[
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
00112;
ICR
1446.08;
Supporting
Statement,
part
1
of
2]

Supporting
Statement
for
a
Request
for
OMB
Review
under
the
Paperwork
Reduction
Act
1.
IDENTIFICATION
OF
THE
INFORMATION
COLLECTION
l(
a)
Title
of
the
Information
Collection
TITLE:
PCBs,
Consolidated
Reporting
and
Recordkeeping
Requirements
EPA
ICR
No.:
1446.08
OMB
Control
No:
2070­
0112
1(
b)
Short
Characterization
The
Toxic
Substances
Control
Act
(
TSCA)
section
6(
e)(
1),
15
USC
2605(
e),
directs
EPA
to
regulate
the
marking
and
disposal
of
polychlorinated
biphenyls
(
PCBs).
Section
6(
e)(
2)
bans
the
manufacturing,
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
and
use
of
PCBs
in
other
than
a
totally
enclosed
manner.
Section
6(
e)(
3)
establishes
a
process
for
obtaining
an
exemption
from
the
prohibitions
on
the
manufacture,
processing,
and
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs.
This
provision
requires
that
EPA
must
make
a
finding
by
rule
that
such
activities
will
not
present
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
In
addition,
good
faith
efforts
must
have
been
made
by
the
petitioner
to
develop
a
chemical
substance
that
does
not
present
an
unreasonable
risk
to
replace
the
PCBs.
Exemptions
may
be
granted
for
a
period
not
to
exceed
one
year.
Since
1978,
EPA
has
promulgated
numerous
rules
addressing
all
aspects
of
the
life
cycle
of
PCBs
as
required
by
the
statute.
These
regulations
have
been
codified
in
the
various
subparts
of
40
CFR
761,
as
shown
in
Table
1­
1.
Appendix
A
contains
a
copy
of
the
statute
and
Appendix
B
is
a
copy
of
the
regulations.

TABLE
1­
1
SUBPARTS
AND
SECTIONS
OF
40
CFR
761
Subpart
Section
Numbers
Subpart
Title
Subpart
A
§
§
761.1
­
.19
General
Subpart
B
§
§
761.20
­
.35
Manufacturing,
Processing,
Distribution
in
Commerce,
and
Use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
Subpart
C
§
§
761.40
­
.45
Marking
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
Subpart
D
§
§
761.50
­.
79
Storage
and
Disposal
TABLE
1­
1,
continued
SUBPARTS
AND
SECTIONS
OF
40
CFR
761
Subpart
Section
Numbers
Subpart
Title
­
2­
Subpart
E
§
§
761.80
Exemptions
Subpart
F
§
§
761.91
­
.99
Transboundary
Shipments
of
PCBs
for
Disposal
Subpart
G
§
§
761.120
­
.135
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
Subparts
J
§
§
761.180
­
.193
General
Records
and
Reports
Subpart
K
§
§
761.202
­
.218
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
Subpart
M
§
§
761.240
­
.257
Determining
a
PCB
Concentration
for
Purposes
of
Abandonment
or
Disposal
of
Natural
Gas
Pipeline;
Selecting
Sample
Sites,
Collecting
Surface
Samples,
and
Analyzing
Standard
PCB
Wipe
Samples
Subpart
N
§
§
761.260
­
.274
Cleanup
Site
Characterization
Sampling
for
PCB
Remediation
Waste
in
Accordance
with
40
CFR
761.61(
a)(
2)

Subpart
O
§
§
761.280
­
.298
Sampling
to
Verify
Completion
of
Self­
Implementing
Cleanup
and
On­
Site
Disposal
of
Bulk
PCB
Remediation
Waste
and
Porous
Surfaces
in
Accordance
with
§
761.61(
a)(
6)

Subpart
P
§
§
761.300
­
.316
Sampling
Non­
Porous
Surfaces
for
Measurement­
Based
Use,
Reuse,
and
On­
Site
or
Off­
Site
Disposal
Under
§
§
761.61(
a)(
6)
and
761.79(
b)(
3)

Subpart
Q
§
§
761.320
­
.326
Self­
Implementing
Alternative
Extraction
and
Chemical
Analysis
Procedures
for
Non­
Liquid
PCB
Remediation
Waste
Samples
Subpart
R
§
§
761.340
­
.359
Sampling
Non­
Liquid,
Non­
Metal
PCB
Bulk
Product
Waste
for
Purposes
of
Characterization
for
PCB
Disposal
in
Accordance
with
§
761.62,
and
Sampling
PCB
Remediation
Waste
Destined
for
Off­
Site
Disposal,
in
Accordance
with
§
761.61
Subpart
S
§
§
761.360
­
.378
Double
Wash/
Rinse
Method
for
Decontaminating
Non­
Porous
Surfaces
Subpart
Section
Numbers
Subpart
Title
­
3­
Subpart
T
§
§
761.380
­
.398
Comparison
Study
for
Validating
a
New
Performance­
Based
Decontamination
Solvent
Under
40
CFR
971.79(
d)(
4)

This
Supporting
Statement
is
a
renewal
of
the
Information
Collection
Request
(
ICR)
that
previously
consolidated
six
ICRs
as
follows:

1.
ICR
857
 
PCB
Manufacturing,
Processing,
and
Distribution
in
Commerce
Exemptions
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0021).
2
ICR
1000
 
PCB
Use
in
Electrical
Equipment
and
Transformers
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0003).
3.
ICR
1001
 
PCB
Exclusions,
Exemptions,
and
Use
Authorizations
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0008).
4.
ICR
1012
 
PCB
Disposal
Permitting
Regulation
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0011).
5.
ICR
1446
 
Notification
and
Manifesting
for
PCB
Waste
Activities
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0112),
which
incorporates
ICR
583
­
PCB
Use,
Storage,
and
Disposal
Recordkeeping
Requirements
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0061).
This
collection
was
amended
to
address
third­
party
notifications
and
to
address
the
burden
associated
with
EPA's
Reclassification
Rule
when
it
was
a
proposed
rule.
6.
ICR
1729
 
Final
Regulations
Amending
the
PCB
Regulations
at
40
CFR
761
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0159).

The
previous
Consolidated
ICR
also
incorporated
collection
request
burdens
associated
with
the
Reclassification
Rule
(
66
FR
17602,
April
2,
2001)
not
previously
contained
in
OMB's
inventory.
No
additional
requirements
have
been
added
to
this
ICR,
with
the
exception
of
two
minor
reporting
provisions
of
the
Reclassification
Rule
that
were
not
included
in
the
previous
Consolidated
ICR.

There
are
approximately
100
specific
reporting,
third­
party
reporting,
and
recordkeeping
requirements
covered
by
this
consolidated
ICR.
Some
examples
of
reporting
and
third­
party
reporting
requirements
included
at
40
CFR
761
follow:

­­
Submitting
reports/
certifications
to
qualify
for
the
exclusion
from
the
manufacturing
ban,
thus
allowing
the
manufacture
or
importation
of
chemical
products
that
contain
inadvertently
generated
trace
PCB
impurities.

­­
Registering
newly
discovered
PCB
Transformers
with
EPA
(
reporting)
and
building
owners
(
third­
party
reporting).

­­
Submitting
annual
reports
concerning
the
storage
and
disposal
of
PCBs.
­
4­
­­
Notifying
EPA
to
obtain
approval
to
exceed
the
time
limits
for
storing
equipment
slated
for
reuse
or
to
exceed
the
current
1­
year
limitation
on
storing
equipment
for
disposal.

­­
Notifying
EPA
(
i.
e.,
reporting)
and
State
and
local
officials
(
i.
e.,
third­
party
reporting)
of
self­
implementing
PCB
remediation
activities
and
changes
to
these
activities,
and
providing
certification
that
all
records
of
remediation
activities
are
on
file.

­­
Requesting
EPA
approval
to
operate
facilities
that
dispose
or
commercially
store
PCBs.

­­
Submitting
Unmanifested
Waste
Reports.

­­
Sending
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
generators
of
PCB
waste
(
third­
party
reporting).

Examples
of
recordkeeping
requirements
under
40
CFR
761
include:

­­
Maintaining
records
of
PCB
Transformers
and
transformer
inspections,
Voltage
Regulators,
and
Large
Capacitors.

­­
Maintaining
records
of
PCB
equipment
stored
for
reuse.

S
Keeping
records
of
remediation
activities.

­­
Preparing
and
maintaining
plans
for
handling
PCB
spills
[
i.
e.,
Spill
Prevention,
Control,
and
Countermeasure
(
SPCC)
plans].

­­
Preparing
and
maintaining
annual
document
logs
for
incineration
facilities,
chemical
waste
landfills,
and
high
efficiency
boilers.

­­
Maintaining
monitoring
records
of
the
manufacture,
import,
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
or
use
of
chemicals
containing
inadvertently
generated
or
recycled
PCBs.

­­
Maintaining
records
associated
with
the
transfer,
storage,
and
disposal
of
PCBs
and
PCB
equipment;
the
processing
and
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs;
and
the
decontamination
of
PCB
Items.

Information
required
by
these
regulations
is
used
by
EPA's
Regional
Administrators,
the
Office
of
Enforcement
and
Compliance
Assurance
(
OECA),
or
the
Office
of
Pollution
Prevention
and
Toxic
Substances
(
OPPTS),
as
appropriate.
Much
of
the
information
is
maintained
as
part
of
­
5­
the
public
docket.
Confidential
business
information
(
CBI)
submitted
to
EPA
to
qualify
for
the
chemical
manufacturing
exclusions
is
maintained
by
OPPTS
in
the
CBI
docket.
Data
collected
under
the
transformer
registration
program
are
provided
to
the
EPA
Regional
Offices
and
other
environmental
offices,
on
an
as
requested
basis
(
e.
g.,
State
environmental
agencies,
fire
response
personnel,
etc.),
and
is
accessible
on­
line
as
well.

All
of
the
information
collection
activities
associated
with
the
PCB
regulations
found
at
40
CFR
761
have
been
approved
by
OMB.
The
total
hourly
and
cost
burdens
associated
with
the
requirements
discussed
in
this
consolidated
ICR
include
time
needed
to
collect
and
review
required
information
and
transmit
or
otherwise
disclose
the
information.
EPA
will
use
the
information
collected
by
the
40
CFR
761
requirements
to
ensure
PCBs
are
managed
in
an
environmentally
safe
manner
and
that
activities
are
being
conducted
in
compliance
with
the
PCB
regulations.
Specific
uses
of
the
information
collected
include
determining
the
efficacy
of
a
disposal
technology;
evaluating
exemption
requests
and
exclusion
notices;
targeting
compliance
inspections
(
e.
g.,
determining
if
operational
criteria
for
disposal
facilities
are
being
met);
and
ensuring
adequate
storage
capacity
for
PCB
waste.

2.
NEED
FOR
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTION
2(
a)
Need/
Authority
for
the
Collection
The
reporting
and
recordkeeping
requirements
of
this
consolidated
ICR
are
implemented
under
the
TSCA
authorities
15
USC
2605,
Section
6(
e).
To
meet
its
statutory
obligations,
EPA
must
obtain
sufficient
information
to
conclude
that
the
specified
activities
do
not
result
in
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
The
regulations
are
intended
to
prevent
the
improper
handling
and
disposal
of
PCBs
and
to
minimize
the
exposure
of
human
beings
or
the
environment
to
PCBs.

To
assist
EPA
in
achieving
these
goals,
the
information
collected
by
these
requirements
will
update
the
Agency's
knowledge
of
ongoing
PCB
activities,
ensure
that
individuals
using
or
disposing
of
PCBs
are
held
accountable
for
their
activities,
and
demonstrate
compliance
with
the
PCB
regulations.
Tables
2­
1,
2­
2,
and
2­
3
(
located
at
the
end
of
this
section)
provide
specific
regulatory
citations
for
each
reporting,
third­
party
reporting,
and
recordkeeping
requirement,
respectively,
as
well
as
the
use
for
each
requirement,
which
is
provided
in
response
to
Section
2(
b)
of
this
report.
Item
numbers
in
the
first
column
of
the
tables
are
included
for
ease
of
reference
to
the
numerous
requirements
and
are
carried
through
to
other
sections
and
tables
throughout
this
document.

There
are,
however,
certain
PCB
requirements
that
are
exempt
from
the
Paperwork
Reduction
Act
(
PRA).
In
defining
"
collection
of
information,"
OMB's
PRA
regulations
explicitly
exempt
public
disclosures
where
all
the
information
required
to
be
displayed
is
supplied
by
the
government.
The
last
sentence
of
5
CFR
1320.3(
c)(
2)
states,
"
The
public
disclosure
of
­
6­
information
originally
supplied
by
the
Federal
Government
to
the
recipient
for
the
purpose
of
disclosure
to
the
public
is
not
included
within
this
definition"
(
emphasis
added).
This
exemption
is
reflected
in
OMB's
February
3,
1997
draft,
the
Paperwork
Reduction
Act
of
1995:
Implementing
Guidance,
p.
20,
n.
88
(
giving
the
example
of
cigarettes
displaying
the
specified
Surgeon
General's
warning).

EPA's
PCB
marking
requirements
at
§
§
761.40
and
.45
supply
all
the
information
required
by
EPA
to
be
displayed
on
items
containing
PCBs,
except
for
§
§
761.45(
a)
and
.40(
j)(
2).
All
the
information
required
to
be
disclosed
for
compliance
with
these
two
provisions
is
not
provided
by
EPA,
however,
the
requirements
do
not
negate
the
above
conclusion.

For
§
761.45(
a),
the
mark
prompts
the
recipient
to
add
information
identifying
the
name
and
telephone
number
of
a
person
to
contact
beyond
the
contact
information
already
supplied
by
EPA's
mark
itself.
(
The
mark
gives
an
emergency
800
number
at
the
U.
S.
Coast
Guard
in
case
of
accidents
or
spills,
and
states
"
for
disposal
information
contact
the
nearest
U.
S.
EPA
office.")
However,
OMB's
PRA
regulations
state
at
5
CFR
1320.3(
h)(
1)
that
the
definition
of
"
information"
does
not
generally
include
"
affidavits,
oaths,
affirmations,
certifications,
receipts,
changes
of
address,
consents,
or
acknowledgments;
provided
that
they
entail
no
burden
other
than
that
necessary
to
identify
the
respondent,
the
date,
the
respondent's
address,
and
the
nature
of
the
instrument."
According
to
OMB's
draft
PRA
Guidance
(
p.
24),
this
exemption
"
is
to
be
used
only
to
identify
an
individual
in
a
routine,
non­
intrusive,
non­
burdensome
way."
Thus,
requiring
the
recipient
to
display
merely
the
name
and
phone
number
of
a
contact
person
falls
outside
OMB's
definition
of
"
information"
and
therefore
does
not
require
OMB
approval
or
negate
the
exemption,
under
5
CFR
1320.3(
c)(
2),
for
the
PCB
marking
requirements.

The
second
exemption
is
that
§
761.40(
j)(
2)
allows
the
use
of
marks
other
than
that
prescribed
by
EPA
at
§
761.45
for
PCB
Transformers
(
provided,
among
other
things,
that
(
i)
those
marks
were
in
use
before
August
15,
1985,
(
ii)
before
August
15,
1985,
the
primary
fire
department
accepted
the
alternative
mark,
(
iii)
the
EPA
Regional
Administrator
(
RA)
was
informed
in
writing
of
the
alternative
mark
by
October
3,
1988,
and
(
iv)
the
EPA
RA
approved
the
alternative
mark
within
30
days
of
receipt).
This
exception
applies
only
to
the
discrete
universe
of
individuals
who
were
already
using
alternative
markings
before
August
15,
1985,
and
received
EPA's
approval
to
continue
using
it.
At
that
time,
the
PRA
did
not
apply
to
Agency
requirements
that
regulated
entities
disclose
information
to
third
parties
or
the
pubic
rather
than
to
the
Agency
itself,
Dole
v.
United
Steelworkers
of
America,
110
S.
Ct.
929,
938
(
1990),
such
as
a
requirement
to
display
a
marking
on
PCB
Transformers.

There
are
three
main
types
of
possible
violations
for
these
PCB
marking
requirements:
PCB
Transformers
with
(
1)
no
labels,
(
2)
unapproved
alternative
labels,
or
(
3)
inadequate
labels
with
missing
or
incorrect
information.
Those
persons
who
fail
to
use
any
mark
and
never
submitted
an
application
for
an
alternative,
and
those
persons
who
are
using
an
unapproved
alternative
mark,
cannot
assert
the
PRA
as
an
affirmative
defense,
because
they
are
required
to
use
the
mark
specified
in
§
761.45,
which,
according
to
5
CFR
1320.3(
c)(
2),
does
not
constitute
the
­
7­
collection
of
information.

2(
b)
Use
of
the
Data
EPA
will
use
the
information
collected
by
the
40
CFR
761
requirements
to
ensure
PCBs
are
managed
in
an
environmentally
safe
manner
and
that
activities
are
being
conducted
in
compliance
with
the
PCB
regulations.
Tables
2­
1,
2­
2,
and
2­
3
contain
information
on
the
specific
use
of
the
data
for
each
information
collection.
­
8­
TABLE
2­
1
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
40
CFR
761
Subpart
A
 
General
1
§
761.1(
f)(
1),(
2),

and
(
3)
Comply
with
reporting
requirements
of
Subpart
J
(
§
§
761.185
­
.187)
as
a
condition
to
be
exempt
from
the
manufacturing
ban
of
Subpart
B,
for
persons
who:

inadvertently
manufacture
or
import
PCBs
generated
as
unintentional
impurities
in
excluded
manufacturing
processes;
process,
distribute
in
commerce,
or
use
products
containing
PCBs
generated
in
excluded
manufacturing
processes;
or
process,
distribute
in
commerce,
or
use
products
containing
recycled
PCBs,
as
per
§
761.1(
f)(
1)
to
(
3).
Provide
means
for
Agency
to
verify
that
individuals
who
claim
manufacturing
exclusions
are
generating
only
allowed
quantities
of
PCBs
in
the
products
that
leave
their
manufacturing
sites.
Provide
data
used
to
establish
who
is
generating
new
PCBs,
where
these
PCBs
are
being
generated,
and
in
what
quantities.

Identify
sites
for
compliance
inspections
of
those
facilities
that
have
reported
unusually
high
amounts
of
PCBs
released
to
products,
air,
or
water.
Provide
quality
control
in
that
the
regulation
encourages
manufacturers
to
audit
their
operations,
quantify
their
PCB
releases,
and
maintain
their
particular
PCB
releases
within
prescribed
limits.
(
Also
see
numbers
42
&
43.)

Subpart
B
 
Use
2
§
§
761.20(
b)
and
(
c)(
1)
and
(
3)
Submit
an
exemption
petition
as
per
TSCA
Section
6(
e)(
3)

to
manufacture
(
import),
process,
or
distribute
in
commerce
(
export)
PCBs,
unless
otherwise
authorized.
Implement
statutory
mandate
that
these
activities
will
not
result
in
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
(
Also
see
numbers
34
and
39.)

3
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)

(
vi),
(
vii),
and
(
xv)(
D)
Register
newly
discovered
PCB
Transformers.
(
See
Appendix
C
for
EPA
Form
7720­
12).
Provide
EPA
and
building
owners
with
key
information
about
transformer
locations.

4
§
§
761.30(
a)(
2)

(
v)(
C)
and
.30(
h)(
2)(
v)(
C)
Obtain
EPA
approval
to
use
alternate
method
for
reclassifying
transformers.
Provide
EPA
with
adequate
information
to
respond
to
request
for
relief
from
regulatory
requirement.

5
§
761.30(
i)(
1)

(
iii)(
A)(
1)
Submit
a
description,
at
the
request
of
the
Regional
Adminstrator
(
RA),
of
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system
owned
or
operated
by
a
seller
or
distributor
of
natural
gas
that
contains
>
50
ppm
PCBs.
Keep
regions
informed
of
the
operation
of
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system
that
contains
PCBs.
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
9­

6
§
761.30(
t)(
3)
Obtain
EPA
approval
for
the
use
of
PCBs
in
other
gas
or
liquid
systems.
Ensure
that
the
wide
variety
and
sometimes
rare
cases
of
PCB­
contaminated
gas
or
liquid
systems
are
identified
and
cleaned
to
<
50
ppm.

7
§
761.35(
b)
Obtain
EPA
approval
for
an
extended
storage
for
reuse
period.
Prevent
indefinite
storage
of
equipment
in
areas
not
designed,
constructed,
or
operated
in
compliance
with
toxic/
hazardous
waste
storage
requirements
(
e.
g.,

TSCA
§
761.65(
b)
or
RCRA
3004
or
3006
facilities).

Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
8
§
761.60(
e),

(
i)(
2);
.70(
a),
(
b),

and
(
d);
.75(
b)(
7),

(
b)(
8)(
ii),
and
(
c)
Submit
permit
application
and,
when
applicable,
a
demo
plan
for
obtaining
approval
to
operate
a
PCB
disposal
facility
(
i.
e.,

alternative
method
of
disposal,
incinerator,
chemical
waste
landfill).
Submit
requests
for
approval
of
R&
D
for
PCB
disposal
for
persons
not
following
self­
implementing
requirements.
Determine
if
applications
meet
the
technical
and
operational
criteria
for
a
disposal
or
R&
D
facility
to
prevent
PCB
releases
into
the
environment.

9
§
761.60(
j)(
1)

(
i)
Notify
EPA
to
obtain
an
identification
number
for
conducting
R&
D
on
PCB
disposal
activities.
(
See
Appendix
D
for
EPA
Form
7710­
53).
Ensure
EPA
is
knowledgeable
of
PCB
R&
D
activities
(
i.
e.,
a
waste
handling
activity)
to
prevent
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
(
Also
see
number
44.)

10
§
761.60(
j)(
1)

(
ii)
Notify
EPA
(
as
well
as
State,
and
local)
environmental
officials
of
PCB
disposal
R&
D
activities.
Keep
relevant
regional
authorities
informed
of
PCB
waste
handling
activities
in
their
area.

