Proposed Text
9VAC25-151-10. Definitions.
The words and terms used in this chapter shall have the meanings defined in the State Water Control Law (§ 62.1-44.2 et seq. of the Code of Virginia) and the VPDES Permit Regulation (9VAC25-31) unless the context clearly indicates otherwise, except that for the purposes of this chapter:
"Best management practices" or "BMPs" means schedules of activities, practices (and prohibitions of practices), structures, vegetation, maintenance procedures, and other management practices to prevent or reduce the discharge of pollutants to surface waters. BMPs also include treatment requirements, operating procedures, and practices to control plant site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or waste disposal, or drainage from raw material storage.
"Closed landfill" means a landfill that, on a permanent basis, will no longer receive waste and has completed closure in accordance with applicable federal, state, or local requirements.
"Coal pile runoff" means the rainfall runoff from or through any coal storage pile.
"Colocated industrial activity" means when a
facility has any industrial activities being conducted activity,
excluding the facility's primary industrial activity, located on-site that are
described under more than one of the industrial sectors of 9VAC25-151-90
through 9VAC25-151-370 meets the description of a category included in
the "industrial activity" definition. An activity at a facility is
not considered colocated if the activity, when considered separately, does not
meet the description of a category included in the "industrial
activity" definition or identified by the Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) code list in Table 50-2 in 9VAC25-151-50.
"Commercial treatment and disposal facilities" means facilities that receive, on a commercial basis, any produced hazardous waste (not their own) and treat or dispose of those wastes as a service to the generators. Such facilities treating or disposing exclusively residential hazardous wastes are not included in this definition.
"Control measure" means any best management practice or other method (including effluent limitations) used to prevent or reduce the discharge of pollutants to surface waters.
"Department" or "DEQ" means the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality.
"Director" means the Director of the Department of Environmental Quality or an authorized representative.
"Existing discharger" means an operator applying for coverage under this permit for discharges authorized previously under a VPDES general or individual permit.
"Impaired water" means a water is impaired,
for purposes of this chapter if it, a water that has been
identified by Virginia pursuant to § 303(d) of the Clean Water Act as not
meeting applicable water quality standards (these waters are called "water
quality limited segments" under 40 CFR 30.2(j)). Impaired waters include
both waters with approved or established TMDLs, and those for which a TMDL has
not yet been approved or established.
"Inactive landfill" means a landfill that, on a
permanent basis, will no longer receive waste and has completed closure in
accordance with any applicable federal, state, or local requirements.
"Industrial activity" - the following categories of facilities are considered to be engaging in "industrial activity":
(1) 1. Facilities subject to storm water effluent
limitations guidelines, new source performance standards, or toxic pollutant
effluent standards under 40 CFR Subchapter N (2007) (except facilities
with toxic pollutant effluent standards which are exempted under category (10)
of this definition);
(2) 2. Facilities classified as Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) 24 (except 2434), 26 (except 265 and 267), 28
(except 283 and 285), 29, 311, 32 (except 323), 33, 3441, and 373 (Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) SIC Manual, 1987);
(3) 3. Facilities classified as SIC 10 through 14
(mineral industry) (OMB SIC Manual, 1987) including active or inactive mining
operations (except for areas of coal mining operations no longer meeting the
definition of a reclamation area under 40 CFR 434.11(l) (2007) because
the performance bond issued to the facility by the appropriate Surface Mining
Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA) (30 USC § 1201 et seq.) authority
has been released, or except for areas of noncoal mining operations which have
been released from applicable state or federal reclamation requirements after
December 17, 1990) and oil and gas exploration, production, processing, or
treatment operations, or transmission facilities that discharge storm water
contaminated by contact with or that has come into contact with, any
overburden, raw material, intermediate products, finished products, byproducts
or waste products located on the site of such operations; (inactive mining
operations are mining sites that are not being actively mined, but which have
an identifiable owner/operator; inactive mining sites do not include sites
where mining claims are being maintained prior to disturbances associated with
the extraction, benefication, or processing of mined materials, nor sites where
minimal activities are undertaken for the sole purpose of maintaining a mining
claim);
(4) 4. Hazardous waste treatment, storage, or
disposal facilities, including those that are operating under interim status or
a permit under Subtitle C of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
(42 USC § 6901 et seq.);
(5) 5. Landfills, land application sites, and
open dumps that receive or have received any industrial wastes (waste that is
received from any of the facilities described under this definition, and
debris/wastes from Department of Conservation and Recreation Virginia
Stormwater Management Program (VSMP) regulated construction activities/sites)
including those that are subject to regulation under Subtitle D of RCRA;
(6) 6. Facilities involved in the recycling of
materials, including metal scrapyards, battery reclaimers, salvage yards, and
automobile junkyards, including but limited to those classified as Standard
Industrial Classification Codes 5015 and 5093 (OMB SIC Manual, 1987);
(7) 7. Steam electric power generating
facilities, including coal handling sites;
(8) 8. Transportation facilities classified as
SIC Codes 40, 41, 42 (except 4221-4225), 43, 44, 45, and 5171 (OMB SIC Manual,
1987) which have vehicle maintenance shops, equipment cleaning operations, or
airport deicing operations. Only those portions of the facility that are either
involved in vehicle maintenance (including vehicle rehabilitation, mechanical
repairs, painting, fueling, and lubrication), equipment cleaning operation,
airport deicing operation, or which are otherwise identified under categories 1
through 7 or 9 and 10 of this definition are associated with industrial
activity;
(9) 9. Treatment works treating domestic sewage
or any other sewage sludge or wastewater treatment device or system used in the
storage treatment, recycling, and reclamation of municipal or domestic sewage,
including land dedicated to the disposal of sewage sludge that is located
within the confines of the facility, with a design flow of 1.0 MGD or more, or
required to have an approved POTW pretreatment program under 9VAC25-31. Not
included are farm lands, domestic gardens or lands used for sludge management
where sludge is beneficially reused and which are not physically located in the
confines of the facility, or areas that are in compliance with 9VAC25-31-420
through 9VAC25-31- 720;
(10) 10. Facilities under SIC Codes 20, 21, 22,
23, 2434, 25, 265, 267, 27, 283, 285, 30, 31 (except 311), 323, 34 (except
3441), 35, 36, 37 (except 373), 38, 39, 4221-4225 (OMB SIC Manual, 1987).
"Industrial storm water" means storm water runoff associated
with the definition of "storm water discharge associated with from
industrial activity."
"Land application unit" means an area where wastes are applied onto or incorporated into the soil surface (excluding manure spreading operations) for treatment or disposal.
"Landfill" means an area of land or an excavation in which wastes are placed for permanent disposal, and that is not a land application unit, surface impoundment, injection well, or waste pile.
"Large and medium municipal separate storm sewer
system" means all municipal separate storm sewers that are located in the
following municipalities: the City of Norfolk; the City of Virginia Beach;
Fairfax County; the City of Chesapeake; the City of Hampton; Prince William
County; Arlington County; Chesterfield County; Henrico County; the City of
Newport News; and the City of Portsmouth.
"Measurable storm event" means a storm event that results in an actual discharge from a site.
"Minimize" means reduce or eliminate to the extent achievable using control measures (including best management practices) that are technologically available and economically practicable and achievable in light of best industry practice.
"MS4" means a municipal separate storm sewer system.
"Municipal separate storm sewer" means a conveyance or system of conveyances (including roads with drainage systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters, ditches, man-made channels, or storm drains): (i) owned or operated by a state, city, town, borough, county, parish, district, association, or other public body (created by or pursuant to state law) having jurisdiction over disposal of sewage, industrial wastes, storm water, or other wastes, including special districts under state law such as a sewer district, flood control district or drainage district, or similar entity, or an Indian tribe or an authorized Indian tribal organization, or a designated and approved management agency under § 208 of the CWA that discharges to surface waters of the state; (ii) designed or used for collecting or conveying storm water; (iii) which is not a combined sewer; and (iv) which is not part of a Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTW).
"No exposure" means all industrial materials or
activities are protected by a storm-resistant shelter to prevent exposure to
rain, snow, snowmelt, and/or or runoff.
"Primary industrial activity" includes any activities performed on-site which are:
1. Identified by the facility's primary SIC code; or
2. Included in the narrative descriptions of the definition of "industrial activity."
Narrative descriptions in the "industrial activity" definition include: category 1 activities subject to stormwater effluent limitations guidelines, new source performance standards, or toxic pollutant effluent standards; category 4 hazardous waste treatment storage or disposal facilities, including those that are operating under interim status or a permit under subtitle C of the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act RCRA; category 5 landfills, land application sites, and open dumps that receive or have received industrial wastes; category 7 steam electric power generating facilities; and category 9 sewage treatment works with a design flow of 1.0 mgd or more.
For colocated activities covered by multiple SIC codes, the primary industrial determination should be based on the value of receipts or revenues, or, if such information is not available for a particular facility, the number of employees or production rate for each process may be compared. The operation that generates the most revenue or employs the most personnel is the operation in which the facility is primarily engaged. In situations where the vast majority of on-site activity falls within one SIC code, that activity may be the primary industrial activity.
"Runoff coefficient" means the fraction of total rainfall that will appear at the conveyance as runoff.
"Section 313 water priority chemicals" means a
chemical or chemical categories which: (i) are listed at 40 CFR 372.65 (2007)
pursuant to § 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act
(EPCRA) (also known as Title III of the Superfund Amendments and
Reauthorization Act (SARA) of 1986) (42 USC § 11001 et seq.); (ii) are present
at or above threshold levels at a facility subject to EPCRA § 313 reporting
requirements; and (iii) that meet at least one of the following criteria: (a) are
listed in Appendix D of 40 CFR Part 122 (2007) on either Table II (Organic
priority pollutants), Table III (Certain metals, cyanides and phenols) or Table
V (Certain toxic pollutants and hazardous substances); (b) are listed as a
hazardous substance pursuant to § 311(b)(2)(A) of the Clean Water Act at
40 CFR 116.4 (2007); or (c) are pollutants for which EPA has published acute or
chronic water quality criteria.
"Significant materials" includes, but is not limited to: raw materials; fuels; materials such as solvents, detergents, and plastic pellets; finished materials such as metallic products; raw materials used in food processing or production; hazardous substances designated under § 101(14) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) (42 USC § 9601 et seq.); any chemical the facility is required to report pursuant to EPCRA § 313; fertilizers; pesticides; and waste products such as ashes, slag and sludge that have the potential to be released with storm water discharges.
"Significant spills" includes, but is not limited
to: releases of oil or hazardous substances in excess of reportable quantities
under § 311 of the Clean Water Act (see 40 CFR 110.10 (2007) and 40 CFR
117.21 (2007)) or § 102 of CERCLA (see 40 CFR 302.4 (2007)).
"Small municipal separate storm sewer system" or
"Small MS4" means all separate storm sewers that are: (i) owned or
operated by the United States, a state, city, town, borough, county, parish,
district, association, or other public body (created by or pursuant to state
law) having jurisdiction over disposal of sewage, industrial wastes, storm
water, or other wastes, including special districts under state law such as a
sewer district, flood control district or drainage district, or similar entity,
or an Indian tribe or an authorized Indian tribal organization, or a designated
and approved management agency under subsection 208 of the CWA that discharges
to surface waters and (ii) not defined as "large" or
"medium" municipal separate storm sewer systems, or designated under
9VAC25-31-120 A 1. This term includes systems similar to separate storm sewer
systems in municipalities, such as systems at military bases, large hospital or
prison complexes, and highways and other thoroughfares. The term does not
include separate storm sewers in very discrete areas, such as individual
buildings.
"Storm water" means storm water runoff, snow melt runoff, and surface runoff and drainage.
"Storm water discharge associated with industrial activity" means the discharge from any conveyance which is used for collecting and conveying storm water and that is directly related to manufacturing, processing or raw materials storage areas at an industrial plant. The term does not include discharges from facilities or activities excluded from the VPDES program under 9VAC25-31. For the categories of industries identified in the "industrial activity" definition, the term includes, but is not limited to, storm water discharges from industrial plant yards; immediate access roads and rail lines used or traveled by carriers of raw materials, manufactured products, waste material, or by-products used or created by the facility; material handling sites; refuse sites; sites used for the application or disposal of process wastewaters; sites used for the storage and maintenance of material handling equipment; sites used for residual treatment, storage, or disposal; shipping and receiving areas; manufacturing buildings; storage areas (including tank farms) for raw materials, and intermediate and final products; and areas where industrial activity has taken place in the past and significant materials remain and are exposed to storm water. For the purposes of this definition, material handling activities include the storage, loading and unloading, transportation, or conveyance of any raw material, intermediate product, final product, by-product or waste product. The term excludes areas located on plant lands separate from the plant's industrial activities, such as office buildings and accompanying parking lots, as long as the drainage from the excluded areas is not mixed with storm water drained from the above described areas. Industrial facilities include those that are federally, state, or municipally owned or operated that meet the description of the facilities listed in the "industrial activity" definition. The term also includes those facilities designated under the provisions of 9VAC25-31-120 A 1 c, or under 9VAC25-31-120 A 7 a (1) or (2) of the VPDES Permit Regulation.
"Total maximum daily load" or "TMDL" means a calculation of the maximum amount of a pollutant that a waterbody can receive and still meet water quality standards, and an allocation of that amount to the pollutant's sources. A TMDL includes wasteload allocations (WLAs) for point source discharges, load allocations (LAs) for nonpoint sources and/or natural background, and must include a margin of safety (MOS) and account for seasonal variations.
"Virginia Environmental Excellence Program" or "VEEP" means a voluntary program established by the department to provide public recognition and regulatory incentives to encourage higher levels of environmental performance for program participants that develop and implement environmental management systems (EMSs). The program is based on the use of EMSs that improve compliance, prevent pollution, and utilize other measures to improve environmental performance.
"Waste pile" means any noncontainerized accumulation of solid, nonflowing waste that is used for treatment or storage.
9VAC25-151-15. Applicability of incorporated references based on the dates that they became effective.
Except as noted, when a regulation of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency set forth in Title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) is referenced and incorporated herein, that regulation shall be as it exists and has been published as of July 1, 2012.
9VAC25-151-20. Purpose.
This general permit regulation governs all new and existing
storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities
in any of the industrial activity categories defined in 9VAC25-151-10
(Definitions), through a point source to surface waters, or through
a municipal or nonmunicipal separate storm sewer system to surface waters. This
regulation also governs storm water discharges designated by the board for
permitting under the provisions of 9VAC25-31-120 A 1 c, or under 9VAC25-31-120
A 7 a (1) or (2) of the VPDES Permit Regulation.
9VAC25-151-40. Effective date of the permit.
This general permit will become effective on July 1, 2009
2014. This general permit will expire on June 30, 2014 2019.
9VAC25-151-50. Authorization to discharge.
A. To be eligible to discharge under this permit, an owner must (i) have a stormwater discharge associated with industrial activity from the facility's primary industrial activity, as defined in 9VAC25-151-10 (Definitions), provided the primary industrial activity is included in Table 50-2 of this section, or (ii) be notified that discharges from the facility have been designated by the board for permitting under the provisions of 9VAC25-31-120 A 1 c, or under 9VAC25-31-120 A 7 a (1) or (2) of the VPDES Permit Regulation, and are eligible for coverage under Sector AD of this permit.
Any owner governed by this general permit is hereby authorized
to discharge storm water associated with industrial activity (as defined in
this regulation), as defined in this chapter, to surface waters of
the Commonwealth of Virginia provided that the:
1. The owner files the submits a
registration statement of in accordance with 9VAC25-151-60,
pays any fees and that registration statement is accepted by the board;
2. The owner submits the required by 9VAC25-20,
receives a copy of the general permit, and permit fee;
3. The owner complies with the applicable
requirements of 9VAC25-151-70 et seq.; and provided that:
4. The board has not notified the owner that the discharge is ineligible for coverage in accordance with subsection B of this section.
