Title 49 › Subtitle SUBTITLE IV— - INTERSTATE TRANSPORTATION › Part PART A— - RAIL › Chapter CHAPTER 109— - LICENSING › § 10908
Requires that rail-run solid waste transfer sites follow the same federal and State pollution, environmental, and public health rules as any similar non-rail facility, except as allowed under section 10909. Within 90 days after the date of enactment of the Clean Railroads Act of 2008, a facility operating on that date must meet those requirements except for permit rules. If a facility did not have required permits (other than siting permits) on that date, it may keep operating if it files a complete permit application in good faith within 180 days after such date of enactment and may operate until each permit is approved or denied. A facility that lacked a State siting permit on that date does not have to get one to keep operating, but the State Governor (or designee) can ask the Board to require the facility to apply for a land-use exemption under section 10909, and the Board must accept the petition; the facility then needs a Board-issued land-use exemption to continue. No customer can force a rail carrier to provide solid waste transfer service at a location that does not already have the required Federal land-use exemption and State permits. This does not affect rail transport of goods other than solid waste. Definitions (one line each): commercial and retail waste — trash from stores, offices, restaurants, warehouses, and similar places; construction and demolition debris — building materials and rubble from construction or demolition; household waste — trash from homes, hotels, motels; industrial waste — waste from manufacturing and related processes, including some contaminated soil and nonhazardous cleanup wastes, but not hazardous waste under subtitle C or mining/oil and gas waste; institutional waste — waste from schools, nonmedical hospital waste, prisons, and government facilities; municipal solid waste — household, commercial/retail, and institutional waste combined; solid waste — includes construction debris, municipal solid waste, sludge, industrial waste, and other Board-designated wastes but excludes railroad track/repair waste and accident debris; sludge — solid, semi-solid, or liquid waste from wastewater, water treatment, or air pollution control plants, excluding treated effluent; solid waste rail transfer facility — the part of a rail-owned or -operated site where solid waste (to be shipped for pay) is handled outside original shipping containers, but not parts used only for loading rail cars or only for tank-truck-to-rail-tank transfers; State requirements — do not include local laws unless the State gives that authority to the local government.
Full Legal Text
Transportation — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
49 U.S.C. § 10908
Title 49 — Transportation
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73