11
§
761.60(
j)(
2)
Obtain
EPA's
approval
to
exceed
allowable
volume
of
PCB
material,
maximum
concentration
of
PCBs,
total
amount
of
pure
PCBs
or
duration
of
an
R&
D
activity.
Ensure
the
PCB
R&
D
disposal
activities
will
not
cause
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
10­

12
§
§
761.61(
a)

(
3)(
i)
and
(
ii)
Notify
EPA
(
as
well
as
State,
Tribal,
and
local)
officials
of
self­
implementing
remediation
activity,
including
a
summary
of
the
procedures
used
to
sample
contaminated
areas
and
sample
collection
and
analysis
data;
submit
additional
information
as
requested;
and
certify
that
records
of
remediation
activity
are
on
file
at
the
location
designated
in
the
certificate.
Allow
for
flexibility
in
self­
implementing
remediation
by
keeping
proper
authorities
informed
of
remediation
activities.

13
§
761.61(
a)(
3)

(
ii)
Notify
EPA
of
changes
to
notification
of
self­
implementing
activities.
Allow
for
flexibility
in
self­
implementing
remediation
by
keeping
proper
authorities
informed
of
remediation
activities.

14
§
761.61(
a)(
3)

(
iii)
Request
a
waiver
of
the
notification
requirement
for
conducting
cleanup
of
PCB
remediation
waste.
Allow
for
flexibility
in
self­
implementing
remediation
by
keeping
proper
authorities
informed
of
remediation
activities.

15
§
761.61(
a)(
8)

(
i)(
B)
Submit
certification
to
EPA
that
the
deed
notation
required
by
§
761.61(
a)(
8)(
i)(
A)
has
been
recorded.
Ensure
proper
notification
to
potential
land
owners
of
PCB
history
at
the
site.

16
§
761.61(
c)(
1)
Apply
for
risk­
based
disposal
of
PCB
remediation
wastes.

Submit
additional
information
as
requested
by
EPA.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
assess
proposed
disposal
option
and
ensure
that
it
will
not
present
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

17
§
761.62(
c)(
1)
Obtain
approval
for
risk­
based
disposal
or
storage
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste.
Provide
additional
information
and
periodic
progress
reports,
as
requested
by
EPA.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
assess
proposed
disposal
or
storage
option
and
ensure
that
it
will
not
present
a
risk
of
injury
to
health
and
the
environment.

18
§
761.65(
a)(
2)
Provide
notification
that
continuing
attempts
to
dispose
of
or
secure
disposal
for
PCB
waste
within
the
1­
year
time
frame
have
been
unsuccessful,
for
which
EPA
may
grant
an
automatic
1­
year
extension.
Show
good
faith
attempts
to
secure
disposal
of
PCB
wastes.
Allow
EPA
to
evaluate
whether
the
1­
year
time
frame
for
storage
should
be
extended
and
ensure
that
appropriate
treatment
and
disposal
options
are
being
pursued.

19
§
761.65(
a)(
3)
Submit
requests
for
additional
extensions
beyond
the
initial
1­
year
extension,
including
justification
and
information
on
measures
taken
to
secure
disposal.
Ensure
that
appropriate
treatment
and
disposal
options
are
being
pursued.
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
11­

20
§
761.65(
a)(
4)
Submit
request
for
modifications
to
TSCA
approval
to
allow
for
extended
storage
period.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
a
facility
is
likely
to
present
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
as
a
result
of
being
granted
approval
to
extend
the
storage
timeframes
for
the
disposal
of
PCB
waste.

21
§
761.65(
c)(
6)

(
i)(
C)
Demonstrate
to
the
RA
and
other
appropriate
regulatory
authorities
(
i.
e.,
NRC,
DOE,
or
DOT),
that
the
use
of
other
containers
for
the
storage
of
liquid
and
non­
liquid
PCB/
radioactive
wastes
is
protective
of
health
and
the
environment.
Allow
flexibility
in
using
unique
container
designs
that
meet
the
criteria
for
containers
used
to
store
liquid
or
non­
liquid
PCB/
radioactive
waste.

22
§
761.65(
d);
(
e)(
1),

(
6),
and
(
8);
and
(
f)
Prepare
application
for
commercial
storage
approval,

including
qualifications
of
key
employees,
closure
plan,

and
closure
cost
estimate.
Commercial
storer
must
also
notify
EPA
of
facility
modification,
closure
schedule,
and
completion
of
closure
activities.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
operational
capabilities,
to
determine
whether
storers/

disposers
of
PCB
wastes
have
the
ability
to
close
their
facilities
in
a
safe
manner,

and
to
prohibit
intermediate
handlers
of
PCBs
who
are
financially
unable
to
close
their
facilities
from
becoming
potential
Superfund
sites.

23
§
761.65(
e)(
4)
Submit
a
written
request
to
the
RA
to
modify
a
storage
approval
to
amend
the
closure
plan,
when
there
are
changes
in
ownership,
changes
in
expected
dates
of
closure,
and/
or
unexpected
events.
Ensure
proper
management
of
storage
facilities.

24
§
761.65(
g)(
9)
Notify
issuing
authority
of
modifications
to
commercial
storage
facilities.
Ensure
financial
assurance
mechanism
is
adequately
funded.

25
§
§
761.65(
j)
Demonstrate
that
a
new
owner
of
a
commercial
storage
facility
has
established
financial
assurance
for
closure.

Submit
new
or
amended
commercial
storage
application
as
a
result
of
change
in
ownership.
Ensure
proper
management
of
storage
facilities
and
handling
of
PCB
wastes
prior
to
approving
changes
in
ownership.

26
§
§
761.70(
a)

(
8),
(
9);
and
(
d)(
5)
Obtain
approval
of
alternate
measures
when
regulatory
requirements
cannot
be
met
for
operating
a
PCB
incinerator.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
adequacy
of
alternate
procedures
for
use
at
incinerators.
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
12­

27
§
§
761.70(
d)

(
8);
761.75
(
c)
(
7)
Notify
EPA
of
change
in
ownership
of
disposal
facility
(
i.
e.,
incinerators
and
landfills).
Allow
EPA
to
determine
whether
transfer
will
present
risk
of
injury
to
health
and
environment.

28
§
§
761.71(
a)(
2)

and
(
b)(
2)
Notify
EPA
prior
to
initial
use
of
high
efficiency
boiler
to
burn
mineral
oil
dielectric
fluid.
Seek
approval
to
burn
liquids,
other
than
mineral
oil
dielectric
fluid
in
a
HEB.
Ensure
that
the
operation
of
high
efficiency
boilers
will
not
present
a
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

29
§
§
761.72(
c)(
2)
Notify
EPA
as
a
scrap
metal
recovery
oven
or
smelter
used
to
dispose
of
PCBs
and
comply
with
the
reporting
requirements
of
Subparts
J
and
K.
Ensure
that
the
operation
of
industrial
furnaces
will
not
present
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
(
Also
see
number44.)

30
§
761.72(
c)(
3)
Submit
written
request
to
RA
based
on
site­
specific
risk
assessments,
in
lieu
of
meeting
requirements
listed
in
§
761.72.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
scrap
metal
recovery
oven
and/
or
smelter
operation
will
present
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

31
§
§
761.77(
a)

(
1)(
i),(
a)(
1)(
ii)(
A)

(
1)
and
(
C),
and
.77(
a)(
2)
Submit
a
notification
to
the
RA
for
coordinated
approval
and
additional
information,
as
requested
by
EPA.
Submit
an
application
for
TSCA
disposal
approval,
if
the
RA
denies
the
request
for
a
coordinated
approval
or
determines
that
the
conditions
of
the
coordinated
approval
are
not
being
met.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
facilities
seeking
coordinated
approval
properly
manage
PCB
wastes
and
recognize
the
Federal
or
State
waste
management
documents
governing
the
properly
managed
facilities,
thus
contributing
to
more
efficient
use
of
limited
resources.

32
§
761.77(
a)(
3)
Notify
EPA
of
changes
in
waste
management
requirements
in
the
non­
TSCA
waste
management
document
used
to
obtain
TSCA
PCB
coordinated
approvals.
Ensure
the
proper
handling
of
PCB
wastes.

33
§
§
761.79(
h)
Submit
requests
for
approvals
of
alternative
decontamination
or
sampling
methods,
for
any
person
decontaminating
porous
surfaces
other
than
concrete,
as
per
paragraph
(
b)(
4),
or
non­
porous
surfaces
covered
with
a
porous
surface,
as
per
paragraph
(
b)(
3)
or
(
c)(
6),
and/
or
by
using
a
self­
implementing
procedures
other
than
prescribed
in
paragraph
(
c).
EPA
may
request
additional
information.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
ensure
that
decontamination
methods
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
13­

Subpart
E
 
Exemptions
34
§
§
761.80(
e)(
1)

and
(
i)(
1)
Submit
petition
to
qualify
for
the
class
exemptions
for
manufacturing
PCBs
for
disposal
R&
D
and
for
the
manufacture,
import,
processing,
distribution,
and
export
of
PCBs
and
analytical
reference
samples
derived
from
PCB
waste
for
R&
D.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
assess
whether
a
facility
meets
the
criteria
for
being
granted
an
exemption.
Minimize
negative
impacts
from
the
relatively
time­
consuming
statutory
process
for
individual
companies
seeking
an
exemption
from
the
prohibition
on
manufacturing,
processing,
and
distributing
in
commerce
of
PCBs.
[
Statutory
requirement]
(
Also
see
numbers
2
and
39).

35
§
761.80(
e),
(
i)(
2)

and
(
n)
Submit
requests
for
renewal
of
the
class
exemptions.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
ensure
that
facility
operations
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

36
§
§
761.80(
e)

(
3),
(
g)(
2),
and
(
i)(
4)
Obtain
approval
from
EPA
to
exceed
limits
of
the
exemption.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
ensure
that
facility
operations
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

37
§
761.80(
e)(
4)
Notify
EPA
before
beginning
R&
D
activities
that
include
the
manufacture
of
PCBs.
Ensure
that
facility
operation
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

38
§
761.80(
n)
Submit
a
petition
for
certain
exemptions
to
address
increases
in
the
amount
of
PCBs
to
be
processed
and
distributed,
imported
(
manufactured),
or
exported,
or
changes
in
the
manner
of
processing
and
distributing,

importing
(
manufacturing),
or
exporting
PCBs.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
ensure
that
facility
operations
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

Subpart
F
 
Transboundary
Shipments
of
PCBs
for
Disposal
39
§
§
761.93(
a)

and
.97(
a)
Submit
an
exemption
petition
as
per
TSCA
Section
6(
e)(
3)

to
import
PCBs
or
PCB
Items
for
disposal.
Allow
EPA,
on
an
as­
requested
basis,
to
ensure
that
the
import
and
export
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
will
not
pose
a
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.

[
Required
by
Statute.]
(
See
number
2.)
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
14­

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
40
§
761.125(
a)(
1)
(
i)

to
(
iii)
Report
certain
spills
of
PCBs
to
EPA.
Request
guidance
from
the
RA
in
completing
statistical
sampling
of
the
spill
area
to
establish
spill
boundaries,
where
there
are
no
visible
traces
of
contamination.
Make
reporting
consistent
with
CERCLA
requirements
and
facilitate
cleanup
of
PCBs,
to
prevent
exposure
to
PCBs.

Subpart
J
 
General
Records
and
Reports
41
§
§
761.180(
b)

(
3)
and
(
c)(
5)
Submit
annual
reports
for
the
operation
of
PCB
incinerators,

chemical
waste
landfills,
high
efficiency
boilers,
and
commercial
storage
facilities,
including
facilities
that
dispose
of
the
PCB
wastes
they
generate.
Report
suspension
of
operations.
Fill
gaps
in
EPA's
knowledge
of
how
PCB
wastes
are
being
handled
and
allow
the
Agency
to
respond
to
public
and
Congressional
inquiries.
Enable
EPA
to
more
effectively
target
disposal
facilities
for
inspection
and
compliance
monitoring.

41a
§
761.180(
g)
Provide
records
pertaining
to
the
reclassification
of
PCB
equipment,
if
requested
by
EPA.
Address
EPA's
concerns
regarding
reclassification
procedures
and
results
for
the
specified
equipment.
(
Also
see
number
68a.)

42
§
§
761.185
Notify
EPA
and
certify
low
level
PCB
product
contamination
to
be
exempt
from
the
requirements
of
Subpart
B,
regarding
processes
inadvertently
generating
PCBs
and
imports
of
products
containing
inadvertently
generated
PCBs.
Certification
must
be
repeated
if
the
previous
certification
is
no
longer
valid.
Ensure
products
do
not
reach
U.
S.
markets
with
unacceptably
high
levels
of
PCBs.

43
§
761.187
Notify
EPA
when
PCB
releases
exceed
limits,
to
be
exempt
from
the
requirements
of
Subpart
B,
for
products,

manufactured
or
imported
with
inadvertently
generated
PCBs.
Ensure
that
facility
operations
will
not
pose
risk
of
injury
to
health/
environment.

Subpart
K
 
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
TABLE
2­
1,
continued
REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e),
40
CFR
761
AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
15­

44
§
§
761.202(
a)
;

205(
a)
to
(
c)
Notify
EPA
of
waste
handling
activities,
for
generators,

commercial
storers,
transporters,
or
disposers
of
PCB
waste.
Inform
EPA
of
generators,
storers,
transporters,
and
disposers
of
PCB
waste
so
that
the
Agency
can
ensure
compliance
with
applicable
regulations.

45
§
761.205(
f)
Report
changes
in
notifications
previously
submitted
by
PCB
waste
handlers
(
i.
e.,
amended
notification).
Ensure
that
PCB
waste
handlers
are
operating
within
the
proper
criteria.

46
§
§
761.208(
a)

(
4)
and
.215(
b)

to
(
d)
Submit
Exception
Reports
to
EPA
when
PCB
waste
generators,
disposers,
and/
or
commercial
storers
do
not
receive
confirmation
that
a
shipment
of
a
PCB
waste
has
been
properly
disposed
of.
Track
the
movement
of
PCB
waste
to
ensure
they
arrive
at
intended
storage
or
disposal
site.

47
§
761.210(
b)
Submit
Discrepancy
Reports
and
copies
of
manifests
to
EPA
when
the
PCB
waste
received
by
a
disposer
is
significantly
different
from
the
description
on
the
manifest
that
accompanies
it,
and
the
discrepancy
is
not
resolved
within
15
days
after
receiving
the
PCB
waste.
Enable
EPA
to
investigate
potential
violations
and
prevent
further
environmental
contamination.
Target
companies
for
inspection.

48
§
§
761.211(
b)
Notify
RA
of
unmanifested
PCB
waste,
for
owners/
operators
of
commercial
storage
facilities
who
cannot
contact
the
generator
of
the
PCB
waste.
Enable
EPA
to
investigate
potential
violations
and
prevent
further
environmental
contamination.
Target
companies
for
inspection.

49
§
761.211(
c)
Submit
Unmanifested
Waste
Reports
(
e.
g.,
waste
description,
volume,
disposition;
date
received;
ID
numbers
of
waste
handlers
for
that
waste)
to
EPA
when
disposers
accept
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
without
an
accompanying
manifest.
Enable
EPA
to
investigate
potential
violations
and
prevent
further
environmental
contamination.
Target
companies
for
inspection.

Subpart
T
 
Comparison
Study
for
Validating
a
New
Performance­
Based
Decontamination
Solvent
under
§
761.79(
d)(
4)

50
§
§
761.395
and
398(
a)
Submit
results
of
analysis
and
validation
study
to
the
Director,
National
Program
Chemicals
Division
(
NPCD).
Allow
EPA
to
confirm
and
publish
findings
in
the
Federal
Register
of
new
decontamination
procedures.
­
16­
TABLE
2­
2
THIRD­
PARTY
NOTIFICATION
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
40
CFR
761
Subpart
B
 
Use
51
§
§
761.20(
e)(
3)

(
ii);.
30(
i)(
5)

(
ii);
and
.60(
b)

(
5)(
iv)(
B)
Burner
of
used
oil
must
provide
a
1­
time
certification
to
the
marketer
that
he
is
in
compliance
with
notification
requirement
at
§
761.71(
a)(
2).
Limits
distribution
of
used
oil
containing
PCBs
to
authorized
burners.

52
§
§
761.30(
a)

(
1)(
xi)
and
(
xv)(
A);

30(
h)(
1)

(
ii)(
B)
Report
PCB
Transformers
and
Voltage
Regulator
fire
incidents
to
the
NRC.
Provide
Federal
officials
with
notice
of
individual
and
the
environmental
exposure
to
PCBs.

53
§
761.30(
a)(
1)

(
xiv)
Notify
owner
of
PCB
Transformer
that
equipment
may
pose
risk
of
exposure
to
food
or
feed.
Allow
determination
to
be
made
regarding
risk
of
exposure
to
food
and
feed.

54
§
761.30(
a)(
1)

(
xv)(
D)
Register
PCB
Transformers
with
the
building
owner
within
30
days
of
discovery
Provide
local
notice
of
the
existence
of
PCBs.

Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
55
§
761.60(
a)(
3)

(
ii)
Provide
information
to
chemical
waste
landfills
that
liquids
do
not
exceed
500
ppm
and
are
not
ignitable.
Prevent
release
of
PCBs
and
provide
flexibility
in
disposal
options
for
incidental
liquids,
making
the
rule
consistent
with
RCRA
land
ban
restrictions.

56
§
761.60(
b)(
5)

(
i)(
A)(
1)
Include
abandoned
natural
gas
pipes
that
contain
PCBs
in
public
service
notification
programs.
Prevent
exposure
to
PCBs.
TABLE
2­
2,
continued
THIRD­
PARTY
NOTIFICATION
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
17­

57
§
761.60(
f)(
1)

(
i)
Provide
State
and
local
officials
with
notification
prior
to
the
first
use
of
an
approved
chemical
waste
landfill,

incinerator,
or
alternate
PCB
disposal
technology.
Inform
relevant
authorities
of
the
operation
of
a
PCB
disposal
facility
in
their
region.

58
§
761.60(
f)(
1)

(
ii)
Provide
annual
notice
of
the
quantities
and
general
description
of
the
PCBs
disposed
of
during
the
year,
at
the
request
of
any
State
or
local
government.
Keep
relevant
authorities
informed
of
PCB
activities
in
their
region.

59
§
761.60(
j)(
1)

(
ii)
Notify
State,
and
local
environmental
officials
(
as
well
as
EPA)
of
PCB
disposal
R&
D
activities.
Keep
relevant
regional
authorities
informed
of
PCB
waste
handling
activities
in
their
area.

60
§
761.60(
j)(
1)

(
vii)
Manifest,
pursuant
to
Subpart
K,
all
PCB
wastes
that
are
generated
by
R&
D
on
PCB
disposal
and
transported
from
the
R&
D
facility
to
a
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility,
unless
the
residuals
or
unused
samples
are
returned
to
the
site
of
generation.
Ensure
proper
handling
and
disposal
of
PCB
wastes.

61
§
§
761.61(
a)

(
3)(
i)
Notify
State,
and
local
environmental
officials
(
as
well
as
EPA)
of
self­
implementing
remediation
activity.
Allow
for
flexibility
in
self­
implementing
remediation
by
keeping
proper
authorities
informed
of
remediation
activities.

62
§
761.61(
a)(
5)

(
i)(
B)(
2)(
iv)
Notify
offsite
non­
TSCA
facility
of
pending
shipment
of
remediation
waste.
Ensure
proper
handling
of
PCB
wastes.

63
§
761.61(
a)(
8)

(
i)(
A)
Attach
a
notation
to
the
deed
for
property
at
which
remediation
projects
require
a
permanent
fence
or
cap.
Ensure
potential
buyer
is
aware
property
is
site
of
PCB
remediation.
TABLE
2­
2,
continued
THIRD­
PARTY
NOTIFICATION
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
18­

64
§
§
761.62(
b)

(
4)(
i)
and
(
ii)
Provide
notification
to
a
receiving
facility
that
does
not
have
a
commercial
PCB
storage
or
disposal
approval
before
the
first
shipment
of
a
PCB
bulk
product
waste
stream.
In
addition,
for
certain
waste
this
notice
must
be
provided
with
each
shipment
thereafter.
Ensure
proper
storage
and
disposal
for
PCB
bulk
product
waste.
(
See
also
§
§
761.357
and
761.359.)

65
§
761.65(
c)(
1)

and
(
8)
Attach
a
notation
to
a
PCB
Item
or
PCB
Container
containing
the
item
indicating
the
date
the
Item
was
removed
from
service.
Facilitate
the
proper
storage
and
disposal
of
PCB
Items
and
Containers.

66
§
761.65(
i)(
3)
Send
information
regarding
the
sample
collector,
the
lab,
date
of
shipment,
quantity,
and
description
of
sample,
when
sending
PCB
samples
to
a
laboratory
for
testing.
Inform
workers
of
appropriate
contact
information
to
ensure
proper
handling
of
PCBs.

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
67
§
761.125(
a)(
1)
Report
certain
spills
of
PCBs
to
the
NRC.
Make
reporting
consistent
with
CERCLA
requirements
and
facilitate
cleanup
of
PCBs,
to
prevent
exposure
to
PCBs.

68
§
761.125(
c)

(
2)(
ii)
Place
label
or
notice
of
PCB
contamination
at
cleanup
site.
Inform
personnel
of
presence
of
low
level
PCB
contamination.