B. The board will notify an owner that the discharge is not eligible for coverage under this general permit in the event of any of the following:
1. The owner is required to obtain an individual permit in accordance with 9VAC25-31-170 B 3 of the VPDES Permit Regulation;
2. The owner is proposing to discharge to state waters specifically named in other board regulations that prohibit such discharges;
3. The discharge violates or would violate the antidegradation policy in the Water Quality Standards at 9VAC25-260-30; or
4. The discharge is not consistent with the assumptions and requirements of an approved TMDL. Note: Virginia's Chesapeake Bay TMDL Watershed Implementation Plan (November 29, 2010) requires that waste loads for new facilities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed with industrial stormwater discharges not exceed the nutrient and sediment loadings that were discharged prior to the land being developed for the industrial activity. For purposes of this permit regulation, facilities constructed after November 29, 2010, must be consistent with this requirement to be eligible for coverage under this general permit.
C. 1. Facilities with colocated industrial activities
on-site shall comply with all applicable effluent limitations, monitoring and
pollution prevention plan requirements of each section of 9VAC25-151-70 et seq.
in which a colocated industrial activity is described;.
2. Storm water discharges associated with industrial activity
that are mixed with other discharges (both storm water and nonstorm water)
requiring a VPDES permit are authorized by this permit, provided that the owner
obtains coverage under this VPDES general permit for the industrial activity
discharges, and a VPDES general or individual permit for the other discharges.
The owner shall comply with the terms and requirements of each permit obtained
that authorizes any component of the discharge;.
3. The storm water discharges authorized by this permit may be
combined with other sources of storm water which are not required to be covered
under a VPDES permit, so long as the combined discharge is in compliance with
this permit; and.
4. Authorized nonstorm water discharges. The following "nonstorm water" discharges are authorized by this permit:
a. Discharges from fire fighting activities;
b. Fire hydrant flushings;
c. Potable water, including water line flushings;
d. Uncontaminated air conditioning or compressor condensate
(excluding air compressors) condensate from air conditioners, coolers,
and other compressors and from the outside storage of refrigerated gases or
liquids;
e. Irrigation drainage;
f. Landscape watering provided all pesticides, herbicides, and
fertilizer have been applied in accordance with manufacturer's instructions
the approved labeling;
g. Pavement wash waters where no detergents are used and no spills or leaks of toxic or hazardous materials have occurred (unless all spilled material has been removed);
h. Routine external building wash down washdown
that does not use detergents;
i. Uncontaminated ground water or spring water;
j. Foundation or footing drains where flows are not contaminated with process materials; and
k. Incidental windblown mist from cooling towers that collects on rooftops or adjacent portions of the facility, but not intentional discharges from the cooling tower (e.g., "piped" cooling tower blowdown or drains).
5. Storm water discharges associated with construction activity that are regulated under the Virginia Stormwater Management Program (VSMP) are not authorized by this permit.
6. Discharges subject to storm water effluent limitation guidelines under 40 CFR Subchapter N (Effluent Guidelines and Standards). Only those storm water discharges subject to storm water effluent limitation guidelines under 40 CFR Subchapter N that are identified in Table 50-1 of this subsection are eligible for coverage under this permit.
TABLE 50 - 1 |
|
Effluent Limitation Guideline |
Sectors with Affected Facilities |
Runoff from material storage piles at cement manufacturing facilities (40 CFR Part 411 Subpart C (established February 20, 1974)) |
E |
Contaminated runoff from phosphate fertilizer manufacturing facilities (40 CFR Part 418 Subpart A (established April 8, 1974)) |
C |
Coal pile runoff at steam electric generating facilities (40 CFR Part 423 (established November 19, 1982)) |
O |
Discharges resulting from spray down or intentional wetting of logs at wet deck storage areas (40 CFR Part 429 Subpart I (established January 26, 1981)) |
A |
Runoff from asphalt emulsion facilities (40 CFR Part 443 Subpart A (established July 24, 1975)) |
D |
Runoff from landfills (40 CFR Part 445 Subparts A and B (established January 19, 2000)) |
K and L |
Discharges from airport deicing operations, (40 CFR Part 449 (established May 16, 2012)) |
S |
7. Permit eligibility is limited to discharges from facilities in the "sectors" of industrial activity summarized in Table 50-2 of this subsection. These sector descriptions are based on Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Codes and Industrial Activity Codes. References to "sectors" in this permit (e.g., sector-specific monitoring requirements) refer to these groupings.
B. Limitations on coverage.
1. The owner shall not be authorized to discharge under this
general permit if the owner has been required to obtain an individual permit
pursuant to 9VAC25-31-170 B;
2. The owner shall not be authorized by this general permit
to discharge to state waters specifically named in other board regulations or
policies which prohibit such discharges;
3. The following storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity are not authorized by this permit:
a. Discharges that are located at a facility where a VPDES
permit has been terminated (other than at the request of the permittee) or
denied;
b. Discharges that the director determines cause, or may
reasonably be expected to cause, or be contributing to a violation of a water
quality standard;
c. Discharges subject to effluent limitation guidelines,
not described under 9VAC25-151-70, Table 70-2;
d. Discharges to waters for which a "total maximum
daily load" (TMDL) allocation has been established by the board and
approved by EPA prior to the term of this permit, unless the owner develops,
implements, and maintains a storm water pollution prevention plan (SWPPP) that
is consistent with the assumptions and requirements of the TMDL. This only
applies where the facility is a source of the TMDL pollutant of concern. The
SWPPP shall specifically address any conditions or requirements included in the
TMDL that are applicable to discharges from the facility. If the TMDL
establishes a specific numeric wasteload allocation that applies to discharges
from the facility, the owner shall implement BMPs designed to meet that
allocation;
e. New dischargers that discharge to impaired waters for
which a TMDL has not been established by the board and approved by EPA unless:
(1) The discharger prevents all exposure to stormwater of
the pollutant(s) for which the waterbody is impaired, and retains documentation
of the procedures taken to prevent exposure onsite with the SWPPP required by
9VAC25-151-70;
(2) The discharger documents that the pollutant(s) for
which the waterbody is impaired is not present at the site, and retains
documentation of this finding with the SWPPP required by 9VAC25-151-70; or
(3) Prior to submitting a registration statement, the
discharger provides to the appropriate DEQ regional office data to support a
showing that the discharge is not expected to cause or contribute to an
exceedance of a water quality standard. The discharger shall provide data and
other technical information to the regional office sufficient to demonstrate
that the discharge of the pollutant for which the water is impaired will meet
in-stream water quality criteria at the point of discharge to the waterbody.
The discharges from the facility are authorized under this permit if the
discharger receives an affirmative determination from the regional office that
the discharges will not contribute to the existing impairment. The discharger
shall maintain the supporting data and the regional office determination onsite
with the SWPPP required by 9VAC25-151-70; and
f. Discharges that do not comply with Virginia's
antidegradation policy for water quality standards under 9VAC25-260-30. If
authorization to discharge under this general permit will not comply with the
antidegradation requirements, an individual permit application may be required
to allow a discharge that meets the requirements for high quality waters in
9VAC25-260-30 A 2, or permits may be denied to meet the requirements for
exceptional waters in 9VAC25-260-30 A 3.
4. Facilities covered. Permit eligibility is limited to
discharges from facilities in the "sectors" of industrial activity
based on Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) codes and Industrial Activity
codes summarized in Table 50‑1. References to "sectors" in this
permit refer to these sectors.
5. Storm water discharges associated with construction
activity that are regulated under the Department of Conservation and Recreation
VSMP permit program are not authorized by this permit.
TABLE 50 - |
||
SIC Code or Activity Code |
Activity Represented |
|
Sector A: Timber Products |
||
|
2411 |
Log Storage and Handling ( |
|
2421 |
General Sawmills and Planning Mills. |
|
2426 |
Hardwood Dimension and Flooring Mills. |
|
2429 |
Special Product Sawmills, Not Elsewhere Classified. |
|
2431-2439 (except 2434 - see Sector W) |
Millwork, Veneer, Plywood, and Structural Wood. |
|
2441, 2448, 2449 |
Wood Containers. |
|
2451, 2452 |
Wood Buildings and Mobile Homes. |
|
2491 |
Wood Preserving. |
|
2493 |
Reconstituted Wood Products. |
|
2499 |
Wood Products, Not Elsewhere Classified (includes SIC Code 24991303 - Wood, Mulch and Bark facilities). |
Sector B: Paper and Allied Products |
||
|
2611 |
Pulp Mills. |
|
2621 |
Paper Mills. |
|
2631 |
Paperboard Mills. |
|
2652-2657 |
Paperboard Containers and Boxes. |
|
2671-2679 |
Converted Paper and Paperboard Products, |
Sector C: Chemical and Allied Products |
||
|
2812-2819 |
Industrial Inorganic Chemicals. |
|
2821-2824 |
Plastics Materials and Synthetic Resins, Synthetic Rubber,
Cellulosic and Other Manmade Fibers, |
|
2833-2836 |
Medicinal Chemicals and Botanical Products; Pharmaceutical
Preparations; In Vitro and In Vivo Diagnostic Substances; Biological
Products, |
|
2841-2844 |
Soaps, Detergents, and Cleaning Preparations; Perfumes, Cosmetics, and Other Toilet Preparations. |
|
2851 |
Paints, Varnishes, Lacquers, Enamels, and Allied Products. |
|
2861-2869 |
Industrial Organic Chemicals. |
|
2873-2879 |
Agricultural Chemicals (includes SIC Code 2875 - Composting Facilities). |
|
2891-2899 |
Miscellaneous Chemical Products. |
|
3952 (limited to list) |
Inks and Paints, Including China Painting Enamels, India Ink, Drawing Ink, Platinum Paints for Burnt Wood or Leather Work, Paints for China Painting, Artist's Paints and Artist's Watercolors. |
Sector D: Asphalt Paving and Roofing Materials and Lubricants |
||
|
2951, 2952 |
Asphalt Paving and Roofing Materials. |
|
2992, 2999 |
Miscellaneous Products of Petroleum and Coal. |
Sector E: Glass Clay, Cement, Concrete, and Gypsum Products. |
||
|
3211 |
Flat Glass. |
|
3221, 3229 |
Glass and Glassware, Pressed or Blown. |
|
3231 |
Glass Products Made of Purchased Glass. |
|
3241 |
Hydraulic Cement. |
|
3251-3259 |
Structural Clay Products. |
|
3261-3269 |
Pottery and Related Products. |
|
3274, 3275 |
Concrete, Gypsum and Plaster Products, Except: Concrete
Block and Brick; Concrete Products, |
|
3281 |
Cut Stone and Stone Products |
|
3291-3299 |
Abrasive, Asbestos, and Miscellaneous |
Sector F: Primary Metals |
||
|
3312-3317 |
Steel Works, Blast Furnaces, and Rolling and Finishing Mills. |
|
3321-3325 |
Iron and Steel Foundries. |
|
3331-3339 |
Primary Smelting and Refining of Nonferrous Metals. |
|
3341 |
Secondary Smelting and Refining of Nonferrous Metals. |
|
3351-3357 |
Rolling, Drawing, and Extruding of Nonferrous Metals. |
|
3363-3369 |
Nonferrous Foundries (Castings). |
|
3398, 3399 |
Miscellaneous Primary Metal Products. |
Sector G: Metal Mining (Ore Mining and Dressing) |
||
|
1011 |
Iron Ores. |
|
1021 |
Copper Ores. |
|
1031 |
Lead and Zinc Ores. |
|
1041, 1044 |
Gold and Silver Ores. |
|
1061 |
Ferroalloy Ores, Except Vanadium. |
|
1081 |
Metal Mining Services. |
|
1094, 1099 |
Miscellaneous Metal Ores. |
Sector H: Coal Mines and Coal Mining Related Facilities |
||
|
1221-1241 |
Coal Mines and Coal Mining-Related Facilities. |
Sector I: Oil and Gas Extraction and Refining |
||
|
1311 |
Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas. |
|
1321 |
Natural Gas Liquids. |
|
1381-1389 |
Oil and Gas Field Services. |
|
2911 |
Petroleum Refineries. |
Sector J: Mineral Mining and Dressing Facilities (SIC 1411-1499) are not authorized under this permit. |
||
Sector K: Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage, or Disposal Facilities |
||
|
HZ |
Hazardous Waste Treatment Storage or Disposal. |
Sector L: Landfills and Land Application Sites |
||
|
LF |
Landfills, Land Application Sites, and Open Dumps. |
Sector M: Automobile Salvage Yards |
||
|
5015 |
Automobile Salvage Yards. |
Sector N: Scrap Recycling Facilities |
||
|
5093 |
Scrap Recycling Facilities. |
|
4499 (limited to list) |
Dismantling Ships, Marine Salvaging, and Marine Wrecking -
Ships |
Sector O: Steam Electric Generating Facilities |
||
|
SE |
Steam Electric Generating Facilities. |
Sector P: Land Transportation and Warehousing |
||
|
4011, 4013 |
Railroad Transportation. |
|
4111-4173 |
Local and Highway Passenger Transportation. |
|
4212-4231 |
Motor Freight Transportation and Warehousing. |
|
4311 |
United States Postal Service. |
|
5171 |
Petroleum Bulk Stations and Terminals. |
Sector Q: Water Transportation |
||
|
4412-4499 (except 4499 facilities as specified in Sector N) |
Water Transportation. |
Sector R: Ship and Boat Building or Repairing Yards |
||
|
3731, 3732 |
Ship and Boat Building or Repairing Yards. |
Sector S: Air Transportation |
||
|
4512-4581 |
Air Transportation Facilities. |
Sector T: Treatment Works |
||
|
TW |
Treatment Works. |
Sector U: Food and Kindred Products |
||
|
2011-2015 |
Meat Products. |
|
2021-2026 |
Dairy Products. |
|
2032-2038 |
Canned, Frozen, and Preserved Fruits, Vegetables, and Food Specialties. |
|
2041-2048 |
Grain Mill Products. |
|
2051-2053 |
Bakery Products. |
|
2061-2068 |
Sugar and Confectionery Products. |
|
2074-2079 |
Fats and Oils. |
|
2082-2087 |
Beverages. |
|
2091-2099 |
Miscellaneous Food Preparations and Kindred Products. |
|
2111-2141 |
Tobacco Products. |
Sector V: Textile Mills, Apparel, and Other Fabric Product Manufacturing, Leather and Leather Products |
||
|
2211-2299 |
Textile Mill Products. |
|
2311-2399 |
Apparel and Other Finished Products Made |
|
3131-3199 (except 3111 - see Sector Z) |
Leather and Leather Products, except Leather Tanning and Finishing. |
Sector W: Furniture and Fixtures |
||
|
2434 |
Wood Kitchen Cabinets. |
|
2511-2599 |
Furniture and Fixtures. |
Sector X: Printing and Publishing |
||
|
2711-2796 |
Printing, Publishing, and Allied Industries. |
Sector Y: Rubber, Miscellaneous Plastic Products, and Miscellaneous Manufacturing Industries. |
||
|
3011 |
Tires and Inner Tubes. |
|
3021 |
Rubber and Plastics Footwear. |
|
3052, 3053 |
Gaskets, Packing, and Sealing Devices and Rubber and Plastics Hose and Belting. |
|
3061, 3069 |
Fabricated Rubber Products, Not Elsewhere Classified. |
|
3081-3089 |
Miscellaneous Plastics Products. |
|
3931 |
Musical Instruments. |
|
3942-3949 |
Dolls, Toys, Games, and Sporting and Athletic Goods. |
|
3951-3955 (except 3952 facilities as specified in Sector C) |
Pens, Pencils, and Other Artists' Materials. |
|
3961, 3965 |
Costume Jewelry, Costume Novelties, Buttons, and Miscellaneous Notions, Except Precious Metal. |
|
3991-3999 |
Miscellaneous Manufacturing Industries. |
Sector Z: Leather Tanning and Finishing |
||
|
3111 |
Leather Tanning, Currying, and Finishing. |
Sector AA: Fabricated Metal Products |
||
|
34113499 |
Fabricated Metal Products, |
|
39113915 |
Jewelry, Silverware, and Plated Ware |
Sector AB: Transportation Equipment, Industrial or Commercial Machinery |
||
|
3511-3599 (except 3571-3579 - see Sector AC) |
Industrial and Commercial Machinery |
|
3711-3799 (except 3731, 3732 - see Sector R) |
Transportation Equipment |
Sector AC: Electronic, Electrical, Photographic, and Optical Goods |
||
|
3571-3579 |
Computer and Office Equipment. |
|
3612-3699 |
Electronic |
|
3812-3873 |
Measuring, Analyzing, and Controlling |
Sector AD: Nonclassified Facilities/Storm Water Discharges
Designated |
||
|
N/A |
|
Note: Facilities may not elect to be covered under Sector AD. Only the board may assign a facility to Sector AD. |
C. D. Conditional exclusion for no exposure. If
an Any owner is covered by this permit, but later is able
to file a no exposure certification to be excluded who becomes eligible
for a no exposure exclusion from permitting under 9VAC25-31-120 E, the
owner is no longer authorized by nor required to comply with this permit. If
the owner is no longer required to have permit coverage due to a no exposure
exclusion, may file a no exposure certification. Upon submission and
acceptance by the board of a complete and accurate no exposure certification,
the permit requirements no longer apply, and the owner is not required to
submit a notice of termination. A no exposure certification must be
submitted to the board once every five years.
