This chapter shall be known as the "York County Low-Level Radioactive
Waste (LLRW) Ordinance."
The purposes of this chapter shall be to:
A. Protect the health, safety and general welfare of all citizens of
the county by preventing exposure to airborne radioactive substances
and to radioactive substances in all other media.
B. Preserve the natural environmental qualities of all the land, flora
and fauna within the county.
C. Promote the sustainable economic well-being of the county by preservation
of agriculture and agriculture-related activities.
D. Promote the sustainable economic well-being of the county by preservation
of camping, hunting, fishing and other recreational opportunities
necessary to tourism.
E. Preserve the values of a healthy environment for this and future
generations.
F. Protect against the infliction of psychological or emotional stress
on county residents from the fear of exposure to radiation.
This chapter shall be liberally interpreted to give priority to the purposes stated in §
89-2 over such considerations as economics, especially the economics of the nuclear industry, or efficiency or scheduling factors at any level of government.
This chapter is adopted pursuant to the authority granted to
the county by all relevant state and federal laws, including but not
limited to the following:
A. The Pennsylvania Constitution, Article I, Section 27.
B. The Pennsylvania Municipalities Code and County Code.
C. The Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Act, Act of February 9,
1988, P.L. 31, Act No. 12, 35 P.S. § 7130.101 et seq., as
amended.
D. Pennsylvania Air Pollution Control Act, Act of January 8, 1960, P.L.
2119 (1959), 35 P.S. § 4001 et seq., as amended.
E. The Appalachian States Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Act of
1985, 35 P.S. § 7125.1 et seq.
F. The Pennsylvania Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Regional Facility
Act, Act of July 11, 1990, P.L. 436, Act No. 107, 35 P.S. § 7131.101
et seq.
G. The Clean Air Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. § 7401 et seq.
(especially §§ 7416 and 7422).
H. The Energy Policy Act of 1992.
I. The United States Pollution Prevention Act (1991).
J. The National Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42 U.S.C.A. §§ 4321
to 4370a.
The following terms shall have the meanings defined in this
section wherever they are used in this chapter:
ABOVEGROUND FACILITY
A facility, above grade level, constructed with triple dedicated,
engineered barriers, isolating the contents from the biosphere.
BUFFER ZONE
The portion of the waste site that is controlled by the licensee
and that lies under the waste units and between the waste units and
the site boundary.
CONTAINER
The first sealed, leakproof, solid enclosure which encompasses
the radioactive waste and which may include a means for controlled
bleeding of gaseous decay products into another container.
CONTAINMENT
The isolation of radioactive waste substances and radiation
from the biosphere by means of engineered barriers and waste site
design.
DEPARTMENT
The Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources or
any successor agency.
ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL OFFICER
An individual who is, or shall become, a permanent resident
of the county, whose full compensation shall be reimbursed to the
county by the operator. The basic minimum qualifications for employment
shall include the highest appropriate formal training and experience
available, and he shall remain current and abreast of issues and information
affecting the disposal of nuclear waste.
FACILITY RECORDS
All information regarding origin, contents, transport and
other relevant data for all low-level radioactive waste and mixed
wastes at the facility.
FILL
Fill, grout or other material which is placed in void spaces
between radioactive waste containers or waste modules within the waste
unit to provide structural strength against subsidence or collapse.
HAZARDOUS LIFE
The amount of time it takes for the LLRW to decay to levels
such that unrestricted use of the waste could not result in exposure
to total radioactive levels higher than the radioactivity measured
at the site prior to its use for storage.
INSPECTOR
An individual, appointed by and reporting to the County Commissioners
to perform inspections of all activities at the waste facility, as
provided under Section 318 of the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal
Act. The inspector's full compensation shall be reimbursed
in full to the county by the operator.
INSTITUTIONAL CONTROL PERIOD
The period of time during which active surveillance, monitoring
and care are maintained and which shall extend to 30 years after the
estimated hazardous life of the waste.