Subpart
J
 
General
Records
and
Reports
68a
§
761.180(
g)
Provide
records
pertaining
to
the
reclassification
of
PCB
equipment,
if
requested
by
recipients
of
equipment.
Address
recipient's
concerns
regarding
liability
for
improper
reclassification.
(
Also
see
number
41a.)
TABLE
2­
2,
continued
THIRD­
PARTY
NOTIFICATION
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
COLLECTED
DATA:
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
19­

Subpart
K
 
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
69
§
§
761.207(
a)

and
.208(
a)(
2)

and
(
3)
Prepare
manifests
and
provide
generator­
initiated
manifests
of
PCB
waste
to
each
transporter
or
designated
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility.
Ensure
proper
tracking
of
PCB
waste
shipments.

70
§
§
761.208(
c)

(
1)(
iv)
and
(
c)(
2)(
iv)
Storer
or
disposer
send
a
copy
of
the
manifest
or
shipping
paper
to
the
generator.
Ensure
proper
tracking
of
PCB
waste
shipments.

71
§
§
761.218(
a)

and
(
b)
Send
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
generators
of
PCB
waste
when
disposal
of
each
item
is
complete
for
a
manifested
PCB
waste
shipment.
Enable
generators
to
confirm
that
each
PCB
Item
in
a
shipment
has
been
disposed
of
legally.
Assure
generator
that
the
PCB
waste
has
been
disposed
of
and
is
in
the
final
step
of
the
cradle­
to­
grave
monitoring
of
PCB
waste.
­
20­
TABLE
2­
3
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
40
CFR
761
Subpart
A
 
General
72
§
761.1(
f)
Comply
with
recordkeeping
requirements
of
Subpart
J
(
§
761.185
­
.193)
as
a
condition
of
the
exclusion
from
the
manufacturing,
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
and
use
bans
of
Subpart
B,
for
persons
who
inadvertently
manufacture
or
import
PCBs
generated
as
unintentional
impurities
in
excluded
manufacturing
processes,
or
generate
PCBs
in
excluded
manufacturing
process
or
products
with
recycled
PCBs,
as
defined
in
§
761.3.
Provide
quality
control
that
encourages
manufacturers
to
audit
their
operations,
to
quantify
their
PCB
releases,
and
to
maintain
their
particular
PCB
releases
within
the
limits
that
will
assure
that
they
have
generated
only
trace
amounts
of
PCBs.
(
See
number100.)

Subpart
B
 
Manufacturing,
Processing,
Distribution
in
Commerce,
and
Use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
73
§
§
761.20(
e)

(
4)(
i)
and
(
ii);

.30(
i)(
5)(
ii);
and
.60(
b)(
5)(
iv)

(
B)
Marketer
who
first
claims
used
oil
does
not
contain
detectable
PCBs
must
retain
records
supporting
the
claim
and
a
copy
of
each
certification
notice
received
or
prepared
relating
to
transactions
involving
PCBcontaining
used
oil.
Burners
must
include
among
the
records
a
copy
of
each
certification
notice
that
has
been
provided
to
a
marketer
of
PCB­
containing
used
oil.
Allow
EPA
to
verify
compliance
with
the
used
oil
provisions.

74
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)

(
xii)
and
(
xiv)
Maintain
records
of
inspection
and
maintenance
history
for
at
least
3
years
after
the
disposal
of
a
PCB
Transformer,
including
records
of
registration,
as
per
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
vi)(
C).
Allow
EPA
to
verify
compliance
with
the
regulations
and
that
PCB
equipment
was
registered.
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
21­

75
§
§
761.30(
a)

(
2)(
v)(
C)
and
(
D);
761.30(
h)(
2)

()(
C)
and
(
D);

and
761.180(
g)
Maintain
records
at
the
facility
where
PCB
electrical
equipment
(
i.
e.,
transformers,
voltage
regulators,

electromagnets,
switches)
has
been
reclassified
to
a
lower
PCB
concentration.
Assist
EPA
in
tracking
the
ultimate
disposition
of
PCB
equipment.

76
§
§
761.30(
i)(
1)

(
iii)(
B)
and
(
C).
Keep
records
of
data
collected
on
natural
gas
pipeline
systems
that
do
not
include
sources
of
PCB
contamination
(
e.
g.,
natural
gas
compressors,
natural
gas
scrubbers,
and
natural
gas
filters)
but
contain

50
ppm
PCB.
Retain
data
and
records
of
actions
taken
to
reduce
PCB
contamination
by
owners
or
operators
of
natural
gas
pipeline
systems.
Be
able
to
demonstrate
the
reduction
of
PCB
levels
in
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system.

77
§
761.35(
a)(
2)
Keep
records
of
equipment
stored
for
reuse.
Ensure
the
proper
handling
of
equipment
stored
for
reuse.

Subpart
C
 
Marking
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
78
§
761.40(
c)(
2)

(
ii)
and
(
k)
Keep
records
of
the
protected
location
of
PCB
Large
Low
and
High
Voltage
Capacitors,
in
lieu
of
marking.
Have
information
available
for
preventing
exposure
to
PCBs
and
allow
flexibility
in
compliance
with
marking
requirement.

Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
79
§
761.60(
j)(
1)

(
ix)
Keep
records
of
R&
D
for
disposal
activities.
Have
information
ensuring
the
proper
management
of
R&
D
for
disposal
activities.
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
22­

80
§
§
761.61(
a)

(
3)(
i)(
E);
and
(
a)(
6)
Retain
records
of
the
sampling
plans,
sample
collection
procedures,
sample
preparation
procedures,

extraction
procedures,
and
instrumental/
chemical
analysis
procedures
used
to
assess
or
characterize
the
PCB
contamination
at
the
cleanup
site,
and
certification
that
these
records
are
on
file
at
the
location
designated
in
the
certificate.
Keep
records
of
comparison
studies
for
any
alternate
method
used
that
meet
or
exceed
the
requirements
of
§
761.326.
Keep
records
of
sampling
and
sample
analysis
to
verify
cleanup
and
on­
site
disposal
of
bulk
PCB
remediation
wastes
and
porous
surfaces,
as
per
Subpart
O,

§
761.295.
Allow
EPA
inspectors
to
ensure
the
proper
operation
of
PCB
remediation
activities.
(
See
also
§
§
761.295.)

81
§
761.61(
a)(
3)

(
iii)
Retain
the
original
written
waiver
of
the
30­
day
notification
requirement
for
conducting
a
cleanup
activity
of
PCB
remediation
waste.
Allow
EPA
to
track
administrative
decisions
regarding
self­
implementing
remediation
projects.

82
§
761.61(
a)(
9)
Keep
records
in
accordance
with
§
761.125(
c)(
5)
for
(
a)(
3),
(
a)(
4),
and
(
a)(
5)
of
this
part.
Ensure
that
a
remediation
site
has
been
properly
decontaminated.
(
See
number
97.)

83
§
761.62(
b)(
5)
Maintain
a
written
record
of
all
sampling
and
analysis
of
PCBs
or
notifications
made
under
this
part
for
3
years
from
the
date
of
its
creation
and
make
available
to
EPA
upon
request.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
PCB
bulk
product
wastes
are
properly
handled.

84
§
§
761.65(
a)

(
2)(
ii)
and
(
a)(
3)
Keep
a
written
record
of
attempts
to
secure
disposal
capacity.
If
requested,
keep
records
of
PCB
wastes
stored
beyond
the
1­
year
storage
extension.
Ensure
that
PCB
wastes
stored
beyond
the
1­
year
storage
extension
do
not
pose
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
and
the
environment.
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
23­

85
§
761.65(
c)(
1)

(
iv)
Prepare/
modify
Spill
Prevention,
Control,
and
Countermeasure
Plans
to
address
liquid
PCBs
>
500
ppm,
to
be
able
to
temporarily
store
PCB
Containers
containing
liquid
PCBs
in
areas
that
do
not
comply
with
the
storage
requirements
of
§
761.65.
Ensure
that
adequate
remediation
measures
have
been
defined
and
can
be
taken
to
avoid
exposure
to
PCBs
in
the
event
of
a
PCB
spill.

86
§
761.65(
c)(
7)

(
ii)
Prepare
a
Spill
Prevention,
Control,
and
Countermeasure
Plan
(
SPCC)
when
using
large
stationary
storage
containers,
as
per
29
CFR
1910.106,

for
liquid
PCBs.
Ensure
that
adequate
remediation
measures
have
been
defined
and
can
be
taken
to
avoid
exposure
to
PCBs
in
the
event
of
a
PCB
spill.

87
§
761.65(
c)(
8)
Keep
records
of
the
quantity
and
the
date
of
each
batch
added
to
the
stationary
storage
container.
Allow
EPA
to
monitor
content
of
stationery
storage
containers.

88
§
§
761.65(
c)

(
10)
Establish
and
maintain
records
as
per
§
761.180
for
the
storage
and
disposal
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items

50
ppm.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
are
being
properly
stored
for
disposal.
(
See
number
99)

89
§
§
761.70(
a)

(
3),
(
4)
and
(
7);

(
c);
and
761.180(
c)
Maintain
for
incinerators
records
of
quantities,
feed
rates,
temperatures,
combustion
products,
and
operations,
and
special
records,
as
per
§
761.180(
c);

retain
records
for
5
years.
Allow
monitoring
of
incinerator
operations.

90
§
§
761.71(
a)

(
1)(
vi)
and
(
vii),

(
a)(
4),
(
b)(
1)(

vivii
and
(
b)(
5);

and
.180(
e)
Record
feed
rate,
carbon
dioxide
emissions,
the
quantity
of
low
concentration
PCB
liquid
burned
in
a
high
efficiency
boiler
each
month,
and
the
analysis
of
the
waste
burned
in
high
efficiency
boilers
and
retain
the
records
for
5
years.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
a
high
efficiency
boiler
has
operated
according
to
the
required
specifications.
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
24­

91
§
761.72(
a)(
9)

and
(
b)(
6)
Record
and
retain
records
of
temperature
readings
from
scrap
metal
recovery
ovens.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
scrap
metal
recovery
ovens
and
smelters
are
operated
according
to
the
required
specifications.

92
§
§
761.75(
b)

(
6)(
iii)
and
(
b)(
8)(
iv);

761.180(
d)
Maintain
records
for
all
PCB
disposal
operations
at
chemical
waste
landfills,
including
PCB
concentration
in
liquid
wastes,
the
three­
dimensional
burial
coordinates
for
PCBs
and
PCB
Items,
water
sampling
and
analysis,
and
additional
records
as
required
in
§
761.180;
retain
records
for
at
least
20
years
after
the
facility
ceases
disposal
operations.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
disposal
facilities
are
operating
in
compliance
with
regulatory
requirements.

93
§
761.79(
d)(
4)

and
Subpart
T
Retain
test/
validation
results
of
performance­
based
organic
decontamination
fluids
(
PODFs)
and
verified
aqueous
decontamination
fluids
(
VADFs).
Allow
EPA
to
ensure
that
a
decontamination
activity
used
proper
decontamination
fluids.

94
§
§
761.79(
f)(
1)

and
(
2)
Keep
records
for
3
years
of
confirmatory
sampling
and
sampling
locations/
results
for
decontamination
activities
and
compliance
with
self­
implementing
procedures.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
whether
a
decontamination
activity
was
properly
implemented.

Subpart
E
 
Exemptions
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
25­

95
§
§
761.80(
e)
(
5)

and
(
i)(
7)
Keep
records
of
activities
associated
with
manufacture/
processing/
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs
or
PCB
reference
samples
derived
from
waste
materials
for
R&
D;
retain
records
for
3
years
after
operations
cease.
Ensure
accountability
for
PCB
activities
otherwise
banned
by
statute.

96
§
761.80(
g)(
1)
Keep
records
of
activities
associated
with
the
processing
and
distribution
in
commerce
of
small
quantities
of
PCBs
for
R&
D.
Ensure
accountability
for
PCB
activities
otherwise
banned
by
statute.

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
97
§
§
761.125(
b)

(
3)
and
(
c)(
5);

.61(
a)(
9)
Maintain
records
of
cleanup
and
certification
of
decontamination
for
5
years,
for
low­
and
highconcentration
spills.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
compliance
with
requirements
and
pursue
enforcement
actions,
when
appropriate.

98
§
761.125(
c)

(
1)
Maintain
records
documenting
delay
in
spill
cleanup
activities
and
areas
of
visible
contamination.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
compliance
with
requirements
and
pursue
enforcement
action,
when
appropriate.

Subpart
J
 
General
Records
and
Reports
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
26­

99
§
§
761.180(
a),

(
a)(
4),
(
b)
and
(
f);
761.65(
c)
(
5)
Maintain
annual
records
and
written
annual
document
log
for
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
for
3
years
after
facility
ceases
PCB
activities,
including
signed
manifests,

Certificates
of
Disposal,
records
of
inspections
and
cleanups,
facility
and
Item
identification
information,

total
number
of
Items,
telephone
records,
and
PCB
Item
transfer
information.
Collect
and
maintain
documents,
correspondence
and
data
pertaining
to
storage/
disposal
of
PCBs
that
have
been
provided
to
as
well
as
received
from
any
State
or
local
government
agency
and
any
application/
correspondence
submitted
to
local,
State,
or
Federal
permitting
authorities.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
compliance
with
requirements
and
pursue
enforcement
action,
when
appropriate.

100
§
§
761.185(
c)

(
2),
(
d)
and
.193
(
a)
and
(
b)
Maintain
theoretical
analysis
or
monitoring
records
by
persons
who
import,
manufacture,
process,
distribute
in
commerce,
or
use
products
containing
inadvertently
generated
or
recycled
PCBs,
pursuant
to
§
761.1(
f)(
1)

to
(
3).
Maintain
letter
certifying
compliance
with
§
761.1(
f),
for
excluded
manufacturing
processes.
Allow
EPA
to
ensure
the
proper
management
of
PCB
activities.

101
§
§
761.208
and
761.209
File
and
maintain
manifests
initiated
or
received
by
a
PCB
waste
handling
facility
(
i.
e.,
generators,

transporters,
commercial
storers
and
disposers)
and
maintain
records
of
all
telephone
and
other
conversations
regarding
manifest
communications,

which
are
to
be
included
in
the
annual
log
in
accordance
with
§
761.180.
Provide
a
record
of
the
fate
of
each
waste
shipment
sent
to
a
disposal
site,

allowing
EPA
to
determine
if
a
waste
had
been
properly
or
improperly
disposed.
TABLE
2­
3,
continued
RECORDKEEPING
REQUIREMENTS
AUTHORIZED
UNDER
TSCA
SECTION
6(
e)

AND
USE
OF
THE
DATA:
FOR
ICR
PART
A,
SECTIONS
2(
a)
and
2(
b)

Ref.

#
Regulatory
Section(
s)
Collection
Requirement
2(
b)
Use
of
Collected
Information
­
27­

102
§
761.218(
c)
Maintain
a
copy
of
each
Certificate
of
Disposal
received
from
disposers,
for
generators
and
commercial
storers
of
PCB
waste.
Provide
a
record
of
the
disposal
of
a
waste
shipment,
allowing
EPA
to
determine
if
a
waste
has
been
properly
or
improperly
disposed.

Subpart
T
 
Comparison
Study
for
Validating
a
New
Performance­
Based
Decontamination
Solvent
under
§
761.79(
d)(
4)

103
§
761.398(
c)
Record
testing
parameters
and
experimental
conditions
in
standard
operating
procedures
(
SOP).
Results
of
validation
study
are
to
be
affixed
as
an
appendix.
Allow
EPA
to
assess
compliance
with
requirements
and
pursue
enforcement
action,
when
appropriate.
­
28­
3.
NON­
DUPLICATION,
CONSULTATIONS,
AND
OTHER
COLLECTION
CRITERIA
3(
a)
Non­
Duplication
TSCA
Section
6(
e)
assigns
the
responsibility
for
regulating
the
manufacture,
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
use,
storage,
and
disposal
of
PCBs
to
the
EPA
administrator.
All
of
the
information
requested
under
this
ICR
is
required
by
the
statute
and
the
implementing
regulations
at
40
CFR
761
and
is
not
available
from
other
sources.
The
information
collection
requirements
addressed
in
these
ICRs
are
not
duplicative
of
any
other
Federal
agency
legislation.
No
other
Federal
agency
requires
respondents
to
report
or
maintain
information
on
the
manufacturing,
processing,
or
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs.

For
example,
the
notification
and
recordkeeping
requirements
of
§
§
761.185,
761.187,
and
761.193
comprise
the
sole
source
of
information
EPA
relies
on
to
identify
the
manufacturing
sites
that
inadvertently
manufacture
PCBs
and
to
verify
that
the
members
who
have
certified
their
eligibility
for
the
exclusion
are
not
exceeding
the
prescribed
limits
on
PCB
releases.
Over
time,
reviewers
of
the
PCB
ICRs
have
suggested
that
the
TSCA
PCB
requirements
are
duplicative
of
TSCA
inventory
Form
U
reports,
EPCRA
Tier
I
and
II
reports,
and
Customs
records
that
presumably
could
be
used
by
EPA
to
identify
a
product's
PCB
concentration
(
§
§
761.185
and
.187);
that
RCRA,
CWA,
CAA,
and
CERCLA
could
be
used
by
EPA
to
address
air
and
water
emissions
and
process
waste
concerns
(
§
761.187);
and
that
EPCRA
reporting
requirements
could
be
used
by
EPA
to
identify
locations
of
PCB
Transformers
and
PCB
releases
(
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)
and
.187).
However,
none
of
these
requirements
begin
to
address
the
concerns
that
are
being
tracked
under
the
TSCA
PCB
regulations.
For
example,
Customs
records
collect
information
on
importation
(
i.
e.,
chemical
products,
points
of
entry,
and
quantities,
not
products
with
de
minimis
levels
of
PCBs).
The
EPCRA
and
TSCA
inventory
reports
do
not
gather
information
at
the
levels
that
would
be
useful
under
the
PCB
regulations
Finally,
the
RCRA,
CWA,
CAA,
and
CERCLA
provisions
cannot
be
used
to
monitor
PCB
concentrations
in
consumer
products
or
to
prescribe
disposal
procedures
for
PCBs.

3(
b)
Public
Notice
Required
Prior
to
ICR
Submission
to
OMB
Prior
to
submission
to
OMB,
this
ICR
will
be
made
available
to
the
public
for
comment
through
a
Federal
Register
notice.
The
public
will
have
60
days
to
provide
comments.
Any
comments
received
will
be
given
consideration
when
completing
the
supporting
statement
that
is
submitted
to
OMB.

3(
c)
Consultations
On
numerous
occasions
during
the
course
of
regulating
PCBs,
the
Agency
has
consulted
with
the
regulated
community
and
the
public.
These
consultations
have
been
held
directly
with
industry
officials
and,
on
an
ongoing
basis,
with
owners
and
operators
of
regulated
facilities,
during
EPA
enforcement
activities
and
facility
inspections.
For
example,
when
developing
the
­
29­
rules
pertaining
to
PCB
Transformer
use,
EPA
consulted
with
the
Department
of
Agriculture,
U.
S.
Department
of
Health
and
Human
Services,
and
the
Small
Business
Administration.
To
obtain
information
on
the
numbers
of
transformers
subject
to
the
requirements,
EPA
consulted
with
the
Edison
Electric
Institute,
Equitable
Life
Assurance,
and
the
Building
Owners
and
Managers
Association.
As
a
result
of
the
promulgated
Electrical
Equipment
Use
Rule,
EPA
has
consulted
with
various
organizations
and
agencies
on
an
ongoing
basis.
EPA
also
meets
annually
with
representatives
from
more
than
50
utilities
and
electric
cooperatives
who
have
verified
the
burden
estimates
related
to
inspection
recordkeeping
requirements
for
PCB
Transformers.

For
the
Final
PCB
Disposal
Rule
promulgated
June
29,
1998
(
63
FR
35384),
the
Agency
consulted
with
the
regulated
community
and
the
public
on
all
aspects
of
the
rulemaking.
In
addition,
informal
meetings
were
held
with
the
American
Gas
Association
(
AGA),
Interstate
Natural
Gas
Association
of
America
(
INGAA),
Utilities
Solid
Waste
Activities
Group
(
USWAG),
and
the
Environmental
Technology
Council
(
ETC).
Interagency
meetings
conducted
jointly
by
OMB
and
EPA
regarding
the
provisions
of
this
rule
were
attended
by
several
Federal
agencies,
including
the
Department
of
Defense
(
DOD),
the
Department
of
Energy
(
DOE),
the
Department
of
Transportation
(
DOT),
and
the
Tennessee
Valley
Authority
(
TVA).

For
this
Consolidated
ICR
renewal,
a
small­
scale
data
gathering
effort
was
conducted
to
update
burdens,
costs,
and
numbers
of
respondents
for
the
information
collection
requirements.
Nine
or
fewer
organizations,
associations,
or
individuals
were
contacted
for
this
effort
per
unique
requirement,
including
representatives
from
the
natural
gas
industry
and
electric
utilities.
These
contacts
were:

Pamela
Lacey,
PCB
Coordinator
American
Gas
Association
Washington,
D.
C.
202­
824­
7000
Mary
Davis,
USWAG
PCB
Committee
Chair
American
Electric
Power
Shrevesport,
LA
318­
673­
2744
Tim
Orton,
Environmental
Manager
EnviroCare
Salt
Lake
City,
UT
801­
532­
1330
This
effort
also
involved
gathering
information
about
the
number
of
notifications
the
Agency
has
received
over
the
past
three
years
for
the
various
reporting
burdens
(
see
Table
2­
1)
and
the
number
of
PCB
spills
reported
to
the
National
Response
Center
(
NRC)
from
2000
to
2002
(
U.
S.
Coast
Guard,
2003).
It
also
involved
using
information
recently
gathered
for
preparing
the
September
2003
Draft
Analysis
to
the
Cost
Impacts
of
Potential
Amendments
to
the
PCB
Regulations
at
40
CFR
Part
761,
including
information
obtained
from
conversations
with
regulated
entities
(
U.
S.
EPA,
2003d).
This
analysis
was
performed
within
the
context
of
the
­
30­
limitations
mentioned
above.
It
is
noted
that
the
responses
regarding
reporting
and
recordkeeping
burdens
are
variable.
Comments
are
incorporated
throughout
the
supporting
statement.
Sources
are
listed
in
the
reference
section.

