:..j National Lab/Center
•• Joint Representation
* Acting
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL
MANUALS
Phosphorus Removal (Sept. 1987) 625/1-87/001
Land Treatment of Municipal Wastewater (Oct. 1981) 625/1-81/013
Supplement for Land Treatment of Municipal Wastewater (Oct. 1984) 625/1-81/013a
Dewatering Municipal Wastewater Sludges (Sept. 1987) 625/1-87/014
Land Application of Municipal Sludge (Oct. 1983) 625/1-83/016
Odor and Corrosion Control in Sanitary Sewerage Systems and Treatment Plants (Oct. 1985) 625/1-85/018
Municipal Wastewater Disinfection (Oct. 1986) 625/1-86/021
Constructed Wetlands and Aquatic Plant Systems for Municipal Wastewater Treatment (Oct. 1988) 625/1-88/022
Fine Pore Aeration Systems (Oct. 1989) 625/1-89/023
Alternative Collection Systems for Small Communities (Oct. 1991) 625/1-91/024
Guidelines for Water Reuse (Sept. 1992) 625/R-92/004
Wastewater Treatment/Disposal for Small Communities (Sept. 1992) 625/R-92/005
Control of CSO Discharges (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/007
Nitrogen Control (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/010
Alternative Methods for Delivery and Recover (Oct. 1994) 625/R-94/003
Recycling and Reuse of Materials Found on Superfund Sites (Oct. 1994) 625/R-94/004
* Ground Water and Leachate Treatment Systems (Jan. 1995) 625/R-94/005
TECHNICAL CAPSULE REPORT
Radon-Resistant Construction Techniques for New Residential Construction: Technical Guidance 625/2-91/032
SEMINAR PUBLICATIONS
Permitting Hazardous Waste Incinerators 625/4-87/017
Meeting Hazardous Waste Requirements for Metal Finishers 625/4-87/018
Transport and Fate of Contaminants in the Subsurface 625/4-89/019
Corrective Actions - Technologies and Applications 625/4-89/020
Solvent Waste Reduction Alternatives 625/4-89/021
Requirements for Hazardous Waste Landfill Design, Construction and Closure 625/4-89/022
Technologies for Upgrading Existing or Designing New Drinking Water Treatment Facilities 625/4-89/023
Risk Assessment, Management and Communication of Drinking Water Contamination 625/4-89/024
Design and Construction of RCRA/CERCLA Final Covers 625/4-91/025
Site Characterization for Subsurface Remediation 625/4-91/026
Nonpoint Source Watershed Workshop 625/4-91/027
Medical and Institutional Waste Incineration: Regulations, Management, Technology, Emissions, and Operation ...625/4-91/030
Control of Biofilm Growth in Drinking Water Distribution Systems 625/R-92/001
Organic Air Emissions from Waste Management Facilities 625/R-92/003
The National Rural Clean Water Program Symposium 625/R-92/006
RCRA Corrective Action Stabilization Technologies 625/R-92/014
Control of Lead and Copper in Drinking Water 625/R-93/001
Wellhead Protection: A Guide for Small Communities 625/R-93/002
Operational Parameters for Hazardous Waste Combustion Devices 625/R-93/008
Design, Operation, and Closure of Municipal Solid Waste Landfills 625/R-94/008
* National Conference on Urban Runoff Management 625/R-95/003
BROCHURES
Environmental Pollution Control Alternatives: Drinking Water Treatment for Small Communities 625/5-90/025
Regional Environmental Monitoring and Assessment Program (R-EMAP) 625/R-93/012
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL (continued)
HANDBOOKS
Septage Treatment and Disposal (Oct. 1984) 625/6-84/009
Control Technologies for Hazardous Air Pollutants (July 1991) 625/6-91/014
Ground Water - Volume I (Sept. 1990) 625/6-90/016a
Ground Water - Volume II: Methodology (July 1991) 625/6-90/016b
Retrofitting POTWs for Phosphorus Removal in the Chesapeake Bay Drainage Area (Sept. 1987) 625/6-87/017
Guide to Technical Resources for the Design of Land Disposal Facilities (Dec. 1988) 625/6-88/018
Guidance on Setting Permit Conditions and Reporting Trial Burn Results (Jan. 1989) 625/6-89/019
Retrofitting POTWs (July 1989) 625/6-89/020
