As a part of the permitting process for hazardous waste combustion facilities, regulatory agencies are now conducting site-specific, multipathway risk assessments. In accordance with the approach established by the USEPA, the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission uses a prospective risk assessment paradigm whereby site-specific activity pattern and land use information is used to determine plausible exposure scenarios and pathways. A set of exposure scenarios defined as receptors (i.e., resident adult, resident child, farmer adult, farmer child, fisher adult and fisher child) is then assumed to be exposed via multiple applicable exposure pathways. In conducting such risk assessments, modeled air emissions of di-n-octyl phthalate (DNOP), at concentrations near or below detectable levels, have been observed to produce an unacceptable hazard in the farmer exposure scenario. Sensitivity analyses indicated that two key parameters affected hazard estimates for DNOP in the farmer scenario: the octanol-w...