LEAKPROOF
The engineered design feature which eliminates the inflow
or outflow of solid, liquid or gaseous material by any means, including
selective absorption, adsorption or ion exchange, except into a container
through a control valve.
LLRW ACT
The Pennsylvania Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Act
of February 9, 1988, P.L. 31, 35 P.S. § 7130.101 et seq.,
as amended.
LOW-LEVEL RADIOACTIVE WASTE or LLRW
Radioactive waste, as defined in Section 11(e)(2) of the
Atomic Energy Act, codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 2014(e)(2),
or in the LLRW Act or the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Regional
Facility Act, Act of July 11, 1990, Act. No. 107, 35 P.S. § 7131.101
et seq., as amended.
MIXED WASTE
Low-level radioactive waste that either contains hazardous
waste listed in the Code of Federal Regulations, 40 CFR 261, Subpart
D, or exhibits any of the hazardous characteristics in 40 CFR 261,
Subpart C.
PUBLIC ACCESS TO INFORMATION
Includes, but is not limited to, a public library containing
historical and current information related to low-level radioactive
waste, preservation of the environment, protection of the people,
flora and fauna and all matters related to the health, safety and
welfare of the county. It shall include copies of all required records
and facility records as defined herein. "Public access" shall include
whatever other measures of disseminating information to the public
as shall, from time to time, be deemed necessary by the County Commissioners
on advice from the Environmental Control Officer and/or the Environmental
Advisory Council. All matters related to the establishment, operation
and/or maintenance of "public access to information" shall be determined
by the county and shall be at the sole expense of the operator.
REQUIRED RECORDS
Independent, daily water well, surface water, soil, gas and
oil well, plant and continuous air sampling, as well as human and
animal surveys or tests as shall be requested by any individual or
health professional and recommended by the Environmental Advisory
Council. Such "required records" shall be made regarding the waste
facility, waste site and ten-mile monitoring area. Copies shall be
kept at the respective offices of the affected municipality(ies) and
the County Planning Department, as well as being available through
the public access to information. Any costs associated with such "required
records" shall be borne by the operator.
SIGNIFICANT THREAT
A threat of injury by violating any federal or Pennsylvania
environmental quality standard or contaminating groundwater, surface
water, flora, fauna or air so as to pose an immediate hazard to human
health by exposure to any substance that causes injury, including,
but not limited to, genetic injury, long latency cancer, immunodeficiency
disorders or endocrine disorders, or that causes the death of fish
or wildlife or that may cause the extinction or threaten the viability
of any endangered or threatened species or species of concern, or
that contributes to an accumulation of radioactive substances in fish
or wildlife or that may disrupt a food chain in an ecosystem.
TRIPLE DEDICATED, ENGINEERED BARRIER
The three leakproof structures, container, waste module and
waste unit, each of which is independently required to ensure the
isolation of radioactive waste from the biosphere for the hazardous
life of the waste.
WASTE FACILITY
The area where radioactive waste is stored, including the
site and all improvements thereon (including engineered units, buildings,
laboratories and ancillary structures), but not including the buffer
zone.
WASTE SITE
The property on which the waste facility is located, including
the buffer zone.
WASTE UNIT
The outer, leakproof, engineered structure containing the
waste modules, which in turn contain the waste containers.
WELL SAMPLING
The testing of piezometer wells drilled at appropriate distances
around the perimeter of the waste facility, as well as the testing
of all public and private water wells within three miles of the boundary
of the waste site.
The county shall appoint two inspectors, who shall have the
authority and whose duties shall be to perform inspections of all
activities at the waste facility under a written agreement with the
Department. The inspectors shall have the right of independent access
to inspect any and all records and activities at the site and to carry
out joint inspections with the Department. The inspectors shall report
their findings to the Environmental Control Officer.
There is hereby created an Environmental Advisory Council, consisting
of not more than seven residents of the county, who shall have the
authority and whose duties shall be:
A. To review all applications required under this chapter, together
with the Environmental Control Officer, and to make recommendations
thereon to the County Commissioners.