D. Receipt of E. Compliance with this general permit
constitutes compliance with the federal Clean Water Act and the State Water
Control Law, with the exceptions stated in 9VAC25-31-60 of the VPDES Permit
Regulation. Approval for coverage under this general permit does not
relieve any owner of the responsibility to comply with any other applicable
federal, state, or local statute, ordinance, or regulation.
F. Continuation of permit coverage.
1. Any owner that was authorized to discharge under the industrial activity storm water general permit issued in 2009 and that submits a complete registration statement on or before July 1, 2014, is authorized to continue to discharge under the terms of the 2009 general permit until such time as the board either:
a. Issues coverage to the owner under this general permit; or
b. Notifies the owner that the discharge is not eligible for coverage under this general permit.
2. When the owner that was covered under the expiring or expired general permit has violated or is violating the conditions of that permit, the board may choose to do any or all of the following:
a. Initiate enforcement action based upon the 2009 general permit;
b. Issue a notice of intent to deny coverage under the reissued general permit. If the general permit coverage is denied, the owner would then be required to cease the discharges authorized by administratively continued coverage under the terms of the 2009 general permit or be subject to enforcement action for discharging without a permit;
c. Issue an individual permit with appropriate conditions; or
d. Take other actions authorized by the VPDES Permit Regulation (9VAC25-31).
9VAC25-151-60. Registration statement and Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP).
A. The owner of a facility with storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity who is proposing to be covered by this
general permit shall submit a VPDES general permit registration statement in
accordance with this chapter. An owner seeking coverage under this
general permit shall submit a complete VPDES general permit registration
statement in accordance with this section, which shall serve as a notice of
intent for coverage under the general VPDES permit for discharges of storm
water associated with industrial activity.
Owners of facilities that were covered Any owner
that was authorized to discharge under the 2004 Industrial Storm Water
General Permit who intend industrial storm water general permit that
became effective on July 1, 2009, and that intends to continue coverage
under this general permit shall review and update the Storm Water Pollution
Prevention Plan (SWPPP) to meet all provisions of the general permit
(9VAC25-151-70 et seq.) by October 1, 2009 within 90 days of the
board granting coverage under this permit. Owners of new facilities,
facilities previously covered by an expiring individual permit, and existing
facilities not currently covered by a VPDES permit who wish to obtain coverage
under this general permit shall prepare and implement a written SWPPP for the
facility in accordance with the general permit (9VAC25-151-70 et seq.) prior to
submitting the registration statement.
B. Deadlines for submitting registration statement statements.
1. Existing facilities.
a. Owners of facilities that were covered Any owner
that was authorized to discharge under the 2004 Industrial Storm Water
General Permit who intend industrial storm water general permit that
became effective on July 1, 2009, and that intends to continue coverage
under this general permit shall submit a complete registration statement prior
to July 1, 2009 to the board on or before May 2, 2014.
b. Owners of facilities previously covered by an expiring
Any owner covered by an individual VPDES permit for storm water
discharges associated with industrial activity may elect that is
proposing to be covered under this general permit by submitting shall
submit a complete registration statement at least 30 240 days
prior to the expiration date of the individual VPDES permit.
c. Owners Any owner of an existing facilities
facility with storm water discharges associated with industrial activity,
not currently covered by a VPDES permit, who intend to obtain coverage that
is proposing to be covered under this general permit for storm water
discharges associated with industrial activity shall submit a complete
registration statement to the board.
2. New facilities. Owners of new facilities who wish to
obtain coverage under this general permit Any owner proposing a new
discharge of storm water associated with industrial activity shall submit a
complete registration statement at least 30 60 days prior to the
date planned for the commencement of the industrial activity at the
facility.
3. New owners of existing facilities. Where the owner of an
existing facility that is covered by this permit changes, the new owner of the
facility shall submit a complete registration statement or a "Change of
Ownership" form within 30 days of the ownership change.
4. Late notifications. An owner of a storm water discharge
associated with industrial activity is not precluded from submitting a
registration statement after the applicable dates provided in subdivisions 1
through 3 of this subsection. If a late registration statement is submitted,
the owner is only authorized for discharges that occur after permit coverage is
granted. The department reserves the right to take appropriate enforcement
actions for any unpermitted discharges.
5. Additional notification for discharges to municipal
separate storm sewer systems. Where the discharge of storm water associated
with industrial activity is through a municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4),
the owner shall notify the operator of the municipal system receiving the
discharge and submit a copy of their registration statement to the municipal
system operator.
3. Late registration statements. Registration statements for existing facilities covered under subdivision 1 a of this subsection will be accepted after July 1, 2014, but authorization to discharge will not be retroactive. Owners described in subdivision 1 a of this subsection that submit registration statements after May 2, 2014, are authorized to discharge under the provisions of 9VAC25-151-50 F (Continuation of permit coverage) if a complete registration statement is submitted on or before July 1, 2014.
C. Registration statement contents. The required
registration statement shall contain the following information:
1. Name, mailing address, email address (where available), and telephone number of the:
a. Property Facility owner of the site; and
b. Operator applying for permit coverage (if different than subdivision
1 a of this subsection) the facility owner);
c. Responsible party requesting permit coverage, and who
will be legally responsible for compliance with this permit;
2. Name Facility name (or other identifier), street
address, county (or city), contact name, email address (where
available), and phone number for the facility for which the
registration statement is submitted, and FAX number (where available);
3. Facility ownership status: federal, state, public or
private The nature of the business;
4. Name(s) of the receiving water(s) that storm water is
discharged into The receiving waters of the industrial activity
discharges;
5. A statement indicating if storm water runoff is
discharged to a municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4). Provide the name of
the MS4 operator if applicable Whether the facility discharges, or will
discharge, to an MS4. If so, provide the name of the MS4 owner. (Note: Permit
special condition #12 requires the permittee to notify the MS4 owner in writing
of the existence of the discharge within 30 days of coverage under this permit.
The notification shall include the following information: the name of the
facility, a contact person and phone number, the location of the discharge, the
nature of the discharge, and the facility's VPDES general permit registration
number);
6. VPDES The permit numbers number
for all permits any existing VPDES permit assigned to the
facility (including coverage under the 2004 Industrial Storm Water General
Permit);
7. Whether an SWPPP has been prepared prior to submitting this registration statement by the owner of a new facility, a facility previously covered by an expiring individual permit, or an existing facility not currently covered by a VPDES permit.
7. 8. An indication as to whether this facility discharges
will discharge storm water runoff from coal storage piles;
8. A copy of the SWPPP general location map and the SWPPP
site map prepared in accordance with 9VAC25-151-80 B 2 b and c (general permit
Part III B 2 b and c) and any applicable sector-specific site map requirements.
Owners covered under the 2004 Industrial Storm Water General Permit shall
update their site map to meet all requirements listed in 9VAC25-151-80 B 2 c
(general permit Part III B 2 c) and any applicable sector-specific site map
requirements, and shall submit the map to the department as soon as
practicable, but not later than October 1, 2009;
9. Identification of up to four 4-digit Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) Codes or 2-letter Industrial Activity Codes that best
represent the principal products or services rendered by the facility and major
colocated industrial activities (2-letter Industrial Activity Codes are:
HZ hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal facilities; LF landfills/disposal
landfills and disposal facilities that receive or have received any
industrial wastes; SE steam electric power generating facilities; or,
TW treatment works treating domestic sewage);
10. Identification of all applicable industrial sectors
in this permit (as designated in Table 50‑1) 50‑2)
that cover the discharges associated with industrial activity from
activities at the facility, and major colocated industrial
activities to be covered under this permit, and the storm water outfalls
associated with each industrial sector.
a. If the facility is a landfill (sector L), indicate the type
of landfill (MSWLF (i.e., MSWLF (municipal solid waste landfill),
CDD (construction debris/demolition), debris and demolition), or
other), and which outfalls (if any) receive contaminated storm water runoff.;
b. If the facility is a timber products operation (sector A), indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from wet decking areas;
c. For all facilities, indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from coal storage piles;
d. If the facility manufactures asphalt paving and roofing materials (sector D), indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from areas where production of asphalt paving and roofing emulsions occurs;
e. If the facility manufactures cement (sector E), indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from material storage piles;
f. If a scrap recycling and waste recycling facility (sector N - SIC 5093) only receives source-separated recyclable materials, indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from this activity. List the metals (if any) that are received; or
g. For primary airports (sector S), list the average deicing season and indicate which outfalls (if any) receive discharges from deicing of non-propeller aircraft, and the annual average departures of non-propeller aircraft;
11. Facility site information. List the total area of the site (in acres), the area of industrial activity at the site (in acres), and the total impervious area of the site (in acres);
12. The following maps shall be included with the registration statement:
a. General location map. A USGS 7.5 minute topographic map, or other equivalent computer generated map, with sufficient resolution to clearly show the location of the facility and the surrounding locale; and
b. Site map. A map showing the property boundaries, the location of all industrial activity areas, all storm water outfalls, and all water bodies receiving storm water discharges from the site. Outfalls shall be numbered using a unique numerical identification code for each outfall (e.g., Outfall No. 001, No. 002, etc.);
13. Virginia's Chesapeake Bay TMDL Watershed Implementation Plan (November 29, 2010) requires that waste loads for new facilities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed with industrial stormwater discharges not exceed the nutrient and sediment loadings that were discharged prior to the land being developed for the industrial activity. For purposes of this permit regulation, facilities constructed after November 29, 2010, must be consistent with this requirement to be eligible for coverage under this general permit.
If this is a new facility constructed after November 29, 2010, in the Chesapeake Bay watershed, and applying for first time general permit coverage, attach documentation to the registration statement to show:
a. That the total phosphorus load does not exceed the greater of: (i) the total phosphorus load that was discharged from the site prior to the land being developed for the industrial activity, or (ii) 0.41 pounds per acre per year (VSMP water quality design criteria). The documentation must include the measures and controls that were employed to meet this requirement, along with the supporting calculations. Compliance with the water quality design criteria may be determined utilizing the Virginia Runoff Reduction Method or another equivalent methodology approved by the board. Design specifications and pollutant removal efficiencies for BMPs can be found on the Virginia Storm Water BMP Clearinghouse website at http://www.vwrrc.vt.edu/swc; or
b. That nutrient credits have been acquired to meet the no net increase requirement in accordance with applicable regulations; and
11. 14. The following certification: "I
certify under penalty of law that this document and all attachments were
prepared under my direction or supervision in accordance with a system designed
to assure that qualified personnel properly gather and evaluate the information
submitted. Based on my inquiry of the person or persons who manage the system,
or those persons directly responsible for gathering the information, the
information submitted is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, true,
accurate, and complete. I am aware that there are significant penalties for
submitting false information, including the possibility of fine and
imprisonment for knowing violations."
D. The registration statement shall be signed in accordance
with 9VAC25-151-70, Part II K 9VAC25-31-110 A of the VPDES Permit
Regulation.
E. Where to submit. The registration statement may be delivered to the department by either postal or electronic mail and shall be submitted to the DEQ regional office serving the area where the industrial facility is located.
F. A facility's registration statement will be posted to
the department's public website for 30 days prior to the department granting
the facility general permit coverage.
9VAC25-151-65. Termination of permit coverage. (Repealed)
A. The owner may terminate coverage under this general
permit by filing a complete notice of termination. The notice of termination
may be filed after one or more of the following conditions have been met:
1. Operations have ceased at the facility and there are no
longer discharges of storm water associated with industrial activity from the
facility;
2. A new owner has assumed responsibility for the facility
(NOTE: A notice of termination does not have to be submitted if a VPDES Change
of Ownership Agreement form has been submitted); or
3. All storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity have been covered by an individual VPDES permit.
B. The notice of termination shall contain the following information:
1. Owner's name, mailing address and telephone number;
2. Facility name and location;
3. VPDES Industrial storm water general permit number;
4. The basis for submitting the notice of termination,
including:
a. A statement indicating that a new owner has assumed
responsibility for the facility;
b. A statement indicating that operations have ceased at
the facility and there are no longer discharges of storm water associated with
industrial activity from the facility;
c. A statement indicating that all storm water discharges
associated with industrial activity have been covered by an individual VPDES
permit; or
d. A statement indicating that termination of coverage is
being requested for another reason (state the reason);
5. The following certification: "I certify under
penalty of law that all storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from the identified facility that are authorized by this VPDES general
permit have been eliminated, or covered under a VPDES individual permit, or
that I am no longer the owner of the industrial activity, or permit coverage
should be terminated for another reason listed above. I understand that by
submitting this notice of termination, that I am no longer authorized to
discharge storm water associated with industrial activity in accordance with
the general permit, and that discharging pollutants in storm water associated
with industrial activity to surface waters is unlawful where the discharge is
not authorized by a VPDES permit. I also understand that the submittal of this
notice of termination does not release an owner from liability for any
violations of this permit or the Clean Water Act."
C. The notice of termination shall be signed in accordance
with 9VAC25-151-70, Part II K.
D. Where to submit. The notice of termination shall be
submitted to the DEQ regional office serving the area where the industrial
facility is located.
9VAC25-151-70. General permit.
Any owner whose registration statement is accepted by the director will receive the following general permit and shall comply with the requirements therein and be subject to the VPDES Permit Regulation, 9VAC25-31. Facilities with colocated industrial activities shall comply with all applicable monitoring and pollution prevention plan requirements of each industrial activity sector of this chapter in which a colocated industrial activity is described. All pages of 9VAC25-151-70 and 9VAC25-151-80 apply to all storm water discharges associated with industrial activity covered under this general permit. Not all pages of 9VAC25-151-90 et seq. will apply to every permittee. The determination of which pages apply will be based on an evaluation of the regulated activities located at the facility.
