Santa Susana Field Laboratory Glossary
Additional Resources | Glossary | Acronyms & Abbreviations
– C –
- California Department of Health Services (DHS), Radiological Health Branch: A state agency which enforces radiation control laws and regulations designed to protect radiation workers, the public, and the environment.
- California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA): A state law mandating environmental impact review of governmental action. CEQA requires that public agencies study the significant environmental effects of proposed activities and that the public be informed and allowed to comment on project decisions.
- California Superfund Law: This law outlines the procedures for cleaning up properties contaminated with hazardous wastes in California. Key provisions include the establishment of cleanup standards, risk assessment according to intended use and public participation.
- Clean Water Act (CWA): Federal law of 1977 enforced by U.S. EPA. A key provision is that “any person responsible for the discharge of a pollutant or pollutants into any waters of the United States from any point source must apply for and obtain a permit.” Discharge permits are required for stormwater runoff from cities and other locations and are issued by Regional Water Quality Control Boards.
- Contamination: Introduction into water, air, and soil of microorganisms, chemicals, toxic substances, wastes or wastewater in a concentration that makes the medium unfit for its next intended use. Also applies to the surfaces of objects, buildings and various household and agricultural products.
- Corrective Action: U.S EPA can require treatment, storage and disposal (TSDF) facilities handling hazardous waste to undertake corrective actions to clean up spills resulting from failure to follow hazardous waste management procedures. The process includes cleanup procedures.
– D –
- Decontamination and Decommissioning (D&D): Requirement of the Department of Energy (DOE) for the cleanup and decommissioning of buildings containing radioactive and hazardous materials. The DOE is required to properly characterize, decontaminate, dismantle and dispose of the materials.
- Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC): A department within the California Environmental Protection Agency (Cal/EPA) that oversees the investigation and remediation of hazardous waste sites.
- Dioxins: A group of generally toxic organic compounds that may be formed as a result of incomplete combustion (as may occur during the incineration of compounds containing chlorine).
– E –
- Engineered backfill: Backfill, such as soil or other material, which meets specifications allowing it to replace removed soils. The material must meet specifications such as grain size, plasticity, and the way it is placed in the removal area.
- Environmental Impact Report (EIR): A detailed report written by the governmental lead agency (the public agency that has the principal responsibility for carrying out or approving a project) describing and analyzing the significant environmental effects of a proposed project, identifying alternatives and discussing ways to reduce or avoid the possible environmental damage. An EIR is prepared when the lead agency finds substantial evidence that the project may have a significant effect on the environment under CEQA.
– G –
- Groundwater: Water beneath the earth’s surface that flows through soil and rock opening, and that often serves as a primary source of drinking water.
– H –
- Hazardous waste: Waste substances which can pose a substantial or potential hazard to human health or the environment when improperly managed. Hazardous waste possesses at least one of these four characteristics: ignitability, corrosivity, reactivity or toxicity; or appears on U.S. EPA lists, such as the Superfund Site List.
- Health-based cleanup levels: Standards established by the U.S. EPA for groundwater, soil and sediment that are based on human exposure levels i.e. ingestion.
- Hydrogeology: The geology of groundwater, with particular emphasis on the chemistry and movement of water.
– I –
- Information Repository: Designated locations that provide public access to site-related documents as required by DTSC.
- Interim Measures: A cleanup action taken to protect public health and the environment while long-term solutions are being developed. An interim measure may be conducted anytime during a remediation program.
– N –
- National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES): A program under the Clean Water Act mandated by the RWQCB, which sets maximum limits for chemical and radiological contaminants in surface water being discharged. Under the authority of the Clean Water Act and the NPDES, the RWQCB sets maximum limits for discharge of chemical and radiological contaminants to surface water such as rivers. These limits, along with requirements for discharge sampling, are incorporated into the site’s NPDES Permit which must be renewed every five years.
– P –
- Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs): A group of toxic, persistent chemicals used in electrical transformers and capacitors for insulating purposes, and in gas pipe
– R –
- Radiation: The process of emitting energy in the form of energetic particles (such as alpha particles or gamma radiation), light or heat.
- Radioactive Waste: Any waste that emits energy as rays, waves, streams or energetic particles. Radioactive materials are often mixed with hazardous waste from nuclear reactors, research institutions, or hospitals.
