Section 25247 Of Article 12. Financial Responsibility And Closure And Maintenance Of Facilities From California Health And Safety Code >> Division 20. >> Chapter 6.5. >> Article 12.
25247
. (a) The department shall review each plan submitted pursuant
to Section 25246 and shall approve the plan if it finds that the
plan complies with the regulations adopted by the department and
complies with all other applicable state and federal regulations.
(b) The department shall not approve the plan until at least one
of the following occurs:
(1) The plan has been approved pursuant to Section 13227 of the
Water Code.
(2) Sixty days expire after the owner or operator of an interim
status facility submits the plan to the department. If the department
denies approval of a plan for an interim status facility, this
60-day period shall not begin until the owner or operator resubmits
the plan to the department.
(3) The director finds that immediate approval of the plan is
necessary to protect public health, safety, or the environment.
(c) Any action taken by the department pursuant to this section is
subject to Section 25204.5.
(d) (1) To the extent consistent with the federal act, the
department shall impose the requirements of a hazardous waste
facility postclosure plan on the owner or operator of a facility
through the issuance of an enforcement order, entering into an
enforceable agreement, or issuing a postclosure permit.
(A) A hazardous waste facility postclosure plan imposed or
modified pursuant to an enforcement order, a permit, or an
enforceable agreement shall be approved in compliance with the
California Environmental Quality Act (Division 13 (commencing with
Section 21000) of the Public Resources Code).
(B) Before the department initially approves or significantly
modifies a hazardous waste facility postclosure plan pursuant to this
subdivision, the department shall provide a meaningful opportunity
for public involvement, which, at a minimum, shall include public
notice and an opportunity for public comment on the proposed action.
(C) For the purposes of subparagraph (B), a "significant
modification" is a modification that the department determines would
constitute a class 3 permit modification if the change were being
proposed to a hazardous waste facilities permit. In determining
whether the proposed modification would constitute a class 3
modification, the department shall consider the similarity of the
modification to class 3 modifications codified in Appendix I of
Chapter 20 (commencing with Section 66270.1) of Division 4.5 of Title
22 of the California Code of Regulations. In determining whether the
proposed modification would constitute a class 3 modification, the
department shall also consider whether there is significant public
concern about the proposed modification, and whether the proposed
change is so substantial or complex in nature that the modification
requires the more extensive procedures of a class 3 permit
modification.
(2) This subdivision does not limit or delay the authority of the
department to order any action necessary at a facility to protect
public health or safety.
(3) If the department imposes a hazardous waste facility
postclosure plan in the form of an enforcement order or enforceable
agreement, in lieu of issuing or renewing a postclosure permit, the
owner or operator who submits the plan for approval shall, at the
time the plan is submitted, pay the same fee specified in
subparagraph (F) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section
25205.7, or enter into a cost reimbursement agreement pursuant to
subdivision (a) of Section 25205.7 and upon commencement of the
postclosure period shall pay the fee required by paragraph (9) of
subdivision (c) of Section 25205.4. For purposes of this paragraph
and paragraph (9) of subdivision (c) of Section 25205.4, the
commencement of the postclosure period shall be the effective date of
the postclosure permit, enforcement order, or enforceable agreement.
(4) In addition to any other remedy available under state law to
enforce a postclosure plan imposed in the form of an enforcement
order or enforcement agreement, the department may take any of the
following actions:
(A) File an action to enjoin a threatened or continuing violation
of a requirement of the enforcement order or agreement.
(B) Require compliance with requirements for corrective action or
other emergency response measures that the department deems necessary
to protect human health and the environment.
(C) Assess or file an action to recover civil penalties and fines
for a violation of a requirement of an enforcement order or
agreement.
(e) Subdivision (d) does not apply to a postclosure plan for which
a final or draft permit has been issued by the department on or
before December 31, 2003, unless the department and the facility
mutually agree to replace the permit with an enforcement order or
enforceable agreement pursuant to the provisions of subdivision (d).
(f) (1) Except as provided in paragraphs (2) and (3), the
department may only impose postclosure plan requirements through an
enforcement order or an enforceable agreement pursuant to subdivision
(d) until January 1, 2009.
(2) This subdivision does not apply to an enforcement order or
enforceable agreement issued prior to January 1, 2009, or an order or
agreement for which a public notice is issued on or before January
1, 2009.
(3) This subdivision does not apply to the modification on or
after January 1, 2009, of an enforcement order or enforceable
agreement that meets the conditions in paragraph (2).
(g) If the department determines that a postclosure permit is
necessary to enforce a postclosure plan, the department may, at any
time, rescind and replace an enforcement order or an enforceable
agreement issued pursuant to this section by issuing a postclosure
permit for the hazardous waste facility, in accordance with the
procedures specified in the department's regulations for the issuance
of postclosure permits.
(h) Nothing in this section may be construed to limit or delay the
authority of the department to order any action necessary at a
facility to protect public health or safety, or the environment.