This is the preview version of the Wisconsin State Legislature site.
Please see http://docs.legis.wisconsin.gov for the production version.
NR 661.1084(11)(a)(a) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall make first efforts at repair of the defect no later than 5 calendar days after detection, and repair shall be completed as soon as possible but no later than 45 calendar days after detection except as provided in par. (b).
NR 661.1084(11)(b)(b) Repair of a defect may be delayed beyond 45 calendar days if the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material determines that repair of the defect requires emptying or temporary removal from service of the tank and no alternative tank capacity is available at the site to accept the hazardous secondary material normally managed in the tank. In this case, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall repair the defect the next time the process or unit that is generating the hazardous secondary material managed in the tank stops operation. Repair of the defect shall be completed before the process or unit resumes operation.
NR 661.1084(12)(12)Following the initial inspection and monitoring of the cover as required by the applicable provisions of this subchapter, subsequent inspection and monitoring may be performed at intervals longer than one year under any of the following special conditions:
NR 661.1084(12)(a)(a) In the case when inspecting or monitoring the cover would expose a worker to dangerous, hazardous, or other unsafe conditions, then the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material may designate a cover as an “unsafe to inspect and monitor cover” and comply with all of the following requirements:
NR 661.1084(12)(a)1.1. Prepare a written explanation for the cover stating the reasons why the cover is unsafe to visually inspect or to monitor, if required.
NR 661.1084(12)(a)2.2. Develop and implement a written plan and schedule to inspect and monitor the cover, using the procedures specified in the applicable section of this subchapter, as frequently as practicable during those times when a worker can safely access the cover.
NR 661.1084(12)(b)(b) In the case when a tank is buried partially or entirely underground, a remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material is required to inspect and monitor, as required by the applicable provisions of this section, only those portions of the tank cover and those connections to the tank, such as fill ports, access hatches, or gauge wells, that are located on or above the ground surface.
NR 661.1084 HistoryHistory: CR 19-082: cr. Register August 2020 No. 776, eff. 9-1-20; correction in (2) (a) (intro.), (6) (intro.), (c) 1. d. made under s. 35.17, Stats., Register August 2020 No. 776; correction in (10) (b) 2., 3. made under s. 13.92 (4) (b) 7., Stats., Register April 2021 No. 784.
NR 661.1086NR 661.1086Standards: containers.
NR 661.1086(1)(1)Applicability. The provisions of this section apply to the control of air pollutant emissions from containers for which s. NR 661.1082 (2) references the use of this section for such air emission control.
NR 661.1086(2)(2)General requirements.
NR 661.1086(2)(a)(a) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions from each container subject to this section in accordance with all of the following requirements, as applicable to the container:
NR 661.1086(2)(a)1.1. For a container having a design capacity greater than 0.1 mand less than or equal to 0.46 m3, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions from the container in accordance with the Container Level 1 standards specified in sub. (3).
NR 661.1086(2)(a)2.2. For a container having a design capacity greater than 0.46 mthat is not in light material service, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions from the container in accordance with the Container Level 1 standards specified in sub. (3).
NR 661.1086(2)(a)3.3. For a container having a design capacity greater than 0.46 mthat is in light material service, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall control air pollutant emissions from the container in accordance with the Container Level 2 standards specified in sub. (4).
NR 661.1086(3)(3)Container level 1 standards.
NR 661.1086(3)(a)(a) A container using Container Level 1 controls is one of the following:
NR 661.1086(3)(a)1.1. A container that meets the applicable U.S. department of transportation regulations on packaging hazardous materials for transportation as specified in sub. (6).
NR 661.1086(3)(a)2.2. A container equipped with a cover and closure devices that form a continuous barrier over the container openings such that when the cover and closure devices are secured in the closed position there are no visible holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the interior of the container. The cover may be a separate cover installed on the container, such as a lid on a drum or a suitably secured tarp on a roll-off box, or may be an integral part of the container structural design, such as a “portable tank” or bulk cargo container equipped with a screw-type cap.
NR 661.1086(3)(a)3.3. An open-top container in which an organic-vapor suppressing barrier is placed on or over the hazardous secondary material in the container such that no hazardous secondary material is exposed to the atmosphere. One example of such a barrier is application of a suitable organic-vapor suppressing foam.
