The §3.14 general rule is simple to say: for each thing that could leak, set cement reaching at least 50 ft above and 50 ft below it — a 100-ft column centered on the hazard. That margin is the cushion against a cement job that doesn't land perfectly.
§3.14(d)(1) — casing-shoe plug
Casing shoes
A shoe is the bottom end of a run of steel casing — a seam between cemented pipe above and open hole below, and a natural leak path. Wherever a pipe ends, we cap the joint.
§3.14(d)(3) — producing-zone plug
Perforated intervals
Perforations are the holes shot through the casing to let oil and gas in — the most direct line from a pressured reservoir to the wellbore. We plug across the interval, plus 50 ft each side. Already-squeezed perforations are left alone.
§3.14(d)(2) — fresh-water plug
The base of usable water
The most important depth in the whole filing — the bottom of the fresh water worth protecting, read from your state GAU letter. When the surface casing already shields it, a 100-ft plug is centered right there.
§3.14 — special case
The continuous column
On many older wells the surface casing was never run deep enough to protect the water. A single plug isn't enough, so one unbroken column of cement is poured from the surface all the way down past the water — and it takes the place of the separate fresh-water and surface plugs, with nothing double-counted.
§3.14(d)(6) — surface plug
The surface plug
The last 50 ft up to ground level, so the wellbore is sealed at the top and can be cut off below grade.