Hazardous Waste Incineration Measurement Guidance (June 1989) 625/6-89/021
Stabilization/Solidification of CERCLA and RCRA Wastes (July 1989) 625/6-89/022
Quality Assurance/Quality Control (QA/QC) Procedures for Hazardous Waste Incineration (Jan. 1990) 625/6-89/023
Operation and Maintenance of Hospital Waste Incinerators (Jan. 1990) 625/6-89/024
Assessing the Geochemical Fate of Deep-Well Injected Hazardous Waste (June 1990)
Reference Guide 625/6-89/025a
Summaries of Recent Research 625/6-89/025b
Stabilization Technologies for RCRA Corrective Actions (Aug. 1991) 625/6-91/026
Optimizing Water Treatment Plant Performance Using the Composite Correction Program Approach (Feb. 1991).. 625/6-91/027
Remediation of Contaminated Sediments (Apr. 1991) 625/6-91/028
Sub-Slab Depressurization for Low-Permeability Fill Material
Sewer System Infrastructure Analysis and Rehabilitation (Oct. 1991) 625/6-91/030
Materials Recovery Facilities for Municipal Solid Waste (Sept. 1991) 625/6-91/031
Vitrification Technologies for Treatment of Hazardous and Radioactive Waste (May 1992) 625/R-92/002
Control of Air Emissions from Superfund Sites 625/R-92/012
Subsurface Field Screening, Characterization and Monitoring
Techniques: A Desk Reference Guide (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/003
Urban Runoff Pollution Prevention and Control Planning (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/004
Use of Airborne, Surface and Borehole Geophysical Techniques at Contaminated Sites:
A Reference Guide (Sept. 1993) 625/R-92/007
Control Techniques for Fugitive VOC Emissions from Chemical Process Facilities (March 1994) 625/R-93/005
Approaches for the Remediation of Federal Facility Sites Contaminated with Explosive or
Radioactive Waste (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/013
Ground Water and Wellhead Protection (May 1994) 625/R-94/001
Guide To Septage Treatment And Disposal (Oct. 1994) 625/R-94/002
GUIDES TO POLLUTION PREVENTION
The Pesticide Formulating Industry (Feb. 1990) 625/7-90/004
The Paint Manufacturing Industry (June 1990) 625/7-90/005
The Fabricated Metal Industry (July 1990) 625/7-90/006
The Printed Circuit Board Manufacturing Industry (June 1990) 625/7-90/007
The Commercial Printing Industry (Aug. 1990) 625/7-90/008
Selected Hospital Waste Streams (June 1990) 625/7-90/009
Research And Educational Institutions (June 1990) 625/7-90/010
Approaches For Remediation Of Uncontrolled Wood Preserving Sites (Nov. 1990) 625/7-90/011
The Photoprocessing Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/012
The Automotive Repair Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/013
The Fiberglass-Reinforced And Composite Plastics Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/014
The Marine Maintenance And Repair Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/015
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TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER MATERIAL (continued)
The Automotive Refinishing Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/016
The Pharmaceutical Industry (Oct. 1991) 625/7-91/017
The Mechanical Equipment Repair Industry (Sept. 1992). 625/R-92/008
Metal Casting And Heat Treating Industry (Sept. 1992) 625/R-92/009
Municipal Pretreatment Programs (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/006
Non-Agricultural Pesticide Users (Sept. 1993) 625/R-93/009
Organic Coating Removal (Feb. 1994) 625/R-93/015
Alternatives To Chlorinated Solvents For Cleaning and Degreasing (Feb. 1994) 625/R-93/016
Cleaning and Degreasing Process Changes (Feb. 1994) 625/R-93/017
Organic Coating Replacements (Oct. 1994) 625/R-94/006
Alternative Metal Finishes (Oct. 1994) 625/R-94/007
SUMMARY REPORTS
In-Vessel Composting of Municipal Wastewater Sludge 625/8-89/016
Optimizing Water Treatment Plant Performance with the Composite Correction Program 625/8-90/017