General Permit No.: VAR05
Effective Date: July 1, 2009 2014
Expiration Date: June 30, 2014 2019
GENERAL PERMIT FOR STORM WATER DISCHARGES ASSOCIATED WITH INDUSTRIAL
ACTIVITY
AUTHORIZATION TO DISCHARGE UNDER THE VIRGINIA POLLUTANT DISCHARGE ELIMINATION
SYSTEM AND THE VIRGINIA STATE WATER CONTROL LAW
In compliance with the provisions of the Clean Water Act, as
amended, and pursuant to the State Water Control Law and regulations adopted
pursuant thereto, owners of facilities with storm water discharges associated
with industrial activity are authorized to discharge to surface waters within
the boundaries of the Commonwealth of Virginia, except those waters
specifically named in board regulation or policies which that
prohibit such discharges.
The authorized discharge shall be in accordance with this cover page, Part I-Effluent Limitations, Monitoring Requirements and Special Conditions, Part II-Conditions Applicable to All VPDES Permits, Part III-Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan, and Part IV-Sector-Specific Permit Requirements, as set forth herein.
Part I
Effluent Limitations, Monitoring Requirements and Special Conditions
A. Effluent limitations and monitoring requirements.
There are three four individual and separate
categories of monitoring requirements that a facility may be subject to under
this permit: (i) quarterly visual monitoring; (ii) benchmark monitoring of
discharges associated with specific industrial activities; and (iii)
compliance monitoring for discharges subject to numerical effluent limitations;
and (iv) monitoring of discharges to impaired waters, both those with an
approved TMDL and those without an approved TMDL. The monitoring
requirements and numeric effluent limitations applicable to a facility depend
on the types of industrial activities generating storm water runoff from the
facility, and for TMDL monitoring, the location of the facility facility's
discharge or discharges. Part IV of the permit (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.)
identifies monitoring requirements applicable to specific sectors of industrial
activity. The permittee shall review Part I A 1 and Part IV of the permit to
determine which monitoring requirements and numeric limitations apply to his facility.
Unless otherwise specified, limitations and monitoring requirements under Part
I A 1 and Part IV are additive.
Sector-specific monitoring requirements and limitations are
applied discharge by discharge at facilities with colocated activities. Where
storm water from the colocated activities are commingled, the monitoring
requirements and limitations are additive. Where more than one numeric
limitation for a specific parameter applies to a discharge, compliance with the
more restrictive limitation is required. Where monitoring requirements for a
monitoring period overlap (e.g., need to monitor TSS one/year twice
per year for a limit and also one/year twice per year for
benchmark monitoring), the permittee may use a single sample to satisfy both
monitoring requirements.
1. Types of monitoring requirements and limitations.
a. Quarterly visual monitoring. The requirements and procedures for quarterly visual monitoring are applicable to all facilities covered under this permit, regardless of the facility's sector of industrial activity.
(1) The permittee shall perform and document a quarterly
visual examination of a storm water discharge associated with industrial
activity from each outfall, except discharges exempted below (Part I A 1 a
(2) and (4), and Part I A 3) in Part I A 3 or Part I A 4. The
examination(s) shall be made at least once in each of the following three-month
periods: January through March, April through June, July through September, and
October through December. The visual examination shall be made during daylight
hours (e.g., normal working hours) normal working hours, where
practicable, and when considerations for safety and feasibility allow. If
no storm event resulted in runoff from the facility during a monitoring
quarter, the permittee is excused from visual monitoring for that quarter
provided that documentation is included with the monitoring records indicating
that no runoff occurred. The documentation shall be signed and certified in
accordance with Part II K of this permit.
(2) Visual examinations shall be made of samples collected
within the first 30 minutes (or as soon thereafter as practical, but not to
exceed one hour) of when the runoff or snowmelt begins discharging from the
facility. Samples shall be collected in accordance with Part I A 2.
The examination shall document observations of color, odor, clarity, floating
solids, settled solids, suspended solids, foam, oil sheen, and other obvious
indicators of storm water pollution. The examination shall be conducted in a
well-lit area. No analytical tests are required to be performed on the samples.
All samples (except snowmelt samples) shall be collected from the discharge
resulting from a storm event that results in an actual discharge from the site
(defined as a "measurable storm event"), and that occurs at least 72
hours from the previously measurable storm event. The 72-hour storm interval is
waived if the permittee is able to document that less than a 72-hour interval
is representative for local storm events during the sampling period. Where
practicable, the same individual shall carry out the collection and examination
of discharges for the entire permit term. If no qualifying storm event
resulted in runoff during daylight hours from the facility during a monitoring
quarter, the permittee is excused from visual monitoring for that quarter
provided that documentation is included with the monitoring records indicating
that no qualifying storm event occurred during daylight hours that resulted in
storm water runoff during that quarter. The documentation shall be signed and
certified in accordance with Part II K.
(3) The visual examination reports shall be maintained on-site with the Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP). The report shall include the outfall location, the examination date and time, examination personnel, the nature of the discharge (i.e., runoff or snow melt), visual quality of the storm water discharge (including observations of color, odor, clarity, floating solids, settled solids, suspended solids, foam, oil sheen, and other obvious indicators of storm water pollution), and probable sources of any observed storm water contamination.
(4) Inactive and unstaffed sites: When the permittee is
unable to conduct visual storm water examinations at an inactive and unstaffed
site, a waiver of the monitoring requirement may be exercised as long as the
facility remains inactive and unstaffed, and there are no industrial materials
or activities exposed to storm water. If this waiver is exercised, the
permittee shall maintain a certification with the SWPPP stating that the site
is inactive and unstaffed, there are no industrial materials or activities
exposed to storm water, and that performing visual examinations during a
qualifying event is not feasible. The waiver shall be signed and certified in
accordance with Part II K.
(5) Representative outfalls - essentially identical
discharges. If the facility has two or more outfalls that discharge
substantially identical effluents, based on similarities of the industrial
activities, significant materials, size of drainage areas, and storm water
management practices occurring within the drainage areas of the outfalls, the
permittee may conduct visual monitoring on the effluent of just one of the
outfalls and report that the observations also apply to the substantially
identical outfall(s). The permittee shall include the following information in
the SWPPP:
(a) The locations of the outfalls;
(b) Why the outfalls are expected to discharge
substantially identical effluents, including evaluation of monitoring data,
where available;
(c) Estimates of the size of the drainage area (in square
feet) for each of the outfalls; and
(d) An estimate of the runoff coefficient of the drainage
areas (low: under 40%; medium: 40% to 65%; high: above 65%).
(6) If a facility's permit coverage is effective less than
one month from the end of a quarterly monitoring period, the first quarterly
period starts with the next respective quarterly monitoring period (e.g., if
permit coverage begins March 5, the permittee will not need to start quarterly
visual monitoring until the April-June quarter).
b. Benchmark monitoring of discharges associated with specific industrial activities.
Table 70-1 identifies the specific industrial sectors subject to the benchmark monitoring requirements of this permit and the industry-specific pollutants of concern. The permittee shall refer to the tables found in the individual sectors in Part IV (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.) for benchmark monitoring concentration values. Colocated industrial activities at the facility that are described in more than one sector in Part IV shall comply with all applicable benchmark monitoring requirements from each sector.
The results of benchmark monitoring are primarily for the permittee to use to determine the overall effectiveness of the SWPPP in controlling the discharge of pollutants to receiving waters. Benchmark concentration values, included in Part IV of this permit, are not effluent limitations. Exceedance of a benchmark concentration does not constitute a violation of this permit and does not indicate that violation of a water quality standard has occurred; however, it does signal that modifications to the SWPPP are necessary, unless justification is provided in the comprehensive site compliance evaluation (Part III E). In addition, exceedance of benchmark concentrations may identify facilities that would be more appropriately covered under an individual, or alternative general permit where more specific pollution prevention controls could be required.
TABLE 70-1. |
||
Industry Sector1 |
Industry Sub-sector |
Benchmark Monitoring Parameters |
A |
General Sawmills and Planing Mills |
TSS. |
Wood Preserving Facilities |
Arsenic, Chromium, Copper. |
|
Log Storage and Handling |
TSS. |
|
Hardwood Dimension and Flooring Mills |
TSS. |
|
Mulch, Wood and Bark Facilities |
BOD, TSS. |
|
Mulching Dying Operations |
BOD, TSS, COD, Aluminum, Arsenic, Cadmium, Chromium, Copper, Iron, Lead, Manganese, Mercury, Nickel, Selenium, Silver, Zinc, Total N, Total P. |
|
B |
Paperboard Mills |
BOD. |
C |
Industrial Inorganic Chemicals |
Aluminum, Iron, Total N. |
Plastics, Synthetic Resins, etc. |
Zinc. |
|
Soaps, Detergents, Cosmetics, Perfumes |
Total N, Zinc. |
|
Agricultural Chemicals |
Total N, Iron, Zinc, |
|
Composting Facilities |
TSS, BOD, COD, Ammonia, Total N, Total P. |
|
D |
Asphalt Paving and Roofing Materials |
TSS. |
E |
Clay Products |
Aluminum. |
Lime and Gypsum Products |
TSS, pH, Iron. |
|
F |
Steel Works, Blast Furnaces, and Rolling and Finishing Mills |
Aluminum, Zinc. |
Iron and Steel Foundries |
Aluminum, TSS, Copper, Iron, Zinc. |
|
Nonferrous Rolling and Drawing |
Copper, Zinc. |
|
Nonferrous Foundries (Castings) |
Copper, Zinc. |
|
G2 |
Copper Ore Mining and Dressing |
TSS |
H |
Coal Mines and Coal-Mining Related Facilities |
TSS, Aluminum, Iron |
K |
Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage or Disposal |
TKN, TSS, TOC, Arsenic, Cadmium, Cyanide, Lead, Magnesium, Mercury, Selenium, Silver. |
L |
Landfills, Land Application Sites, and Open Dumps |
|
M |
Automobile Salvage Yards |
TSS, Aluminum, Iron, Lead. |
N |
Scrap Recycling and Waste Recycling Facilities |
Copper, Aluminum, Iron, Lead, Zinc, TSS, Cadmium, Chromium. |
Ship Dismantling, Marine Salvaging and Marine Wrecking |
Aluminum, Cadmium, Chromium, Copper, Iron, Lead, Zinc, TSS. |
|
O |
Steam Electric Generating Facilities |
Iron. |
P |
Land Transportation and Warehousing |
TPH, TSS. |
Q |
Water Transportation Facilities |
|
R |
Ship and Boat Building or Repairing Yards |
TSS, Copper, Zinc. |
S |
Airports |
|
U |
Dairy Products. |
BOD, TSS. |
Grain Mill Products |
TSS, TKN. |
|
Fats and Oils |
BOD, Total N, TSS. |
|
Y |
Rubber Products |
Zinc. |
Z |
Leather Tanning and Finishing |
TKN. |
AA |
Fabricated Metal Products Except Coating |
Iron, Aluminum, Copper, Zinc. |
Fabricated Metal Coating and Engraving |
Zinc. |
|
AB |
Transportation Equipment, Industrial, or Commercial Machinery |
TSS, TPH, Copper, Zinc. |
AD |
Nonclassified Facilities/Storm Water Discharges Designated By the Board As Requiring Permits |
TSS. |
1Table does not include parameters for compliance monitoring under effluent limitations guidelines. |
||
2See Sector G (Part IV G) for additional monitoring discharges from waste rock and overburden piles from active ore mining or dressing facilities, inactive ore mining or dressing facilities, and sites undergoing reclamation. |
||
|
(1) (a) If a facility falls within a sector(s) required to
conduct benchmark monitoring, monitoring Benchmark monitoring shall be
performed for all benchmark parameters specified for the industrial sector or
sectors applicable to a facility's discharge. Monitoring shall be performed
at least once during each of the first two four, and potentially
all, monitoring periods after the facility is granted coverage under the
permit begins. Monitoring commences with the first full monitoring
period after the owner is granted coverage under the permit. Monitoring periods
are specified in Part I A 2.
Depending on the results of two four consecutive
monitoring periods, benchmark monitoring may not be required to be conducted in
subsequent monitoring periods (see Part I A 1 b (2)) (see subdivision
(2) below).
(b) Monitoring periods for benchmark monitoring. The benchmark
monitoring periods are as follows: (i) July 1, 2009, to December 31, 2009; (ii)
January 1, 2010, to December 31, 2010; (iii) January 1, 2011, to December 31,
2011; (iv) January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2012; and, (v) January 1, 2013, to
December 31, 2013.
(c) If a facility's permit coverage is effective less than
one month from the end of a monitoring period, the facility's first monitoring
period starts with the next respective monitoring period (e.g., if permit
coverage begins December 5, the permittee will not need to start sampling until
the next January-December monitoring period).
(2) Benchmark monitoring waivers for facilities testing below benchmark concentration values. Waivers from benchmark monitoring are available to facilities whose discharges are below benchmark concentration values on an outfall by outfall basis. Sector-specific benchmark monitoring is not required to be conducted in subsequent monitoring periods during the term of this permit provided:
(a) Samples were collected in two four
consecutive monitoring periods, and all the parameter concentrations
were average of the four samples for all parameters at the outfall is
below the applicable benchmark concentration values value in Part
IV. (Note: facilities that were covered under the 2009 industrial storm
water general permit may use sampling data from the last two monitoring periods
of that permit and the first two monitoring periods of this permit to satisfy
the four consecutive monitoring periods requirement); and
(b) The facility is not subject to a numeric effluent
limitation for that parameter established in Part I A 1 c (1) (Storm
Water Effluent Limitations, Coal Pile Runoff, and TMDL Wasteload Allocations)
(Storm Water Effluent Limitations), Part I A 1 c (2) (Coal Pile Runoff), or
Part IV (Sector Specific Permit Requirements) for any of the parameters at
that outfall; and
(c) A waiver request is submitted to and approved by the department
board. The waiver request shall be sent to the appropriate DEQ regional
office, along with the supporting monitoring data for two four
consecutive monitoring periods, and a certification that, based on current
potential pollutant sources and BMPs used, discharges from the facility are
reasonably expected to be essentially the same (or cleaner) compared to when
the benchmark monitoring for the two four consecutive monitoring
periods was done.
Waiver requests will be evaluated by the department board
based upon: (i) benchmark monitoring results below the benchmark concentration
values; (ii) a favorable compliance history (including inspection results); and
(iii) no outstanding enforcement actions.
The monitoring waiver may be revoked by the department board
for just cause. The permittee will be notified in writing that the
monitoring waiver is revoked, and that the benchmark monitoring requirements
are again in force and will remain in effect until the permit's expiration
date.
(3) Samples shall be collected and analyzed in accordance with
Part I A 2. For each outfall, one signed Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR)
form shall be submitted to the department for each storm event sampled.
Monitoring results shall be Monitoring results shall be reported in
accordance with Part I A 5 and Part II C and retained in accordance with
Part II B.
(4) Inactive and unstaffed sites. If the permittee is
unable to conduct benchmark monitoring at an inactive and unstaffed site, a
waiver of the monitoring requirement may be exercised as long as the facility
remains inactive and unstaffed, and there are no industrial materials or
activities exposed to storm water. If the permittee exercises this waiver, a
certification shall be submitted to the department and maintained with the
SWPPP stating that the site is inactive and unstaffed, there are no industrial
materials or activities exposed to storm water, and that performing benchmark
monitoring during a qualifying storm event is not feasible. The waiver shall be
signed and certified in accordance with Part II K.
