2012 Wyoming Statutes
TITLE 35 - PUBLIC HEALTH AND SAFETY
CHAPTER 11 - ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY
35-11-503. Authority to promulgate rules and regulations for solid waste management facilities and for the management of hazardous wastes.


WY Stat § 35-11-503 (through 2012) What's This?

(a) The director, upon recommendation from the administrator after consultation with the water advisory board, is authorized to recommend that the council promulgate rules, regulations, standards and permit systems for solid waste management facilities in order to protect human health and the environment. The rules, regulations, standards and permit systems shall govern the management of any waste, including liquid, solid, or semisolid waste, which is managed within the boundary of any solid waste management facility, and:

(i) Shall provide requirements as to facility location, design, construction, operation, environmental monitoring, cost effective corrective actions for active facilities, closure, notices of public record, management and technical capabilities of the applicant and post-closure care as necessary to promote the purposes of this act;

(ii) Shall provide requirements for bonding or financial assurance to assure that solid waste management facilities will be constructed, operated and closed in accordance with the purposes and provisions of this act and the rules and regulations promulgated pursuant to this act;

(iii) Within ten (10) months after the effective date of this act the council shall adopt rules and regulations to implement this act and shall provide such reasonable time as may be necessary, but in no event to exceed twenty-four (24) months after the effective date of this act, for owners and operators of solid waste management facilities to comply with the rules, regulations, standards or permits;

(iv) Shall establish categories of solid waste management facilities based on waste type, volume, facility ownership, facility operation or other facility characteristics. Standards and requirements for each category may vary as are necessary to promote the purposes of this act;

(v) Shall provide for consistency and equivalency with rules and regulations adopted by the United States environmental protection agency under authority of Subtitle C of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, P.L. 94-580, as amended, for those facilities subject to such federal requirements, provided that:

(A) The director after consultation with the administrator may petition the council to promulgate rules and regulations more stringent than federal rules if adequate cause exists to determine that circumstances specific to the state compel adoption of more stringent rules to adequately protect the public health and environment of the state;

(B) The imposition of the rules under this paragraph is consistent and equivalent with the imposition of rules by the United States environmental protection agency, except that the director after consultation with the administrator may petition the council to determine for individual permits or orders that adequate cause exists for permit conditions or orders more stringent than federal regulations;

(C) Nothing in this paragraph authorizes the promulgation of rules which are not otherwise authorized in this act.

(b) To the extent not already provided by subsection (a) of this section and W.S. 35-11-504 and notwithstanding W.S. 35-11-424, the director shall, pursuant to this section or by rule, require applicants for commercial radioactive waste management facility permits to do the following:

(i) Upon the filing of the application, pay a fee to be determined by the director, based upon the estimated cost of investigating, reviewing and processing of the application. Unused fees under this subsection shall be refunded to the applicant;

(ii) No less than ten (10) months prior to submission of an application for a commercial radioactive waste management facility permit, submit a notice of intent to file a permit application and a nonrefundable regulatory agency support fee in the amount of one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000.00);

(iii) Upon receipt of a permit and the filing of each annual report thereunder, pay an annual inspection and monitoring fee to be determined by the director, based upon the estimated costs of inspecting the facility and monitoring compliance with the permit terms. Unused funds shall be credited against the next annual inspection and monitoring fee;

(iv) Upon receipt of a permit, establish a long term remediation and monitoring trust for the benefit of the department in an amount sufficient to conduct perpetual monitoring and maintenance of the permitted facility and to remediate the release of any waste or waste constituent in violation of the approved post-closure plan. The long term remediation and monitoring trust may be initially funded by a letter of credit, cash or sufficient bond excepting self-bonds. The letter of credit, cash or bond shall be reduced by an amount equal to the per ton fee levied and paid to the trust during the prior year, provided:

(A) Facilities or portions thereof which the United States government is required by law to accept ownership and assume responsibility for perpetual monitoring, maintenance, and remediation shall not be required to establish a long term remediation and monitoring trust;

(B) Monies actually paid into the long term remediation and monitoring trust on a per ton basis shall be a credit against funds otherwise payable pursuant to W.S. 35-12-113(g)(i); and

(C) All expenses incurred by the department to conduct perpetual monitoring and maintenance of the permitted facility shall be paid by the permittee. The department may contract for temporary professional services to monitor and maintain the permitted facility and to assist in rulemaking.

(v) Reduce, to the extent determined by the director to be technically and economically reasonable, the toxicity of any waste managed at the facility; and

(vi) Follow post-closure land uses established for the facility by the director.

(c) Unless and until the council adopts rules pursuant to subsection (a) of this section, for commercial radioactive waste management facilities or a particular classification of commercial radioactive waste management facilities, the director shall rely upon the performance criteria and standards of title 10, part 40, appendix A, and title 40, part 192, subpart D of the Code of Federal Regulations, as of January 1, 1991, as guidance for determining whether an application complies with the act. Nothing in this subsection shall be construed to limit the director's authority to impose permit requirements or conditions or the council's authority to promulgate rules, consistent with this act, which are more stringent than the federal regulations referenced.

(d) The council shall, upon recommendation from the director and the administrators of the air, water and solid and hazardous waste divisions, promulgate rules and regulations which are:

(i) Necessary for the state to obtain authorization of its hazardous waste management regulatory program to operate in lieu of the federal hazardous waste program administered under subtitle C of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, P.L. 94-580, as amended, provided that the council may not adopt rules requiring imposition of administrative penalties for hazardous waste violations; and

(ii) Subject to the limitations on stringency of paragraph (a)(v) of this section, consistent with, and equivalent to rules and regulations adopted by the United States environmental protection agency under authority of subtitle C of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, P.L. 94-580, as amended.

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