[Title 40 CFR 300.515]
[Code of Federal Regulations (annual edition) - July 1, 1996 Edition]
[Title 40 - PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT]
[Chapter I - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (Continued)]
[Subchapter J - SUPERFUND, EMERGENCY PLANNING, AND COMMUNITY RIGHT-TO-KNOW]
[Part 300 - NATIONAL OIL AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES POLLUTION CONTINGENCY PLAN]
[Subpart F - State Involvement in Hazardous Substance Response]
[Sec. 300.515 - Requirements for state involvement in remedial and enforcement response.]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




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  PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
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  1996-07-01
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  Requirements for state involvement in remedial and enforcement response.
  300.515
  Sec. 300.515
  
    PROTECTION OF ENVIRONMENT
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY (Continued)
    SUPERFUND, EMERGENCY PLANNING, AND COMMUNITY RIGHT-TO-KNOW
    NATIONAL OIL AND HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES POLLUTION CONTINGENCY PLAN
    State Involvement in Hazardous Substance Response
  


Sec. 300.515  Requirements for state involvement in remedial and enforcement response.

    (a) General. (1) States are encouraged to undertake actions 
authorized under subpart E. Section 104(d)(1) of CERCLA authorizes EPA 
to enter into cooperative agreements or contracts with a state, 
political subdivision, or a federally recognized Indian tribe to carry 
out Fund-financed response actions authorized under CERCLA, when EPA 
determines that the state, the political subdivision, or federally 
recognized Indian tribe has the capability to undertake such actions. 
EPA will use a cooperative agreement to transfer funds to those entities 
to undertake Fund-financed response activities. The requirements for 
states, political subdivisions, or Indian tribes to receive funds as a 
lead or support agency for response are addressed at 40 CFR part 35, 
subpart O.
    (2) For EPA-lead Fund-financed remedial planning activities, 
including, but not limited to, remedial investigations, feasibility 
studies, and remedial designs, the state agency acceptance of the 
support agency role during an EPA-lead response shall be documented in a 
letter, SMOA, or cooperative agreement. Superfund state contracts are 
unnecessary for this purpose.
    (3) Cooperative agreements and Superfund state contracts are only 
appropriate for non-Fund-financed response actions if a state intends to 
seek credit for remedial action expenses under Sec. 300.510.
    (b) Indian tribe involvement during response. To be afforded 
substantially the same treatment as states under section 104 of CERCLA, 
the governing body of the Indian tribe must:
    (1) Be federally recognized; and
    (2) Have a tribal governing body that is currently performing 
governmental functions to promote the health, safety, and welfare of the 
affected population or to protect the environment within a defined 
geographic area; and
    (3) Have jurisdiction over a site at which Fund-financed response, 
including pre-remedial activities, is contemplated.
    (c) State involvement in PA/SI and National Priorities List process. 
EPA shall ensure state involvement in the listing and deletion process 
by providing states opportunities for review, consultation, or 
concurrence specified in this section.
    (1) EPA shall consult with states as appropriate on the information 
to be used in developing HRS scores for releases.
    (2) EPA shall, to the extent feasible, provide the state 30 working 
days to review releases which were scored by EPA and which will be 
considered for placement on the National Priorities List (NPL).
    (3) EPA shall provide the state 30 working days to review and concur 
on the Notice of Intent to Delete a release from the NPL. Section 
300.425 describes the EPA/state consultation and concurrence process for 
deleting releases from the NPL.
    (d) State involvement in RI/FS process. A key component of the EPA/
state partnership shall be the communication of potential federal and 
state ARARs and, as appropriate, other pertinent advisories, criteria, 
or guidance to be considered (TBCs).
    (1) In accordance with Secs. 300.400(g) and 300.430, the lead and 
support agencies shall identify their respective potential ARARs and 
communicate them to each other in a timely manner, i.e., no later than 
the early stages of the comparative analysis described in 
Sec. 300.430(e)(9), such that sufficient time is available for the lead 
agency to consider and incorporate all potential ARARs without 
inordinate delays and duplication of effort. The lead and support 
agencies may also identify TBCs and communicate them in a timely manner.
    (2) When a state and EPA have entered into a SMOA, the SMOA may 
specify a consultation process which requires the lead agency to solicit 
potential ARARs at specified points in the remedial planning and remedy 
selection processes. At a minimum, the SMOA shall include the points 
specified in Sec. 300.515(h)(2). The SMOA shall specify timeframes for 
support agency response to lead agency requests to ensure that potential 
ARARs are identified and communicated in a timely manner. Such 
timeframes must also be documented in site-specific agreements. The SMOA 
may also discuss