3(
d)
Effects
of
Less
Frequent
Collection
EPA
has
judged
that
the
reporting
and
recordkeeping
requirements
of
these
ICRs
are
the
minimum
amount
necessary
to
prevent
injury
to
health
and
the
environment.
These
requirements
ensure
adequate
oversight
by
EPA
over
the
use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
equipment
and
the
storage
and
disposal
of
PCB
wastes.
If
these
activities
were
conducted
less
frequently,
the
mismanagement
and
improper
storage
and
disposal
of
PCBs
would
likely
cause
subsequent
environmental
contamination.

There
are
several
examples
of
one­
time
PCB
information
collection
requirements.
One
example
is
the
notification
and
certifications
requirements
of
§
761.185,
which
are
supported
by
relevant
sampling
data
or
by
theoretical
analysis.
Only
when
processes
are
modified
are
importers
and
manufacturers
required
to
renotify.
The
notification
requirements
regarding
installation
of
PCB
Transformers
in
emergency
situations,
and
for
owners
who
elect
not
to
install
enhanced
electrical
protection
on
lower
voltage
secondary
transformers
were
one­
time
notifications
that
were
to
be
completed
by
October
1,
1990.
Another
example
are
the
reports
on
total
PCB
releases
of
§
761.187
that
need
only
be
submitted
if
the
PCB
levels
in
the
products
exceed
the
specified
annual
average
of
25
ppm,
or
when
releases
to
air
and
water
exceed
the
regulatory
thresholds.
Also,
EPA
requires
one­
time
notifications
for
owners
to
register
their
newly
discovered
PCB
Transformers
(
see
EPA
Form
7720­
12,
PCB
Transformer
Registrations
at
Appendix
C)
and
for
individuals
to
notify
the
Agency
of
their
PCB
waste
handling
activities
(
see
EPA
Form
7710­
53,
Notification
of
PCB
Activity
at
Appendix
D);
both
notifications
can
be
accomplished
by
completing
a
simple
form,
although
use
of
the
form
is
optional
when
registering
PCB
Transformers.

3(
e)
General
Guidelines
Most
of
the
information
requested
by
this
ICR
is
consistent
with
OMB's
Paperwork
Reduction
Act
Guidelines.
Some
exceptions
are
as
follows.

Under
the
information
collection
requirements
of
§
§
761.185
and
761.193
(
ICR
1001),
manufacturing
and
monitoring
records
that
document
PCB
levels
in
products
and
analyses
that
support
the
one­
time
notification
and
certification
of
compliance
for
the
process
must
be
retained
for
either
3
years
after
the
certified
process
ceases
operations
or
7
years,
whichever
is
shorter.
The
content
of
the
file
most
likely
would
not
change
over
the
7­
year
period,
so
the
burden
of
keeping
the
file
is
substantially
mitigated
by
its
limited
contents.
Likewise,
entities
that
monitor
for
actual
PCB
concentrations
in
the
products
they
manufacture,
use,
process,
distribute
in
commerce,
or
recycle
must
also
maintain
monitoring
data
records
under
§
761.193
for
either
a
3­
year
period
after
the
operation
ceases
or
up
to
7
years.
The
effect
of
this
provision
is
to
impose
­
31­
an
equal
retention
period
for
sampling
data
on
all
those
who
deal
with
inadvertently
generated
PCBs
in
products,
whether
the
PCBs
result
from
excluded
manufacturing
processes
or
recycling.

To
comply
with
the
storage
and
disposal
requirements
of
Subpart
D,
disposers
and
commercial
storers
must
retain
records
for
at
least
3
years
after
the
facility
is
no
longer
used
for
the
storage
or
disposal
of
PCB
wastes,
except
that
chemical
waste
landfills
must
maintain
records
for
at
least
20
years
after
the
facility
no
longer
accepts
PCB
wastes.
The
reason
for
requiring
records
retention
for
landfills
in
excess
of
3
years
is
that
a
leak
from
a
chemical
waste
landfill
could
take
years
to
develop
into
a
noticeable
environmental
problem.
Landfill
records
are
the
only
mechanism
to
accurately
trace
the
source
of
the
contamination.
Also,
certain
operational
records
maintained
by
the
owner/
operator
of
incineration
facilities
and
high
efficiency
boilers
must
be
retained
for
5
years
from
the
date
of
collection.
This
enables
facilities
to
demonstrate
to
enforcement
officials
that
the
facility
has
consistently
complied
with
relevant
technical
requirements
and
conditions
specified
in
the
disposal
permit.

The
Final
Disposal
Amendments
Rule
contains
several
provisions
that
require
recordkeeping
for
5
years
or
more.
These
provisions
include
§
761.61(
a)(
9),
which
requires
the
notifications
and
remediation
site
cleanup
activity
documentation,
pursuant
§
§
761.61(
a)(
3),
(
4),
and
(
5),
to
be
maintained
for
5
years.
Section
761.61(
a)(
8)(
i)(
A)
requires
a
notice
be
permanently
affixed
to
the
deed
of
any
property
where
a
remediation
project
has
resulted
in
the
installation
of
a
fence
or
ground
cover
cap
to
increase
protection
from
exposure
to
PCBs.
These
measures
were
taken
to
enable
adequate
oversight
of
remediation
projects
by
environmental
officials
and
to
provide
adequate
notice
to
potential
new
owners
of
property
where
remediation
projects
were
undertaken.

There
are
a
number
of
provisions
in
Part
761
that
require
reporting
within
15
or
30
days
of
the
occurrence
of
a
specific
event.
For
example,
the
third­
party
notification
requirements
of
§
§
761.61(
a)(
5)(
B)(
2)(
iv)
and
761.62(
b)(
4)(
i)
and
(
ii)
require
generators
to
provide
notice
to
certain
off­
site
facilities
at
least
15
days
prior
to
shipping
certain
wastes.
These
reporting
requirements
are
not
triggered
by
the
calendar
(
i.
e.,
they
are
not
required
quarterly
or
at
more
frequent
intervals).
Therefore,
the
Agency
does
not
believe
that
these
provisions,
or
the
following
30­
day
reporting
requirements,
need
special
justification:

 
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
vi)(
A)(
1)
requires
owners
of
PCB
transformers
to
register
the
transformer
with
EPA
within
30
days
of
discovery.

 
§
761.60(
j)(
1)(
ii)
requires
EPA,
State,
and
local
environmental
protection
agencies
to
be
notified
of
the
commencement
of
pilot­
scale
PCB
R&
D
disposal
activity.

 
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
i)
requires
EPA,
State
or
Tribal,
and
county
or
local
environmental
protection
agencies
to
be
notified
of
the
location
of
a
remediation
waste
cleanup
project.
­
32­
 
§
761.65(
a)(
2)(
i)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
of
intent
to
store
waste
beyond
the
1­
year
limit
30
days
prior
to
the
expiration
of
the
1­
year
time
frame
when
disposal
cannot
be
accomplished
within
that
period.

 
§
761.70(
b)(
8)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
30
days
prior
to
transferring
ownership
of
an
incinerator.

 
§
761.75(
c)(
7)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
30
days
prior
to
transferring
ownership
of
a
landfill.

 
§
761.80(
e)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
30
days
prior
to
commencing
PCB
R&
D
disposal
activity
when
using
manufactured/
imported
PCBs
obtained
under
this
exemption.

 
§
761.180(
c)(
5)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
within
30
days
of
suspension
of
incineration
operations.

 
§
761.205(
f)
requires
EPA
to
be
notified
within
30
days
of
changes
to
previous
PCB
Notification.

 
§
761.207(
c)(
1)(
iv)
requires
commercial
storers/
disposal
facilities
to
send
copy
of
manifest
to
generators
within
30
days
of
receipt
of
waste.

 
§
761.218(
b)
requires
disposers
to
send
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
generator
within
30
days
of
disposing
of
his
waste.

3(
f)
Confidentiality
Petitioners
or
permit
applicants
may
claim
that
all
or
part
of
any
information
given
to
EPA,
such
as
process
design
information,
is
confidential
business
information
(
CBI).
EPA
handles
claims
of
confidentiality
pursuant
to
established
CBI
procedures,
as
found
at
Section
14
of
TSCA,
40
CFR
750.16
and
750.36,
and
the
Agency's
TSCA
CBI
Manual.
Confidential
Business
Information
is
also
protected
under
the
Freedom
of
Information
Act
(
5
USC
Section
525).
Most
of
the
information
requested
in
the
reporting
or
recordkeeping
requirements
of
these
collections
is
not
of
a
confidential
nature.

3(
g)
Sensitive
Questions
EPA
asks
no
questions
of
a
sensitive
nature.
­
33­
4.
THE
RESPONDENTS
AND
THE
INFORMATION
REQUESTED
4(
a)
Respondents/
NAICS
Codes
EPA's
PCB
regulations
could
affect
entities
in
all
industrial
categories,
regardless
of
size,
that
currently
possess
PCB
Items,
PCB­
contaminated
equipment,
or
other
PCB
waste.
These
entities
include
those
in
both
the
public
and
private
sectors,
and
may
include
not­
for­
profit
organizations
as
well
as
for­
profit
entities.
Entities
that
generate
PCB
wastes
comprise
the
following
classes:

 
Electric
utility
industry
(
NAICS
2211),
including
municipal
and
county
electric
systems,
and
other
publicly
owned
systems,
such
as
irrigation
districts.
It
has
been
estimated
that
70
percent
of
PCBs
produced
were
used
in
dielectric
fluid
for
transformers
and
capacitors.
Thus,
such
high­
voltage
equipment
represents
a
significant
use
of
PCBs
and
therefore
a
major
source
of
PCB
waste
generation.
EPA
studies
of
the
numbers
of
such
equipment
in
use
assumed
that
utilities
owned
30
percent
of
the
askarel
transformers,
80
percent
of
the
mineral
oil
transformers,
and
85
percent
of
the
large
PCB
Capacitors,
with
the
remainder
owned
by
non­
utility
industrial
enterprises.
It
is
estimated
that
there
are
about
2,900
small
entities
in
the
electric
utility
industry.
Privately
owned
small
utilities
are
defined
as
those
with
less
than
4
million
megawatt­
hours
of
electricity
sales
per
year.
Small
publicly
owned
utilities
are
those
owned
by
government
bodies
with
less
than
50,000
in
population.

 
Non­
utility
entities
with
privately­
owned
electric
equipment,
such
as:

­
oil
and
gas
producers
(
NAICS
211111)
­
manufacturers
(
NAICS
31­
33)
­
line­
haul
railroads
(
NAICS
48211)
­
telecommunications
(
NAICS
513)
­
refuse
systems
(
NAICS
562111)

(
EPA
studies
have
shown
that
these
entities
account
for
more
than
90
percent
of
PCB
waste
generated
by
the
non­
utility
private
sector.
Hospitals
(
NAICS
62211)
and
colleges/
universities
(
NAICS
61131)
are
also
likely
to
have
high­
voltage
electrical
equipment
of
the
type
associated
with
PCB
use
and
contamination.)

 
Entities
with
PCB
ballasts
from
fluorescent
light
fixtures,
including
manufacturing
and
industrial
entities,
government
bodies
and
school
districts
that
have
such
lighting
equipment.

 
Entities
operating
natural
gas
pipelines.

 
Entities
engaged
in
bulk
solid
waste
operations,
such
as
automobile
shredders.
­
34­
 
Entities
involved
in
remediating
PCB
wastes,
such
as
Superfund
and
other
hazardous
waste
sites.

 
PCB
disposal
facilities
that
must
obtain
approval
from
EPA
to
operate
(
e.
g.,
incinerators,
chemical
waste
landfills,
alternate
disposal
technologies).
This
would
include
individuals,
businesses,
Federal
agencies,
and
State/
local
governments
engaged
in
PCB
waste
management
activities.
NAICS
code
562111,
hazardous
waste
material
disposal
sites,
may
be
applicable.

Other
primary
respondents
include:

­
trucking
and
warehousing
(
storage)
(
NAICS
484)
­
sanitary
services
(
incinerators,
landfills)
(
NAICS
5622)
­
steam
suppliers
[
high
efficiency
boilers
(
HEB)]
(
NAICS
22133)
­
Administrators
of
Environmental
Quality
Programs
(
NAICS
924)

 
All
chemical
manufacturers
(
and
importers
of
products)
who
wish
to
qualify
excluded
processes
and
continue
the
legal
manufacture
(
or
importation)
of
trace
amounts
of
PCBs;
the
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
or
use
of
chemical
products
that
contain
the
PCBs
generated
in
excluded
manufacturing
processes;
and
the
processing,
distribution
in
commerce,
or
use
of
products
containing
"
recycled
PCBs"
(
§
761.3)
must
comply
with
appropriate
notification
and
recordkeeping
requirements.
These
respondents
are
classified
under
NAICS
codes
3254,
325611,
325,
3253,
which
are
drugs;
soap,
cleaners,
and
toilet
goods;
industrial
organic
chemicals;
and
agricultural
chemicals,
respectively.
Other
affected
industries
may
include:

 
alkalies
and
chlorine
(
NAICS
325181)
­­
inorganic
pigments
(
NAICS
325131)
­­
plastic
materials
and
resins
(
NAICS
325211)
­­
synthetic
rubber
(
NAICS
325212)
­­
organic
fibers
non­
cellulosic
(
NAICS
325222)
­­
other
chemicals
and
allied
products
(
NAICS
3259981)
­­
adhesives
and
sealants
(
NAICS
32552)
­­
printing
ink
(
NAICS
32591)
­­
chemical
preparations
(
NAICS
325998)
­­
rubber
and
miscellaneous
plastic
products
(
NAICS
326)

 
Respondents
who
petition
the
Agency
for
exemption
from
the
prohibitions
and
restrictions
on
the
manufacture,
processing,
and
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs
may
include
general
manufacturing
industries
(
NAICS
31
­
33)
and
Electric
Equipment
Manufacturing
(
NAICS
335).
­
35­
4(
b)
Information
Requested
(
i)
Data
Items.

Many
of
the
information
collection
requirements
are
triggered
only
by
an
individual's
need
to
address
a
particular
PCB
scenario,
while
other
requirements
apply
to
the
universe
of
individuals
who
use,
process,
distribute
in
commerce,
or
dispose
of
PCBs.
EPA
anticipates
that
no
one
individual
would
be
subject
to
all
of
the
requirements
listed
below.
The
reporting,
thirdparty
reporting,
and
recordkeeping
data
items
contain
the
reference
number
used
throughout
this
document,
the
existing
ICR
number,
a
description
of
the
requirement,
and
the
regulatory
citation,
and
are
organized
according
to
the
subparts
of
40
CFR
761.

(
A)
Notifications/
Reports.
Respondents
are
required
to
submit
information
to
EPA
to
accomplish
the
following
reporting
tasks.
(
Refer
to
Tables
2­
1,
2­
2,
and
2­
3
for
summaries
of
the
reporting,
third­
party
reporting,
and
recordkeeping
requirements
of
this
consolidated
ICR).

40
CFR
761
Subpart
A
 
General
(#
1)
Certification
Notification
for
Excluded
Manufacturers:
The
primary
reporting
requirement
for
manufacturers
who
inadvertently
generate
PCBs
and
importers
of
products
containing
inadvertently
generated
PCBs
is
a
certified
notification
to
EPA.
The
notification
(
1)
identifies
the
manufacturing
processes
that
generate
PCBs
in
products
at
levels
above
2
parts
per
million
(
ppm);
(
2)
certifies
compliance
with
all
PCB
release
conditions
on
excluded
processes;
and
(
3)
states
whether
the
certification
is
based
on
actual
monitoring
data
or
on
theoretical
analysis
of
the
chemical
reaction(
s)
involved
in
the
manufacturing
process.
Additionally,
manufacturers
and
importers
must
report
to
EPA
data
on
their
processes
during
periods
of
unusually
high
generation
or
releases
of
PCBs.
Reports
are
required
in
any
calendar
year
where
total
quantities
of
PCBs
in
manufactured
products
exceed
0.0025%
of
a
manufacturing
site's
rated
capacity,
or
the
total
quantity
of
PCBs
imported
exceeds
0.0025%
of
the
average
for
PCB­
containing
products
that
were
imported
during
the
1978­
1982
timeframe.
Also,
reporting
is
required
when
total
PCB
releases
to
air
or
water
exceed
10
pounds
during
the
year
at
any
site,
and
certification
must
be
repeated
whenever
process
conditions
are
significantly
modified
[
§
§
761.1
(
f)(
1)
­
(
3);
Subpart
J;
also
see
the
entries
for
#
42
and
#
43].

Subpart
B
 
Manufacturing,
Processing,
Distribution
in
Commerce,
and
Use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
(#
2)
Exemption
Petitions:
Individuals
seeking
exemptions
to
manufacture
(
import),
process,
or
distribute
in
commerce
(
export)
PCBs
as
per
TSCA
Section
6(
e)(
3),
must
submit
exemption
petitions
unless
otherwise
authorized
[
§
761.20(
b)
and
(
c)(
1)
and
(
3)].
­
36­
(#
3)
Transformer
Registration:
Owners
of
PCB
Transformers
are
required
to
register
their
transformers
with
EPA.
The
registration
program
provides
State
officials
and
emergency
response
personnel
information
for
providing
a
significantly
higher
degree
of
protection
in
emergency
situations.
This
information
is
also
for
use
to
address
requirements
of
international
environmental
programs
to
identify
sources
and
reduce
or
eliminate
the
reliance
on
PCBs.
Information
that
must
be
included
in
the
notification
consists
of
the
following:
transformer
address
(
i.
e.,
location);
number
of
PCB
Transformers,
including
total
weight
in
kilograms;
and
the
name,
address,
telephone
number,
and
signature
of
the
owner,
operator,
or
other
authorized
representative
certifying
the
accuracy
of
the
submitted
information.
The
use
of
a
form
is
optional,
as
is
information
on
whether
the
unit(
s)
contains
a
flammable
liquid.
A
copy
of
EPA
Form
7720­
12,
which
can
be
used
for
submitting
this
information
[
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
vi)],
is
included
in
this
report
as
Appendix
C.
Note
that
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
xv)(
D)
removes
the
requirement
to
register
PCB
Transformers
with
the
fire
department,
but
retains
the
requirement
to
register
the
transformers
with
building
owners.
(
See
#
54.)

(#
4)
PCB
Equipment
Reclassification:
Persons
wishing
to
use
alternate
methods
to
reclassify
PCB
equipment
(
i.
e.,
transformers
,
electromagnets,
switches,
and
voltage
regulators)
must
obtain
EPA
approval
to
do
so
[
§
§
761.30(
a)(
2)(
v)(
c);
.30(
h)(
2)(
v)(
c)].
Therefore,
EPA
requires
information
on
the
process
that
is
being
considered
as
well
as
equipment
identification
information.

(#
5)
Use
of
Natural
Gas
Pipelines
and
Other
Gas
or
Liquid
Systems:
Owners/
operators
of
natural
gas
pipelines
who
sell
or
distribute
natural
gas
are
authorized
to
use
natural
gas
pipelines
that
have
been
contaminated
with
PCBs
in
concentrations

50
ppm,
if
they
take
certain
actions
to
identify
sources
of
contamination
and
reduce
levels
to
<
50
ppm
PCBs.
Owner/
operators
of
these
pipelines
must
submit
a
written
description
of
the
general
nature
and
location
of
PCB
contamination
in
concentrations

50
ppm
if
requested
by
EPA.
This
description
is
sent
to
the
RA
or
the
Director,
National
Program
Chemicals
Division
(
NPCD),
at
EPA,
if
the
contaminated
pipe
is
located
in
more
than
one
Region.
EPA
expects
the
reporting
burden
to
be
minimized
as
the
regulations
allow
for
the
use
of
historical
data
regarding
these
requirements
(
e.
g.,
sampling
and
analyses
data
and
reports
of
actions
taken
to
reduce
PCB
levels)
[
§
761.30(
i)(
1)(
iii)(
A)(
1)].

(#
6)
EPA
Approval
for
Uses
of
PCBs
in
Other
Gas
or
Liquid
Systems:
The
use
of

50
ppm
PCBs
in
"
other"
gas
or
liquid
transmission
systems
is
authorized.
Operators
with
systems
with
PCBs
at
concentrations
of

50
ppm
must
obtain
written
consent
from
the
Director,
National
Program
Chemicals
Division,
who
may
then
specify
conditions
necessary
to
reduce
the
levels
of
PCBs
in
the
system.
It
is
not
apparent
that
systems
not
otherwise
authorized
under
the
regulations
exist.
Therefore,
EPA
expects
this
authorization
to
be
rare
and
has
no
basis
for
developing
a
burden
for
this
notification
requirement.
Without
this
authorization,
however,
use
of
such
gas
or
liquid
systems
with
PCBs

50
ppm
would
be
prohibited
[
§
761.30(
t)(
3)].
­
37­
(#
7)
Exceeding
Storage
Limitations
for
PCB
Articles
Stored
for
Reuse:
EPA
has
limited
the
storage
for
reuse
of
PCB
Articles
in
areas
not
meeting
the
TSCA
approved
storage
standards
in
§
761.65
to
a
period
of
5
years.
However,
RAs
may
grant
extensions
beyond
5
years
with
conditions,
if
a
request
explaining
the
rationale
for
the
extension
is
submitted
6
months
prior
to
the
expiration
date
[
§
761.35(
b)].

Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
(#
8)
Permit
Applications
and
Demonstration
Plans
for
Disposal
Facilities:
The
application
must
contain
the
following
types
of
information,
if
applicable:
(
1)
name,
address,
and
phone
number
of
the
unit's
principal
manager;
(
2)
location
of
the
facility
where
the
unit
will
be
tested
and
the
location
where
the
unit
will
be
stored
and
serviced
when
not
engaged
in
testing;
(
3)
detailed
description
of
the
unit
including
general
plans
and
design
drawings;
(
4)
engineering
report
or
other
information
on
the
anticipated
performance
of
the
unit;
(
5)
sampling
and
quality
assurance
plan;
(
6)
waste
volumes
expected
to
be
handled,
process
design
capacity,
process
control,
reagent­
to­
waste
feed
ratios,
and
safety
features;
(
7)
local,
State,
or
Federal
permits
or
approvals;
(
8)
schedules
and
plans
for
complying
with
the
approval
requirements;
(
9)
contingency
plan
that
describes
steps
taken
in
case
of
process
failure,
spill,
or
overflow;
and
(
10)
environmental
impact,
including
process
emissions,
toxicity
and
disposal
of
process
products,
site
relationships,
and
steps
taken
to
protect
the
health
of
the
operator.

Following
receipt
of
the
application,
EPA
may
require
additions
or
modifications
to
the
application,
disapprove
the
application,
or
determine
that
a
process
demonstration
is
required
and
will
notify
the
person
who
submitted
the
application.
The
following
information
is
requested
of
persons
who
are
asked
to
demonstrate
their
process
for
the
Agency:
(
1)
time,
date,
and
location
of
the
process
demonstrations;
(
2)
quantity
and
type
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
to
be
processed;
(
3)
parameters
to
be
monitored
and
location
of
sampling
points;
(
4)
sampling
plan
and
quality
assurance
plan,
including
sampling
frequency,
methods,
and
schedules
for
sampling
analysis;
and
(
5)
names,
addresses,
and
qualifications
of
persons
who
review
the
analytical
results
and
other
pertinent
data
and
who
will
perform
a
technical
evaluation
of
the
effectiveness
of
the
process
demonstration.
Following
receipt
of
the
process
demonstration
plan,
EPA
will
either
approve
the
plan,
require
additions
or
modifications
to
the
plan,
such
as
additional
testing
or
analysis
to
help
the
reviewing
officials
determine
the
safety
and
efficiency
of
the
process,
or
disapprove
the
plan.

Any
person
who
is
required
to
incinerate
any
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
and
who
can
demonstrate
that
an
alternative
method
of
destroying
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
can
achieve
a
level
of
performance
equivalent
to
an
approved
incinerator
or
high
efficiency
boiler,
as
per
§
§
761.70
or
.71,
respectively,
must
submit
a
written
request
to
EPA
for
a
waiver
from
the
incinerator
or
high
efficiency
boiler
(
HEB)
requirements.
[
§
§
761.60(
e),
(
i)(
2);
.70(
a),(
b),(
d);
.75(
b)(
7),
(
b)(
8)(
ii),
and
(
c)].
­
38­
(#
9
­
11)
Notification
about
PCB
Research
and
Development
Activities
(
R&
D):
Individuals
engaged
in
R&
D
for
disposal
under
§
761.60(
j)
must
notify
the
RA,
and
State
and
local
environmental
officials
30
days
before
conducting
the
R&
D
for
disposal
activity
[
§
761.60(
j)(
1)].
The
notification
must
provide
the
EPA
identification
number
for
the
location
of
the
R&
D
activity
[
§
761.60(
j)(
1)(
i)],
quantity
of
PCBs
to
be
processed,
type
of
R&
D,
physical
and
chemical
properties
of
the
material
being
treated,
and
an
estimate
of
the
duration
of
the
R&
D
activities
[
§
761.60(
j)(
1)(
ii)].
[
NOTE:
After
reviewing
the
submitted
information,
EPA
may
determine,
based
on
potential
unreasonable
risks
to
health
or
the
environment,
to
impose
additional
conditions
on
the
R&
D
project
in
the
form
of
an
Approval.]
[
§
§
761.60(
j)(
1)
and)
(
2)].

Additionally,
requests
to
exceed
the
specified
limits
for
the
quantities
of
PCBs
used,
the
maximum
concentration
of
PCBs,
the
total
amount
of
pure
PCBs,
or
the
duration
of
the
R&
D
activities
must
be
submitted
to
the
RA.
Each
request
shall
specify
the
quantity
or
concentration
requested
or
additional
time
needed
and
include
a
justification
for
each
increase.
For
extensions
to
the
duration
of
the
R&
D
for
PCB
disposal
activity,
the
request
shall
also
include
a
report
on
the
accomplishments
and
progress
of
the
previously
authorized
R&
D
activity
for
which
the
extension
is
sought
[
§
761.60(
j)(
2)].

This
notification
identifies
those
individuals
who
do
research
on/
with
PCBs,
their
locations,
and
the
type
of
activities
they
perform.
By
establishing
a
small
quantity
exemption
for
R&
D,
EPA
is
reducing
the
burden
previously
associated
with
the
existing
requirement
that
individuals
who
engage
in
R&
D
into
PCB
disposal
technologies
obtain
a
TSCA
R&
D
Approval.
EPA
does
not
require
this
information
to
be
submitted
on
a
specific
form
or
in
a
specific
format.
By
requiring
individuals
to
write
a
letter
to
the
RA,
EPA
is
providing
maximum
flexibility
to
the
respondent
to
minimize
the
burden
associated
with
this
notification
provision.

(#
12
­
15)
Self­
implementing
Remediation:
Owners
of
remediation
sites
are
required
to
notify,
in
writing,
the
RA
and
the
appropriate
State
(
or
tribal),
county
(
or
local)
environmental
agencies
at
least
30
days
prior
to
conducting
remediation
activities.
The
notification
must
include
the
following
information:
the
nature
of
the
contamination;
a
summary
of
the
procedures
used
to
sample
contaminated
and
adjacent
areas;
a
table
or
cleanup
site
map;
the
location
and
extent
of
PCB
contaminated
areas,
including
topographic
maps;
and
a
cleanup
plan
for
the
site
[
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
i)].
Once
the
remediation
project
has
been
initiated,
any
proposed
deviation
from
the
notification
previously
submitted
must
be
reported
to
EPA
no
less
than
14
days
prior
to
the
proposed
implementation
of
the
change
[
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
ii)].
Any
person
conducting
a
cleanup
activity
may
obtain
a
waiver
of
the
30­
day
notification
requirement,
if
they
receive
a
separate
waiver,
in
writing,
from
each
of
the
agencies
they
are
required
to
notify
under
this
section
[
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
iii)].
Additionally,
under
the
self­
implementing
provision,
persons
must
submit
a
written
certification
to
the
RA
that
the
sampling
plans,
sample
collection
and
preparation
procedures,
extraction
procedures,
and
instrumental/
chemical
analysis
procedures
used
to
assess
or
characterize
the
cleanup
site
are
on
file
at
the
location
designated
in
the
certificate
and
are
available
for
EPA
inspection.
Persons
using
alternate
methods
for
chemical
extraction
and
chemical
analysis
for
site
characterization
must
include
in
the
certificate
a
statement
that
indicates
­
39­
that
such
a
method
will
be
used
and
that
a
comparison
study
that
meets
or
exceeds
the
requirements
of
§
761.269(
c)
of
Subpart
Q,
for
which
records
are
on
file,
has
been
completed
prior
to
verification
sampling
[
§
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
i)(
E)
and
761.274].
Additionally,
persons
conducting
remediation
waste
projects
that
require
the
use
of
a
fence
or
cap,
must
record
a
notation
on
the
deed
to
notify
potential
purchasers
of
the
property
(
i.
e.,
a
third­
party
notification)
and
submit
to
EPA
a
certification
that
the
property
deed
has
a
notation
to
that
effect
[
§
761.61(
a)(
8)(
i)].

(#
16)
Risk­
based
Remediation:
Any
person
wishing
to
clean
up,
store,
or
dispose
of
PCB
remediation
waste
in
a
manner
other
than
prescribed
in
the
self­
implementing
or
performancebased
disposal
options
must
apply
in
writing
to
the
RA.
Each
application
must
contain
information
as
described
in
§
761.61(
a)(
3)
(
e.
g.,
nature
and
extent
of
the
contamination,
sample
procedure,
cleanup
plan,
and
certification
that
records
have
been
maintained).
The
EPA
may
request
the
submission
of
other
information
it
believes
necessary
to
evaluate
the
application
[
§
761.61(
c)(
1)].

(#
17)
Risk­
based
Cleanup
Approval
for
PCB
Bulk
Product
Waste:
Any
person
wishing
to
sample
or
dispose
of
or
store
PCB
bulk
product
waste
in
a
manner
other
than
prescribed
in
paragraphs
(
a)
or
(
b),
or
store
the
waste
other
than
prescribed
by
§
761.65,
must
apply
in
writing
to
the
EPA
RA
or
Director,
NPCD.
Each
application
must
contain
information
indicating
that
the
proposed
storage
and
disposal
methods
or
locations
will
not
pose
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment.
EPA
may
request
the
submission
of
other
information
it
believes
necessary
to
evaluate
the
application.
[
§
761.62(
c)(
1)].

(#
18
­
20)
Exceeding
Storage
Limitations
for
PCB
Wastes:
A
mechanism
has
been
established
for
automatically
extending
the
1­
year
storage
for
disposal
deadline
for
another
year
based
on
an
adequate
justification.
Any
person
storing
PCB
waste
that
is
subject
to
the
1­
year
time
limit
for
storage
and
disposal
may
provide
written
notification
to
the
RA
that
their
continuing
attempts
to
dispose
of
or
secure
disposal
for
their
waste
within
the
1­
year
time
limit
have
been
unsuccessful.
For
the
automatic
extension
of
the
1­
year
time
frame,
EPA
must
receive
the
notification
at
least
30
days
before
the
initial
1­
year
time
limit
expires
and
the
notice
must
identify
the
storer;
the
types,
volumes,
and
locations
of
the
waste,
and
the
reasons
for
failure
to
meet
the
initial
1­
year
time
limit
[
§
761.65(
a)(
2)].

For
subsequent
extensions
of
the
time
frame
for
storing
PCB
wastes,
the
requestor
must
submit
specific
justifications
and
indicate
measures
he
or
she
is
taking
to
secure
disposal
or
reasons
why
disposal
could
not
occur
during
the
prior
extension.
EPA
may
require
specific
actions
as
conditions
to
granting
the
extension,
including
marking,
inspection,
recordkeeping,
or
financial
assurance
to
ensure
that
the
waste
does
not
pose
an
unreasonable
risk
of
injury
to
health
or
the
environment
[
§
761.65(
a)(
3)]
or
the
submission
of
periodic
progress
reports
[
§
761.65(
a)(
4)].
­
40­
(#
21)
Storage
Containers
for
PCB/
Radioactive
Waste:
Containers
prescribed
by
the
American
National
Standard
Institute
(
ANSI)
for
nuclear
criticality
safety
may
be
used
for
PCB/
radioactive
waste.
However,
other
containers
may
be
used
if
the
users
are
able
to
demonstrate
to
EPA
and
other
appropriate
regulatory
authorities
[
i.
e.,
the
Nuclear
Regulatory
Commission
(
NRC),
the
Department
of
Energy
(
DOE),
or
the
Department
of
Transportation
(
DOT)]
that
such
containers
are
protective
of
public
health
and
safety
and
the
environment
[
§
761.65(
c)(
6)(
i)(
C)].

(#
22)
Preparing
Application
for
Commercial
Disposal
Approval:
Applicants
for
commercial
storage
approval
shall
submit
a
written
application
that
includes
any
relevant
information
bearing
upon
the
qualifications
of
the
facility.
The
application
shall
identify
the
facility
owner/
operator
and
include
information
on
the
technical
qualifications
of
the
person
in
charge
of
operations,
any
past
violations,
and
waste
handling
experience
of
the
company
and
employees,
estimates
of
maximum
waste
quantity
that
can
be
handled,
the
certification
of
compliance,
the
financial
assurance
instrument,
a
closure
plan
and
closure
cost
estimate,
and
a
demonstration
of
financial
responsibility
for
closure.
The
applicant
must
also
revise
and
update
the
closure
plan
when
certain
changes
occur
at
the
facility,
and,
within
30
days
after
the
facility
closes,
submit
certification
that
the
facility
has
been
closed
in
accordance
with
the
approved
plan
[
§
§
761.65(
d),
(
e)(
1),
(
6),
and
(
8);
and
(
f)].

(#
23)
Request
to
Amend
the
Storage
Closure
Plan:
Owners/
operators
of
storage
facilities
must
submit
requests
to
the
RA
to
amend
the
closure
plan,
when
there
are
changes
in
ownership,
changes
in
expected
date
of
closure,
and/
or
unexpected
events
[
§
761.65(
e)(
4)].

(#
24)
Modifications
to
Commercial
Storage
Facilities:
To
ensure
that
the
owner/
operator
of
these
facilities
have
made
adjustments
to
their
financial
assurance
mechanisms
when
modifications
will
increase
the
storage
capacity
of
the
facility,
EPA
is
requiring
that
the
these
individuals
notify
the
Federal
or
State
issuing
authority
in
writing
that
they
have
revised
the
financial
assurance
mechanism
and
activated
it
within
30
days
of
the
completion
of
the
modification
[
§
761.65(
g)(
9)].
EPA
does
not
require
the
information
to
be
submitted
on
a
specific
form
or
in
a
specific
format.

(#
25)
Change
of
Ownership
for
Storage
Facilities:
EPA
will
approve
of
the
transfer
of
ownership
or
operational
control
of
a
commercial
storage
facility
if
the
transferee
has
established
financial
assurance
for
the
closure
and
the
transferor
or
transferee
has
resolved
any
deficiencies
(
e.
g.,
with
technical
operations,
closure
plans,
cost
estimates,
etc.)
that
the
Agency
has
identified
in
the
transferor's
new
or
amended
application
[
§
761.65(
j)].

(#
26)
Approval
of
Alternate
Measures
for
Operating
Incinerators:
Owners/
operators
of
incinerators
that
burn
PCBs
must
submit
a
contingency
plan
of
alternate
measures
for
operating
the
facility
when
regulatory
requirements
cannot
be
met.
The
plan
must
indicate
what
alternative
measures
the
owner/
operator
would
take
if
there
is
a
failure
of
regulatory
monitoring
requirements
or
PCB
rate
and
quantity
measuring
and
recording
equipment,
or
if
excess
oxygen
­
41­
falls
below
the
percentages
specified
in
paragraph
(
a)(
1)
of
this
section
[
§
§
761.70(
a)(
8)
and
(
9);
and
(
d)(
5)].

(#
27)
Notification
of
Changes
in
Disposal
Facility
Ownership:
Owners/
operators
of
incinerators
and
chemical
waste
landfills
that
dispose
of
PCBs
must
notify
EPA
at
least
30
days
before
transferring
ownership
of
the
facility.
The
notice
must
include
a
notarized
affidavit
signed
by
the
transferee,
which
states
that
the
transferee
will
abide
by
the
transferor's
EPA
incinerator
approval
[
§
§
761.70(
d)(
8);
.75(
c)(
7)].

(#
28)
High
Efficiency
Boiler
Approval:.
Thirty
days
before
any
person
burns
mineral
oil
dielectric
fluid
in
high
efficiency
boilers,
the
person
must
give
a
1­
time
written
notice
to
the
RA,
including
information
on
the
owner
and
location
of
the
boiler,
boiler
specifications,
and
associated
equipment.
To
burn
liquids
other
than
mineral
oil
dielectric
fluids,
at
a
PCB
concentration
of
50
to
500
ppm,
boiler
owners
must
first
obtain
an
approval
of
the
EPA
RA
for
the
EPA
Region
in
which
the
boiler
is
located.
The
request
to
the
RA
must
include
at
least
the
following:
name
and
address
of
owner/
operator
of
boiler
and
address
of
boiler,
boiler
rating
in
units
of
BTU/
hour,
carbon
monoxide
concentration
and
oxygen
percentage
in
the
stack
when
boiler
is
operated,
type
of
equipment
and
procedures
used
to
control
feed
and
monitor
emissions,
type
of
waste
to
be
burned,
concentration
of
PCBs
and
other
chlorinated
hydrocarbons
in
the
waste,
estimate
of
the
amount
of
waste
to
be
burned
in
a
30­
day
period,
and
an
explanation
of
the
procedures
to
be
followed
to
ensure
that
the
burning
of
the
waste
will
not
adversely
affect
the
operation
of
the
boiler
such
that
combustion
efficiency
will
decrease
[
§
§
761.71(
a)(
2)
and
(
b)(
2)].

(#
29
­
30)
Disposal
by
Scrap
Metal
Recovery
Ovens
and
Smelters:
Owners
of
scrap
metal
recovery
ovens
disposing
of
drained
PCB­
Contaminated
electrical
equipment,
natural
gas
pipelines
and
non­
porous
surfaces
must
notify
EPA
as
disposers
of
PCBs
and
are
required
to
comply
with
existing,
applicable
disposal
facility
reporting
requirements
in
Subparts
J
and
K
[
§
§
761.72(
c)(
2)].
In
lieu
of
meeting
the
operating
requirements,
an
owner
or
operator
of
a
scrap
metal
recovery
oven
or
smelter
can
submit
a
written
request
to
the
RA
for
a
determination
that
the
industrial
furnace
poses
no
unreasonable
risk,
based
on
a
site­
specific
risk
assessment
[
§
761.72(
c)(
3)].

(#
31
­
32)
TSCA
Coordinated
Approval:
Persons
seeking
a
TSCA
PCB
coordinated
approval
may
submit
a
request
for
approval
to
the
RA
at
the
same
time
they
seek
a
permit
approval
or
other
action
for
a
PCB
waste
management
activity
under
any
other
Federal
or
State
authority.
The
request
for
coordinated
approval
shall
include
a
copy
of
the
confirmation
of
the
EPA
identification
number,
information
regarding
a
point
of
contact
at
the
other
permitting
authority,
description
of
the
waste
activities
to
be
conducted
(
or
a
copy
of
the
waste
management
document,
if
one
has
been
issued),
and
a
certification
that
the
requestor
will
adhere
to
the
TSCA
PCB
reporting
and
recordkeeping
requirements
[
§
761.77(
a)(
1)].
The
RA
may
request
additional
information
to
remedy
a
deficiency
in
the
waste
management
activities
[
§
761.77(
a)(
1)(
ii)(
A)(
1)].
If
the
RA
determines
that
conditions
of
the
coordinated
approval
are
not
being
met,
the
RA
may
require
the
person
to
whom
the
coordinated
approval
was
issued
to
submit
an
application
for
a
­
42­
TSCA
PCB
approval
[
§
761.77(
a)(
2)].
Any
person
with
a
coordinated
approval
must
notify
the
RA
in
writing
within
5
calendar
days
of
changes
relating
to
PCB
waste
requirements
in
the
non­
TSCA
waste
management
documents
that
serve
as
the
basis
for
the
coordinated
approval
[
§
761.77(
a)(
3)].

(#
33)
Approvals
for
Alternative
Decontamination
and
Sampling
Methods:
Any
person
wishing
to
decontaminate
material
described
in
a
manner
other
than
prescribed
in
§
761.79(
b)
or
(
c),
or
sample
material
other
than
prescribed
in
§
761.79(
f)
must
apply
in
writing
to
the
EPA
RA.
Each
decontamination
application
must
describe
the
material
to
be
decontaminated
and
the
proposed
decontamination
method,
and
must
demonstrate
that
the
proposed
method
is
capable
of
decontaminating
the
material
to
the
applicable
level
set
out
in
§
761.79(
b)(
1)
through
(
4).
Each
application
must
describe
in
writing
the
material
to
be
decontaminated
and
the
proposed
selfimplementing
decontamination
method,
and
must
include
a
proposed
validation
study
to
confirm
performance
of
the
method.
Each
sampling
application
must
contain
a
description
of
the
material
to
be
decontaminated,
the
nature
and
PCB
concentration
of
the
contaminating
material
(
if
known),
the
decontamination
method,
the
proposed
sampling
procedure,
and
a
justification
for
how
the
proposed
sampling
is
equivalent
to
or
more
comprehensive
than
the
sampling
procedure
required
under
§
761.79(
f)
of
this
section.
EPA
may
request
additional
information
it
believes
to
be
necessary
to
evaluate
the
application
[
§
761.79(
h)(
1)
to
(
4)].