(5) Representative outfalls - essentially identical
discharges. If the facility has two or more outfalls that discharge
substantially identical effluents, based on similarities of the industrial
activities, significant materials, size of drainage areas, and storm water
management practices occurring within the drainage areas of the outfalls, the
permittee may perform benchmark monitoring on the effluent of just one of the
outfalls and report that the quantitative data also applies to the
substantially identical outfall(s). The permittee shall include the following
information in the SWPPP, and in any DMRs that are required to be submitted to
the department:
(a) The locations of the outfalls;
(b) Why the outfalls are expected to discharge
substantially identical effluents, including evaluation of monitoring data,
where available;
(c) Estimates of the size of the drainage area (in square
feet) for each of the outfalls; and
(d) An estimate of the runoff coefficient of the drainage
areas (low: under 40%; medium: 40% to 65%; high: above 65%).
c. Compliance monitoring for discharges subject to numerical effluent limitations or discharges to impaired waters.
(1) Facilities subject to storm water effluent limitation guidelines.
(a) Facilities subject to storm water effluent limitation
guidelines (see Table 70-2) are required to monitor such discharges to evaluate
compliance with numerical effluent limitations. Industry-specific numerical
limitations and compliance monitoring requirements are described in Part IV of
the permit (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.). Colocated Permittees with
colocated industrial activities at the facility that are described in more
than one sector in Part IV shall comply on a discharge-by-discharge basis with
all applicable effluent limitations from each sector.
(b) Permittees shall monitor the discharges for the presence
of the pollutant subject to the effluent limitation at least once during each
of the monitoring periods after the facility is granted coverage under
the permit begins. If a facility's permit coverage is effective less
than one month from the end of a monitoring period, the facility's first
monitoring period starts with the next respective monitoring period (e.g., if
permit coverage begins December 5, the permittee will not need to start the
effluent limitation monitoring until the next January-December monitoring
period). Monitoring commences with the first full monitoring period
after the owner is granted coverage under the permit. Monitoring periods are
specified in Part I A 2. The substantially identical outfall monitoring provisions
(Part I A 2 f) are not available for numeric effluent limits monitoring.
(c) The monitoring periods for effluent limitation
monitoring are as follows: (i) July 1, 2009, to December 31, 2009; (ii) January
1, 2010, to December 31, 2010; (iii) January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011;
(iv) January 1, 2012, to December 31, 2012; and (v) January 1, 2013, to
December 31, 2013.
(d) (c) Samples shall be collected and analyzed
in accordance with Part I A 2. Monitoring results shall be reported in
accordance with Part I A 4 5 and Part II C, and retained in
accordance with Part II B.
TABLE 70-2 |
|
Effluent Limitation Guideline |
Sectors with Affected Facilities |
Runoff from material storage piles at cement manufacturing
facilities (40 CFR Part 411 Subpart C |
E |
Contaminated runoff from phosphate fertilizer manufacturing
facilities (40 CFR Part 418 Subpart A |
C |
Coal pile runoff at steam electric generating facilities (40
CFR Part 423 |
O |
Discharges resulting from spray down or intentional wetting
of logs at wet deck storage areas (40 CFR Part 429, Subpart I |
A |
Runoff from asphalt emulsion facilities (40 CFR Part 443
Subpart A |
D |
Runoff from landfills |
K |
Discharges from airport deicing operations (40 CFR Part 449 (established May 16, 2012)) |
S |
(2) Facilities subject to coal pile runoff monitoring.
(a) Facilities with discharges of storm water from coal storage piles shall comply with the limitations and monitoring requirements of Table 70-3 for all discharges containing the coal pile runoff, regardless of the facility's sector of industrial activity.
(b) Permittees shall monitor such storm water discharges at
least once during each of the monitoring periods after the facility is
granted coverage under the permit begins. If a facility's permit
coverage is effective less than one month from the end of a monitoring period,
the facility's first monitoring period starts with the next respective
monitoring period (e.g., if permit coverage begins December 5, the permittee
will not need to start the coal pile runoff monitoring until the next
January-December monitoring period). Monitoring commences with the first
full monitoring period after the owner is granted coverage under the permit.
Monitoring periods are specified in Part I A 2. The substantially identical
outfall monitoring provisions (Part I A 2 f) are not available for coal pile
numeric effluent limits monitoring.
(c) Coal pile runoff monitoring periods are as follows: (i)
July 1, 2009, to December 31, 2009; (ii) January 1, 2010, to December 31, 2010;
(iii) January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011; (iv) January 1, 2012, to December
31, 2012; and (v) January 1, 2013, to December 31, 2013.
(d) (c) The coal pile runoff shall not be
diluted with other storm water or other flows in order to meet this limitation.
(e) (d) If a facility is designed, constructed
and operated to treat the volume of coal pile runoff that is associated with a
10-year, 24-hour rainfall event, any untreated overflow of coal pile runoff
from the treatment unit is not subject to the 50 mg/L limitation for total
suspended solids.
(f) (e) Samples shall be collected and analyzed
in accordance with Part I A 2. Monitoring results shall be reported in
accordance with Part I A 4 5 and Part II C, and retained in
accordance with Part II B.
TABLE 70-3 |
|||
Parameter |
Limit |
Monitoring Frequency |
Sample Type |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
50 mg/l, max. |
1/year |
Grab |
pH |
6.0 min. - 9.0 max. |
1/year |
Grab |
(3) Facilities (discharging discharging to an
impaired water with a board-established and EPA-approved an approved
TMDL wasteload allocation.
(a) Upon written notification from the department, facilities subject to TMDL wasteload allocations will be required to monitor such discharges to evaluate compliance with the TMDL requirements.
(b) Permittees shall monitor the discharges for the pollutant
subject to the TMDL wasteload allocation at least semiannually (twice per
year) once during each of the monitoring periods after coverage under
the permit begins. The TMDL semiannual monitoring periods are from July
1 to December 31, and January 1 to June 30. If a facility's notification that
they are subject to the TMDL monitoring requirements is effective less than one
month from the end of a semiannual monitoring period, the facility's first
monitoring period starts with the next respective monitoring period (e.g., if
notification is given on December 5, the permittee will not need to start
semiannual monitoring until the next January 1 to June 30 monitoring period).
Monitoring commences with the first full monitoring period after the owner
is granted coverage under the permit. Monitoring periods are specified in Part
I A 2.
Note: Facilities discharging to waters impaired for PCBs shall follow the monitoring schedule and the pollutant minimization plan (PMP) requirements described in the written notification from the department.
(c) Samples shall be collected and analyzed in accordance with
Part I A 2. Monitoring results shall be reported in accordance with Part I A 4
5 and Part II C, and retained in accordance with Part II B.
(d) If the pollutant subject to the TMDL waste load allocation
is not detected in any of the samples from the first four monitoring periods
(i.e., the first two years of coverage under the permit), the permittee may
request to the department board in writing that further sampling
be discontinued, unless the TMDL has specific instructions to the contrary (in
which case those instructions shall be followed). The laboratory certificate
of analysis shall be submitted with the request. If approved, documentation
of this shall be kept with the SWPPP.
If the pollutant subject to the TMDL waste load allocation is detected in any of the samples from the first four monitoring periods, the permittee shall continue the scheduled TMDL monitoring throughout the term of the permit.
(4) Facilities discharging to an impaired water without a
board established and EPA-approved an approved TMDL wasteload
allocation.
(a) Upon written notification from the department, facilities
discharging to an impaired water without a board established and
EPA-approved an approved TMDL wasteload allocation will be required
to monitor such discharges for the pollutant(s) that caused the impairment.
(b) Permittees shall monitor the discharges for all pollutants
for which the waterbody is impaired, and for which a standard analytical method
exists, at least once during each of the monitoring periods after the
facility is granted coverage under the permit begins. If a
facility's permit coverage is effective less than one month from the end of a
monitoring period, the facility's first monitoring period starts with the next
respective monitoring period (e.g., if permit coverage begins December 5, the
permittee will not need to start the impaired water monitoring until the next
January-December monitoring period). Monitoring commences with the first
full monitoring period after the owner is granted coverage under the permit.
Monitoring periods are specified in Part I A 2.
Note: Facilities discharging to waters impaired for PCBs shall follow the monitoring schedule and the pollutant minimization plan (PMP) requirements described in the written notification from the department.
(c) The impaired water monitoring periods are as follows:
(i) July 1, 2009, to December 31, 2009; (ii) January 1, 2010, to December 31,
2010; (iii) January 1, 2011, to December 31, 2011; (iv) January 1, 2012, to
December 31, 2012; and (v) January 1, 2013, to December 31, 2013.
(d) (c) If the pollutant for which the waterbody
is impaired is suspended solids, turbidity or sediment/sedimentation,
or sediment, or sedimentation, monitor for Total Suspended Solids total
suspended solids (TSS). If the pollutant for which the waterbody is
impaired is expressed in the form of an indicator or surrogate pollutant,
monitor for that indicator or surrogate pollutant. No monitoring is required
when a waterbody's biological communities are impaired but no pollutant,
including indicator or surrogate pollutants, is specified as causing the
impairment, or when a waterbody's impairment is related to hydrologic
modifications, impaired hydrology, or temperature.
Samples shall be collected and analyzed in accordance with
Part I A 2. Monitoring results shall be reported in accordance with Part I A 4
5 and Part II C, and retained in accordance with Part II B.
(e) (d) If the pollutant for which the water is
impaired is not present in the discharges from the facility, or it is present
but its presence is caused solely by natural background sources, a notification
to this effect shall be included in the first discharge monitoring report
submitted by the facility, after which the permittee may request to the
board in writing that further impaired water monitoring may be
discontinued. The laboratory certificate of analysis shall be submitted with
the request. If approved, documentation of this shall be kept with the SWPPP.
To support a determination that the pollutant's presence is caused solely by natural background sources, the following documentation shall be submitted with the request and kept with the SWPPP: (i) an explanation of why it is believed that the presence of the impairment pollutant in the facility's discharge is not related to the activities at the facility; and (ii) data or studies that tie the presence of the impairment pollutant in the facility's discharge to natural background sources in the watershed. Natural background pollutants include those substances that are naturally occurring in soils or groundwater. Natural background pollutants do not include legacy pollutants from earlier activity at the facility's site, or pollutants in run-on from neighboring sources that are not naturally occurring.
2. Monitoring instructions.
a. Collection and analysis of samples. Sampling requirements shall be assessed on an outfall by outfall basis. Samples shall be collected and analyzed in accordance with the requirements of Part II A.
b. When and how to sample. A minimum of one grab sample shall
be taken from the discharge associated with industrial activity resulting from
a storm event that results in an actual discharge from the site (defined as a
"measurable storm event"), providing the interval from the preceding
measurable storm event is at least 72 hours. The 72-hour storm interval is
waived if the permittee is able to document that less than a 72-hour interval
is representative for local storm events during the sampling period. In the
case of snowmelt, the monitoring must shall be performed at a
time when a measurable discharge occurs at the site. For discharges from a
storm water management structure, the monitoring shall be performed at a time
when a measurable discharge occurs from the structure.
The grab sample shall be taken during the first 30 minutes of
the discharge. If it is not practicable to take the sample during the first 30
minutes, the sample may be taken during the first hour three hours
of the discharge, provided that the permittee explains why a grab
sample during the first 30 minutes was impracticable. This information shall be
submitted on or with the Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR), or and
maintained with the SWPPP if reports are not required to be submitted.
If the sampled discharge commingles with process or nonprocess water, the
permittee shall attempt to sample the storm water discharge before it mixes
with the nonstorm water.
c. Storm event data. For each monitoring event (except snowmelt monitoring), along with the monitoring results, the permittee shall identify the date and duration (in hours) of the storm event(s) sampled; rainfall total (in inches) of the storm event that generated the sampled runoff; and the duration between the storm event sampled and the end of the previous measurable storm event. For snowmelt monitoring, the permittee shall identify the date of the sampling event.
d. Monitoring periods.
(1) Quarterly visual monitoring. The quarterly visual examinations shall be made at least once in each of the following three-month periods each year of permit coverage: January through March, April through June, July through September, and October through December.
(2) Benchmark monitoring, effluent limitation monitoring, and impaired waters monitoring (for waters both with and without an approved TMDL). Monitoring shall be conducted at least once in each of the following semiannual periods each year of permit coverage: January through June, and July through December.
d. e. Documentation explaining a facility's
inability to obtain a sample (including dates/times dates and times
the outfalls were viewed and/or or sampling was attempted), of no
rain event, or of no "measurable" storm event shall be maintained
with the SWPPP. Acceptable documentation includes, but is not limited to, NCDC
National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) weather station data, local weather
station data, facility rainfall logs, and other appropriate supporting data.
f. Representative outfalls - substantially identical discharges. If the facility has two or more outfalls that discharge substantially identical effluents, based on similarities of the industrial activities, significant materials, size of drainage areas, and storm water management practices occurring within the drainage areas of the outfalls, the permittee may conduct monitoring on the effluent of just one of the outfalls and report that the observations also apply to the substantially identical outfall or outfalls. The substantially identical outfall monitoring provisions apply to quarterly visual monitoring, benchmark monitoring, and impaired waters monitoring (both those with and without an approved TMDL). The substantially identical outfall monitoring provisions are not available for numeric effluent limits monitoring.
The permittee shall include the following information in the SWPPP:
(1) The locations of the outfalls;
(2) Why the outfalls are expected to discharge substantially identical effluents, including evaluation of monitoring data where available; and
(3) Estimates of the size of the drainage area (in square feet) for each of the outfalls.
3. Adverse climatic conditions waiver. When adverse weather conditions prevent the collection of samples, a substitute sample may be taken during a qualifying storm event in the next monitoring period. Adverse weather conditions are those that are dangerous or create inaccessibility for personnel, and may include such things as local flooding, high winds, electrical storms, or situations that otherwise make sampling impracticable, such as drought or extended frozen conditions. Unless specifically stated otherwise, this waiver may be applied to any monitoring required under this permit.
4. Inactive and unstaffed sites (including temporarily inactive sites).
a. A waiver of the quarterly visual assessments, routine facility inspections, and monitoring requirements (including benchmark, effluent limitation, and impaired waters monitoring) may be granted by the board at a facility that is both inactive and unstaffed, as long as the facility remains inactive and unstaffed and there are no industrial materials or activities exposed to stormwater. The owner of such a facility is only required to conduct an annual comprehensive site inspection in accordance with the requirements in Part III E.
b. An inactive and unstaffed sites waiver request shall be submitted to the board for approval and shall include: the name of the facility; the facility's VPDES general permit registration number; a contact person, phone number and email address (if available); the reason for the request; and the date the facility became or will become inactive and unstaffed. The waiver request shall be signed and certified in accordance with Part II K. If this waiver is granted, a copy of the request and the board's written approval of the waiver shall be maintained with the SWPPP.
c. If circumstances change and industrial materials or activities become exposed to stormwater, or the facility becomes either active or staffed, the permittee shall notify the department within 30 days, and all quarterly visual assessments, routine facility inspections, and monitoring requirements shall be resumed immediately.
d. The board retains the right to revoke this waiver when it is determined that the discharge is causing, has a reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to a water quality standards violation.
e. Inactive and unstaffed facilities covered under Sector G (Metal Mining) and Sector H (Coal Mines and Coal Mining-Related Facilities) are not required to meet the "no industrial materials or activities exposed to stormwater" standard to be eligible for this waiver, consistent with the conditional exemption requirements established in Part IV Sector G and Part IV Sector H.
