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agricultural - wastes resulting from the production and processing of farm or agricultural products, including manures, <br />prunings, and crop residues. <br />asbestos- a naturally occurring family of carcinogenic fibrous mineral substance. The State Department of Health Services has <br />classified friable wastes which contain more than one percent asbestos by weight as hazardous wastes. Friable means that <br />the material can be crumbled with pressure and, therefore, is likely to emit fibers. <br />ash - the residue from the Incineration of solid wastes, including municipal waste, infectious waste, woodwaste, sludge, and <br />agricultural waste. <br />auto shredder - the "fluff' consisting of upholstery, paint, plastics, and other non-metallic substances which remains after the <br />shredding of automobiles, discarded household major appliances, and sheetmetal. The State Department of Health Services has <br />classified untreated shredder wastes as hazardous. <br />construction/demolition waste - waste building materials, packaging, and rubble resulting from construction, remodeling, <br />repair and demolition operations, and consisting mainly of inert materials. <br />dead animals- animal carcasses requiring disposal that have not been previously used for medical purposes or with known <br />infectious diseases. <br />industrial - solid or semi-solid wastes resulting from industrial processes and manufacturing operations, e.g. cement kiln dust, <br />ore process residues, grit or screenings removed from a waste water treatment facility, etc. <br />liquids - wastes which are not spadeable, usually containing less than 60% solids. These wastes include cannery and food <br />processing wastes, landfill leachate and gas condensate, boiler blowdown water, grease trap plumbings, oil and geothermal field <br />wastes, septic tank pumpings, rendering plant byproducts, some sewage sludge, etc. may be hazardous. <br />mixed municipal - residential and commercial refuse, garbage and/or rubbish. Residential waste is commonly thought of as <br />household garbage, commercial wastes contain less putrescible waste and more paper and cardboard. <br />sewage sludge - human (not industrial) residue, excluding grit or screenings, removed from a waste water treatment facility or <br />septic tank, whether in a dry or semidry forth. <br />tires- discarded lire casings, <br />wood mill - shavings, sawdust, sanderdust, chips, bark, slabs, deck scrapings, edging wood and other flammable waste <br />material incidental to the processing of wood products. <br />other - classification of exempted solid waste facility, or any allowable wastes not included in the above. <br />It. FACILITY INFORMATION <br />A. Proposed change: For existing permitted facilities, when the operator proposes changes in design, operation, operator, or <br />owner, details of the changes must be seen to by the agency(s). If significant, the permit must be revised prior to implementation <br />of the change. For an application for permit review, if there are no changes, so indicate. <br />B. Average annual loading (tpy): The average amount of wastes the facility will receive on a yearly basis over the next five years, <br />expressed in tons. Must be consistent with the RFI and any California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) requirements. Volume <br />figures should be converted to tons and the conversion factor should be documented in the accompanying Report of Facility <br />Information. <br />Peak daily loading (tpd): The maximum amount of waste the facility is designed to receive, store, process, or dispose of per <br />day, expressed in tons. <br />Facility size: The area of the facility in acres to be used for receiving, storing, processing, or disposing of wastes, including all <br />monitoring locations and any buffer zone. This will be referred to as the "permitted acreage" and is considered the facility <br />boundaries. <br />Present capacity. Air space remaining to be filled at the disposal site. <br />C. Design flow: Treatment design flow (not maximum hydraulic capacity) when for sewage treatment. <br />Ill. SOURCE OF WATER SUPPLY (This is the water that contributes to or transports the waste.): <br />A. Municipal or utility service: Give name and address of the water surveyor. <br />B. Individual wells: Those not part of a municipal or utility service. <br />C. Surface supply: <br />(1) Name of stream, lake, spring, etc, if named. <br />(2) Type of water rights: Check appropriate item. <br />(3) If a state permit or license has been granted, give identification number. <br />V. OPERATOR INFORMATION: <br />For land disposal operations, if the operator is different from land owner, attach lease or franchise agreement documenting operator's <br />interest in real property. <br />11196 <br />