NR 661.1086(3)(b)(b) A container used to meet the requirements specified in par. (a) 2. or 3. shall be equipped with covers and closure devices, as applicable to the container, that are composed of suitable materials to minimize exposure of the hazardous secondary material to the atmosphere and to maintain the equipment integrity, for as long as the container is in service. Factors to be considered in selecting the materials of construction and designing the cover and closure devices include organic vapor permeability; the effects of contact with the hazardous secondary material or its vapor managed in the container; the effects of outdoor exposure of the closure device or cover material to wind, moisture, and sunlight; and the operating practices for which the container is intended to be used.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)(c) Whenever a hazardous secondary material is in a container using Container Level 1 controls, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall install all covers and closure devices for the container, as applicable to the container, and secure and maintain each closure device in the closed position except as follows:
NR 661.1086(3)(c)1.1. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed for the purpose of adding hazardous secondary material or other material to the container as follows:
NR 661.1086(3)(c)1.a.a. In the case when the container is filled to the intended final level in one continuous operation, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install the covers, as applicable to the container, upon conclusion of the filling operation.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)1.b.b. In the case when discrete quantities or batches of material intermittently are added to the container over a period of time, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install covers, as applicable to the container, upon either the container being filled to the intended final level, the completion of a batch loading after which no additional material will be added to the container within 15 minutes, the person performing the loading operation leaving the immediate vicinity of the container, or the shutdown of the process generating the hazardous secondary material being added to the container, whichever condition occurs first.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)2.2. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed for the purpose of removing hazardous secondary material from the container as follows:
NR 661.1086(3)(c)2.a.a. For the purpose of meeting the requirements of this section, an empty hazardous secondary material container may be open to the atmosphere at any time. Covers and closure devices on an empty container are not required to be secured in the closed position.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)2.b.b. In the case when discrete quantities or batches of material are removed from the container, but the container is not an empty hazardous secondary material container, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install covers, as applicable to the container, upon the completion of a batch removal after which no additional material will be removed from the container within 15 minutes or the person performing the unloading operation leaves the immediate vicinity of the container, whichever condition occurs first.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)3.3. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed when access inside the container is needed to perform routine activities other than transfer of hazardous secondary material. Examples of such activities include those times when a worker needs to open a port to measure the depth of or sample the material in the container, or when a worker needs to open a manhole hatch to access equipment inside the container. Following completion of the activity, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure device in the closed position or reinstall the cover, as applicable to the container.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)4.4. Opening of a spring-loaded pressure-vacuum relief valve, conservation vent, or similar type of pressure relief device which vents to the atmosphere is allowed during normal operations for the purpose of maintaining the internal pressure of the container in accordance with the container design specifications. The device shall be designed to operate with no detectable organic emissions when the device is secured in the closed position. The settings at which the device opens shall be established such that the device remains in the closed position whenever the internal pressure of the container is within the internal pressure operating range determined by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material based on container manufacturer recommendations, applicable regulations, fire protection and prevention codes, standard engineering codes and practices, or other requirements for the safe handling of flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or hazardous materials. Examples of normal operating conditions that may require these devices to open are during those times when the internal pressure of the container exceeds the internal pressure operating range for the container as a result of loading operations or diurnal ambient temperature fluctuations.
NR 661.1086(3)(c)5.5. Opening of a safety device, as defined in s. NR 661.1081, is allowed at any time conditions require doing so to avoid an unsafe condition.
NR 661.1086(3)(d)(d) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material using a container with Container Level 1 controls shall inspect the container and its covers and closure devices as follows:
NR 661.1086(3)(d)1.1. In the case when a hazardous secondary material already is in the container at the time the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material first accepts possession of the container at the facility and the container is not emptied within 24 hours after the container is accepted at the facility the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the closed position. The visual inspection of the container shall be conducted on or before the date that the container is accepted at the facility, which is the date the container becomes subject to the subch. CC container standards.
NR 661.1086(3)(d)2.2. In the case when a container used for managing hazardous secondary material remains at the facility for a period of one year or more, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices initially and thereafter, at least once every 12 months, to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the closed position. If a defect is detected, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall repair the defect in accordance with the requirements specified in subd. 3.
NR 661.1086(3)(d)3.3. When a defect is detected for the container, cover, or closure devices, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall make first efforts at repair of the defect no later than 24 hours after detection and repair shall be completed as soon as possible but no later than 5 calendar days after detection. If repair of a defect cannot be completed within 5 calendar days, then the hazardous secondary material shall be removed from the container and the container may not be used to manage hazardous secondary material until the defect is repaired.
NR 661.1086(3)(e)(e) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall maintain at the facility a copy of the procedure used to determine that containers with capacity of 0.46 mor greater, which do not meet applicable U.S. department of transportation regulations as specified in sub. (6), are not managing hazardous secondary material in light material service.