4. 5. Reporting monitoring results.
a. Reporting to the department. Depending on the types of monitoring
required at a permitted facility, monitoring results may have to be submitted
to the department, or they may only have to be kept with the SWPPP. The
permittee shall follow the reporting requirements and deadlines below for the
types of monitoring that apply to the facility:
TABLE 70-4 |
|
|
|
Semiannual Monitoring |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Quarterly Visual Monitoring |
Retain results with SWPPP - do not submit unless requested to do so by the department. |
|
|
Permittees that are required to submit monitoring shall
submit results for each outfall associated with industrial activity according
to the requirements of Part II C. For each outfall sampled, one signed
discharge monitoring report (DMR) form shall be submitted to the department per
storm event sampled. For representative outfalls, the sampled outfall will
be reported on the DMR, and the outfalls that are representative of the sampled
outfall will be listed in the comment section of the DMR. Signed DMRs are not
required for each of the outfalls that are representative of the sampled
outfall.
b. Additional reporting. In addition to filing submitting
copies of discharge monitoring reports in accordance with Part II C, permittees
with at least one storm water discharge associated with industrial activity
through a regulated municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4), or a
municipal system designated by the director, must shall submit
signed copies of DMRs to the MS4 operator at the same time as the reports
are submitted to the department. Permittees not required to report
monitoring data and permittees that are not otherwise required to monitor their
discharges need not comply with this provision.
c. Significant digits. The permittee shall report at least the same number of significant digits as a numeric effluent limitation or TMDL wasteload allocation for a given parameter; otherwise, at least two significant digits shall be reported for a given parameter. Regardless of the rounding convention used by the permittee (i.e., five always rounding up or to the nearest even number), the permittee shall use the convention consistently and shall ensure that consulting laboratories employed by the permittee use the same convention.
5. 6. Corrective actions.
a. Data exceeding benchmarks concentration values.
(1) If the benchmark monitoring result exceeds the benchmark
concentration value for that parameter, the permittee must shall
review the SWPPP and modify it as necessary to address any deficiencies that
caused the exceedance. Revisions to the SWPPP must shall be
completed within 30 days after an exceedance is discovered. When BMPs need to
be modified or added (distinct from regular preventive maintenance of existing
BMPs described in Part III C), implementation must shall be
completed before the next anticipated storm event if possible, but no later
than 60 days after the exceedance is discovered, or as otherwise provided or
approved by the department. In cases where construction is necessary to
implement BMPs, the permittee shall include a schedule in the SWPPP that
provides for the completion of the BMPs as expeditiously as practicable, but no
later than three years after the exceedance is discovered. Where a construction
compliance schedule is included in the SWPPP, the plan shall include
appropriate nonstructural and/or and temporary controls to be
implemented in the affected portion(s) of the facility prior to completion of
the permanent BMP. Any BMP modifications must shall be documented
and dated, and retained with the SWPPP, along with the amount of time taken to
modify the applicable BMPs or implement additional BMPs.
(2) Natural background pollutant levels. If the concentration of a pollutant exceeds a benchmark concentration value, and the permittee determines that exceedance of the benchmark is attributable solely to the presence of that pollutant in the natural background, corrective action is not required provided that:
(a) The concentration of the benchmark monitoring result is less than or equal to the concentration of that pollutant in the natural background;
(b) The permittee documents and maintains with the SWPPP the supporting rationale for concluding that benchmark exceedances are in fact attributable solely to natural background pollutant levels. The supporting rationale shall include any data previously collected by the facility or others (including literature studies) that describe the levels of natural background pollutants in the facility's storm water discharges; and
(c) The permittee notifies the department on the benchmark monitoring DMR that the benchmark exceedances are attributable solely to natural background pollutant levels.
Natural background pollutants include those substances that are naturally occurring in soils or groundwater. Natural background pollutants do not include legacy pollutants from earlier activity on the facility's site, or pollutants in run-on from neighboring sources that are not naturally occurring.
b. Corrective actions. The permittee must shall
take corrective action whenever:
(1) Routine facility inspections, comprehensive site compliance evaluations, inspections by local, state or federal officials, or any other process, observation or event result in a determination that modifications to the storm water control measures are necessary to meet the permit requirements; or
(2) There is any exceedance of an effluent limitation
(including coal pile runoff), or TMDL wasteload allocation, or a
reduction required by a local ordinance established by a municipality to meet
Chesapeake Bay TMDL requirements;
(3) The department determines, or the permittee becomes aware, that the storm water control measures are not stringent enough for the discharge to meet applicable water quality standards.
The permittee must shall review the SWPPP and
modify it as necessary to address any deficiencies. Revisions to the SWPPP must
shall be completed within 30 days following the discovery of the
deficiency. When BMPs need to be modified or added (distinct from regular
preventive maintenance of existing BMPs described in Part III C),
implementation must shall be completed before the next
anticipated storm event if possible, but no later than 60 days after the
deficiency is discovered, or as otherwise provided or approved by the
department. In cases where construction is necessary to implement BMPs, the
permittee shall include a schedule in the SWPPP that provides for the
completion of the BMPs as expeditiously as practicable, but no later than three
years after the deficiency is discovered. Where a construction compliance
schedule is included in the SWPPP, the plan shall include appropriate
nonstructural and/or and temporary controls to be implemented in the
affected portion(s) of the facility prior to completion of the permanent BMP.
The amount of time taken to modify a BMP or implement additional BMPs must
shall be documented in the SWPPP.
Any corrective actions taken must shall be
documented and retained with the SWPPP. Reports of corrective actions must
shall be signed in accordance with Part II K.
c. Follow-up monitoring and reporting. If at any time
monitoring results indicate that discharges from the facility exceed an
effluent limitation or a TMDL wasteload allocation, or the department
determines that discharges from the facility are causing or contributing to an
exceedance of a water quality standard, immediate steps must shall
be taken to eliminate the exceedances in accordance with the above Part I A 5
6 b (Corrective actions). Within 30 calendar days of implementing the
relevant corrective action(s) (or during the next qualifying runoff event,
should none occur within 30 calendar days) follow-up monitoring must be
undertaken to verify that the BMPs that were modified are effectively
protecting water quality. Follow-up monitoring need only be conducted for
pollutant(s) with prior exceedances unless there are reasons to believe that
facility modifications may have reduced pollutant prevention or removal
capacity for other pollutants of concern.
The follow-up monitoring data must be submitted to the
department no later than 30 days after the results are received. If the
follow-up monitoring value does not exceed the effluent limitation or other
relevant standard, no additional follow-up monitoring is required for this
corrective action.
Should the follow-up monitoring indicate that the effluent
limitation, TMDL wasteload allocation, water quality standard or other relevant
standard is still being exceeded, an exceedance report must shall
be submitted to the department no later than 30 days after the follow-up
monitoring results are received. The following information must shall
be included in the report: general permit registration number;
facility name, address, and location; receiving water; monitoring data
from this and the preceding monitoring event(s) event; an
explanation of the situation; description of what has been done and the
intended actions (should the corrective actions not yet be complete) to further
reduce pollutants in the discharge; and an appropriate contact name and phone
number. Additional follow-up monitoring must be continued at an appropriate
frequency, but no less often than quarterly, until the discharge no longer
exceeds the standard.
B. Special conditions.
1. Allowable nonstorm water discharges. Except as provided in this section or in Part IV (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.), all discharges covered by this permit shall be composed entirely of storm water. The following nonstorm water discharges are authorized by this permit:
a. Discharges from fire fighting activities;
b. Fire hydrant flushings;
c. Potable water including water line flushings;
d. Uncontaminated air conditioning or compressor condensate
(excluding air compressors) condensate from air conditioners, coolers,
and other compressors and from the outside storage of refrigerated gases or
liquids;
e. Irrigation drainage;
f. Landscape watering provided all pesticides, herbicides, and
fertilizer have been applied in accordance with manufacturer's instructions
the approved labeling;
g. Routine external building wash down washdown
that does not use detergents;
h. Pavement wash waters where no detergents are used and no spills or leaks of toxic or hazardous materials have occurred (unless all spilled material has been removed);
i. Uncontaminated ground water or spring water;
j. Foundation or footing drains where flows are not contaminated with process materials; and
k. Incidental windblown mist from cooling towers that collects on rooftops or adjacent portions of the facility, but not intentional discharges from the cooling tower (e.g., "piped" cooling tower blowdown or drains).
All other nonstorm water discharges shall be in compliance
with a are not authorized and shall either be eliminated or covered
under a separate VPDES permit (other than this permit) issued for the
discharge.
The following nonstorm water discharges are specifically not authorized by this permit:
Sector A - Timber products. Discharges of storm water from areas where there may be contact with chemical formulations sprayed to provide surface protection.
Sector C - Chemical and allied products manufacturing. Inks, paints, or substances (hazardous, nonhazardous, etc.) resulting from an on-site spill, including materials collected in drip pans; washwaters from material handling and processing areas; or washwaters from drum, tank, or container rinsing and cleaning.
Sector G - Metal mining (ore mining and dressing). Adit drainage or contaminated springs or seeps; and contaminated seeps and springs discharging from waste rock dumps that do not directly result from precipitation events.
Sector H - Coal mines and coal mining-related facilities. Discharges from pollutant seeps or underground drainage from inactive coal mines and refuse disposal areas that do not result from precipitation events; and discharges from floor drains in maintenance buildings and other similar drains in mining and preparation plant areas.
Sector I - Oil and gas extraction and refining. Discharges of vehicle and equipment washwater, including tank cleaning operations.
Sector K - Hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal facilities. Leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids, contaminated ground water, laboratory-derived wastewater and contact washwater from washing truck, equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that have come in direct contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
Sector L - Landfills, land application sites and open dumps. Leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids, contaminated ground water, laboratory wastewater, and contact washwater from washing truck, equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that have come in direct contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
Sector N - Scrap recycling and waste recycling facilities. Discharges from turnings containment areas in the absence of a storm event.
Sector O - Steam electric generating facilities. Nonstorm water discharges subject to effluent limitation guidelines.
Sector P - Land transportation and warehousing. Vehicle/equipment/surface
Vehicle, equipment, or surface washwater, including tank cleaning
operations.
Sector Q - Water transportation. Bilge and ballast water, sanitary wastes, pressure wash water, and cooling water originating from vessels.
Sector R - Ship and boat building or repair yards. Bilge and ballast water, pressure wash water, sanitary wastes, and cooling water originating from vessels.
Sector S - Air transportation. Aircraft, ground vehicle, runway
and equipment washwaters; and dry weather discharges of deicing/anti-icing
deicing and anti-icing chemicals.
Sector T - Treatment works. Sanitary and industrial wastewater;
and equipment/vehicle equipment or vehicle washwaters.
Sector U - Food and kindred products. Boiler blowdown, cooling
tower overflow and blowdown, ammonia refrigeration purging, and vehicle washing/clean-out
washing and clean-out operations.
Sector V - Textile mills, apparel, and other fabric products.
Discharges of wastewater (e.g., wastewater as a result of wet processing or
from any processes relating to the production process); reused/recycled reused
or recycled water; and waters used in cooling towers.
2. Releases of hazardous substances or oil in excess of
reportable quantities. The discharge of hazardous substances or oil in the
storm water discharge(s) from the facility shall be prevented or minimized in
accordance with the storm water pollution prevention plan for the facility.
This permit does not authorize the discharge of hazardous substances or oil
resulting from an on-site spill. This permit does not relieve the permittee of
the reporting requirements of 40 CFR Part 110 (2007), 40 CFR Part 117 (2007),
and 40 CFR Part 302 (2007) or § 62.1-44.34:19 of the Code of Virginia.
Where a release containing a hazardous substance or oil in an
amount equal to or in excess of a reportable quantity established under either
40 CFR Part 110 (2007), 40 CFR Part 117 (2007), or 40 CFR
Part 302 (2007) occurs during a 24-hour period:
a. The permittee is required to notify the department in accordance with the requirements of Part II G as soon as he has knowledge of the discharge;
b. Where a release enters a municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4), the permittee shall also notify the owner of the MS4; and
c. The storm water pollution prevention plan required under Part III shall be reviewed to identify measures to prevent the reoccurrence of such releases and to respond to such releases, and the plan shall be modified where appropriate.
3. Colocated industrial activity. If the facility has industrial activities occurring on-site which are described by any of the activities in Part IV of the permit (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.), those industrial activities are considered to be colocated industrial activities. Storm water discharges from colocated industrial activities are authorized by this permit, provided that the permittee complies with any and all additional pollution prevention plan and monitoring requirements from Part IV applicable to that particular colocated industrial activity. The permittee shall determine which additional pollution prevention plan and monitoring requirements are applicable to the colocated industrial activity by examining the narrative descriptions of each coverage section (Discharges covered under this section).
4. The storm water discharges authorized by this permit may be combined with other sources of storm water which are not required to be covered under a VPDES permit, so long as the combined discharge is in compliance with this permit.
5. There shall be no discharge of waste, garbage, or
floating solids or visible foam debris in other than trace
amounts.
6. Salt storage piles or piles containing salt. Storage
piles of salt or piles containing salt used for deicing or other commercial or
industrial purposes shall be enclosed or covered to prevent exposure to
precipitation. The permittee shall implement appropriate measures (e.g., good
housekeeping, diversions, containment) to minimize exposure resulting from
adding to or removing materials from the pile. All salt storage piles shall be
located on an impervious surface. All runoff from the pile, and/or runoff that
comes in contact with salt, including under drain systems, shall be collected
and contained within a bermed basin lined with concrete or other impermeable
materials, or within an underground storage tank(s), or within an above ground
storage tank(s), or disposed of through a sanitary sewer (with the permission of
the treatment facility). A combination of any or all of these methods may be
used. In no case shall salt contaminated storm water be allowed to discharge
directly to the ground or to state waters.
7. 6. Discharges to waters subject to TMDL
wasteload allocations.
Facilities a. Owners of facilities that are a
source of the specified pollutant of concern to waters for which a "total
maximum daily load" (TMDL) wasteload allocation has been established
by the board and approved by EPA prior to the term of this permit
shall incorporate measures and controls into the SWPPP required by Part III
that are consistent with the assumptions and requirements of the TMDL. The
department will provide written notification to the owner that a facility is
subject to the TMDL requirements. The facility's SWPPP shall specifically
address any conditions or requirements included in the TMDL that are applicable
to discharges from the facility. If the TMDL establishes a specific numeric
wasteload allocation that applies to discharges from the facility, the owner
shall perform any required monitoring in accordance with Part I A 1 c (3), and
implement BMPs designed to meet that allocation.
b. Facilities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed.
(1) Owners of facilities in the Chesapeake Bay watershed shall monitor their discharges for total suspended solids (TSS), total nitrogen (TN), and total phosphorus (TP) to characterize the contributions from their facility's specific industrial sector for these parameters, After the facility is granted coverage under the permit, samples shall be collected during each of the first four monitoring periods (i.e., the first two years of permit coverage). Monitoring periods are specified in Part I A 2. Samples shall be collected and analyzed in accordance with Part I A 2. Monitoring results shall be reported in accordance with Part I A 5 and Part II C, and retained in accordance with Part II B.
7. Discharges through a Virginia Stormwater Management Program (VSMP) regulated MS4 to waters subject to the Chesapeake Bay TMDL. Any facility with industrial activity discharges through a VSMP regulated MS4 that is notified by the MS4 operator that the locality has adopted ordinances to meet the Chesapeake Bay TMDL shall incorporate measures and controls into their SWPPP to comply with the local ordinances.
