[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 40, Volume 24]
[Revised as of July 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 40CFR264.551]

[Page 355-357]
 
                   TITLE 40--PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
 
         CHAPTER I--ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (CONTINUED)
 
PART 264_STANDARDS FOR OWNERS AND OPERATORS OF HAZARDOUS WASTE TREATMENT, 
STORAGE, AND DISPOSAL FACILITIES--Table of Contents
 
                Subpart S_Special Provisions for Cleanup
 
Sec. 264.551  Grandfathered Corrective Action Management Units (CAMUs).

    (a) To implement remedies under Sec. 264.101 or RCRA Section 
3008(h), or to implement remedies at a permitted facility that is not 
subject to Sec. 264.101, the Regional Administrator may designate an 
area at the facility as a corrective action management unit under the 
requirements in this section. Corrective action management unit means an 
area within a facility that is used only for managing remediation wastes 
for implementing corrective action or cleanup at the facility. A CAMU 
must be located within the contiguous property under the control of the 
owner or operator where the wastes to be managed in the CAMU originated. 
One or more CAMUs may be designated at a facility.
    (1) Placement of remediation wastes into or within a CAMU does not 
constitute land disposal of hazardous wastes.
    (2) Consolidation or placement of remediation wastes into or within 
a CAMU does not constitute creation of a unit subject to minimum 
technology requirements.
    (b)(1) The Regional Administrator may designate a regulated unit (as 
defined in Sec. 264.90(a)(2)) as a CAMU, or may incorporate a regulated 
unit into a CAMU, if:
    (i) The regulated unit is closed or closing, meaning it has begun 
the closure process under Sec. 264.113 or Sec. 265.113; and
    (ii) Inclusion of the regulated unit will enhance implementation of 
effective, protective and reliable remedial actions for the facility.
    (2) The subpart F, G, and H requirements and the unit-specific 
requirements of part 264 or 265 that applied to that regulated unit will 
continue to apply to that portion of the CAMU after incorporation into 
the CAMU.
    (c) The Regional Administrator shall designate a CAMU in accordance 
with the following:
    (1) The CAMU shall facilitate the implementation of reliable, 
effective, protective, and cost-effective remedies;
    (2) Waste management activities associated with the CAMU shall not 
create unacceptable risks to humans or to the environment resulting from 
exposure to hazardous wastes or hazardous constituents;
    (3) The CAMU shall include uncontaminated areas of the facility, 
only if including such areas for the purpose of managing remediation 
waste is more protective than management of such wastes at contaminated 
areas of the facility;
    (4) Areas within the CAMU, where wastes remain in place after 
closure of the CAMU, shall be managed and contained so as to minimize 
future releases, to the extent practicable;
    (5) The CAMU shall expedite the timing of remedial activity 
implementation, when appropriate and practicable;

[[Page 356]]

    (6) The CAMU shall enable the use, when appropriate, of treatment 
technologies (including innovative technologies) to enhance the long-
term effectiveness of remedial actions by reducing the toxicity, 
mobility, or volume of wastes that will remain in place after closure of 
the CAMU; and
    (7) The CAMU shall, to the extent practicable, minimize the land 
area of the facility upon which wastes will remain in place after 
closure of the CAMU.
    (d) The owner/operator shall provide sufficient information to 
enable the Regional Administrator to designate a CAMU in accordance with 
the criteria in Sec. 264.552.
    (e) The Regional Administrator shall specify, in the permit or 
order, requirements for CAMUs to include the following:
    (1) The areal configuration of the CAMU.
    (2) Requirements for remediation waste management to include the 
specification of applicable design, operation and closure requirements.
    (3) Requirements for ground water monitoring that are sufficient to:
    (i) Continue to detect and to characterize the nature, extent, 
concentration, direction, and movement of existing releases of hazardous 
constituents in ground water from sources located within the CAMU; and
    (ii) Detect and subsequently characterize releases of hazardous 
constituents to ground water that may occur from areas of the CAMU in 
which wastes will remain in place after closure of the CAMU.
    (4) Closure and post-closure requirements.
    (i) Closure of corrective action management units shall:
    (A) Minimize the need for further maintenance; and
    (B) Control, minimize, or eliminate, to the extent necessary to 
protect human health and the environment, for areas where wastes remain 
in place, post-closure escape of hazardous waste, hazardous 
constituents, leachate, contaminated runoff, or hazardous waste 
decomposition products to the ground, to surface waters, or to the 
atmosphere.
    (ii) Requirements for closure of CAMUs shall include the following, 
as appropriate and as deemed necessary by the Regional Administrator for 
a given CAMU:
    (A) Requirements for excavation, removal, treatment or containment 
of wastes;
    (B) For areas in which wastes will remain after closure of the CAMU, 
requirements for capping of such areas; and
    (C) Requirements for removal and decontamination of equipment, 
devices, and structures used in remediation waste management activities 
within the CAMU.
    (iii) In establishing specific closure requirements for CAMUs under 
Sec. 264.552(e), the Regional Administrator shall consider the 
following factors:
    (A) CAMU characteristics;
    (B) Volume of wastes which remain in place after closure;
    (C) Potential for releases from the CAMU;
    (D) Physical and chemical characteristics of the waste;
    (E) Hydrological and other relevant environmental conditions at the 
facility which may influence the migration of any potential or actual 
releases; and
    (F) Potential for exposure of humans and environmental receptors if 
releases were to occur from the CAMU.
    (iv) Post-closure requirements as necessary to protect human health 
and the environment, to include, for areas where wastes will remain in 
place, monitoring and maintenance activities, and the frequency with 
which such activities shall be performed to ensure the integrity of any 
cap, final cover, or other containment system.
    (f) The Regional Administrator shall document the rationale for 
designating CAMUs and shall make such documentation available to the 
public.
    (g) Incorporation of a CAMU into an existing permit must be approved 
by the Regional Administrator according to the procedures for Agency-
initiated permit modifications under Sec. 270.41 of this chapter, or 
according to the permit modification procedures of Sec. 270.42 of this 
chapter.
    (h) The designation of a CAMU does not change EPA's existing 
authority to address clean-up levels, media-specific

[[Page 357]]

points of compliance to be applied to remediation at a facility, or 
other remedy selection decisions.

[58 FR 8683, Feb. 16, 1993, as amended at 63 FR 65939, Nov. 30, 1998. 
Redesignated and amended at 67 FR 3025, Jan. 22, 2002]