B. To conduct a study on behalf of the county of any potentially suitable
sites in any application and to apply for funding of said study and
to expend the funds so provided for all necessary technical assistance,
subject to approval of the County Commissioners, as provided in Section
318(a) of the Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Act.
C. To conduct an evaluation of each license application, to make application
for funding of such study and to expend the funds so provided for
all necessary technical assistance, subject to the approval of the
County Commissioners, and to prepare and propose to the county findings
regarding said applications for inclusion in licensing proceedings
by the Department, as provided in Section 318(a) of the Low-Level
Radioactive Waste Disposal Act.
D. To counsel and assist the Environmental Control Officer and the inspectors
in the performance of their duties.
E. To study and make recommendations to the county for the adoption
of ordinances and regulations necessary for the protection of the
county, its land, flora and fauna and the health of its residents.
F. To exercise such powers as would be otherwise granted to any Environmental
Advisory Council, established pursuant to the Act of December 21,
1973, P.L. 425, Act No. 148, 53 P.S. § 11501 et seq., as
amended.
No waste facility shall be constructed within the county without
first obtaining a siting permit under this chapter.
The minimum site requirements for any facility shall be as follows:
A. The site shall have geological characteristics such that all applicable state and federal emissions requirements may be met without the use of dedicated engineered barriers, other than the entrance described in §
89-18B of this chapter.
B. There shall be no active, inactive or abandoned water, gas, oil or
brine wells or other man-made underground structures within two miles
of the periphery of the site, including the buffer areas.
C. Surface features at the site shall be designated to direct water
drainage away from waste units at velocities and gradients which will
not result in erosion. No water shall drain from the waste site to
any off-site location or into any aquifer without first being collected
in an appropriate holding facility and there tested and shown to be
free from radiation and hazardous contaminants.
D. No waste site shall be located in recharge zones for sources of public
or private drinking water, the headwaters of any waterway, any currently
designated or previously designated wetlands, floodplains or tidal
coastal zone or in the habitat for any threatened or endangered species
(wildlife or vegetation) or species of special concern. The National
Wetlands Inventory Maps from the United States Department of the Interior
shall be used as a guide to wetlands locations for the sake of this
chapter.
E. No waste site shall be located in an agricultural security area as
designated pursuant to Act 43 of 1981, the Agricultural Area Security
Law, as amended.
F. No waste site shall be located in any area disqualified by law or
regulation.
No waste facility shall be constructed or operated within the
county unless an operating permit is first obtained and the nonrefundable
application fee paid pursuant to this chapter.
When an operator submits a license application to the Department,
the operator shall simultaneously make application to the county for
an operating permit under this chapter. The application shall be on
a form provided by the county and shall be accompanied by a nonrefundable
application fee of $1,000,000. The application shall be accompanied
by a complete copy of the license application filed with the Department.
The application shall set out the chemical and physical forms, specific
isotopes, half-life and number of curies of each substance expected
to be present in any radioactive air emissions, along with the appropriate
formulas for calculating the weight equivalent to one curie, and the
number of millirems associated with potential exposures to one curie
of each substance. The application fee shall be deposited by the county
into a separate account and shall be used solely for purposes of administration
of this chapter.
Every facility, subject to this chapter, shall meet the following
minimum design requirements:
A. The waste facility shall be designed for zero release of radioactivity
and shall not permit liquid or gaseous infiltration through any engineered
cover, bottom, side or entrance.
B. The waste facility shall be an above-grade facility, mounded with
earth and capped for tornado protection, with a sealed entrance permitting
access so that leaking containers can be easily and safely located
and removed or repaired.
C. No containers or waste modules are to be covered by any type of material
that could cause loss of integrity of the containers or the waste
modules if recovery of the waste is undertaken.