NR 661.1086(4)(4)Container level 2 standards.
NR 661.1086(4)(a)(a) A container using Container Level 2 controls is one of the following:
NR 661.1086(4)(a)1.1. A container that meets the applicable U.S. department of transportation regulations on packaging hazardous materials for transportation as specified in sub. (6).
NR 661.1086(4)(a)2.2. A container that operates with no detectable organic emissions as defined in s. NR 661.1081 and determined in accordance with the procedure specified in sub. (7).
NR 661.1086(4)(a)3.3. A container that has been demonstrated within the preceding 12 months to be vapor-tight by using Method 27 in appendix A of 40 CFR part 60, incorporated by reference in s. NR 660.11, according to sub. (8).
NR 661.1086(4)(b)(b) Transfer of hazardous secondary material in or out of a container using Container Level 2 controls shall be conducted in such a manner as to minimize exposure of the hazardous secondary material to the atmosphere, to the extent practical, considering the physical properties of the hazardous secondary material and good engineering and safety practices for handling flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or other hazardous materials. Examples of container loading procedures that the EPA considers to meet the requirements of this paragraph include using a submerged-fill pipe or other submerged-fill method to load liquids into the container, a vapor-balancing system or a vapor-recovery system to collect and control the vapors displaced from the container during filling operations, or a fitted opening in the top of a container through which the hazardous secondary material is filled and subsequently purging the transfer line before removing it from the container opening.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)(c) Whenever a hazardous secondary material is in a container using Container Level 2 controls, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall install all covers and closure devices for the container, and secure and maintain each closure device in the closed position except as follows:
NR 661.1086(4)(c)1.1. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed for the purpose of adding hazardous secondary material or other material to the container as follows:
NR 661.1086(4)(c)1.a.a. In the case when the container is filled to the intended final level in one continuous operation, the remanufacture or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install the covers, as applicable to the container, upon conclusion of the filling operation.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)1.b.b. In the case when discrete quantities or batches of material intermittently are added to the container over a period of time, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install covers, as applicable to the container, upon either the container being filled to the intended final level, the completion of a batch loading after which no additional material will be added to the container within 15 minutes, the person performing the loading operation leaving the immediate vicinity of the container, or the shutdown of the process generating the material being added to the container, whichever condition occurs first.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)2.2. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed for the purpose of removing hazardous secondary material from the container as follows:
NR 661.1086(4)(c)2.a.a. For the purpose of meeting the requirements of this section, an empty hazardous secondary material container may be open to the atmosphere at any time. Covers and closure devices are not required to be secured in the closed position on an empty container.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)2.b.b. In the case when discrete quantities or batches of material are removed from the container, but the container is not an empty hazardous secondary material container, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure devices in the closed position and install covers, as applicable to the container, upon the completion of a batch removal after which no additional material will be removed from the container within 15 minutes or the person performing the unloading operation leaves the immediate vicinity of the container, whichever condition occurs first.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)3.3. Opening of a closure device or cover is allowed when access inside the container is needed to perform routine activities other than transfer of hazardous secondary material. Examples of such activities include those times when a worker needs to open a port to measure the depth of or sample the material in the container, or when a worker needs to open a manhole hatch to access equipment inside the container. Following completion of the activity, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall promptly secure the closure device in the closed position or reinstall the cover, as applicable to the container.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)4.4. Opening of a spring-loaded, pressure-vacuum relief valve, conservation vent, or similar type of pressure relief device that vents to the atmosphere is allowed during normal operations for the purpose of maintaining the internal pressure of the container in accordance with the container design specifications. The device shall be designed to operate with no detectable organic emission when the device is secured in the closed position. The settings at which the device opens shall be established such that the device remains in the closed position whenever the internal pressure of the container is within the internal pressure operating range determined by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material based on container manufacturer recommendations, applicable regulations, fire protection and prevention codes, standard engineering codes and practices, or other requirements for the safe handling of flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or hazardous materials. Examples of normal operating conditions that may require these devices to open are during those times when the internal pressure of the container exceeds the internal pressure operating range for the container as a result of loading operations or diurnal ambient temperature fluctuations.
NR 661.1086(4)(c)5.5. Opening of a safety device, as defined in s. NR 661.1081, is allowed at any time conditions require doing so to avoid an unsafe condition.
