Section 101480 Of Article 5. Released Waste From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 101. >> Part 3. >> Chapter 4. >> Article 5.
101480
. (a) For purposes of this article, the following definitions
apply:
(1) "Local officer" means a county health officer, city health
officer, or county director of environmental health.
(2) "Person" has the same meaning as set forth in Section 25118.
(3) "Release" has the same meaning as set forth in Section 25320.
(4) "Remedial action" means any action taken by a responsible
party to clean up a released waste, to abate the effects of a
released waste, or to prevent, minimize, or mitigate damages that may
result from the release of a waste. "Remedial action" includes the
restoration, rehabilitation, or replacement of any natural resource
damaged or lost as a result of the release of a waste.
(5) "Responsible party" means a person who, pursuant to this
section, requests the local officer to supervise remedial action with
respect to a released waste.
(6) "Waste" has the same meaning as set forth in subdivision (b)
of Section 101075.
(b) Whenever a release of waste occurs and remedial action is
required, the responsible party for the release may request the local
officer to supervise the remedial action. The local officer may
agree to supervise the remedial action if he or she determines, based
on available information, that adequate staff resources and the
requisite technical expertise and capabilities are available to
adequately supervise the remedial action.
(c) Remedial action carried out under this section shall be
carried out only pursuant to a remedial action agreement entered into
by the local officer and the responsible party. The remedial action
agreement shall specify the testing, monitoring, and analysis the
responsible party will carry out to determine the type and extent of
the contamination caused by the released waste that is the subject of
the remedial action, the remedial actions that will be taken, and
the cleanup goals that the local officer determines are necessary to
protect human health or safety or the environment, and that, if met,
constitute a permanent remedy to the release of the waste.
(d) A local officer who enters into a remedial action agreement,
as described in subdivision (c), may, after giving the responsible
party adequate notice, withdraw from the agreement at any time after
making one of the following findings:
(1) The responsible party is not in compliance with the remedial
action agreement.
(2) Appropriate staff resources, technical expertise, or technical
capabilities are not available to adequately supervise the remedial
action.
(3) The release of the waste that is the subject of the remedial
action is of a sufficiently complex nature or may present such a
significant potential hazard to human health or the environment that
it should be referred to the Department of Toxic Substances Control
or a California regional water quality control board.
(e) After determining that a responsible party has completed the
actions required by the remedial action agreement and that a
permanent remedy for the release of waste has been achieved, the
local officer may provide the responsible party with a letter or
other document that describes the release of waste that occurred and
the remedial action taken, and certifies that the cleanup goals
embodied in the remedial action agreement were accomplished.