Subpart
E
 
Exemptions
(#
34
­
37)
Class
Exemptions,
Manufacture,
Processing,
Distribution
of
PCBs
for
R&
D:
Individuals
seeking
exemptions
from
the
PCB
prohibitions
are
required
by
statute
[
15
USC
2601,
Section
6(
e)(
3)(
B)]
to
submit
exemption
petitions
to
EPA.
The
information
provided
to
EPA
in
an
exemption
petition
includes:
name,
address
and
telephone
number
of
the
petitioner;
description
of
the
exemption
being
requested
for
the
manufacture/
processing/
distribution
in
commerce
activity;
location;
length
of
time
desired
(
1­
year
maximum);
amount
of
PCBs
to
be
manufactured
processed
and/
or
distributed
in
commerce,
rationale
regarding
no
unreasonable
risk
and
substitutes
criteria
of
Section
6(
e)(
3)(
B)(
i)
and
(
ii),
and
the
economic
consequences
of
an
EPA
denial.
Provisions
regarding
class
exemptions
for
manufacturers
of
PCBs
and
processors/
distributors
of
PCBs
or
analytical
reference
samples
derived
from
PCB
waste
material
require
a
petition
be
submitted
60
days
prior
to
engaging
in
the
activity
[
§
761.80(
e)(
1)
and
(
i)(
1)].
Section
761.80(
e)(
2)
and
(
i)(
2)
and
.80(
n)
require
individuals
seeking
renewals
of
class
exemptions
to
submit
requests
for
renewal
as
per
§
§
750.11
and
.31.
If
persons
need
to
exceed
the
annual
quantity
limits,
they
must
request
approval
from
EPA
[
§
§
761.80(
e)(
3),
(
g)(
2),
and
(
i)(
4)].
The
owner
or
operator
of
the
facility
also
must
notify
the
RA
in
writing
30
days
prior
to
beginning
R&
D
activities
that
require
the
manufacturing
or
import
of
PCBs,
unless
the
owner
has
obtained
a
PCB
R&
D
approval
from
EPA,
pursuant
to
§
761.60(
a)
or
(
i)(
2),
or
.70(
b),
that
allows
the
manufacture
of
PCBs
[
§
761.80(
e)(
4)].
­
43­
(#
38)
Manufacturing,
Processing,
and
Distribution
in
Commerce,
Exemptions
When
a
facility
holding
a
certain
type
of
exemption
plans
to
increase
the
amount
of
PCBs
to
be
processed
and
distributed,
imported
(
manufactured),
or
exported,
or
to
change
the
manner
or
processing
and
distribution,
import
(
manufacture),
or
export
of
PCBs,
the
owner/
operator
of
the
facility
must
submit
a
new
exemption
petition
to
EPA,
which
will
be
addressed
through
an
exemption
rulemaking.
The
petitioners
must
provide
the
following
information
to
extend
manufacturing
exemptions,
as
per
§
§
750.11:
(
1)
the
identity,
telephone
number,
and
address
of
the
petitioner;
(
2)
description
of
the
PCB
exemption
being
requested,
including
items
to
be
manufactured,
and
the
nature
of
the
manufacturing
process;
(
3)
location(
s)
of
manufacturing
sites
requiring
exemption;
(
4)
length
of
time
requested
for
exemption;
(
5)
amount
of
PCBs
to
be
manufactured
or
used
during
the
requested
exemption
period
and
the
manner
of
release
of
PCBs
to
the
environment
associated
with
such
manufacture
or
use;
(
6)
basis
for
meeting
Section
6(
e)(
3)(
B)(
i)
criteria
for
"
unreasonable
risk;"
(
7)
basis
for
meeting
Section
6(
e)(
3)(
B)(
ii)
criteria
for
"
PCB
substitutes;"
and
(
8)
quantification
of
the
economic
consequences
of
EPA
denying
the
petition
and
an
explanation
of
the
manner
of
computation.

Persons
interested
in
obtaining
processing
or
distribution
in
commerce
exemptions
must
provide
information
listed
above
as
items
(
1),
(
4),
(
6),
(
7)
and
(
8).
In
addition,
as
per
§
750.31,
they
must
provide:
a
description
of
the
PCB
processing
or
distribution
in
commerce
exemption
being
requested,
including
a
description
of
the
chemical
substances,
mixtures,
or
items
to
be
processed
or
distributed
in
commerce,
and
if
processing
is
involved,
the
nature
of
the
processing;
location(
s)
of
processing
sites
requiring
exemption;
the
estimated
amount
of
PCBs
to
be
processed
or
distributed
in
commerce
or
used
during
the
requested
exemption
period;
and
the
manner
of
release
of
PCBs
to
the
environment
associated
with
such
processing,
or
distribution
in
commerce.
EPA
also
requires
specific
information
on
the
description,
number,
and/
or
location
of
PCB
equipment
to
be
serviced
and
the
description
of
the
uses
of/
exposures
to
PCB­
contaminated
substances
or
mixtures
that
are
to
be
used
for
petitions
filed
under
paragraphs
§
750.31(
a)(
1)­(
9)
[
§
761.80(
n)].

Subpart
F
 
Transboundary
Shipments
of
PCBs
for
Disposal
(#
39)
Import
and
Export
for
Disposal:
By
Statute,
no
person
may
import
or
export
PCBs
or
PCB
Items
for
disposal
without
an
exemption
issued
under
the
authority
of
TSCA
Section
6(
e)(
3)
[
§
§
761.93(
a)
and
.97(
a)].

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
(#
40)
Reporting
of
PCB
Spills:
Parties
responsible
for
the
following
types
of
PCB
spills
must
notify
EPA
to
obtain
cleanup
guidance:
spills
that
directly
contaminate
surface
waters,
sewers,
or
drinking
water
supplies;
spills
that
directly
contaminate
grazing
lands
or
vegetable
gardens;
spills
that
exceed
10
pounds
of
PCBs
by
weight
[
§
§
761.125(
a)(
1)(
i)
to
(
iii)].

Subpart
J
 
General
Records
and
Reports
­
44­
(#
41)
Annual
Reports
for
Waste
Disposed
of
by
the
Waste
Generator:
Owners/
operators
of
PCB
disposal
facilities,
including
owners/
operators
who
dispose
of
PCB
waste
generated
at
his/
her
own
facilities,
and
owners
of
commercial
storage
facilities,
shall
submit
annual
reports
to
the
RA.
The
reports
shall
summarize
the
records
and
annual
document
logs
required
to
be
maintained
and
prepared
under
§
761.180(
b)(
1)
and
(
b)(
2)
of
this
section.
Within
30
days
of
suspending
the
operation
of
any
incinerator,
the
owner/
operator
of
the
facility
must
submit
a
document
to
EPA
that
includes
the
date
and
time
of
the
suspension
and
an
explanation
of
the
circumstances
causing
the
suspension
of
operations
[
§
§
761.180(
b),
(
b)(
3),
and
(
c)(
5)].

(#
41a)
Records
of
Reclassified
PCB
Equipment:
Owners
of
reclassified
PCB
electrical
equipment
must
promptly
provide
records
pertaining
to
the
reclassification
of
PCB
equipment,
if
requested
by
EPA.
Also
see
#
68a
and
#
75
[
§
761.180(
g)].

(#
42)
Notification/
Certification
of
Product
Contamination
by
Inadvertent
PCBs:
Manufacturers
with
processes
inadvertently
generating
PCBs
and
importers
of
products
containing
inadvertently
generated
PCBs
must
report
to
EPA
within
90
days
any
excluded
manufacturing
process
or
imports
for
which
the
concentration
of
PCBs
in
products
leaving
the
manufacturing
site
or
imported
is
>
2
ug/
g
(
roughly
2ppm)
for
any
resolvable
gas
chromatographic
peak.
Manufacturers
who
must
submit
the
report
must
transmit
a
letter
notifying
EPA
of
the
number,
type,
and
location
of
the
excluded
manufacturing
process.
Persons
must
also
certify
compliance
with
the
requirements
of
§
761.1(
f),
specify
whether
the
compliance
is
determined
by
actual
monitoring
or
theoretical
assessments;
and
maintain
determinations
of
compliance.
Facilities
with
compliance
based
on
theoretical
assessment
must
also
notify
EPA
of
the
estimated
PCB
concentration
levels
generated
and
released
[
§
761.185].

(#
43)
Notification
When
PCB
Releases
Exceed
Limits:
Owners/
operators
of
excluded
manufacturing
processes
must
report
to
EPA
the
total
quantity
of
inadvertently
generated
PCBs
released
into
the
air
and
or
water
from
these
processes
when
the
total
quantity
of
each
type
of
release
in
any
calendar
year
exceeds
10
pounds
[
§
761.187].

Subpart
K
 
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
(#
44)
Notify
EPA
of
PCB
Waste
Activity:
All
generators
with
on­
site
storage,
commercial
storers,
transporters,
and
disposers
of
PCBs
shall
notify
EPA
of
their
PCB
waste
activity
by
filing
EPA
Form
7710­
53
(
see
Appendix
D)
prior
to
engaging
in
PCB
waste­
handling
activities.
The
form
includes
individuals
engaged
in
R&
D
and
treatability
studies
and
owners
of
scrap
metal
recovery
ovens/
smelters
and
HEBs.
This
one­
time
notification
form
asks
for
a
statement
of
the
type
of
activity
taking
place
at
the
facility,
the
location
of
the
facility,
name
and
address
of
the
owner,
and
the
facility
point­
of­
contact.
EPA
issues
an
identification
number
or
verifies
an
existing
RCRA
identification
number
[
§
§
761.202(
a);
205(
a)
to
(
c)].
­
45­
(#
45)
Changes
in
Waste
Handling
Activities:
Individuals
who
make
changes
in
their
wastehandling
activities
(
e.
g.,
relocating
or
assuming
additional
activities)
are
required
to
submit
an
amended
notification
form
30
days
after
the
change
in
activity
occurs.
The
information
is
collected
using
a
one­
page
form
(
EPA
Form
7710­
53)
that
has
previously
been
approved
by
OMB
(
OMB
Control
No.
2070­
0112)
and
requires
minimal
effort
to
complete
[
§
761.205(
f)].

(#
46)
Exception
Reports:
When
a
generator
uses
an
independent
transporter,
he
or
she
must
confirm
by
telephone
or
other
convenient
means
that
the
commercial
storer
or
disposer
actually
received
the
manifested
waste.
If
the
disposal
facility
did
not
receive
the
waste,
the
generator
shall
contact
the
transporter
to
determine
the
disposition
of
the
waste.
If
the
generator
has
not
received
a
manifest
from
the
disposal
facility,
the
generator
shall
submit
an
exception
report
to
the
EPA
RA
A
disposer
shall
submit
a
One­
Year
Exception
Report
to
EPA
within
45
days
from
the
end
of
the
1­
year
storage
for
disposal
date
when
the
facility
receives
the
PCBs
on
a
date
more
than
9
months
from
the
date
when
the
PCBs
were
removed
from
service
for
disposal
or
when
the
facility
can
no
longer
dispose
of
the
PCBs
within
the
1­
year
date
due
to
contractual
commitments
or
other
factors
affecting
the
facility's
disposal
capacity.
Generators
or
commercial
storers
shall
submit
One­
Year
Exception
Reports
when
they
transferred
PCB
wastes
within
9
months
from
the
date
of
removal
from
service
for
disposal,
when
the
facility
has
not
received
a
Certificate
of
Disposal
within
13
months
from
the
date
the
waste
was
removed
from
service,
or
has
received
a
Certificate
of
Disposal
more
that
1
year
after
the
date
the
waste
was
removed
from
service
[
§
§
761.208(
a)(
4);
.215(
b)
to
(
d)].

(#
47)
Discrepancy
Reporting:
Upon
discovering
a
significant
discrepancy,
the
owner/
operator
of
the
designated
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
shall
attempt
to
reconcile
the
discrepancy
with
the
waste
generator
or
transporter.
If
the
discrepancy
is
not
resolved
within
15
days
after
receiving
the
PCB
waste,
the
owner
or
operator
shall
immediately
submit
to
the
RA
a
letter
describing
the
discrepancy
and
attempts
to
reconcile
it,
and
a
copy
of
the
manifest
or
shipping
paper
at
issue
[
§
761.210(
b)].

(#
48
­
49)
Unmanifested
Waste
Reports:
Disposers
must
submit
unmanifested
waste
reports
to
EPA
when
they
accept
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
without
an
accompanying
manifest.
If
an
owner
or
operator
of
a
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
cannot
contact
the
generator
of
the
PCB
waste,
he
or
she
shall
notify
the
RA
so
that
the
RA
can
determine
whether
further
actions
are
required
before
the
owner
or
operator
may
store
or
dispose
of
the
unmanifested
PCB
waste
[
§
761.211(
b)].
Within
15
days
after
receiving
the
unmanifested
PCB
waste,
the
owner/
operator
shall
prepare
a
report
to
the
RA
of
the
Region
where
the
storage
or
disposal
facility
is
located
and
the
Region
in
which
the
PCB
waste
originated.
The
report
shall
include
the
EPA
facility
identification
numbers,
facility
information,
date
the
waste
was
received,
description
of
the
waste,
explanation
why
the
waste
was
unmanifested,
if
the
waste
was
stored
or
disposed,
if
the
generator
was
identified,
if
a
manifest
was
subsequently
supplied,
and
if
and
when
the
waste
was
sent
back
to
the
generator
[
§
761.211(
c)].
­
46­
Subpart
T
 
Comparison
Study
for
Validating
a
New
Performance­
Based
Decontamination
Solvent
Under
§
761.79(
d)(
4)

(#
50)
Results
of
Analysis
and
Decontamination
Validation
Studies:
Persons
using
the
selfimplementing
criteria
for
validating
the
conditions
for
the
performance­
based
decontamination
of
solvents
must
submit
validation
study
results
to
EPA
[
§
§
761.395
and
.398].

(
B)
Third­
Party
Reports.
Respondents
are
required
to
submit
information
to
entities
other
than
EPA
headquarters
or
the
RA,
such
as
to
State,
Tribal,
county
or
local
officials,
waste
generators,
transporters,
storers,
and
disposers,
or
the
public.

40
CFR
761
Subpart
B
 
Manufacturing,
Processing,
Distribution
in
Commerce,
and
Use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
(#
51)
Certification
for
Burners
of
Used
Oil:
Before
the
first
shipment
of
used
fuel
oil
containing
detectable
PCBs,
the
burner
of
the
oil
must
provide
a
one­
time
written
certification
to
the
marketer
of
the
oil
that
the
incinerator
is
in
compliance
with
the
notification
requirements
of
§
761.71(
a)(
2)
or
40
CFR
279,
Subpart
G.
This
regulation
also
applies
to
marketing
or
burning
for
energy
recovery
liquids
containing
PCBs
at
concentrations
<
50
ppm
at
the
time
of
removal
from
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system
[
§
§
761.20(
e)(
3)(
ii);
.30(
i)(
5)(
ii);
and
.60(
b)(
5)(
iv)(
B)].

(#
52)
Transformer
and
Voltage
Regulator
Fire
Emergency
Notification:
Owners
of
PCB
Transformers
and
PCB
Voltage
Regulators
(
containing

500
ppm
PCBs)
must
report
any
firerelated
incidents
involving
this
equipment
and
the
release
of
PCBs
to
the
National
Response
Center.
Information
must
be
provided
regarding
the
type
of
PCB
Transformer
installation
involved
in
the
incident
(
e.
g.,
high
or
low
secondary
voltage
network
transformer,
high
or
low
secondary
voltage
radial
system,
expanded
radial
system,
primary
selective
system,
primary
loop
system,
or
secondary
selective
system)
and
the
readily
ascertainable
cause
of
the
fire
(
e.
g.,
high
current
fault
in
the
primary
or
secondary
or
low
current
fault
in
secondary).
The
NRC
notifies
the
appropriate
Regional
Administrator
[
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
xi)
and
(
xv)(
A);
(
h)(
1)(
ii)(
B)].

(#
53)
Notification
to
Owners
of
PCB
Transformers:
Users
of
a
PCB
Transformer
in
use
or
stored
for
reuse
that
may
pose
an
exposure
risk
to
food
or
feed
must
notify
the
owner
of
the
Transformer
[
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
xiv)].

(#
54)
Registering
Newly
Discovered
PCB
Transformers:
In
the
event
that
a
mineral
oil
transformer
assumed
to
contain
<
500
ppm
PCBs
is
tested
and
found
to
be
contaminated
at

500
ppm,
the
owner
of
the
PCB
Transformer
must
register
the
equipment
with
the
building
owner
(
and
EPA;
see
#
3)
within
30
days
of
discovery
[
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
xv)(
D)].
­
47­
Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
(#
55)
Documentation
About
and
Disposal
Approval
for
PCB­
Contaminated
Liquids:
Prior
to
any
chemical
waste
landfill
disposing
of
PCB­
Contaminated
liquids
from
incidental
sources
associated
with
non­
liquid
PCB
waste,
the
landfill
owner/
operator
must
be
provided
with
documentation
that
shows
that
the
waste
does
not
exceed
500
ppm
PCBs,
that
it
is
not
an
ignitable
waste
as
described
in
§
761.75(
b)(
8)(
iii),
and
that
disposal
does
not
violate
40
CFR
§
268.32(
a)(
2)
and
§
268.42(
a)(
1),
which
list
specific
hazardous
wastes
prohibited
from
land
disposal,
including
liquid
hazardous
wastes
containing
PCBs
>
50
ppm
[
§
761.60(
a)(
3)(
ii)].

(#
56)
Inclusion
of
Abandoned
Natural
Gas
Pipes
in
Public
Service
Notification
Programs:
One
disposal
option
for
natural
gas
pipeline
systems
containing
PCBs
at
any
concentration
but
no
free­
flowing
liquids,
and
having
a
nominal
inside
diameter
of

4
inches,
is
to
seal
each
end
closed,
abandon
the
pipes
in
the
place
where
they
were
used
to
transport
natural
gas,
and
include
them
in
a
public
service
notification
program,
such
as
a
one­
call
system
under
49
CFR
192.614(
a)
and
(
b).
One­
call
systems
are
programs
run
by
utility
companies
to
inform
landowners
that
they
should
contact
the
utility
companies
before
beginning
any
excavation
work
on
their
property
to
avoid
disturbing
underground
utility
pipes
[
§
761.60(
b)(
5)(
i)(
A)(
1)].

(#
57)
Notification
About
Approved
PCB
Disposal
Facilities:
Each
operator
of
a
chemical
waste
landfill,
incinerator,
or
approved
alternative
disposal
technology
meeting
the
incineration
standard
must
notify
State
and
local
officials
at
least
30
days
prior
to
the
first
use
of
the
facility.
[
§
761.60(
f)(
1)(
i)].

(#
58)
Annual
Notification
about
PCBs
Disposed
of:
If
requested
by
State
and
local
officials,
each
operator
of
a
chemical
waste
landfill,
incinerator,
or
approved
alternative
to
incineration
must
provide
annual
information
about
the
quantities
and
types
of
PCBs
disposed
of
[
§
761.60(
f)(
1)(
ii)].

(#
59)
Notification
to
State
and
Local
Officials
of
PCB
Activities:
Any
person
may
conduct
R&
D
for
PCB
disposal
without
prior
written
approval
from
EPA,
if
they
meet
certain
conditions,
one
of
which
is
to
notify
State
and
local
environmental
agencies
at
least
30
days
prior
to
beginning
the
activities.
Each
written
notification
must
contain
the
EPA
identification
number
for
the
site,
the
quantity
of
PCBs
to
be
treated,
the
type
of
R&
D
technology
to
be
used,
the
physical
and
chemical
properties
of
the
materials
being
treated,
and
an
estimation
of
the
duration
of
the
activities
[
§
761.60(
j)(
i)(
ii)].

(#
60)
Manifest
R&
D
PCB
Wastes:
Research
facilities
must
use
manifests,
pursuant
to
Subpart
K,
for
all
R&
D
PCB
wastes
being
transported
from
the
R&
D
facility
to
an
approved
PCB
storage
or
disposal
facility
for
disposal.
Manifests
are
not
needed
if
the
residuals
are
returned
to
the
site
of
generation
[
§
761.60(
j)(
1)(
vii)].
­
48­
(#
61)
Self­
implementing
Remediation:
Owners
of
remediation
sites
are
required
to
notify,
in
writing,
the
appropriate
State
(
or
tribal),
county
(
or
local)
environmental
agencies
at
least
30
days
prior
to
conducting
remediation
activities.
The
notification
must
include
the
following
information:
the
nature
of
the
contamination,
a
summary
of
the
procedures
used
to
sample
contaminated
and
adjacent
areas,
a
table
or
cleanup
site
map,
the
location
and
extent
of
PCB
contaminated
areas,
including
topographic
maps,
and
a
cleanup
plan
for
the
site
[
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
i)].

(#
62)
Notification
of
Pending
PCB
Shipments:
Generators
of
bulk
PCB
remediation
waste
must
provide
written
notice
to
each
off­
site
facility
where
the
waste
is
destined
that
is
not
subject
to
a
TSCA
PCB
disposal
approval
about
the
quantity
and
the
highest
concentration
of
PCBs
shipped,
at
least
15
days
before
the
first
shipment
of
the
waste
from
each
cleanup
site
[
§
761.61(
a)(
5)(
i)(
B)(
2)(
iv)].

(#
63)
Deed
Restrictions
on
Property
Where
Remediation
Projects
Have
Been
Conducted:
Within
60
days
of
completion
of
a
cleanup
activity
and
in
accordance
with
State
law,
site
owners
must
record
a
notation
on
the
deed
to
the
property,
or
on
some
other
instrument
that
is
normally
examined
during
the
title
search,
that
will
in
perpetuity
notify
any
potential
purchaser
of
the
property
that
the
land
has
been
used
for
disposal
of
PCB
remediation
waste,
the
site
is
restricted
for
use,
and
the
fence
or
cap
must
be
maintained,
as
well
as
the
applicable
cleanup
levels
left
at
the
site.
This
notice
becomes
a
permanent
attachment
to
the
deed
[
§
761.61(
a)(
8)(
i)(
A)].

(#
64)
Disposal
of
PCB
Bulk
Product
Waste:
Any
person
disposing
off
site
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste
under
paragraph
(
b)(
1)
at
a
waste
management
facility
not
having
a
commercial
PCB
storage
or
disposal
approval,
must
provide
written
notification
to
the
receiving
facility
a
minimum
of
15
days
in
advance
of
the
first
shipment
from
the
same
disposal
waste
stream.
The
notice
shall
state
that
the
waste
may
include
components
containing
PCBs
at

50
ppm
and
that
the
waste
is
known
or
presumed
to
leach
<
10
ug/
L
PCBs.
The
objective
of
the
notification
is
to
alert
the
waste
facilities
and
prevent
the
generator
from
sending
a
waste
to
a
facility
that
may
be
restricted
from
receiving
PCBs,
based
on
a
State­
issued
permit
[
§
§
761.62(
b)(
4)(
i)
and
761.357].
Any
person
disposing
off
site
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste
under
paragraph
(
b)(
2)
at
the
same
type
of
facility
must
comply
with
the
same
notification
requirements,
except
that
the
notice
shall
state
that
the
waste
is
known
or
presumed
to
leach

10
ug/
L
PCBs
[
§
§
761.62(
b)(
4)(
i)
and
(
ii);
761.357
and
.359].