8. Expansion of facilities that discharge to waters subject to the Chesapeake Bay TMDL.
a. After November 29, 2010, (the date of Virginia's Phase I Chesapeake Bay TMDL Watershed Implementation Plan), the waste loads from any expansion of an existing permitted facility discharging storm water in the Chesapeake Bay watershed cannot exceed the nutrient and sediment loadings that were discharged from the expanded portion of the land prior to the land being developed for the industrial activity.
b. The permittee shall document in the SWPPP the information and calculations used to determine the nutrient and sediment loadings discharged from the expanded portion of the land prior to the land being developed and the measures and controls that were employed to meet the no net increase of storm water nutrient and sediment load as a result of the expansion of the industrial activity.
c. The permittee may use the VSMP water quality design criteria to meet the requirements of subdivisions a and b of this subsection. Under this criteria, the total phosphorus load shall not exceed the greater of: (i) the total phosphorus load that was discharged from the expanded portion of the land prior to the land being developed for the industrial activity or (ii) 0.41 pounds per acre per year. Compliance with the water quality design criteria may be determined utilizing the Virginia Runoff Reduction Method or another equivalent methodology approved by the board. Design specifications and pollutant removal efficiencies for BMPs can be found on the Virginia Storm Water BMP Clearinghouse website at http://www.vwrrc.vt.edu/swc.
d. The facility owner may acquire nutrient credits to meet the no net increase requirement in accordance with applicable regulations.
8. 9. Water quality protection. The discharges
authorized by this permit shall be controlled as necessary to meet applicable
water quality standards. The permittee shall employ an iterative, BMP-based
program to select, install, implement and maintain best management practices
(BMPs) at the facility designed to minimize pollutants in the storm water
discharges, and to address any exceedance of any applicable water quality
standard, effluent limitation, or TMDL waste load allocation. The board
expects that compliance with the conditions in this permit will control
discharges as necessary to meet applicable water quality standards. If there
is evidence indicating that the storm water discharges authorized by this
permit are causing, have the reasonable potential to cause, or are contributing
to an excursion above an applicable water quality standard, an excursion above
a TMDL wasteload allocation, or are causing downstream pollution (as defined in
§ 62.1-44.3 of the Code of Virginia), the board may require the permittee to
take corrective action in accordance with Part I A 5 b and c, and include and
implement appropriate controls in the SWPPP to correct the problem, or may
require the permittee to obtain an individual permit in accordance with
9VAC25-31-170 B 3.
9. Adding/deleting 10. Adding or deleting storm
water outfalls. The permittee may add new and/or or delete
existing storm water outfalls at the facility as necessary/appropriate necessary
and appropriate. The permittee shall update the SWPPP and notify the
department of all outfall changes within 30 days of the change. The permittee
shall submit a copy of the updated SWPPP site map with their notification.
10. 11. Antidegradation requirements for new or
increased discharges to high quality waters. Facilities that add new outfalls,
or increase their discharges from existing outfalls that discharge directly to
high quality waters designated under Virginia's water quality standards antidegradation
policy under 9VAC25-260-30 A 2 may be notified by the department that
additional control measures, or other permit conditions are necessary to comply
with the applicable antidegradation requirements, or may be notified that an
individual permit is required in accordance with 9VAC25-31-170 B 3.
12. If the permittee discharges to surface waters through a municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4), the permittee shall, within 30 days of coverage under this general permit, notify the owner of the MS4 in writing of the existence of the discharge and provide the following information: the name of the facility, a contact person and phone number, the location of the discharge, the nature of the discharge, and the facility's VPDES general permit registration number. A copy of such notification shall be provided to the department.
13. Termination of permit coverage.
a. The owner may terminate coverage under this general permit by filing a complete notice of termination. The notice of termination may be filed after one or more of the following conditions have been met:
(1) Operations have ceased at the facility and there are no longer discharges of storm water associated with industrial activity from the facility;
(2) A new owner has assumed responsibility for the facility (Note: A notice of termination does not have to be submitted if a VPDES Change of Ownership Agreement Form has been submitted);
(3) All storm water discharges associated with industrial activity have been covered by an individual VPDES permit; or
(4) Termination of coverage is being requested for another reason, provided the board agrees that coverage under this general permit is no longer needed.
b. The notice of termination shall contain the following information:
(1) Owner's name, mailing address, telephone number, and email address (if available);
(2) Facility name and location;
(3) VPDES industrial storm water general permit registration number;
(4) The basis for submitting the notice of termination, including:
(a) A statement indicating that a new owner has assumed responsibility for the facility;
(b) A statement indicating that operations have ceased at the facility, and there are no longer discharges of storm water associated with industrial activity from the facility;
(c) A statement indicating that all storm water discharges associated with industrial activity have been covered by an individual VPDES permit; or
(d) A statement indicating that termination of coverage is being requested for another reason (state the reason); and
(5) The following certification: "I certify under penalty of law that all storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from the identified facility that are authorized by this VPDES general permit have been eliminated, or covered under a VPDES individual permit, or that I am no longer the owner of the industrial activity, or permit coverage should be terminated for another reason listed above. I understand that by submitting this notice of termination, that I am no longer authorized to discharge storm water associated with industrial activity in accordance with the general permit, and that discharging pollutants in storm water associated with industrial activity to surface waters is unlawful where the discharge is not authorized by a VPDES permit. I also understand that the submittal of this notice of termination does not release an owner from liability for any violations of this permit or the Clean Water Act."
c. The notice of termination shall be signed in accordance with Part II K.
d. The notice of termination shall be submitted to the DEQ regional office serving the area where the industrial facility is located.
Part II
Conditions Applicable to All VPDES Permits
A. Monitoring.
1. Samples and measurements taken as required by this permit shall be representative of the monitored activity.
2. Monitoring shall be conducted according to procedures
approved under 40 CFR Part 136 (2007) or alternative methods approved by
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, unless other procedures have been
specified in this permit.
3. The permittee shall periodically calibrate and perform maintenance procedures on all monitoring and analytical instrumentation at intervals that will insure accuracy of measurements.
4. Samples taken as required by this permit shall be analyzed in accordance with 1VAC30-45 (Certification for Noncommercial Environmental Laboratories) or 1VAC30-46 (Accreditation for Commercial Environmental Laboratories).
B. Records.
1. Records of monitoring information shall include:
a. The date, exact place, and time of sampling or measurements;
b. The individual(s) who performed the sampling or measurements;
c. The date(s) and time(s) analyses were performed;
d. The individual(s) who performed the analyses;
e. The analytical techniques or methods used; and
f. The results of such analyses.
2. The permittee shall retain copies of the SWPPP, including any modifications made during the term of this permit, records of all monitoring information, including all calibration and maintenance records and all original strip chart recordings for continuous monitoring instrumentation, copies of all reports required by this permit, and records of all data used to complete the registration statement for this permit, for a period of at least three years from the date that coverage under this permit expires or is terminated. This period of retention shall be extended automatically during the course of any unresolved litigation regarding the regulated activity or regarding control standards applicable to the permittee, or as requested by the board.
C. Reporting monitoring results.
1. The permittee shall submit the results of the monitoring required by this permit not later than the 10th day of the month after monitoring takes place, unless another reporting schedule is specified elsewhere in this permit. Monitoring results shall be submitted to the department's regional office.
2. Monitoring results shall be reported on a discharge monitoring report (DMR) or on forms provided, approved or specified by the department.
3. If the permittee monitors any pollutant specifically
addressed by this permit more frequently than required by this permit using
test procedures approved under 40 CFR Part 136 (2007) or using other
test procedures approved by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency or using
procedures specified in this permit, the results of this monitoring shall be
included in the calculation and reporting of the data submitted on the DMR or
reporting form specified by the department.
4. Calculations for all limitations which require averaging of measurements shall utilize an arithmetic mean unless otherwise specified in this permit.
D. Duty to provide information. The permittee shall furnish to
the department, within a reasonable time, any information which the board may
request to determine whether cause exists for modifying, revoking and
reissuing, or terminating coverage under this permit or to determine
compliance with this permit. The board may require the permittee to furnish,
upon request, such plans, specifications, and other pertinent information as
may be necessary to determine the effect of the wastes from his the
discharge on the quality of state waters, or such other information as may be
necessary to accomplish the purposes of the State Water Control Law. The
permittee shall also furnish to the department upon request, copies of records
required to be kept by this permit.
E. Compliance schedule reports. Reports of compliance or noncompliance with, or any progress reports on, interim and final requirements contained in any compliance schedule of this permit shall be submitted no later than 14 days following each schedule date.
F. Unauthorized discharges. Except in compliance with this permit, or another permit issued by the board, it shall be unlawful for any person to:
1. Discharge into state waters sewage, industrial wastes, other wastes, or any noxious or deleterious substances; or
2. Otherwise alter the physical, chemical or biological properties of such state waters and make them detrimental to the public health, or to animal or aquatic life, or to the use of such waters for domestic or industrial consumption, or for recreation, or for other uses.
G. Reports of unauthorized discharges. Any permittee who discharges or causes or allows a discharge of sewage, industrial waste, other wastes or any noxious or deleterious substance into or upon state waters in violation of Part II F; or who discharges or causes or allows a discharge that may reasonably be expected to enter state waters in violation of Part II F, shall notify the department of the discharge immediately upon discovery of the discharge, but in no case later than 24 hours after said discovery. A written report of the unauthorized discharge shall be submitted to the department within five days of discovery of the discharge. The written report shall contain:
1. A description of the nature and location of the discharge;
2. The cause of the discharge;
3. The date on which the discharge occurred;
4. The length of time that the discharge continued;
5. The volume of the discharge;
6. If the discharge is continuing, how long it is expected to continue;
7. If the discharge is continuing, what the expected total volume of the discharge will be; and
8. Any steps planned or taken to reduce, eliminate and prevent a recurrence of the present discharge or any future discharges not authorized by this permit.
Discharges reportable to the department under the immediate reporting requirements of other regulations are exempted from this requirement.
H. Reports of unusual or extraordinary discharges. If any unusual or extraordinary discharge including a bypass or upset should occur from a treatment works and the discharge enters or could be expected to enter state waters, the permittee shall promptly notify, in no case later than 24 hours, the department by telephone after the discovery of the discharge. This notification shall provide all available details of the incident, including any adverse affects on aquatic life and the known number of fish killed. The permittee shall reduce the report to writing and shall submit it to the department within five days of discovery of the discharge in accordance with Part II I 2. Unusual and extraordinary discharges include but are not limited to any discharge resulting from:
1. Unusual spillage of materials resulting directly or indirectly from processing operations;
2. Breakdown of processing or accessory equipment;
3. Failure or taking out of service some or all of the treatment works; and
4. Flooding or other acts of nature.
I. Reports of noncompliance. The permittee shall report any noncompliance which may adversely affect state waters or may endanger public health.
1. An oral report shall be provided within 24 hours from the time the permittee becomes aware of the circumstances. The following shall be included as information which shall be reported within 24 hours under this paragraph:
a. Any unanticipated bypass; and
b. Any upset which causes a discharge to surface waters.
2. A written report shall be submitted within five days and shall contain:
a. A description of the noncompliance and its cause;
b. The period of noncompliance, including exact dates and times, and if the noncompliance has not been corrected, the anticipated time it is expected to continue; and
c. Steps taken or planned to reduce, eliminate, and prevent reoccurrence of the noncompliance.
The board may waive the written report on a case-by-case basis for reports of noncompliance under Part II I if the oral report has been received within 24 hours and no adverse impact on state waters has been reported.
3. The permittee shall report all instances of noncompliance not reported under Part II I 1 or 2, in writing, at the time the next monitoring reports are submitted. The reports shall contain the information listed in Part II I 2.
NOTE: The immediate (within 24 hours) reports required in Part
II G, H and I may be made to the department's regional office. Reports may be
made by telephone or by fax, FAX, or online at
http://www.deq.virginia.gov/Programs/PollutionResponsePreparedness/MakingaReport.aspx.
For reports outside normal working hours, leave a message may be left
and this shall fulfill the immediate reporting requirement. For emergencies,
the Virginia Department of Emergency Management maintains a 24-hour telephone
service at 1-800-468-8892.
J. Notice of planned changes.
1. The permittee shall give notice to the department as soon as possible of any planned physical alterations or additions to the permitted facility. Notice is required only when:
a. The permittee plans alteration or addition to any building, structure, facility, or installation from which there is or may be a discharge of pollutants, the construction of which commenced:
(1) After promulgation of standards of performance under § 306 of the Clean Water Act which are applicable to such source; or
(2) After proposal of standards of performance in accordance with § 306 of the Clean Water Act which are applicable to such source, but only if the standards are promulgated in accordance with § 306 within 120 days of their proposal;
b. The alteration or addition could significantly change the nature or increase the quantity of pollutants discharged. This notification applies to pollutants which are subject neither to effluent limitations nor to notification requirements specified elsewhere in this permit; or
c. The alteration or addition results in a significant change in the permittee's sludge use or disposal practices, and such alteration, addition, or change may justify the application of permit conditions that are different from or absent in the existing permit, including notification of additional use or disposal sites not reported during the permit application process or not reported pursuant to an approved land application plan.
2. The permittee shall give advance notice to the department of any planned changes in the permitted facility or activity which may result in noncompliance with permit requirements.
K. Signatory requirements.
1. Registration statement. All registration statements shall be signed as follows:
a. For a corporation: by a responsible corporate officer. For the
purpose of this section, a responsible corporate officer means: (i) a
president, secretary, treasurer, or vice-president of the corporation in charge
of a principal business function, or any other person who performs similar
policy-making or decision-making functions for the corporation; or (ii) the
manager of one or more manufacturing, production, or operating facilities,
provided the manager is authorized to make management decisions that govern the
operation of the regulated facility including having the explicit or implicit
duty of making major capital investment recommendations, and initiating and
directing other comprehensive measures to assure long-term environmental
compliance with environmental laws and regulations; the manager can ensure that
the necessary systems are established or actions taken to gather complete and
accurate information for permit application registration
requirements; and where authority to sign documents has been assigned or
delegated to the manager in accordance with corporate procedures;
b. For a partnership or sole proprietorship: by a general partner or the proprietor, respectively; or
c. For a municipality, state, federal, or other public agency: by either a principal executive officer or ranking elected official. For purposes of this section, a principal executive officer of a public agency includes: (i) the chief executive officer of the agency, or (ii) a senior executive officer having responsibility for the overall operations of a principal geographic unit of the agency.
2. Reports, etc. All reports required by permits, and other information requested by the board shall be signed by a person described in Part II K 1 or by a duly authorized representative of that person. A person is a duly authorized representative only if:
a. The authorization is made in writing by a person described in Part II K 1;
b. The authorization specifies either an individual or a position having responsibility for the overall operation of the regulated facility or activity such as the position of plant manager, operator of a well or a well field, superintendent, position of equivalent responsibility, or an individual or position having overall responsibility for environmental matters for the company. A duly authorized representative may thus be either a named individual or any individual occupying a named position; and
c. The written authorization is submitted to the department.
3. Changes to authorization. If an authorization under Part II K 2 is no longer accurate because a different individual or position has responsibility for the overall operation of the facility, a new authorization satisfying the requirements of Part II K 2 shall be submitted to the department prior to or together with any reports, or information to be signed by an authorized representative.
4. Certification. Any person signing a document under Part II K 1 or 2 shall make the following certification:
"I certify under penalty of law that this document and all attachments were prepared under my direction or supervision in accordance with a system designed to assure that qualified personnel properly gather and evaluate the information submitted. Based on my inquiry of the person or persons who manage the system, or those persons directly responsible for gathering the information, the information submitted is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, true, accurate, and complete. I am aware that there are significant penalties for submitting false information, including the possibility of fine and imprisonment for knowing violations."
