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ARARs and TBCs for Superfund Sites -4- 17 May 1991 <br /> Boards' obligation to promulgate water quality standards pursuant to §303 of the federal <br /> Clean Water Act (CWA). In California,water quality standards are identified in the Basin <br /> Plans and consist of designated beneficial uses for particular surface and ground water <br /> bodies and water quality objectives to ensure the reasonable protection of those beneficial <br /> uses. SARA considers "state standards" as potential ARARs.' <br /> Unlike water quality standards as defined by the CWA,Porter-Cologne does not restrict <br /> water quality standards to surface waters or point sources and does not impose a <br /> particular type or level of control technology on chemicals being discharged. Porter- <br /> Cologne requires the promulgation of water quality standards in Basin Plans which are <br /> applicable to ground water and nonpoint sources, as well. Cleanup activities subject to <br /> the Basin Plans and their water quality standards could be chemical-specific, action- <br /> specific, and/or location-specific. <br /> TOXIC PITS CLEANUP ACT OF 1984 (TPCA) <br /> The Toxic Pits Cleanup Act (California Health and Safety Code, §§25208 et seq.) <br /> authorized the Regional Boards to regulate surface impoundments containing liquid <br /> hazardous waste. This act prohibits the discharge of liquid hazardous waste or <br /> hazardous waste containing free liquids after 30 June 1988 to surface impoundments not <br /> meeting specific siting and design standards. Persons owning or discharging to surface <br /> impoundments found to be containing hazardous waste are required to file a <br /> hydrogeologic assessment report (HAR) with the Regional Board upon notification. <br /> Closure of these impoundments is regulated under TPCA as well as other programs <br /> under Porter-Cologne and Title 23 of the California Code of Regulations (CCR). Some <br /> cleanup activities at CERCLA sites may be subject to TPCA and this statute would be <br /> action-specific and location-specific. Since the hazardous waste identification criteria <br /> contained in Title 22 CCR, Division 4, Chapter 30, Article 11 are cited as defining <br /> "hazardous waste" under TPCA, these regulatory criteria would also be chemical-specific <br /> ARARs. Since this ARAR requires compliance during the site characterization phase, it is <br /> important to inform the responsible party of TPCA applicability in an early stage of the <br /> remedial investigation, so that HAR requirements can be met within the CERCLA <br /> process. <br /> THE SAFE DRINKING WATER AND TOXIC ENFORCEMENT ACT OF 1986 <br /> (PROPOSITION 65) <br /> Found in Division 20 of the California Health and Safety Code, Proposition 65 prohibits <br /> the discharge of a significant amount of a known human carcinogen or reproductive toxin <br /> into any source of drinking water or onto or into land where it may pass into a source of <br /> drinking water. The State Department of Health Services (DHS) is the lead agency under <br /> ' U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, "CERCLA <br /> Compliance with Other Laws Manual",September 1989. <br />