(#
65)
Notations
on
PCB
Items
and
Containers:
To
store
PCB
Items,
either
for
disposal
or
temporarily
in
areas
that
do
not
comply
with
§
761.65(
b)
for
up
to
30
days
from
the
date
of
an
Item's
removal
from
service,
owners
of
the
Items
must
place
on
the
Item
the
date
it
is
removed
from
service.
Items
that
can
be
temporarily
stored
include
non­
leaking
PCB
Articles
and
PCB
Equipment;
leaking
PCB
Articles
and
Equipment
if
the
PCB
Items
are
placed
in
a
non­
leaking
PCB
Container;
PCB
Containers
containing
non­
liquid
PCBs;
or
PCB
Containers
containing
liquid
PCBs
at
concentrations

50
ppm
in
areas
with
SPCC
plans
[
§
§
761.65(
c)(
1)
and
(
8)].
­
49­
(#
66)
Notification
of
Shipping
Laboratory
Samples:
To
qualify
for
the
exemption
from
manifesting
laboratory
sampling
wastes,
as
per
§
761.65(
i)(
2)(
i)
and
(
ii),
the
sample
collector
shipping
the
samples
to
a
laboratory
and
a
laboratory
returning
samples
to
a
sample
collector
must
comply
with
applicable
DOT
requirements
found
at
49
CFR
173.345
and
U.
S.
Postal
Service
regulations,
652.2
and
652.3.
Information
on
the
sample
collector,
the
laboratory,
and
date
of
shipment
must
accompany
a
PCB
sample
when
it
is
shipped
to
the
testing
laboratory
or
back
to
the
sample
collector
[
§
761.65(
i)(
3)].

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
(#
67)
Requirements
for
the
Spill
Cleanup
Policy:
Spills
involving
1
pound
or
more
by
weight
of
PCBs
must
be
reported
to
the
National
Response
Center
[
§
761.125(
a)(
1)].

(#
68)
Notification
of
PCB
Contamination
at
a
Cleanup
Site:
Parties
responsible
for
cleaning
up
PCB
spills
as
per
the
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
can
cleanup
the
site
to
50
ppm
PCBs
by
weight
(
as
opposed
to
25
ppm)
provided
that
a
label
or
notice
is
visibly
placed
in
the
area
[
§
761.125(
c)(
2)(
ii)].

(#
68a)
Records
Pertaining
to
Reclassification
of
PCB
Equipment:
Owners
of
reclassified
PCB
electrical
equipment
must
promptly
provide
records
of
reclassified
PCB
equipment
to
any
party
holding
or
possessing
the
equipment
(
for
example,
through
sale,
loan,
lease,
or
for
servicing).
Also
see
#
41a
and
#
75
[
§
761.180(
g)].

Subpart
K
 
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
(#
69)
Manifests
for
PCB
Wastes:
Generators
who
relinquish
control
over
PCB
wastes
by
transporting,
or
offering
for
transport,
PCB
waste
for
commercial
off­
site
storage
or
disposal
shall
prepare
a
manifest
(
EPA
Form
8700­
22),
which
specifies
the
identity
of
the
waste,
the
earliest
date
of
removal
from
service
for
disposal,
the
weight
in
kilograms
of
the
waste,
the
unique
identifying
number
of
a
PCB
Article
Container
or
PCB
Container,
the
serial
number
or
other
identification
of
PCB
Articles
not
in
containers
[
§
761.207(
a)].
For
bulk
shipments
within
the
United
States
transported
solely
by
water,
waste
generators
are
required
to
provide
three
copies
of
the
dated
and
signed
manifests
to
the
owner
or
operator
of
the
designated
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
[
§
761.208(
a)(
2)].
For
rail
shipments
of
PCB
wastes
that
originate
at
the
site
of
generation,
the
generator
shall
send
at
least
three
copies
of
the
manifest
to
the
next
non­
rail
shipper,
if
any,
and
the
designated
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility,
if
transported
solely
by
rail
[
§
761.208(
a)(
3)].

(#
70)
Send
Manifest
to
Generator:
When
a
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
receives
an
offsite
shipment
of
PCB
waste
accompanied
by
a
manifest,
the
owner/
operator
of
the
facility
must
send
a
copy
of
the
manifest
to
the
generator
within
30
days
after
the
delivery.
When
a
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
receives
a
PCB
waste
from
a
rail
or
water
(
bulk
shipment)
transporter
accompanied
by
a
shipping
paper
containing
all
the
information
required
on
­
50­
the
manifest
except
the
EPA
identification
number,
generator's
certification,
and
signatures,
the
owner/
operator
of
the
facility
shall
send
a
copy
of
the
manifest
or
shipping
paper
to
the
generator
[
§
761.208
(
c)(
1)(
iv)
and
(
c)(
2)(
iv)].

(#
71)
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
Waste
Generators:
Owners
or
operators
of
disposal
facilities
must
send
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
generators
of
PCB
wastes
identified
on
the
manifests
that
accompany
each
shipment.
The
Certificates
must
be
sent
within
30
days
of
the
date
that
the
disposal
of
each
item
of
PCB
waste
identified
on
the
manifest
was
completed,
unless
the
generator
and
the
disposer
agree
to
another
time
frame.
The
Certificate
of
Disposal
shall
identify
the
disposal
facility
and
waste
affected
by
the
certificate
and
include
a
statement
certifying
the
date
of
disposal
and
disposal
process
for
the
identified
PCB
waste
[
§
761.218(
a)
and
(
b)].

(
C)
Records.
Respondents
are
required
to
maintain
records
as
follows:

40
CFR
761
Subpart
A
 
General
(#
72)
Recordkeeping
of
Excluded
Manufacturing
Processes
and
Certification:
Chemical
manufacturers
and
importers
of
products
that
contain
inadvertently
generated
PCBs
(
i.
e.,
excluded
manufacturing
processes)
must
maintain
the
monitoring
data
(
or
other
analyses)
that
were
used
to
support
the
determination
of
compliance
with
the
conditions
of
§
761.3,
and
copies
of
the
signed
certification
of
compliance.
These
recordkeeping
requirements
expire
under
their
own
terms,
either
three
years
after
the
manufacturer
has
ceased
operating
the
process
that
necessitated
notification,
or
after
seven
years,
whichever
is
a
shorter
retention
period.
Monitoring
records
must
contain
the
method
of
analysis;
the
results
of
the
analysis,
including
data
from
the
Quality
Assurance
Plan;
a
description
of
the
sample
matrix,
the
name
of
the
analyst
or
analysis;
the
date
and
time
of
the
analysis;
and
numbers
for
the
lots
from
which
the
samples
are
taken
[
§
§
761.1(
f)(
1),
.185(
c)(
2)
and
(
d),
and
.193].

Subpart
B
 
Manufacturing,
Processing,
Distribution
in
Commerce,
and
Use
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
(#
73)
Records
of
Marketing
Used
Oil:
Marketers
who
first
claim
used
oil
does
not
contain
detectable
levels
of
PCBs
must
retain
records
supporting
the
claim
and
a
copy
of
each
certification
notice
received
or
prepared
relating
to
transactions
involving
PCB­
containing
used
oil.
Burners
must
include
among
the
records
a
copy
of
each
certification
notice
that
has
been
provided
to
a
marketer
of
PCB­
containing
used
oil.
These
requirements
also
apply
to
persons
who
market
or
burn
for
energy
recovery
liquid
containing
PCBs
at
concentrations
<
50
ppm
PCBs
at
the
time
of
removal
from
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system
[
§
§
761.20(
e)(
4)(
i)
and
(
ii);
.30(
i)(
5)(
ii);
and
.60(
b)(
5)(
iv)(
B)].
­
51­
(#
74)
Records
of
PCB
Transformer
Registration,
Inspection,
and
Maintenance:
Individuals
are
required
to
retain
a
copy
of
the
transformer
registration
and
the
return
receipt
signed
by
the
EPA
and
records
of
inspection
and
maintenance
history
for
a
period
of
3
years
after
the
disposal
of
the
transformer(
s).
The
records
also
shall
contain
information
of
the
location
of
each
transformer;
inspection
dates;
date
of
discovery
of
any
leaks;
inspector's
name;
location
of
any
leaks;
estimate
of
the
amount
of
dielectric
fluid
leaked;
date
and
description
of
any
cleanup,
containment,
repair,
or
replacement;
the
results
of
any
containment
and
daily
inspection
required
for
uncorrected
active
leaks;
and
any
transfer
of
ownership
of
PCB
Items
[
§
§
761.30(
a)(
1)(
vi)(
C),
(
xii),
and
(
xiv)].

(#
75)
Records
of
Reclassified
PCB
Equipment:
Owners
of
reclassified
PCB
equipment
must
maintain
records
at
the
facility
where
the
equipment
has
been
reclassified
to
a
lower
PCB
concentration
for
a
period
of
3
years
after
reclassified
and
sold,
transferred,
or
disposed.
These
records,
generated
during
the
normal
course
of
the
reclassification
procedure,
must
show
that
the
equipment
was
reclassified
following
the
required
reclassification
procedure.
When
these
procedures
require
testing,
the
records
must
include
copies
of
the
pre­
and
post­
reclassification
PCB
concentration
of
the
unit,
taken
by
a
laboratory
using
quality
control
and
quality
assurance
procedures.
Equipment
includes
transformers,
voltage
regulators,
electromagnets,
and
switches.
Also
see
#
41a
and
#
68a
[
§
§
761.30(
a)(
2)(
v)(
C)
and
(
D);
.30(
h)(
2)(
v)(
C)
and
(
D),
and
.180(
g)].

(#
76)
Natural
Gas
Pipeline
Data:
PCBs
at
concentrations
of

50
ppm
are
authorized
for
use
in
natural
gas
pipelines
if
certain
actions
are
taken
to
characterize
the
concentration
and
extent
of
contamination,
as
well
as
remedial
measures
taken
to
reduce
the
PCB
concentrations
below
regulated
levels.
Records
of
the
results
of
the
sampling
and
analysis
as
well
as
any
actions
taken
or
not
taken
to
reduce
the
PCB
concentrations
must
be
kept
for
3
years
after
the
PCB
concentrations
have
been
reduced
to
below
regulated
levels.
EPA
expects
the
recordkeeping
burden
to
be
minimal
as
the
regulations
allow
for
use
of
historical
data.
Owners
or
operators
of
natural
gas
pipeline
systems
that
do
not
include
sources
of
PCB
contamination
(
e.
g.,
natural
gas
compressors,
natural
gas
scrubbers,
and
natural
gas
filters)
containing

50
ppm
PCBs
also
must
comply
with
the
recordkeeping
requirements
[
§
§
761.30(
i)(
1)(
iii)(
B)
and
(
C)].

(#
77)
Records
of
Equipment
Stored
for
Reuse:
Owners
of
PCB
Articles
stored
for
reuse
must
maintain
records
starting
at
and
indicating
the
time
the
PCB
Article
is
removed
from
use
or
starting
from
August
28,
1998,
if
the
date
it
was
removed
from
use
is
not
known.
The
records
must
also
include
the
projected
location
and
the
future
use
of
the
PCB
Article,
and,
if
applicable,
the
date
the
PCB
Article
is
scheduled
for
repair
or
servicing
[
§
761.35(
a)(
2)].

Subpart
C
 
Marking
(
#
78)
Records
for
Identifying
PCB
Large
Low
Voltage
Capacitors:
Owners
or
operators
of
PCB
Large
Capacitors
located
in
protected
locations
must
maintain
a
record
for
identifying
the
PCB
Capacitors,
but
only
if
they
choose
not
to
mark
each
capacitor
individually
[
§
§
761.40(
c)(
2)(
ii)
and
(
k)].
­
52­
Subpart
D
 
Storage
and
Disposal
(#
79)
Records
of
Disposal
for
R&
D
Facilities:
The
self­
implementing
provisions
under
§
761.60(
j)
allow
individuals
to
conduct
research
and
development
for
PCB
disposal.
One
of
the
provisions
is
that
R&
D
facilities
must
comply
with
existing
recordkeeping
requirements
in
§
761.180
(
e.
g.,
maintain
the
annual
document
log
and
annual
records)
and
the
applicable
storage
and
disposal
requirements
in
Subpart
D
[
§
761.60(
j)(
1)(
ix)].

(#
80)
Records
of
Remediation
Activities:
Individuals
conducting
self­
implementing
remediation
projects
are
required
to
maintain
records
of
the
sampling
plans,
sample
collection
procedures,
sample
preparation
procedures,
extraction
procedures,
and
instrumental/
chemical
analysis
procedures
used
to
assess
or
characterize
the
PCB
contamination
at
the
cleanup
site.
Persons
using
alternate
methods
for
chemical
extraction
and
chemical
analysis
for
site
characterization
must
keep
on
file
records
of
a
comparison
study
that
meets
or
exceeds
the
requirements
of
§
761.269(
c)
[
§
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
i)(
E)
and
(
a)(
6),
and
Subparts
O
and
Q].

(#
81)
Waivers
of
the
Notification
Requirement:
Under
the
self­
implementing
remediation
provisions
of
§
761.61,
individuals
who
receive
a
waiver
of
the
30­
day
notification
requirement
must
maintain
the
original
written
waivers
received
from
each
of
the
agencies
they
are
required
to
notify
under
this
section
(
i.
e.,
the
RA,
State
and
county
(
or
local)
environmental
offices)
[
§
761.61(
a)(
3)(
iii)].

(#
82)
Records
of
Remediation
Cleanup
Activities:
For
the
cleanup
of
bulk
PCB
remediation
waste,
non­
porous
surfaces,
porous
surfaces,
and
liquids,
site
owners
must
keep
records
as
per
§
761.125(
c)(
5)
for
a
period
of
5
years.
The
records
must
identify
the
source
of
the
spill
and
include
information
on
the
estimated
or
actual
date
of
the
spill,
the
date
cleanup
was
completed
or
terminated,
a
brief
description
of
spill
location
and
the
nature
of
the
materials
contaminated,
pre­
cleanup
sampling
data
used
to
establish
spill
boundaries,
a
brief
description
of
the
solid
surfaces
cleaned,
the
approximate
depth
of
soil
excavation
and
the
amount
of
soil
removed,
post
cleanup
verification
sampling
data,
and
a
brief
description
of
the
sampling
methodology
[
§
761.61(
a)(
9)].

(#
83)
Records
of
Sampling
and
Analysis
of
PCB
Bulk
Product
Waste:
Persons
disposing
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste
in
solid
waste
landfills
must
keep
records
of
the
sampling
and
analysis
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste
as
well
as
required
notifications.
The
records
must
be
maintained
for
3
years
from
the
date
of
their
creation
and
made
available
to
EPA
upon
request
[
§
761.62(
b)(
5)].

(#
84)
Attempts
to
Secure
Disposal
:
The
regulations
include
a
provision
that
would
grant
individuals
an
automatic
1­
year
extension
to
store
waste
beyond
the
1­
year
deadline
for
disposal
if
certain
conditions
are
met.
One
of
the
conditions
is
that
the
individual
must
maintain
a
written
record
of
his
efforts
to
secure
disposal
capacity
until
the
waste
is
disposed.
These
records
must
be
made
available
for
inspection
by
the
EPA
[
§
§
761.65(
a)(
2)(
ii),
and
(
3)].
­
53­
(#
85,
86)
Spill
Prevention,
Control,
and
Countermeasure
(
SPCC)
Plan:
Owners/
operators
of
facilities
using
PCB
storage
containers,
as
per
29
CFR
1910.106,
must
prepare
SPCC
plans.
SPCC
plans
are
also
necessary
to
temporarily
store
containers
of
PCB
liquids
>
50
ppm.
An
SPCC
plan
is
necessary
when
an
individual
has
not
previously
stored
liquid
PCBs
on
a
temporary
basis.
[
§
§
761.65(
c)(
1)(
iv)
and
(
7)(
ii)].

(#
87)
Records
of
PCB
Items
in
Stationery
Storage
Containers:
PCB
Items
shall
be
dated
when
removed
from
service
for
disposal.
For
each
batch
of
PCBs
added
to
storage
containers,
as
per
§
761.65(
c)(
7),
owners
of
the
containers
shall
maintain
a
record
that
includes
the
quantity
of
the
batch
and
date
the
batch
was
added
to
the
container.
The
record
shall
also
include
the
date,
quantity,
and
disposition
of
any
batch
of
PCBs
removed
from
the
container
[
§
761.65(
c)(
8)].

(#
88)
Records
of
Storage
for
Disposal
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items:
Owners/
operators
of
commercial
storage
facilities
must
establish
and
maintain
records,
as
per
§
761.180,
for
the
storage
and
disposal
PCBs
and
PCB
Items

50
ppm
[
§
§
761.65(
c)(
10)
and
.180].

(#
89)
Incinerator
Records:
Owners
and
operators
of
incinerators
must
keep
records
5
years
after
the
date
of
collection
of
the
quantity
of
PCBs
fed
into
the
incinerator
and
the
rate
at
which
the
PCBs
are
fed,
the
temperature
of
the
incineration
process,
the
results
of
continuous
monitoring
of
combustion
products
for
oxygen
and
carbon
monoxide,
at
a
frequency
specified
by
EPA,
and
information
on
the
weight
of
solid
residue
generated
by
the
incinerator
[
§
§
761.70(
a)(
3),
(
4),
and
(
7);
(
c);
and
.180(
c)].

(#
90)
High
Efficiency
Boiler
(
HEB)
Feed
Rate
and
Emissions
Record
Retention:
Persons
burning
liquids
other
than
mineral
oil
dielectric
fluid,
containing
PCBs
between
50
and
500
ppm,
in
an
approved
HEB
must
retain
the
following
records
for
a
period
of
5
years:
the
quantity
of
low
concentration
PCBs
burned
in
the
boiler
each
month,
monthly
waste
analysis
records,
and
the
data
required
in
§
§
761.71(
b)(
1)(
vi)
and
(
b)(
1)(
vii),
which
includes
the
carbon
monoxide
concentration
and
excess
oxygen
percentage
in
the
stack
gas;
the
fuel
feed
rate;
waste
fluid
feed
rate;
and
the
quantities
of
fuel
and
waste
fluid
fed
to
the
boiler
[
§
§
761.71(
a)(
1)(
vi)
and
(
vii),
(
a)(
4),
(
b)(
1)(
vi)
and
(
b)(
1)(
vii),
(
b)(
5),
and
.180(
e)].

(#
91)
PCB
Disposal
Using
Scrap
Metal
Recovery
Ovens
and
Smelters:
The
use
of
scrap
metal
recovery
ovens
and
smelters
is
authorized
for
disposing
of
PCB­
contaminated
items
when
the
equipment
meets
certain
operating
parameters
and
conditions.
One
of
these
parameters
addresses
the
temperature
of
the
hearth
(
i.
e.,
at
least
1,000

C
when
charged
with
PCB
Items).
Operators
are
required
to
record
the
temperature
and
retain
the
data
at
the
facility
for
3
years
from
the
date
each
charge
is
introduced.
Because
these
devices
are
considered
disposal
units,
owners
of
the
equipment
must
meet
all
applicable
recordkeeping
requirements
in
40
CR
761
Subparts
J
and
K
(
e.
g.,
maintain
annual
document
log
and
annual
records)
[
§
§
761.72(
a)(
9)
and
(
b)(
6)].
­
54­
(#
92)
Chemical
Waste
Landfill
Records:
Owners/
operators
of
chemical
waste
landfills
that
dispose
of
PCBs
must
maintain
records
at
least
20
years
after
a
facility
ceases
disposal
operations
of
all
PCB
disposal
operations,
including
PCB
concentration
in
liquid
wastes,
the
threedimensional
burial
coordinates
for
PCBs
and
PCB
Items,
water
sampling
and
analysis
(
i.
e.,
samples
of
surface
and
ground
water
at
locations
and
frequencies
specified
by
EPA
in
their
approvals),
and
additional
records.
The
samples
must
be
analyzed
for
PCBs,
pH,
specific
conductance,
and
chlorinated
organics
[
§
§
761.75(
b)(
6)(
iii)
and
(
b)(
8)(
iv)
and
.180(
d)].

(#
93,
94)
Decontamination
Activities:
If
individuals
follow
self­
implementing
decontamination
procedures
(
and
maintain
the
required
records),
they
will
not
need
to
obtain
a
PCB
disposal
approval,
as
is
currently
the
case,
to
decontaminate
for
continued
use
or
distribution
in
commerce
items
that
had
been
contaminated
with
PCBs.
Test
and
validation
results
of
performance­
based
decontamination
activities
using
PODFs
and
VADFs
must
be
retained
[
Subpart
T,
§
761.79(
d)(
4)].
Also,
individuals
that
conduct
PCB
decontamination
activities
must
maintain
records
of
sampling
activities
that
show
sampling
locations,
analytical
results,
and
information
about
the
wastes
generated
by
a
decontamination
process.
These
records
must
be
retained
at
the
site
of
decontamination
for
a
period
of
3
years
for
inspection
by
EPA
[
§
§
761.79(
f)(
1)
and
(
2)].

Subpart
E
 
Exemptions
(#
95,
96)
Manufacture
of
PCBs
and
Processing/
Distributing
of
Limited
Quantities
of
PCBs
or
PCBs
in
Waste
Materials
for
R&
D:
Under
the
class
exemptions
for
manufacturers
of
PCBs
and
processors
and
distributors
of
limited
quantities
of
PCBs
and
PCB
analytical
reference
samples
derived
from
waste
materials
for
purposes
of
research
and
development,
facilities
seeking
the
exemption
must
maintain
records
on
the
source(
s)
of
PCBs,
the
person(
s)
to
whom
the
PCBs
were
shipped,
and
the
amount(
s)
of
PCBs
received,
processed
and
distributed
in
commerce
annually.
These
records
must
be
retained
for
a
period
of
either
3
years
after
ceasing
the
processing
and/
or
distributing
operations
or
5
years
[
§
§
761.80(
e)(
5),
(
g)(
1),
and
(
i)(
7)].

