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Kim Tisa

PCB Coordinator

U.S. EPA Region 1

Regulatory Perspective

PCBs in Building Materials

Kim Tisa, PCB Coordinator

US EPA Region 1

CURRENT REGULATIONS

40 CFR Part 761

Section 6(e) of the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA) generally bans the manufacture, processing, distribution in commerce, and use of PCBs after 1978, but provides for exceptions based on an EPA finding of “no unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment.”

Most of the exceptions take the form of authorizations, which include conditions, such as location restrictions, repair restrictions, and concentration limits. 1998 Amendments

Regulatory Considerations

PCB regulations include owners and/or operators of PCB-contaminated property where the PCB contamination exceeds allowable concentrations under the regulations

TSCA authority has not been delegated to any of the states, thus both EPA and state regulations will apply

Uses of Aroclor by Type

Current Uses (since 1970) 1221 1232 1242 1248 1254 1260 1268

Capacitors X X X

Transformers X X

Heat transfer X

Hydraulic/lubricants

Hydraulic fluids X X X X X

Vacuum pumps X X

Gas-transmission turbines X X

Plasticizers

Rubbers X X X X X X

Synthetic resins X X X X

Carbonless paper X X

Miscellaneous

Adhesives X X X X X X

Wax extenders X X

Dedusting agents X

Inks X X

Cutting oils X

Pesticide extenders X

Sealants and caulking compounds

X

Issues

The use of PCBs in non-liquid manufactured building products at >/= 50 ppm is prohibited under TSCA.

Manufactured products containing PCBs have been found in many buildings and structures

Caulk typically contains PCBs at very high levels - %

The PCBs in the caulk migrate to a limited extent to surrounding materials (air, soil, masonry).

Typical renovation procedures can increase exposures to workers and building residents, including children.

PCBs in Building Materials

Bulk Product Waste (761.62)

examples: caulk, applied dried paints, varnishes, other

similar coatings or sealants, Galbestos

Performance-based disposal

Disposal in Solid Waste Landfill

Risk-based Disposal Approval

Daily Cover/Roadbed

Source Removal

PCB Bulk Product Waste

Caulk removal

–Strip out

Paint removal

–Abrasives

–Chemicals

–Hydroblast

**761.62**

Adjacent Surfaces

PCB Remediation Waste Grind/cut out areas

of contamination beyond “source material”

Encapsulate porous surfaces

Clean non-porous

** 40 CFR 761.61 **

Management in Place

Not acceptable for PCB bulk product waste (§ 761.62)

May be acceptable for surrounding materials (§ 761.61)

Possible short-term interim measure –Consultation with EPA

–Sampling may be required

Excluded PCB Products

Must meet all criteria under § 761.3

May be left in place without further restrictions/requirements

State Requirements may require removal

PROJECT CONSIDERATIONS

Establish DQOs

Analytical program with adequate QA/QC samples is critical

Laboratory Requirements

– Extraction/Analytical Methods

(3510, 3540C, 8082)

– Reporting Limits

DATA QUALITY

Activities to Date September 2009 (caulk guidance)

– http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/hazard/tsd/pcbs (fact sheets, Q’s and A’s, and a Schools Information Kit)

Steps to Safe Renovation and Abatement of Buildings that have PCB-

Containing Caulk

Developed public health levels for PCBs in indoor air for schools

Conducting research on mitigation and exposures assessment on PCB sources in buildings (ORD)

December 2010 (ballast guidance)

– http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/hazard/tsd/pcbs

EPA Recommendations

For buildings built between 1950 and 1978

– Minimize exposure (e.g. ventilation, cleaning)

– Take care when renovating

– Take care when abating

If you think you may have a problem

– Test for elevated air levels

– Test for source of air contamination

Evaluate duct systems

Sample deteriorating caulk

NEW CHANGES

April 2010 ANPRM PCB Uses

Federal Register Notice

Vol. 77, No. 40

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

–Management of Demolition Debris

30 day comment

Contacts and PCB Info

Kimberly Tisa – USEPA Region 1 PCB Coordinator

617-918-1527

tisa.kimberly@epa.gov

Caulk Hotline: 888-835-5372

http://www.epa/gov/pcb

http://www.epa.gov/region1/cleanup/pcbs/index.html