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0 EXHIBIT 11A9° 10 <br />HAZARDOUS WASTE <br />EXPOSURE CONTINGENCY PLAN <br />CAL OSHA STANDARD (29CFR PART 1926,1100-1148) <br />WHAT IS HAZARDOUS WASTE <br />A waste is considered hazardous if it appears on the lists of hazardous wastes included in federal <br />RCRA regulations [40CFR, §§ 264.30-.33] or as published in the state regulations at 22 CCR § 66261.30 <br />- .33. The state's regulations have been amended in 1991 to include both federal and state lists of <br />hazardous wastes and, therefore, it is not necessary to consult EPA 40 CFR regulations. Wastes have <br />been placed on these lists because they are known to exhibit certain toxicological properties with respect <br />to human health or the environment, are hazardous or dangerous from some other standpoint, or tend to <br />be difficult to store or dispose of effectively. These listed wastes may be from any type of operation and <br />are said to have non-specific sources, generated in the course of certain manufacturing or processing <br />operations. <br />SUMMARY OF HOW TO IDENTIFY HAZARDOUS WASTE <br />To determine whether wastes are hazardous, it will be necessary to study information available on <br />raw materials, have tests performed on your wastes or take other steps to accurately classify the wastes. <br />The following information is provided to help you in making this determination. <br />• If you know the chemical composition of your wastes, check to see if they are listed as <br />hazardous wastes; or <br />identifyUse information contained on MSDSs to dooperations us <br />and which may be contained in its wastes. I <br />• If not specifically listed, determine whether your waste exhibits one of the characteristics <br />described above that would qualify it as a hazardous waste. Testing according to the methods by <br />a state -certified laboratory does this. <br />• Check references for typical waste streams and presume that the wastes are hazardous if <br />they fall into these categories. To illustrate: a facility is likely to generate hazardous <br />wastes if it handles the following types of materials and these materials are not entirely <br />consumed by your operations: <br />asbestos cement pipe or asbestos products; <br />oils or other petroleum products; <br />dyes, paints, printing inks, thinners, solvents, or cleaning fluids; <br />pesticides or other related chemicals; <br />materials that dissolve metals, wood paper, or clothing (acids and bases0; <br />flammable materials; <br />materials that burn or itch upon contact with the skin; <br />materials that bubble or fume upon contact with water; <br />products accompanied by shipping papers or labels or an MEDS indicating that the <br />product is hazardous; or <br />any substance listed as a hazardous waste in the list of common names. <br />(Appendix X to 22 CCR §66261, Appendix A) <br />[Reference: California Chamber of Commerce, Hazardous Waste Management Manual, <br />Copyright 01996 by the California Chamber of Commerce] <br />