Subpart
G
 
PCB
Spill
Cleanup
Policy
(#
97,
98)
Records
of
Spill
Cleanup
and
Delays:
Parties
responsible
for
cleaning
up
PCB
spills
must
maintain
documentation
of
the
cleanup
activities
and
certification
of
the
documentation
for
five
years.
Owners
of
PCB
spills
who
have
delayed
cleanup
because
of
circumstances
such
as
civil
emergency;
hurricane,
tornado,
or
other
similar
adverse
weather
conditions;
lack
of
access
due
to
physical
impossibility;
or
emergency
operating
conditions,
must
keep
records
documenting
the
fact
that
circumstances
precluded
rapid
response
[
§
§
761.125(
b)(
3),
(
c)(
1)
and
(
c)(
5)
and
.61(
a)(
9)].
­
55­
Subpart
J
 
General
Records
and
Reports
(#
99)
The
Annual
Document
Log
for
PCBs
and
PCB
Items:
Owners/
operators
of
PCBs
and
PCB
Items
in
service
or
projected
for
disposal
must
maintain
annual
records
and
a
written
annual
document
log
for
3
years
after
the
PCB
activities
cease.
The
records
must
include
signed
manifests,
Certificates
of
Disposal,
records
of
inspections
and
cleanups,
facility
and
Item
identification
information,
total
number
of
Items,
telephone
records,
and
Item
transfer
information.
Individuals
must
also
collect
and
maintain
documents,
correspondence,
and
data
pertaining
to
storage/
disposal
of
PCBs
that
have
been
provided
to
as
well
as
received
from
any
State
or
local
government
agency
and
any
application/
correspondence
submitted
to
local,
State,
or
Federal
permitting
authorities
[
§
§
761.180(
a),
(
a)(
4),
(
b),
and
(
f);
and
761.65(
c)(
5)].

(#
100)
Recordkeeping
of
Monitoring
Data
for
Inadvertently
Generated
PCBs:
Any
importers
of
or
manufacturers
generating
PCBs
in
excluded
manufacturing
process
must
maintain
for
a
period
of
3
years
after
ceasing
process
operations
or
importation,
or
for
7
years,
whichever
is
shorter,
monitoring
or
analytical
data
used
to
determine
compliance
of
import,
manufacture,
process,
distribution
in
commerce,
or
use
of
chemicals
containing
inadvertently
generated
PCBs.
The
manufacturers'
records
must
include
the
reaction(
s)
believed
to
be
generating
PCBs,
the
levels
of
PCBs
generated,
and
the
levels
of
PCBs
released.
Importer
records
must
include
the
reaction(
s)
believed
to
be
generating
PCBs,
the
levels
of
PCBs
generated,
the
basis
for
all
estimations
of
PCB
concentrations,
and
the
name
and
qualifications
of
the
person
performing
the
analyses.
Monitoring
data
must
include
the
method
of
analysis,
the
results
of
the
analysis,
description
of
the
plan
matrix,
names
of
the
analysts,
date
and
time
of
the
analysis,
and
number
for
the
lots
from
which
the
samples
were
taken
[
§
§
761.185(
c)(
2),
(
d),
and
.193(
a)
and
(
b)].

Subpart
K
 
PCB
Waste
Disposal
Records
and
Reports
(#
101,
102)
Recordkeeping
of
Manifests
and
Certificates
of
Disposal:
PCB
waste
generators
must
retain
a
written
record
of
all
manifests
and
telephone
and
other
confirmations
regarding
manifesting
communications,
which
are
to
be
included
in
the
annual
document
log,
in
accordance
with
§
761.180
[
§
761.208(
a)].
Each
transporter,
storer,
and
disposer
must
retain
one
copy
of
each
manifest
or
shipping
paper
[
§
§
761.208(
b)
and
(
c)].
Each
PCB
waste­
handling
facility
that
initiates
or
receives
a
manifest
must
file
and
maintain
a
copy
of
each
manifest.
The
generator
of
PCB
waste
shall
keep
a
copy
of
each
manifest
until
the
generator
receives
a
signed
copy
from
the
designated
commercial
storage
or
disposal
facility
that
received
the
PCB
waste.
The
generator,
transporter,
and
owners/
operators
of
the
storage
and
disposal
facilities
shall
keep
a
copy
signed
by
the
storer
or
disposer
for
at
least
3
years
from
the
date
the
PCB
waste
was
accepted
by
the
initial
transporter.
[
§
761.209(
a)
to
(
d)].
Generators
and
commercial
storers
of
PCB
waste
must
also
maintain
a
copy
of
each
Certificates
of
Disposal
received
from
disposers
[
§
761.218(
c)].
­
56­
Subpart
T
 
Comparison
Study
for
Validating
a
New
Performance­
Based
Decontamination
Solvent
Under
§
761.79(
d)(
4)

(#
103)
Results
of
Validation
Studies:
Persons
conducting
studies
to
validate
a
new
performance­
based
decontamination
solvent
must
record
the
testing
parameters
and
experimental
procedures
in
standard
operating
practices
and
must
affix
in
an
appendix
the
results
of
the
validation
study
[
§
761.398(
c)].

(
ii)
Respondent
Activities
Typical
respondents
include:
manufacturers,
processors,
distributors
of
PCBs
in
commerce;
owners
of
PCB­
contaminated
equipment
and
PCB
Items;
PCB
waste
generators,
transporters,
commercial
storers,
and
disposers
(
i.
e.,
PCB
waste
handlers);
owners/
operators
of
laboratories;
and
other
users
of
PCBs.
All
respondents
must
read
the
rule
and
determine
which
provisions
are
applicable
to
their
operations;
plan
and
modify
their
procedures
to
come
into
compliance
with
the
rule;
provide
training
to
appropriate
staff;
process,
compile,
and
review
information
for
accuracy
and
appropriateness;
and
record,
disclose,
and/
or
report
the
required
information.
Specific
responsibilities
for
each
type
of
respondent
are
as
follows:

Manufacturers,
Processors,
Distributors
in
Commerce
of
PCBs.
Individuals
who
are
included
in
the
manufacturing
exclusions
must
gather
and
document
data
on
raw
materials
and
intermediates
used
in
the
manufacturing
process;
analyze
the
reactions
and
conditions
at
issue;
survey
the
facility
site
and
specific
equipment
to
determine
and
document
where
and
to
what
extent
PCBs
could
be
released
into
air,
water,
and
end
products.
Individuals
who
seek
exemptions
from
the
manufacturing,
processing,
or
distribution
in
commerce
bans
must
document
the
amount
of
PCBs
affected
by
the
exemption
request;
describe
the
manufacturing/
processing/
distribution
in
commerce
processes;
comply
with
additional
statutory
requirements
of
TSCA
section
6(
e)(
3)(
B);
quantify
the
economic
consequences
of
an
exemption
denial;
and
provide
specifics
about
servicing
and
use
activities,
develop
certification
statements,
and
complete
other
paperwork.

Owners
of
PCB
Items
and
PCB­
Contaminated
Equipment.
There
are
various
requirements
for
owners
of
the
many
different
types
of
PCB
Items.
Owners
of
newly
discovered
PCB
Transformers
must
register
their
Transformers
with
EPA
and
building
owners,
providing
information
on
the
number
of
PCB
Transformers,
their
locations,
and
his
or
her
name,
address,
telephone
number
and
signature,
or
that
of
the
authorized
representative,
which
certifies
the
accuracy
of
the
submitted
information.
Owners
of
these
PCB
Transformers
must
record
inspection
and
maintenance
information
and
file
and
maintain
the
data
and
information
in
the
annual
log
about
any
transfer
of
ownership
of
a
PCB
Transformer.
Owners
of
reclassified
transformers,
voltage
regulators,
electromagnets,
and
switches
must
maintain
records
showing
that
they
followed
the
required
reclassification
procedures.
When
testing
is
required,
equipment
owners
must
keep
records
of
the
pre­
and
post­
reclassification
PCB
concentration
measurements.
They
must
also
provide
records
of
the
reclassification
procedure
to
EPA
and
recipients
of
the
­
57­
equipment,
upon
request.

Individuals
who
discover
fire­
related
incidents
that
result
from
a
rupture
of
a
PCB
Transformer
or
PCB
Voltage
Regulator
must
report
the
incident
to
the
National
Response
Center.
Owners
of
PCB
Items
distributed
in
commerce
for
reuse
must
retain
records
in
the
annual
document
log
of
any
transfers
of
ownership.
Owners
of
large
capacitors
located
in
protected
locations
who
choose
not
to
mark
these
units
individually
must
maintain
records
for
identifying
the
Capacitors.

Owners
of
PCB
Articles
stored
for
reuse
must
maintain
records
of
the
Articles.
Some
owners
of
PCB
Items
may
want
to
obtain
approval
to
store
equipment
for
disposal
beyond
the
current
1­
year
limit,
or
to
exceed
the
5­
year
limit
for
the
storage
of
equipment
for
purposes
of
reuse.
In
those
cases,
they
would
be
required
to
contact
the
appropriate
RA
and
compile
and
submit
the
requisite
information.
Utilities
and
other
owners
of
PCB­
Contaminated
equipment
must
create
or
modify
their
Spill
Prevention,
Control,
and
Countermeasure
Plan
(
SPCC)
if
temporarily
storing
PCB
liquids.
Owners
of
PCB
Items
(
in
addition
to
PCB
Transformers)
are
also
required
to
record
and
maintain
records
of
inspection,
maintenance
activities,
cleanup,
disposal,
and
certain
decontamination
activities.
When
PCB
Items
are
removed
from
service
for
disposal,
the
owners
of
the
Items
must
place
the
date
on
the
item.

When
owners
of
PCB
Items
generate
wastes
that
must
be
handled
as
a
PCB
remediation
or
bulk
product
waste,
they
will
need
to
determine
which
of
the
available
disposal
options
(
i.
e.,
self­
implementing,
performance­
based,
or
risk­
based
options)
should
be
used
to
address
their
disposal
needs.
These
disposal
options
will
require
compliance
with
various
reporting
and
recordkeeping
requirements.

PCB
Waste
Handlers.
PCB
waste
handlers
must
respond
to
the
notification
requirements
by
filling
out
a
brief
one­
time
form
(
EPA
Form
#
7710­
53)
)
and
filing
and
maintaining
the
information.
Individuals
who
handle
PCB­
Contaminated
liquid
wastes
must
notify
chemical
waste
landfill
owners
of
the
certain
specified
properties
of
the
waste,
and
the
landfill
must
obtain
written
approval
from
the
RA
before
disposing
of
these
wastes.
Individuals
disposing
of
PCB
waste,
such
as
in
a
high
efficiency
boiler,
must
notify
the
RA
about
the
activity.

Waste
handlers
attempting
to
secure
disposal
must
maintain
records
of
these
attempts
to
be
granted
an
automatic
one­
year
extension
to
store
wastes
beyond
the
one­
year
deadline
for
disposal.
If
waste
handlers
change
their
waste­
handling
activities,
they
are
also
required
to
file
an
amended
TSCA
PCB
notification
form
(
EPA
Form
#
7710­
53,
Appendix
D),
which
provides
information
on
the
amended
activity.

To
handle
PCB
remediation
wastes
under
the
self­
implementing
option,
site
owners
must
notify
the
RA
and
other
authorities
about
the
remediation
activities
and
submit
a
written
certification
to
the
RA
that
site
sampling
and
waste
characterization
plans
are
on
file
at
a
specified
location.
Generators
of
bulk
PCB
remediation
waste
must
provide
written
notice
to
off­
site
waste
­
58­
handling
facilities
about
the
quantities
that
will
be
shipped
to
the
facilities
and
the
highest
concentration
of
PCBs
in
the
shipment.
Property
owners
with
remediation
sites
that
require
the
use
of
a
fence
or
a
cap
must
submit
to
EPA
a
certification
that
the
property
deed
has
a
notation
to
that
effect.
The
recordkeeping
activities
for
individuals
using
the
self­
implementing
remediation
provisions
for
disposing
of
PCB
remediation
waste
include
retaining
written
waivers
received
from
EPA
or
other
authorities
for
5
years,
maintaining
records
of
sampling
plans
and
characterization
procedures,
recording
in
the
deed
any
sites
that
require
the
use
of
a
fence
or
cap,
and
keeping
records
of
cleanup
activities
for
5
years.
PCB
waste
handlers
are
required
to
record
and
maintain
records,
such
as
calculations
used
and
validation
and
sampling
results,
on
certain
decontamination
activities.

Any
person
using
the
risk­
based
disposal
option
to
dispose
of
PCB
bulk
product
waste
must
apply
in
writing
to
EPA
to
do
so.
Persons
handling
PCB
bulk
product
waste
must
maintain
records
of
sampling
and
analysis
for
3
years.
Any
person
with
a
spill
involving
one
pound
or
more
of
PCBs
must
report
the
spill
to
the
National
Response
Center.

PCB
waste
generators
must
provide
manifests
and/
or
shipping
papers
that
will
accompany
the
waste
shipment
to
the
transporters
and
to
the
disposers.
When
a
generator
uses
an
independent
transporter,
he
or
she
must
confirm
either
by
phone
or
some
other
convenient
means
that
the
receiving
PCB
storage
and/
or
disposal
facility
actually
received
the
wastes.
Generators,
storers,
transporters,
and
disposers
must
sign
and
retain
copies
of
the
manifests
when
they
handle
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste.
Generators
must
submit
exception
reports
to
EPA
when
they
fail
to
receive
confirmation
from
the
disposer
that
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
has
been
properly
disposed
of.

Persons
seeking
coordinated
approval
for
their
waste­
handling
activities
are
required
to
submit
requests
for
approval
to
the
RA.
These
individuals
are
required
to
adhere
to
recordkeeping
and
reporting
requirements,
submit
additional
information
as
required
by
EPA,
or
submit
an
application
for
a
TSCA
PCB
approval,
and
notify
the
RA
of
any
changes
relating
to
the
waste
management
documents
that
serve
as
the
basis
for
the
coordinated
approval.

Owners
and
Operators
of
PCB
Disposal
Facilities.
These
respondents
are
expected
to
complete
the
EPA
approval
process:
develop
a
description
and
a
plan
for
a
demonstration
of
the
system;
conduct
demonstration
and
complete
an
analytical
assessment
of
the
results;
and
record/
disclose
information;
submit
a
demonstration
report;
and
develop
standard
operating
procedures,
a
closure
plan
and
financial
assurance
that
cover
the
closure
costs
of
the
facility.
Operators
of
approved
chemical
waste
landfills,
incinerators,
or
alternate
PCB
disposal
technologies
must
also
notify
State
and
local
officials
prior
to
the
first
use
of
the
technology,
and
if
requested
by
a
State
or
local
government,
provide
annual
notice
of
the
quantities
and
types
of
PCBs
disposed
of
during
the
year.

Owners/
operators
of
incinerators
must
keep
records
regarding
the
PCBs
fed
into
the
incinerator
and
the
operating
conditions
of
the
equipment.
Owners
of
chemical
waste
landfills
­
59­
must
collect
and
analyze
samples
of
surface
and
ground
water
at
EPA­
approved
locations.
To
dispose
of
residual
PCB
waste
in
a
scrap
metal
recovery
oven
or
smelter,
the
owner
must
obtain
a
permit
or
have
the
unit
approved
by
the
RA,
and
comply
with
applicable
reporting
requirements
of
Subparts
J
and
K,
such
as
recording
operating
temperatures.
Persons
burning
PCB
liquids
in
high
efficiency
boilers
must
retain
records
of
the
quantities
burned,
waste
analysis
results,
and
operational
conditions
of
the
boiler.

Owners
and
operators
of
PCB
disposal
facilities
are
required
to
submit
annual
reports
to
EPA.
PCB
waste
disposers
must
submit
unmanifested
waste
reports
to
EPA
when
they
accept
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
without
an
accompanying
manifest.
Disposers
also
must
submit
discrepancy
reports
when
the
PCB
waste
they
receive
for
disposal
does
not
match
the
description
of
the
manifest
that
accompanies
it.
Owners/
operators
of
disposal
facilities
must
submit
Certificates
of
Disposal
to
waste
generators
when
a
disposal
is
complete
for
each
item
on
a
manifested
waste
shipment.
The
disposers
must
maintain
all
of
the
above
records.
Owners/
operators
of
PCB
disposal
facilities
also
are
required
to
attempt
to
contact
the
generator
when
they
receive
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
that
does
not
include
a
manifest.

Owners/
Operators
of
Commercial
Storage
Facilities.
These
respondents
must
complete
the
EPA
approval
process;
i.
e.,
submit
closure
plans
and
financial
assurances
to
EPA.
They
must
notify
the
appropriate
RA
when
it
is
necessary
to
exceed
the
1­
year
storage
limitation,
to
modify
the
facility,
or
amend
the
financial
assurance
mechanism.
For
subsequent
extensions
to
the
storage
limitations,
the
requestor
must
submit
specific
justification
for
the
extension
and
indicate
measures
he
is
taking
to
secure
disposal.
Owners
of
commercial
storage
facilities
must
record
and
maintain
records
associated
with
PCB
equipment
inspections
and
cleanups.
They
must
also
submit
a
summary
report
to
EPA
of
the
type
and
quantity
of
PCB
wastes
that
were
managed
at
the
facility
during
the
preceding
year.
Commercial
storers
of
PCB
wastes
must
submit
Exception
Reports
when
they
transfer
the
PCBs
or
PCB
Items
to
the
disposer
within
9
months
from
the
date
of
removal
of
the
Item
from
service
or
when
they
have
not
received
within
13
months
from
the
date
of
removal
from
service
for
disposal
a
Certificate
of
Disposal
confirming
the
disposal
of
the
Item,
as
applicable.

Users
of
PCB
waste
storage
containers
can
use
containers
other
than
those
prescribed
by
ANSI
for
nuclear
criticality
safety
if
the
user
demonstrates
that
such
containers
are
protective
of
human
health
and
the
environment.
Managers
of
large
bulk
PCB
storage
containers
shall
have
a
record
that
includes
for
each
batch
of
PCBs
the
quantity
of
the
batch
and
the
date
the
batch
was
added
to
the
container.

If
owners
of
storage
facilities
change
their
waste­
handling
activities,
they
would
also
be
required
to
file
an
amended
TSCA
PCB
notification
form.
EPA
will
approve
changes
in
ownership
of
storage
facilities
if
the
transferee
has
established
financial
assurance
for
closure
and
the
transferor
has
resolved
any
deficiencies,
such
as
with
operations,
closure
plans,
and
cost
estimates.
­
60­
Owners/
operators
of
PCB
commercial
storage
facilities
are
required
to
attempt
to
reconcile,
with
either
the
generator
and/
or
transporter
any
significant
discrepancy
in
the
manifest.
Owners/
operators
of
PCB
commercial
storage
facilities
are
required
to
attempt
to
contact
the
generator
when
they
receive
a
shipment
of
PCB
waste
that
doesn't
include
a
manifest.

Laboratories.
Persons
conducting
R&
D
on
PCB
disposal
are
required
to
obtain
an
EPA
identification
number
and
notify
EPA
and
other
authorities
before
conducting
the
R&
D
activities.
R&
D
facilities
must
also
manifest
wastes,
as
applicable,
and
submit
requests
to
EPA
when
exceeding
the
specified
limits
for
the
PCBs
used.
R&
D
facilities
can
also
submit
requests
for
extensions
in
the
duration
of
the
activity.
Facilities
can
submit
exemption
petitions
to
qualify
for
the
class
exemptions
to
manufacture
PCBs
for
disposal­
related
R&
D
activities
or
to
process
or
distribute
PCBs
or
PCB
analytical
reference
samples
derived
from
waste
materials.
Facilities
seeking
the
exemption
must
maintain
records
of
the
activities
for
the
annual
log.
Laboratories
conducting
self­
implementing
R&
D
for
disposal
activities
must
maintain
annual
records,
as
well.

R&
D
facilities
seeking
coordinated
approvals
may
submit
requests
for
approval
to
the
RA.
They
are
required
to
adhere
to
recordkeeping
and
reporting
requirements,
submit
additional
information
as
required
by
EPA
or
submit
an
application
for
a
TSCA
PCB
approval,
and
notify
the
RA
of
any
changes
relating
to
the
waste
management
documents
that
serve
as
the
basis
for
the
coordinated
approval.

Operators
of
laboratories
who
wish
to
exceed
quantity
limitations
for
the
manufacture,
processing,
or
distribution
in
commerce
of
PCBs
will
have
to
submit
requests
to
EPA.

Other
Individuals
(
i.
e.,
Users
of
PCBs).
Owners
of
PCB­
Contaminated
natural
gas
pipeline
systems
who
sell
or
distribute
natural
gas,
can
use
these
systems
if
they
keep
records
of
sampling
and
analysis
results
and
actions
taken
to
reduce
the
PCB
concentrations
to
below
regulated
levels
and
submit
a
description
of
the
system
to
EPA,
if
requested.
Owners
of
natural
gas
pipelines
must
also
include
the
system
in
public
service
notification
programs,
which
inform
landowners
that
they
should
contact
the
utilities
before
beginning
any
excavation
work
on
their
property.
Owners
of
other
PCB­
contaminated
gas
liquid
systems
must
obtain
the
consent
of
the
EPA
(
Director,
National
Program
Chemicals
Division)
to
use
the
systems.

Persons
burning
for
energy
recovery
used
oil
or
liquids
containing
PCBs
<
50
ppm
from
a
natural
gas
pipeline
system
must
keep
records
of
each
certification
notice,
and
marketers
of
these
liquids
must
retain
records
related
to
transactions
that
they
claim
do
not
contain
detectable
PCBs.
Other
users
of
PCBs
may
have
to
deal
with
remediation
waste
or
PCB
bulk
waste
disposal
issues.
In
that
event,
they
will
need
to
determine
which
of
the
available
options
(
i.
e.,
self­
implementing,
performance­
based,
leachability
or
risk­
based)
could
be
used
to
address
their
disposal
needs.
These
disposal
options
will
require
compliance
with
various
reporting
and
recordkeeping
requirements.
