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STANDARD PROVISIONS AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS September 1993 <br /> FOR WASTE DISCHARGE REQUIREMENTS <br /> FOR DISCHARGES REGULATED BY CHAPTER 15 AND/OR PART 258 -21- <br /> a. <br /> 21_a. Ground water in the uppermost aquifer, in any other portion of the zone of saturation in <br /> which it would be reasonable to anticipate that waste constituents migrating from the <br /> WMU could be detected. and in any perched zones underlying the WMU. <br /> b. Any bodies of surface water that could be measurably affected by a release. <br /> C. Soil pore liquid beneath and/or adjacent to the WMU, and <br /> d. Soil pore gas beneath and/or adjacent to the Unit. <br /> 15. "Monitoring Point" means a device (e.g., well) or location (e.g., a specific point along a <br /> Lakeshore), downgradient from the landfill and that is assigned in this Order, at which samples <br /> are collected for the purpose of detecting a release by comparison with samples collected at <br /> Background Monitoring Points. <br /> 16. ';'Monthly average concentration" means the arithmetic mean of measurements made during <br /> the month. <br /> 17. ":Monthly average discharge" means the total discharge by volume during a calendar month <br /> divided by the number of days in the month that the facility was discharging (e.g. gallons per <br /> day, cubic feet per day). <br /> Where less than daily sampling is required by this Order, the monthly average shall be <br /> determined by the summation of all the measured discharges divided by the number of days <br /> during the month when the measurements were made. <br /> 18. "MSWLF,or MSW landfill" means a Class II or Class III landfill unit in this region that <br /> accepts, or has accepted, municipal solid wastes, and that is subject to regulation under either <br /> or both Chapter 15 and the federal MSW regulations. <br /> 19. "Order," as used throughout this document, means the Waste Discharge Requirements. The <br /> Monitoring and Reporting Program and Standard Provisions and Reporting Requirements are <br /> incorporated by reference into the Waste Discharge Requirements. <br /> 20. "Practical quantitation limit (PQL)" means the lowest constituent concentration at which a <br /> numerical concentration can be assigned with reasonable certainty that its value represents the <br /> constituent's actual concentration in the sample. Normally PQLs should be set equal to the <br /> concentration of the lowest standard used to calibrate the analytical procedure. The PQL shall <br /> reflect the quantitation capabilities of the specific analytical procedure and equipment used by <br /> the laboratory. PQLs reported by the laboratory shall not simply be restated from U.S. EPA <br /> analytical method manuals. In relatively interference-free water, laboratory-derived PQLs are <br /> expected to closely agree with published U. S. EPA PQLs. If the lab suspects that, due to <br /> matrix or other effects, the quantitation limit for a particular analytical run differs significantly <br /> from the laboratory-derived PQL, the results should be flagged accordingly, along with an <br /> estimate of the quantitation limit achieved. <br />