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identification and communication of TBCs.
    (3) If EPA in its statement of a proposed plan intends to waive any 
state-identified ARARs, or does not agree with the state that a certain 
state standard is an ARAR, it shall formally notify the state when it 
submits the RI/FS report for state review or responds to the state's 
submission of the RI/FS report.
    (4) EPA shall respond to state comments on waivers from or 
disagreements about state ARARs, as well as the preferred alternative 
when making the RI/FS report and proposed plan available for public 
comment.
    (e) State involvement in selection of remedy. (1) Both EPA and the 
state shall be involved in preliminary discussions of the alternatives 
addressed in the FS prior to preparation of the proposed plan and ROD. 
At the conclusion of the RI/FS, the lead agency, in conjunction with the 
support agency, shall develop a proposed plan. The support agency shall 
have an opportunity to comment on the plan. The lead agency shall 
publish a notice of availability of the RI/FS report and a brief 
analysis of the proposed plan pursuant to Sec. 300.430(e) and (f). 
Included in the proposed plan shall be a statement that the lead and 
support agencies have reached agreement or, where this is not the case, 
a statement explaining the concerns of the support agency with the lead 
agency's proposed plan. The state may not publish a proposed plan that 
EPA has not approved. EPA may assume the lead from the state if 
agreement cannot be reached.
    (2)(i) EPA and the state shall identify, at least annually, sites 
for which RODs will be prepared during the next fiscal year, in 
accordance with Sec. 300.515(h)(1). For all EPA-lead sites, EPA shall 
prepare the ROD and provide the state an opportunity to concur with the 
recommended remedy. For Fund-financed state-lead sites, EPA and the 
state shall designate sites, in a site-specific agreement, for which the 
state shall prepare the ROD and seek EPA's concurrence and adoption of 
the remedy specified therein, and sites for which EPA shall prepare the 
ROD and seek the state's concurrence. EPA and the state may designate 
sites for which the state shall prepare the ROD for non-Fund-financed 
state-lead enforcement response actions (i.e., actions taken under state 
law) at an NPL site. The state may seek EPA's concurrence in the remedy 
specified therein. Either EPA or the state may choose not to designate a 
site as state-lead.
    (ii) State concurrence on a ROD is not a prerequisite to EPA's 
selecting a remedy, i.e., signing a ROD, nor is EPA's concurrence a 
prerequisite to a state's selecting a remedy at a non-Fund-financed 
state-lead enforcement site under state law. Unless EPA's Assistant 
Administrator for Solid Waste and Emergency Response or Regional 
Administrator concurs in writing with a state-prepared ROD, EPA shall 
not be deemed to have approved the state decision. A state may not 
proceed with a Fund-financed response action unless EPA has first 
concurred in and adopted the ROD. Section 300.510(a) specifies 
limitations on EPA's proceeding with a remedial action without state 
assurances.
    (iii) The lead agency shall provide the support agency with a copy 
of the signed ROD for remedial actions to be conducted pursuant to 
CERCLA.
    (iv) On state-lead sites identified for EPA concurrence, the state 
generally shall be expected to maintain its lead agency status through 
the completion of the remedial action.
    (f) Enhancement of remedy. (1) A state may ask EPA to make changes 
in or expansions of a remedial action selected under subpart E.
    (i) If EPA finds that the proposed change or expansion is necessary 
and appropriate to the EPA-selected remedial action, the remedy may be 
modified (consistent with Sec. 300.435(c)(2)) and any additional costs 
paid as part of the remedial action.
    (ii) If EPA finds that the proposed change or expansion is not 
necessary to the selected remedial action, but would not conflict or be 
inconsistent with the EPA-selected remedy, EPA may agree to integrate 
the proposed change or expansion into the planned CERCLA remedial work 
if:
    (A) The state agrees to fund the entire additional cost associated 
with the change or expansion; and