- Radioactive Materials: Materials that emit ionizing radiation.
- RCRA Facility Investigation (RFI): A series of investigations and studies that serve as the subsequent step in the corrective action process following a RCRA Facility Assessment to identify the types and extent of chemicals of concern at the site and to determine cleanup criteria (a Remedial Investigation under the California Superfund Law), and to provide an evaluation of the alternatives for remediating any identified soil or groundwater problems (a Feasibility Study under California Superfund Law).
- RCRA Facility Assessment: A detailed, preliminary site assessment of a treatment, storage, and disposal facility that may be required to undergo some form of corrective action under RCRA. The first step in the corrective action process is an investigation to determine whether or not potential substances or other constituents of concern exist in soils or groundwater at or near a facility. A lead agency, such as DTSC, gathers information about potential chemical releases relative to chemical usage, storage and treatment at the site. Under the California Superfund Law, the RCRA Facility Assessment is called a Remedial Investigation.
- Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB): The RWQCB is the lead agency responsible for regulating surface water discharge activities. The RWQCB also shares responsibilities with DTSC for monitoring discharges to groundwater.
- Remediation: Cleanup of a site to levels determined to be health protective for its intended use. The cleanup process is a comprehensive program for the clean-up (remediation) of a contaminated site. It involves investigation, analysis, development of a cleanup plan and implementation of that plan.
- Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA): A 1976 amendment to the first federal solid waste legislation, the Solid Waste Disposal Act of 1965. RCRA established a regulatory system to track hazardous substances from the time of generation to final disposal.
– S –
- Sediment: The soil, sand and minerals at the bottom of surface waters, such as streams, lakes and rivers. Sediments capture or adsorb contaminants. The term may also refer to solids that settle out of any liquid.
- Senate Bill 990: SB 990, effective on January 1, 2008, allows DTSC to clean up the site under the requirements and procedures of the California Superfund Law, and to be enforced under the authority of either the California Superfund Law or the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). The new law gives DTSC the authority to oversee all aspects of the cleanup including both chemical and radioactive wastes, and allows the use of the State Superfund’s risk assessment process for both the radiological and toxic contamination. It also requires DTSC to use the highest and most protective cleanup standards provided under the “rural residential (agricultural)” land use designation.
- Statement of Basis: A document which describes the basis for DTSC’s proposed remedy and cleanup standards.
– U –
- U.S. Department of Energy (DOE): Federal agency responsible for energy policy and nuclear safety.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA): A federal agency established in 1970 charged with protecting human health and the environment.
– V –
- Ventura County Air Pollution Control District (VCAPCD): A county agency responsible for establishing and enforcing local air pollution regulations that meet or exceed requirements of the Federal and California State Clean Air Acts, and the California Health and Safety Code.
- Ventura County Environmental Health Division (VCEHD): Through an agreement with the State of California, the VCEHD is responsible for enforcing regulations on hazardous waste generation, including manifest preparation (shipping documentation) and temporary on-site storage.
SSFL Links
- SSFL Home
- About SSFL
- Soil Smarts Learning Series
- Boeing Cleanup Settlement Agreement
- What's New
- AIBP Interim Cleanup Page
- AIBP Air Monitoring Data
- Document Library
- Public Involvement
- Community Updates and Public Involvement Documents
- Summary of Cancer Study and Exposure Assessment Activities Related to the Santa Susana Field Laboratory (Rocketdyne) Site
- Site Activities
- Regulatory Oversight
- SSFL Final PEIR
- Additional Resources
- SSFL Archive
- Contact Information
- Subscribe to SSFL E-List
- Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
SSFL Related Links
Site Mitigation & Restoration Program Links
- Brownfields
- Cleanup in Vulnerable Communities Initiative (CVCI)
- EnviroStor
- Exide
- Human and Ecological Risk Office
- Lead-Acid Battery Recycling Facility Investigation and Cleanup Program
- Loans & Grants
- Land Use Restriction Sites
- Santa Susana Field Laboratory
- School Sites
- Sea Level Rise
- State Superfund Program
- Strategic Plan and Program Enhancement Work Plan
- Vapor Intrusion
- Contact Information