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WASTE DISCHARGE REQUIREMENTS <br />FORWARD INCORPORATED <br />WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITY <br />CLASS II LANDFILLS <br />CLASS III LANDFILLS <br />CLASS II SURFACE IMPOUNDMENT <br />CLASS II LAND TREATMENT UNIT <br />SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY <br />-2- <br />expanded to a final size as shown on Attachment C. This expansion will be <br />conducted in three phases. During phases I and II, WMU "0" will be <br />extended to cover low portions of WMUs "B" and 'ic". <br />WKU "E" - This Class 11 Landfill is being constructed to meet Subchapter <br />,15 requirements, and is dedicated for the disposal of coal and wood ash. <br />WMU "F" - A proposed Class II surface impoundment which will hold leachate <br />and other 'designated wastes' compatible with the liner. <br />WHU "G" - A proposed Class 11 land treatment unit. Soils contaminated with <br />less than hazardous levels of petroleum hydrocarbons will be stored and <br />aerated at this WMU. <br />WKU ON" - A proposed Class III landfill which will hold 'nonhazardous <br />solid waste'. <br />WASTES AND THEIR CLASSIFICATION <br />4. The Discharger proposes to continue to discharge 'nonhazardous solid <br />waste' in WMU I'D", a Class III landfill unit, as shown on Attachment 'IS". <br />5. The Discharger proposes to discharge wastes containing greater than one <br />percent (>I%) friable asbestos in WMUs I'D" and "H". These wastes are <br />classified as 'hazardous' under, Title 22 of CCR. However, because these <br />wastes do not pose a threat to ground water quality, Section 25143.7 of the <br />Health and Safety Code permits their disposal in any landfill which has <br />waste discharge requirements that specifically permit the discharge, <br />provided that the wastes are handled and disposed of in accordance with <br />applicable statutes and regulations. <br />6. The Discharger proposes to discharge coal and wood ash to WMU "E", a Class <br />11 landfill unit. Data submitted by the Discharger indicate that coal ash, <br />if commingled with wastes that produce acidic leachate, could release <br />pollutants in concentrations which could cause degradation of waters of the <br />state. However, the Discharger's data also show that in the absence of <br />acidic conditions, coal ash does not pose such a water quality threat. In <br />addition, the data show that coal ash itself is not capable of generating <br />acidic leachate. <br />7. The State Department of Health Services (OHS) has granted shredder waste a <br />variance, for the purposes of disposal, from hazardous waste management <br />requirements pursuant to Section 66310, Title 22 of the CCR. Shredder <br />waste is any waste which results from the shredding of automobile bodies <br />(from which batteries, mufflers, and exhaust pipes have been reinoved), <br />household appliances, and, sheet metal. <br />