Every waste facility subject to this chapter shall be operated
in conformance with each of the following standards:
A. No radioactive emissions into the outdoor atmosphere from any waste unit shall be permitted. Each waste container and module shall be monitored so as to minimize the possibility of any radioactivity from escaping and so as to allow retrieval and removal of any leaking container prior to radioactive emissions escaping to the atmosphere, as in §
89-18 of this chapter.
B. The waste facility shall be designed and operated to achieve containment
for the hazardous life of the waste. Prior to construction, the waste
facility design shall be modeled and analyzed to demonstrate that
its performance and its interaction with the environment at the waste
site will conform to the requirements of this chapter. The facility
design shall demonstrate complete radioactive containment, maintained
for any maximum disruptive event, external or internal.
C. The waste facility design and operation shall be upgraded from time
to time as safer technologies are devised and demonstrated to the
satisfaction of the county. The county may hire consultants to investigate
said technologies at the expense of the operator.
D. The operator shall perform active and passive monitoring which shall
detect any releases of radioactivity from the waste containers or
the waste modules into the waste units to ensure that there shall
be no releases from the waste units into the buffer zone during the
entire institutional control period. The operator shall provide the
Environmental Control Officer with continuous verification of its
performance of these monitoring requirements.
E. The waste facility shall accept only waste with physical and chemical
properties for which it was designed and which it is capable of containing
in isolation for the entire hazardous life of the waste as defined
herein. All facility records shall be retained for the institutional
control period. Complete copies of all facility records shall be forwarded
to the ECO no later than the 10th of each month for the previous month
and immediately on request of the ECO.
F. All classes of waste shall be segregated unless they were mixed as
they were generated. Classes of wastes A, B and C and mixed wastes,
as defined in 10 CFR 61.55 (1989), shall be contained for their full,
hazardous lives. No waste greater than Class C shall be accepted even
though it may have been diluted to a lower level of radioactivity.
G. No radioactive materials generated outside the Appalachian compact
states and not designated as waste, prior to shipment into Pennsylvania
or other compact states, but thereafter declared to be waste, shall
be disposed of or stored in the county. No waste, generated outside
the United States, shall be disposed of or stored in the county, even
if the company generating the waste has its corporate headquarters,
is incorporated, has offices or receives such waste at its facilities
or through a port of entry in one of the Appalachian compact states.
H. In the event that radioactive substances from the waste facility
contaminate an area outside the waste site, the operator shall notify
the Environmental Control Officer or any inspector and the Emergency
Management Agency and shall promptly clean up all contamination and
restore all such contaminated areas to their preexisting and uncontaminated
state.
I. No LLRW facility shall accept waste for more than 30 years. No additional
radioactive waste shall be stored, disposed of or treated anywhere
in the county after that thirty-year period.
J. Routine operations of the waste facility shall be conducted solely
between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Mondays through Fridays,
excluding any legal holidays recognized by the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
K. No waste shall be accepted at the facility except during the hours
of routine operations.
L. The waste facility shall, at all times, be operated in strict compliance
with all applicable laws and regulations of all federal, state and
local agencies having jurisdiction over the site, the operator or
the activities at the site by the operator.
Any waste facility subject to this chapter shall comply with
the following minimum standards:
A. No radioactive substance or waste generated by any government agency
or pursuant to a federal or state government contract or license,
nor as defined by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), Section
11(e)(92) of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, codified as amended at
42 U.S.C. § 2014(e)(2) in the Low-Level Radioactive Waste
Policy Act Amendment of 1985 and in effect as of January 1, 1986,
or in the LLRW Act, nor any substance that may be redefined as being
within an expanded exemption, as below regulatory concern (BRC) or
otherwise deregulated by the NRC or any other federal agency, shall
be received for treatment, recycled, incinerated, deposited in any
sewer or be accepted in any waste facility or in any other place in
the county, except in an LLRW facility holding an operating permit
under this chapter and having adequate safeguards to prevent the release
of radioactive substances into the air, as defined herein.