Small Community Water and Wastewater Treatment 625/R-92/010
EXECUTIVE BRIEFINGS
Injection Well Mechanical Integrity 625/9-89/007
Experiences in Incineration Applicable to Superfund Site Remediation 625/9-88/008
Volumetric Tank Testing: An Overview 625/9-89/009
ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS AND TECHNOLOGY PUBLICATIONS
The Electroplating Industry 625/10-85/001
Fugitive VOC Emissions in the Synthetic Organic Chemicals Manufacturing Industry 625/10-84/004
Autothermal Thermophilic Aerobic Digestion of Municipal Wastewater Sludge 625/10-90/007
Control of Pathogens and Vectors in Sewage Sludge 625/R-92/013
* Managing Used Oil 625/R-94/010
SOFTWARE
POTW Expert 625/11-90/001
Strategic WAste Minimization Initiative (SWAMI) Version 2.0 625/11-91/004
GRoundwater Information Tracking System with STATistical Analysis Capability (GRITS/STAT) 625/11-91/002
OTHER
ORD BBS User's Manual (V 2.0) 600/M-91/050
Description and Sampling of Contaminated Soils: A Field Pocket Guide 625/12-91/002
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To order any of the above items, please use the Ordering Form on the last page. Please limit number of publications to 9. Justification
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Future Meetings
Meeting
Seminar
Workshop
Symposium
Title
On Control of Organic
Air Emissions from
Tanks, Surface
Impoundments, and
Containers
Pollution Prevention
(Re)engineering
Workshop
Annual Symposium
on Bioremediation of
Hazardous Wastes:
Research,
Development, and
Field Evaluations
Date(s)
Aug. 14, 1995
Dates of two others
will be announced.
June 19-22, 1995
Aug. 8-10, 1995
Location
Philadelphia, PA
Chicago, IL
Dallas, TX
Orlando, FL
Rye Brook, NY
Contact
ERG
(registration)
Justice Manning
(content)
Society for
Enterprise
Engineering
(registration)
Doug Williams
(content)
ERG
(registration)
Fran Kremer
(content)
Phone No.
617-674-7374
6 17-674-2906 (fax)
513-569-7349
513-259-4702
5 13-259-4343 (fax)
513-569-7361
617-674-7374
6 17-674-2906 (fax)
513-569-7346
10
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Manuals
625/1-87/001
625/1-81/013
625/1-81/013a
625/1-87/014
625/1-83/016
625/1-85/018
625/1-86/021
625/1-88/022
625/1-89/023
625/1-91/024
625/R-92/004
625/R-92/005
625/R-93/007
625/R-93/010
625/R-94/003
625/R-94/004
625/R-94/005
TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER ORDERING FORM
The numbers on this form correspond to those given to each publication. Circle the
number of the publication(s) you want to receive (not to exceed 9) and return this page to
ORD Publications
P.O. Box 19968
Cincinnati, OH 45219-0968
Telephone: 513-569-7562
Justification on letterhead required for more than 9 publications.
Capsule Report
625/2-91/032
Seminar
Publications
625/4-87/017
625/4-87/018
625/4-89/019
625/4-89/020
625/4-89/021
625/4-89/022
625/4-89/023
625/4-89/024
625/4-91/025
625/4-91/026
625/4-91/027
625/4-91/030
625/R-92/001
625/R-92/003
625/R-
625/R-
625/R-
625/R-
625/R-
625/R-
92/006
92/014
93/001
93/002
93/008
94/008
Brochure
625/5-90/025
625/R-93/012
Handbooks
625/6-84/009
625/6-91/014
625/6-90/016a
625/6-90/016b
625/6-87/017
625/6-88/018
625/6-89/019
625/6-89/020
625/6-89/021
625/6-89/022
625/6-89/023
625/6-89-024
625/6-89/0253
625/6-89/025b
625/6-91/026
625/6-91/027
625/6-91/028
625/6-91/030
625/6-91/031
625/R-92/002
625/7-90/004
625/R-92/002
625/R-92/007
625/R-92/012
625/R-93/003
625/R-93/004
625/R-93/005
625/R-93/013
625/R-94/001
625/R-94/002
PP Guides
625/7-90/005
625/7-90/006
625/7-90/007
625/7-90/008
625/7-90/009
625/7-90/010
625/7-90/01 1
625/7-91/012
625/7-91/013
625/7-91/014
625/7-91/015
625/7-91/016
625/7-91/017
625/R-92/008
625/R-92/009
625/R-93/006
625/R-93/009
625/R-93/015
625/R-93/016
625/R-93/017
625/R-94/006
625/R-94/007
Summary
Reports
625/8-89/015
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