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    (B) The state agrees to assume the lead for supervising the state-
funded component of the remedy or, if EPA determines that the state-
funded component cannot be conducted as a separate phase or activity, 
for supervising the remedial design and construction of the entire 
remedy.
    (2) Where a state does not concur in a remedial action secured by 
EPA under CERCLA section 106, and the state desires to have the remedial 
action conform to an ARAR that has been waived under 
Sec. 300.430(f)(1)(ii)(C), a state may seek to have that remedial action 
so conform, in accordance with the procedures set out in CERCLA section 
121(f)(2) .
    (g) State involvement in remedial design/remedial action. The extent 
and nature of state involvement during remedial design and remedial 
action shall be specified in site-specific cooperative agreements or 
Superfund state contracts, consistent with 40 CFR part 35, subpart O. 
For Fund-financed remedial actions, the lead and support agencies shall 
conduct a joint inspection at the conclusion of construction of the 
remedial action to determine that the remedy has been constructed in 
accordance with the ROD and with the remedial design.
    (h) Requirements for state involvement in absence of SMOA. In the 
absence of a SMOA, EPA and the state shall comply with the requirements 
in Sec. 300.515(h). If the SMOA does not address all of the requirements 
specified in Sec. 300.515(h), EPA and the state shall comply with any 
unaddressed requirements in that section.
    (1) Annual consultations. EPA shall conduct consultations with 
states at least annually to establish priorities and identify and 
document in writing the lead for remedial and enforcement response for 
each NPL site within the state for the upcoming fiscal year. States 
shall be given the opportunity to participate in long-term planning 
efforts for remedial and enforcement response during these annual 
consultations.
    (2) Identification of ARARs and TBCs. The lead and support agencies 
shall discuss potential ARARs during the scoping of the RI/FS. The lead 
agency shall request potential ARARs from the support agency no later 
than the time that the site characterization data are available. The 
support agency shall communicate in writing those potential ARARs to the 
lead agency within 30 working days of receipt of the lead agency request 
for these ARARs. The lead and support agencies may also discuss and 
communicate other pertinent advisories, criteria, or guidance to be 
considered (TBCs). After the initial screening of alternatives has been 
completed but prior to initiation of the comparative analysis conducted 
during the detailed analysis phase of the FS, the lead agency shall 
request that the support agency communicate any additional requirements 
that are applicable or relevant and appropriate to the alternatives 
contemplated within 30 working days of receipt of this request. The lead 
agency shall thereafter consult the support agency to ensure that 
identified ARARs and TBCs are updated as appropriate.
    (3) Support agency review of lead agency documents. The lead agency 
shall provide the support agency an opportunity to review and comment on 
the RI/FS, proposed plan, ROD, and remedial design, and any proposed 
determinations on potential ARARs and TBCs. The support agency shall 
have a minimum of 10 working days and a maximum of 15 working days to 
provide comments to the lead agency on the RI/FS, ROD, ARAR/TBC 
determinations, and remedial design. The support agency shall have a 
minimum of five working days and a maximum of 10 working days to comment 
on the proposed plan.
    (i) Administrative record requirements. The state, where it is the 
lead agency for a Fund-financed site, shall compile and maintain the 
administrative record for selection of a response action under subpart I 
of this part unless specified otherwise in the SMOA.