B. No operator shall cause or permit the direct or indirect release
of radioactive substances into the air, whether in gaseous, particulate,
mist, vapor or other form, or through any pathway, except in compliance
with air pollution control standards included in the operating permit
obtained under this chapter.
C. No operating permit may be granted under this chapter where the Environmental
Advisory Council determines that radioactive air emissions are expected
to exceed zero in the worst-case scenario nor where any radioactive
emissions are expected routinely.
The operator shall develop, maintain and yearly upgrade a plan
for responding to all anticipated emergency events which might occur
at the facility and in connection with transport connected therewith.
The operator shall provide the Environmental Control Officer, the
County Emergency Management Agency, the Emergency Management Coordinators
for the affected municipalities, each fire company in the county and
the Communications Control Office with copies of the plan and all
amendments, updates and revisions thereto. The operator shall provide
funds to the Emergency Management Agency for specialized training
in emergency response and equipment for use of emergency response
teams.
On or before the 10th of each month, the operator shall provide
the Environmental Control Officer with a list of the names and business
addresses of all persons, firms or corporations who or which provided
transportation of wastes to the facility the previous month, including
a copy of all manifests. The Environmental Control Officer may request,
and the operator shall provide, such information on a more frequent
basis as the Environmental Control Officer deems necessary. Copies
of such reports shall be provided to the Emergency Management Agency
and the County Solid Waste Coordinator.
All required records and facility records shall be available
to the ECO and the inspectors at all times. The operator shall provide
reasonable assistance in locating, identifying and reviewing all information
contained in any such records.
The operator shall provide and maintain continuously in effect
a policy of general liability insurance, including liability for personal
injury or property damage resulting from any release of radioactivity
or other hazards into any part of the environment, in the minimum
amount of $100,000,000 per occurrence. The county shall be identified
as a party to be notified of any cancellation, expiration or change
in said policy. The operator shall provide the Environmental Control
Officer with proof of renewal at least 30 days prior to renewal.
The applicant shall reimburse the county in full for all reasonable
expenses, including engineering and consultant fees, attorney's
fees and all out-of-pocket expenses, incurred by the county to perform
the studies and evaluations provided under this chapter and under
Section 318 of the LLRW Act within 30 days after submission of a requisition.
No permit required under this chapter shall be issued until
all requisitions have been paid in full by the applicant.
The operator shall, upon issuance of the operating permit and
before beginning operations at the facility, submit in a form, with
security, and of an amount acceptable to the county, a performance
bond to assure the county of the proper operation and closure of the
facility and of compliance with this chapter. This bond shall be in
addition to any bond or other security demanded under any state or
federal law, regulation or agency. The county shall be named as a
party to be notified should the bond be in any manner in jeopardy,
whether through the activities of the operator, the bonding company
or of any governmental entity.
The violation of any of the provisions of this chapter relating
to the emission of pollutants into the environment surrounding the
facility shall be considered a public nuisance per se. The operator
shall abate such nuisance immediately and shall report it to the Environmental
Control Officer. If the Environmental Control Officer or any inspector
finds such a nuisance and it has not been reported by the operator,
it shall be considered a major violation of this chapter.
In addition to any other remedies provided under this chapter
or any state or federal law or by action of any state or federal agency,
the county shall have the right to pursue injunctive relief to halt
and abate any release of pollutants from the facility, to mitigate
any damages therefrom and to clean up the same. In the alternative,
the county may halt, abate and clean up the release and be reimbursed
by the operator for the same.
By applying for a permit under this chapter, the applicant agrees
to reimburse the county in full for all reasonable costs of litigation,
including, but not limited to, investigative costs, attorneys'
fees and experts' fees, incurred by the county in the successful
prosecution of any legal remedy provided under this chapter.
If the operator is delinquent in the payment of any surcharges
for a period of 30 days or if the operator is in default of any other
provision of this chapter, after notice and reasonable opportunity
to cure said default, the Environmental Control Officer or the county
may revoke the operating permit.