Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 6A— - PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER XII— - SAFETY OF PUBLIC WATER SYSTEMS › Part Part C— - Protection of Underground Sources of Drinking Water › § 300h
The Administrator must write rules for State underground injection control programs. He had to publish proposed rules within 180 days after December 16, 1974 and issue final rules within 180 days after those proposals. The rulemaking must follow section 553 of title 5 (the federal rulemaking process) and must include a chance for a public hearing. The Administrator must talk with the Secretary, the National Drinking Water Advisory Council, other federal agencies, and interested State groups. Rules can be changed later. The rules must set minimum protections to keep underground injection from putting drinking water at risk. To get a State program approved, the State must bar any injection unless the State permits it (or the State may allow injection by rule). Permit applicants must show the injection won’t endanger drinking water, and rules that authorize injection may not allow anything that would endanger water. The rules must require inspection, monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting, and they must apply to federal agencies and to all other people. The Administrator may not add rules that block brine or other fluids from oil and gas production or storage, or rules that stop secondary or tertiary oil/gas recovery. The rules must allow for different geology and conditions in different places and should not needlessly disrupt State programs already in use. The Administrator may let a State issue temporary permits until four years after December 16, 1974 under certain limited conditions, and may allow one-off temporary permits after notice and hearing if safe technology is not generally available and other safeguards are met. Definitions: underground injection = putting fluids underground by well injection (excludes natural gas storage injection and most hydraulic fracturing fluids/proppants); endangers drinking water = may put contaminants into groundwater that supplies public water systems so they fail standards or harm health.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 300h
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73