NR 661.1086(4)(d)(d) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material using containers with Container Level 2 controls shall inspect the containers and their covers and closure devices as follows:
NR 661.1086(4)(d)1.1. In the case when a hazardous secondary material already is in the container at the time the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material first accepts possession of the container at the facility and the container is not emptied within 24 hours after the container is accepted at the facility, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the closed position. The visual inspection of the container shall be conducted on or before the date that the container is accepted at the facility, which is the date the container becomes subject to the subch. CC container standards.
NR 661.1086(4)(d)2.2. In the case when a container used for managing hazardous secondary material remains at the facility for a period of one year or more, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the container and its cover and closure devices initially and thereafter, at least once every 12 months, to check for visible cracks, holes, gaps, or other open spaces into the interior of the container when the cover and closure devices are secured in the closed position. If a defect is detected, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall repair the defect in accordance with the requirements specified in subd. 3.
NR 661.1086(4)(d)3.3. When a defect is detected for the container, cover, or closure devices, the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall make first efforts at repair of the defect no later than 24 hours after detection, and repair shall be completed as soon as possible but no later than 5 calendar days after detection. If repair of a defect cannot be completed within 5 calendar days, then the hazardous secondary material shall be removed from the container and the container may not be used to manage hazardous secondary material until the defect is repaired.
NR 661.1086(5)(5)Container level 3 standards.
NR 661.1086(5)(a)(a) A container using Container Level 3 controls is one of the following:
NR 661.1086(5)(a)1.1. A container that is vented directly through a closed-vent system to a control device in accordance with the requirements specified in par. (b) 2.
NR 661.1086(5)(a)2.2. A container that is vented inside an enclosure that is exhausted through a closed-vent system to a control device in accordance with the requirements specified in par. (b) 1. and 2.
NR 661.1086(5)(b)(b) The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall meet all of the following requirements, as applicable to the type of air emission control equipment selected by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material:
NR 661.1086(5)(b)1.1. The container enclosure shall be designed and operated in accordance with the criteria for a permanent total enclosure as specified in “Procedure T—Criteria for and Verification of a Permanent or Temporary Total Enclosure” under of appendix B of 40 CFR 52.741, incorporated by reference in s. NR 660.11. The enclosure may have permanent or temporary openings to allow worker access, passage of containers through the enclosure by conveyor or other mechanical means, entry of permanent mechanical or electrical equipment, or direct airflow into the enclosure. The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall perform the verification procedure for the enclosure as specified in Section 5.0 of “Procedure T—Criteria for and Verification of a Permanent or Temporary Total Enclosure” initially when the enclosure is first installed and, thereafter, annually.
NR 661.1086(5)(b)2.2. The closed-vent system and control device shall be designed and operated in accordance with the requirements specified in s. NR 661.1087.
NR 661.1086(5)(c)(c) Safety devices, as defined in s. NR 661.1081, may be installed and operated as necessary on any container, enclosure, closed-vent system, or control device used to comply with the requirements specified in par. (a).
NR 661.1086(5)(d)(d) A remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material using Container Level 3 controls in accordance with the provisions of this subchapter shall inspect and monitor the closed-vent systems and control devices as specified in s. NR 661.1087.
NR 661.1086(5)(e)(e) A remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material that uses Container Level 3 controls in accordance with the provisions of this subchapter shall prepare and maintain the records specified in s. NR 661.1089 (4).
NR 661.1086(5)(f)(f) Transfer of hazardous secondary material in or out of a container using Container Level 3 controls shall be conducted in such a manner as to minimize exposure of the hazardous secondary material to the atmosphere, to the extent practical, considering the physical properties of the hazardous secondary material and good engineering and safety practices for handling flammable, ignitable, explosive, reactive, or other hazardous materials. Examples of container loading procedures that the EPA considers to meet the requirements of this paragraph include a submerged-fill pipe or other submerged-fill method to load liquids into the container, a vapor-balancing system or a vapor-recovery system to collect and control the vapors displaced from the container during filling operations, or a fitted opening in the top of a container through which the hazardous secondary material is filled and subsequently purging the transfer line before removing it from the container opening.
NR 661.1086(6)(6)Hazardous materials packaging requirements. For the purpose of compliance with sub. (3) (a) 1. or (4) (a) 1., a container shall be used that meets the applicable U.S. department of transportation regulations on packaging hazardous materials for transportation as follows:
NR 661.1086(6)(a)(a) The container meets the applicable requirements specified in 49 CFR part 178—Specifications for Packaging or part 179—Specifications for Tank Cars.
