Weitere ähnliche Inhalte Ähnlich wie Richards, Margaret, Lathrop & Gage, McCart, Susan, SCS Engineers, Common NPDES Mistakes and the Importance of Good Data, MECC, Kansas City (20) Mehr von Kevin Perry (20) Kürzlich hochgeladen (20) Richards, Margaret, Lathrop & Gage, McCart, Susan, SCS Engineers, Common NPDES Mistakes and the Importance of Good Data, MECC, Kansas City1. Margaret H. Richards (Lathrop & Gage LLP)
Susan L. McCart, P.E., P.G. (SCS Engineers)
Common NPDES Mistakes and the Importance
of Good Data
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Clean Water Act established NPDES permitting program regulating
discharges of pollutants into waters of the US
Pollutant defined broadly and includes any type of industrial,
municipal, or agricultural waste (including heat) discharged into
water
Two Basic NPDES Permits:
o Individual (permit tailored to an individual facility)
o General (permit tailored to cover multiple facilities in a
specific category of discharges, sludge use, or disposal
practices)
Overview of National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES)
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Permits Require Reporting and Monitoring
Companies need to establish plans for compliance such as SWPPP,
SPCC, and FRP
Potential criminal & civil liability for violations
Overview of National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES)
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Common Point Source Discharges of Pollutants
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Failure to provide:
o industry or municipality specific information;
o topographic map of the area around the discharge;
o the correct long-term average and daily maximum values.
Failure to submit the effluent data necessary to characterize the facility.
Reporting quantified values below known detection limits, and using
misplaced decimal points or incorrect concentration units.
In most cases, the errors and omissions in the application are
inadvertent because of the length and complexity of the form. When
mistakes are detected they must be corrected.
Common Mistakes in Permit Applications
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Common Compliance Issues
Factors to Consider – New or Modifying Permits,
Making Changes Following a Violation
Various Examples
TECHNICAL CONSIDERATIONS
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Exceedances
Outdated SWPPP, SPCC Plan, FRP; Site Map not current
Incomplete and/or insufficient documentation of personnel training
Failure to retain monitoring and inspection records
Routine visual inspections (typically required by general permits and/or
SWPPP) either not performed or insufficient documentation
No documentation of meter calibration prior to collecting measurements (eg.
pH meter)
Insufficient recording/documentation of rain gauge data (if required)
Common Compliance Issues
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Sample Locations
Sample Frequency and Timing of Sample Collection
Sampling Procedures
Naturally Occurring Parameters
BMPs and Housekeeping
Factors to Consider – New/Modified Permits
Making Changes Following a Violation
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Example Facility in Iowa
– Sampling location required the sampler to wade into an
impoundment or use a sampling rod.
– TSS exceedance
– Determined the sampler did not use the sampling rod, and
collected the “cloud” from his foot step in the impoundment.
– With explanation, IDNR allowed re-sampling.
– The mistake cost the client several thousand dollars in
consultant fees, at least one trip to meet with IDNR, and
multiple conference calls with in-house legal counsel,
consultants, facility, and corporate staff.
Sample Locations
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Sample Locations
Sample Frequency and Timing of Sample Collection
– How many times per year
– If possible, in spring after vegetation is established
– During rain events,
after rain events, quarterly,
annually
Sampling Procedures
Naturally Occurring Parameters
BMPs and Housekeeping
Factors to Consider – New/Modified Permits
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Sample Frequency
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A client complained about having to run out of the facility during
every rain fall event to catch a sample.
We reviewed their permit and it was not clear that procedure was
required. We contacted the state to clarify what they expected for
discharge sampling.
State required a sample to be collected within the first 30 minutes
of discharge, but it was not necessary to collect a sample in the
rain.
Informed our client –
the look on his face was pretty funny!
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Sample Locations
Sample Frequency and Timing of Sample Collection
Sampling Procedures
– Grab vs Composite
– Equipment
– Filtered or Unfiltered
– During or after rain events*
– Sample port or discharge pipe
– Manual or Automated
Naturally Occurring Parameters
BMPs and Housekeeping
Factors to Consider – New/Modified Permits
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Sampling Procedures
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Sample Locations
Sample Frequency and Timing of Sample Collection
Sampling Procedures
Naturally Occurring Parameters
BMPs and Housekeeping
Factors to Consider – New/Modified Permits
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Naturally occurring background metals are present in Midwest soil
(supported by literature)
Slightly acidic storm water can leach metal bearing minerals from
the soil
Un-vegetated soil mobilized in storm water (suspended or
dissolved) can cause exceedances for a variety of metals
Even if TSS is below laboratory detection limits,
there still may be enough metals dissolved from
native soils alone to exceed storm water
benchmarks
Perform a Natural Background Pollutant Source Demonstration
Naturally Occurring Parameters
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Sample Locations
Sample Frequency and Timing of Sample Collection
Sampling Procedures
Naturally Occurring Parameters
BMPs and Housekeeping
Factors to Consider – New/Modified Permits
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Vegetate bare soil
Control traffic routes, eliminate tracking
Maintain conveyance systems (clean filters, pipes)
Install directional berms, perimeter berms
Good housekeeping
(increase sweeping frequency,
cover bins/work product)
Follow your SWPPP!!
Document your activities
BMPs and Housekeeping
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Storm Water Discharge & Sampling Location at a
Construction Yard/Equipment Maintenance Facility
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TSS was an issue from
rolling stock over
paved surfaces.
Installed rock and
straw wattles at the
pipe.
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Storm Water Discharge and Sampling Location
from a Wood Waste Facility
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COD was very elevated and difficult to control.
Installed straw bales, straw wattles, a small retention pond, and a
sand filter. None were effective.
Eventually, eliminated discharge point and routed storm water to an
infiltration/retention pond.
Updated SWPPP
Currently expanding the holding capacities of the existing ponds to
get facility to zero discharge.
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Storm Water Discharge and Sampling Location
from a Wood Waste Facility
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Discharge flows along
gravel ditch from clear
water pit to the
discharge area. Note the
silt fence does not
completely span the
channel. Also had issues
with cement dust in the
gravel channel.
Recommended
construction of a
sediment bay/basin and
installing a discharge
pipe for a fixed
outfall/sampling port at
the end of the channel.
Ready-Mix Concrete Site
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Discharge is clear; represents excess water from a recharge water
storage pond. However, excessive flow has scoured the discharge
area and taken out the silt fence.
Sand and Gravel Facility
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Salt spreader staged outside (lower left)
Oil stains on ground (upper right)
Miscellaneous products “stored” outside
(lower right)
School Bus Depot –
Violations for BMPs
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KCMO and St. Louis settled with EPA for illegal overflows of untreated raw
sewage.
o Both cities agreed to make extensive improvements to sewer
systems and treatment plants.
• KCMO estimated cost of $2.5 billion over 25 years. $600,000
penalty.
• STL estimated cost of $4.7 billion over 23 years. $1.2 million
penalty.
o State of Missouri did not join in EPA settlements.
EPA regional enforcement actions against CAFOs:
o KS: $10,800 penalty for improper stockpiling of manure.
o NE: $20,000 penalty for land application of manure and wastewater
at levels exceeding the nutrient management plan.
o IA: required to reduce number of cattle, apply for NPDES permit, and
complete wastewater controls.
EPA Enforcement Actions
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Don’t get caught looking for your ball….
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Keep our water clean for the Salvy Splashes!
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