NR 661.1086(6)(b)(b) Hazardous secondary material is managed in the container in accordance with the applicable requirements specified in 49 CFR part 107, subpart B—Exemptions; 49 CFR part 172—Hazardous Materials Table, Special Provisions, Hazardous Materials Communications, Emergency Response Information, and Training Requirements; 49 CFR part 173—Shippers—General Requirements for Shipments and Packages, and 49 CFR part 180—Continuing Qualification and Maintenance of Packagings.
NR 661.1086(6)(c)(c) For the purpose of complying with this subchapter, no exceptions to the 49 CFR part 178 or 179 regulations are allowed.
NR 661.1086(7)(7)Procedure for determining no detectable organic emissions. The procedures specified in s. NR 661.1083 (4) shall be used to determine compliance with the no detectable organic emissions requirement of sub. (4) (a) 2.
NR 661.1086(8)(8)Procedure for determining a container to be vapor-tight. To determine compliance with the vapor-tight container requirement of sub. (4) (a) 3., the following procedure shall be used:
NR 661.1086(8)(a)(a) The test shall be performed in accordance with Method 27 in appendix A of 40 CFR part 60, incorporated by reference in s. NR 660.11.
NR 661.1086(8)(b)(b) A pressure measurement device shall be used that has a precision of ±2.5 mm water and that is capable of measuring above the pressure at which the container is to be tested for vapor tightness.
NR 661.1086(8)(c)(c) If the test results determined by Method 27 indicate that the container sustains a pressure change less than or equal to 750 Pascals within 5 minutes after it is pressurized to a minimum of 4,500 Pascals, then the container is determined to be vapor-tight.
NR 661.1086 HistoryHistory: CR 19-082: cr. Register August 2020 No. 776, eff. 9-1-20; correction in (3) (d) 1., (5) (a) 2., (6) (c), (7) made under s. 35.17, Stats., Register August 2020 No. 776.
NR 661.1087NR 661.1087Standards: closed-vent systems and control devices.
NR 661.1087(1)(1)This section applies to each closed-vent system and control device installed and operated by the remanufacturer or other person who stores or treats the hazardous secondary material to control air emissions in accordance with standards of this subchapter.
NR 661.1087(2)(2)The closed-vent system shall meet all of the following requirements:
NR 661.1087(2)(a)(a) The closed-vent system shall route the gases, vapors, and fumes emitted from the hazardous secondary material in the hazardous secondary material management unit to a control device that meets the requirements specified in sub. (3).
NR 661.1087(2)(b)(b) The closed-vent system shall be designed and operated in accordance with the requirements specified in s. NR 661.1033 (11).
NR 661.1087(2)(c)(c) In the case when the closed-vent system includes bypass devices that could be used to divert the gas or vapor stream to the atmosphere before entering the control device, each bypass device shall be equipped with either a flow indicator as specified in subd. 1. or a seal or locking device as specified in subd. 2. For the purpose of complying with this paragraph, low leg drains, high point bleeds, analyzer vents, open-ended valves or lines, spring loaded pressure relief valves, and other fittings used for safety purposes are not considered to be bypass devices.
NR 661.1087(2)(c)1.1. If a flow indicator is used to comply with this paragraph, the indicator shall be installed at the inlet to the bypass line used to divert gases and vapors from the closed-vent system to the atmosphere at a point upstream of the control device inlet. For this paragraph, a flow indicator means a device that indicates the presence of either gas or vapor flow in the bypass line.
NR 661.1087(2)(c)2.2. If a seal or locking device is used to comply with this paragraph, the device shall be placed on the mechanism by which the bypass device position is controlled, such as the valve handle or damper lever, when the bypass device is in the closed position such that the bypass device cannot be opened without breaking the seal or removing the lock. Examples of such devices include a car-seal or a lock-and-key configuration valve. The remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material shall visually inspect the seal or closure mechanism at least once every month to verify that the bypass mechanism is maintained in the closed position.
NR 661.1087(2)(d)(d) The closed-vent system shall be inspected and monitored by the remanufacturer or other person that stores or treats the hazardous secondary material in accordance with the procedure specified in s. NR 661.1033 (12).
NR 661.1087(3)(3)The control device shall meet all of the following applicable requirements:
NR 661.1087(3)(a)(a) The control device shall be one of the following devices:
NR 661.1087(3)(a)1.1. A control device designed and operated to reduce the total organic content of the inlet vapor stream vented to the control device by at least 95 percent by weight.
Loading...
Loading...
Published under s. 35.93, Stats. Updated on the first day of each month. Entire code is always current. The Register date on each page is the date the chapter was last published.