L. Duty to comply. The permittee shall comply with all conditions of this permit. Any permit noncompliance constitutes a violation of the State Water Control Law and the Clean Water Act, except that noncompliance with certain provisions of this permit may constitute a violation of the State Water Control Law but not the Clean Water Act. Permit noncompliance is grounds for enforcement action; for permit termination, revocation and reissuance, or modification; or denial of a permit coverage renewal application.
The permittee shall comply with effluent standards or prohibitions established under § 307(a) of the Clean Water Act for toxic pollutants and with standards for sewage sludge use or disposal established under § 405(d) of the Clean Water Act within the time provided in the regulations that establish these standards or prohibitions or standards for sewage sludge use or disposal, even if this permit has not yet been modified to incorporate the requirement.
M. Duty to reapply. If the permittee wishes to continue an
activity regulated by this permit after the expiration date of this permit, the
permittee shall submit a new registration statement at least 90 60
days before the expiration date of the existing permit, unless permission for a
later date has been granted by the board. The board shall not grant permission
for registration statements to be submitted later than the expiration date of
the existing permit.
N. Effect of a permit. This permit does not convey any property rights in either real or personal property or any exclusive privileges, nor does it authorize any injury to private property or invasion of personal rights, or any infringement of federal, state or local law or regulations.
O. State law. Nothing in this permit shall be construed to preclude the institution of any legal action under, or relieve the permittee from any responsibilities, liabilities, or penalties established pursuant to any other state law or regulation or under authority preserved by § 510 of the Clean Water Act. Except as provided in permit conditions on "bypassing" (Part II U), and "upset" (Part II V) nothing in this permit shall be construed to relieve the permittee from civil and criminal penalties for noncompliance.
P. Oil and hazardous substance liability. Nothing in this permit shall be construed to preclude the institution of any legal action or relieve the permittee from any responsibilities, liabilities, or penalties to which the permittee is or may be subject under §§ 62.1-44.34:14 through 62.1-44.34:23 of the State Water Control Law.
Q. Proper operation and maintenance. The permittee shall at all times properly operate and maintain all facilities and systems of treatment and control (and related appurtenances) which are installed or used by the permittee to achieve compliance with the conditions of this permit. Proper operation and maintenance also includes effective plant performance, adequate funding, adequate staffing, and adequate laboratory and process controls, including appropriate quality assurance procedures. This provision requires the operation of back-up or auxiliary facilities or similar systems which are installed by the permittee only when the operation is necessary to achieve compliance with the conditions of this permit.
R. Disposal of solids or sludges. Solids, sludges or other pollutants removed in the course of treatment or management of pollutants shall be disposed of in a manner so as to prevent any pollutant from such materials from entering state waters.
S. Duty to mitigate. The permittee shall take all reasonable steps to minimize or prevent any discharge or sludge use or disposal in violation of this permit which has a reasonable likelihood of adversely affecting human health or the environment.
T. Need to halt or reduce activity not a defense. It shall not be a defense for a permittee in an enforcement action that it would have been necessary to halt or reduce the permitted activity in order to maintain compliance with the conditions of this permit.
U. Bypass.
1. "Bypass" means the intentional diversion of waste streams from any portion of a treatment facility. The permittee may allow any bypass to occur which does not cause effluent limitations to be exceeded, but only if it also is for essential maintenance to assure efficient operation. These bypasses are not subject to the provisions of Part II U 2 and 3.
2. Notice.
a. Anticipated bypass. If the permittee knows in advance of the need for a bypass, prior notice shall be submitted, if possible at least 10 days before the date of the bypass.
b. Unanticipated bypass. The permittee shall submit notice of an unanticipated bypass as required in Part II I.
3. Prohibition of bypass.
a. Bypass is prohibited, and the board may take enforcement action against a permittee for bypass, unless:
(1) Bypass was unavoidable to prevent loss of life, personal injury, or severe property damage;
(2) There were no feasible alternatives to the bypass, such as the use of auxiliary treatment facilities, retention of untreated wastes, or maintenance during normal periods of equipment downtime. This condition is not satisfied if adequate back-up equipment should have been installed in the exercise of reasonable engineering judgment to prevent a bypass which occurred during normal periods of equipment downtime or preventive maintenance; and
(3) The permittee submitted notices as required under Part II U 2.
b. The board may approve an anticipated bypass, after considering its adverse effects, if the board determines that it will meet the three conditions listed above in Part II U 3 a.
V. Upset.
1. An upset constitutes an affirmative defense to an action brought for noncompliance with technology based permit effluent limitations if the requirements of Part II V 2 are met. A determination made during administrative review of claims that noncompliance was caused by upset, and before an action for noncompliance, is not a final administrative action subject to judicial review.
2. A permittee who wishes to establish the affirmative defense of upset shall demonstrate, through properly signed, contemporaneous operating logs, or other relevant evidence that:
a. An upset occurred and that the permittee can identify the cause(s) of the upset;
b. The permitted facility was at the time being properly operated;
c. The permittee submitted notice of the upset as required in Part II I; and
d. The permittee complied with any remedial measures required under Part II S.
3. In any enforcement proceeding the permittee seeking to establish the occurrence of an upset has the burden of proof.
W. Inspection and entry. The permittee shall allow the director, or an authorized representative, upon presentation of credentials and other documents as may be required by law, to:
1. Enter upon the permittee's premises where a regulated facility or activity is located or conducted, or where records must be kept under the conditions of this permit;
2. Have access to and copy, at reasonable times, any records that must be kept under the conditions of this permit;
3. Inspect at reasonable times any facilities, equipment (including monitoring and control equipment), practices, or operations regulated or required under this permit; and
4. Sample or monitor at reasonable times, for the purposes of assuring permit compliance or as otherwise authorized by the Clean Water Act and the State Water Control Law, any substances or parameters at any location.
For purposes of this section, the time for inspection shall be deemed reasonable during regular business hours, and whenever the facility is discharging. Nothing contained herein shall make an inspection unreasonable during an emergency.
X. Permit actions. Permits may be modified, revoked and reissued, or terminated for cause. The filing of a request by the permittee for a permit modification, revocation and reissuance, or termination, or a notification of planned changes or anticipated noncompliance does not stay any permit condition.
Y. Transfer of permits.
1. Permits are not transferable to any person except
after notice to the department. Except as provided in Part II Y 2, a permit
may be transferred by the permittee to a new owner or operator only if the
permit has been modified or revoked and reissued, or a minor modification made,
to identify the new permittee and incorporate such other requirements as may be
necessary under the State Water Control Law and the Clean Water Act.
2. As an alternative to transfers under Part II Y 1, Coverage
under this permit may be automatically transferred to a new permittee if:
a. 1. The current permittee notifies the
department at least 30 days in advance of the proposed transfer of the title to
the facility or property, unless permission for a later date has been
granted by the board;
b. 2. The notice includes a written agreement
between the existing and new permittees containing a specific date for transfer
of permit responsibility, coverage, and liability between them; and
c. 3. The board does not notify the existing
permittee and the proposed new permittee of its intent to modify or revoke
and reissue deny the new permittee coverage under the permit. If
this notice is not received, the transfer is effective on the date specified in
the agreement mentioned in Part II Y 2 b.
Z. Severability. The provisions of this permit are severable, and if any provision of this permit or the application of any provision of this permit to any circumstance, is held invalid, the application of such provision to other circumstances, and the remainder of this permit, shall not be affected thereby..
Part III
Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan
9VAC25-151-80. Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plans.
A Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan (SWPPP) shall be
developed and implemented for the facility covered by this permit. The SWPPP
shall include Best Management Practices (BMPs) that are reasonable,
economically practicable, and appropriate in light of current industry
practices. The BMPs shall be control measures selected, designed,
installed, implemented and maintained in accordance with good engineering
practices and manufacturer's specifications, to eliminate or reduce the
pollutants in all storm water discharges from the facility. The SWPPP shall
also include any control measures necessary for the storm water discharges,
and to meet applicable effluent limitations and water quality
standards.
The SWPPP requirements of this general permit may be fulfilled, in part, by incorporating by reference other plans or documents such as a spill prevention control and countermeasure (SPCC) plan developed for the facility under § 311 of the Clean Water Act, or best management practices (BMP) programs otherwise required for the facility, provided that the incorporated plan meets or exceeds the plan requirements of Part III B (Contents of the Plan). All plans incorporated by reference into the SWPPP become enforceable under this permit. If a plan incorporated by reference does not contain all of the required elements of the SWPPP of Part III B, the permittee shall develop the missing SWPPP elements and include them in the required plan.
A. Deadlines for plan preparation and compliance.
1. Facilities that were covered under the 2004 2009
Industrial Storm Water General Permit. Owners of facilities that were covered
under the 2004 2009 Industrial Storm Water General Permit who are
continuing coverage under this general permit shall update and implement any
revisions to the SWPPP not later than October 1, 2009 within 90 days
of the board granting coverage under this permit.
2. New facilities, facilities previously covered by an expiring individual permit, and existing facilities not currently covered by a VPDES permit. Owners of new facilities, facilities previously covered by an expiring individual permit, and existing facilities not currently covered by a VPDES permit who elect to be covered under this general permit shall prepare and implement the SWPPP prior to submitting the registration statement.
3. New owners of existing facilities. Where the owner of an existing facility that is covered by this permit changes, the new owner of the facility shall update and implement any revisions to the SWPPP within 60 days of the ownership change.
4. Extensions. Upon a showing of good cause, the director may establish a later date in writing for the preparation and compliance with the SWPPP.
B. Contents of the plan. The contents of the SWPPP shall comply with the requirements listed below and those in the appropriate sectors of Part IV (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.) These requirements are cumulative. If a facility has colocated activities that are covered in more than one sector of Part IV, that facility's pollution prevention plan shall comply with the requirements listed in all applicable sectors. The following requirements are applicable to all SWPPPs developed under this general permit. The plan shall include, at a minimum, the following items:
1. Pollution prevention team. The plan shall identify the staff
individuals by name or title that who comprise the facility's
storm water pollution prevention team. The pollution prevention team is
responsible for assisting the facility or plant manager in developing,
implementing, maintaining, revising and ensuring compliance with the facility's
SWPPP. Specific responsibilities of each staff individual on the team shall be
identified and listed.
2. Site description. The SWPPP shall include the following:
a. Activities at the facility. A description of the nature of the industrial activities at the facility.
b. General location map. A general location map (e.g., USGS quadrangle or other map) with enough detail to identify the location of the facility and the receiving waters within one mile of the facility.
c. Site map. A site Map map identifying the
following:
(1) The size of the property (in acres);
(2) The location and extent of significant structures and impervious surfaces (roofs, paved areas and other impervious areas);
(3) Locations of all storm water conveyances including ditches, pipes, swales, and inlets, and the directions of storm water flow (use arrows to show which ways storm water will flow);
(4) Locations of all existing structural and source control BMPs;
(5) Locations of all surface water bodies, including wetlands;
(6) Locations of potential pollutant sources identified under Part III B 3;
(7) Locations where significant spills or leaks identified under Part III B 4 have occurred;
(8) Locations of the following activities where such
activities are exposed to precipitation: fueling stations; vehicle and
equipment maintenance and/or and cleaning areas; loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas; locations used for the treatment, storage
or disposal of wastes; liquid storage tanks; processing and storage areas;
access roads, rail cars and tracks; transfer areas for substances in bulk; and
machinery;
(9) Locations of storm water outfalls and an approximate outline of the area draining to each outfall, and location of municipal storm sewer systems, if the storm water from the facility discharges to them. Outfalls shall be numbered using a unique numerical identification code for each outfall (e.g., Outfall No. 001, No. 002, etc.);
(10) Location and description of all nonstorm water discharges;
(11) Location of any storage piles containing salt used for
deicing or other commercial or industrial purposes; and
(12) Locations and sources of runon to the site from adjacent
property, where the runon contains significant quantities of pollutants. The
permittee shall include an evaluation with the SWPPP of how the quality of the
storm water running onto the facility impacts the facility's storm water
discharges.; and
(13) Locations of all storm water monitoring points.
d. Receiving waters and wetlands. The name of all surface waters receiving discharges from the site, including intermittent streams, dry sloughs, and arroyos. Provide a description of wetland sites that may receive discharges from the facility. If the facility discharges through a municipal separate storm sewer system (MS4), identify the MS4 operator, and the receiving water to which the MS4 discharges.
3. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall identify each separate area at the facility where industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water. Industrial materials or activities include, but are not limited to: material handling equipment or activities, industrial machinery, raw materials, industrial production and processes, intermediate products, byproducts, final products, and waste products. Material handling activities include, but are not limited to: the storage, loading and unloading, transportation, disposal, or conveyance of any raw material, intermediate product, final product or waste product. For each separate area identified, the description shall include:
a. Activities in the area. A list of the industrial
activities exposed to storm water (e.g., material storage, equipment
fueling and cleaning, cutting steel beams); and
b. Pollutants. A list of the associated pollutant(s) or
pollutant constituents (e.g., crankcase oil, zinc, sulfuric acid, cleaning
solvents, etc.) for associated with each industrial
activity. The pollutant list shall include all significant materials handled,
treated, stored or disposed that have been exposed to storm water in the three
years prior to the date this SWPPP was prepared or amended. The list shall
include any hazardous substances or oil at the facility.
4. c. Spills and leaks. The SWPPP shall clearly
identify areas where potential spills and leaks that can contribute pollutants
to storm water discharges can occur and their corresponding outfalls. The plan
shall include a list of significant spills and leaks of toxic or hazardous
pollutants that actually occurred at exposed areas, or that drained to a storm
water conveyance during the three-year period prior to the date this SWPPP was
prepared or amended. The list shall be updated if significant spills or leaks
occur in exposed areas of the facility during the term of the permit.
Significant spills and leaks include, but are not limited to, releases
of oil or hazardous substances in excess of reportable quantities, and may
also include releases of oil or hazardous substances that are not in excess of
reporting requirements.
5. d. Sampling data. The plan shall include a
summary of existing storm water discharge sampling data taken at the facility.
The summary shall include, at a minimum, any data collected during the previous
permit term.
6. 4. Storm water controls.
a. Control measures (BMPs) shall be implemented
for all the areas identified in Part III B 3 (summary of potential pollutant
sources) to prevent or control pollutants in storm water discharges from the
facility. All reasonable steps shall be taken to control or address the
quality of discharges from the site that may not originate at the facility.
Regulated storm water discharges from the facility include storm water runon
that commingles with storm water discharges associated with industrial activity
at the facility. The SWPPP shall describe the type, location and
implementation of all BMPs control measures for each area where
industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water.
Selection of BMPs control measures shall take
into consideration:
(1) That preventing storm water from coming into contact with polluting materials is generally more effective, and less costly, than trying to remove pollutants from storm water;
(2) BMPs Control measures generally shall be
used in combination with each other for most effective water quality
protection;
(3) Assessing the type and quantity of pollutants, including their potential to impact receiving water quality, is critical to designing effective control measures;
(4) That minimizing impervious areas at the facility can reduce runoff and improve groundwater recharge and stream base flows in local streams (however, care must be taken to avoid ground water contamination);
(5) Flow attenuation by use of open vegetated swales and natural depressions can reduce in-stream impacts of erosive flows;
(6) Conservation or restoration of riparian buffers will help protect streams from storm water runoff and improve water quality; and
(7) Treatment interceptors (e.g., swirl separators and sand filters) may be appropriate in some instances to minimize the discharge of pollutants.
b. Control measures (Nonnumeric technology-based effluent
limits) Nonnumeric technology-based effluent limits. The permittee
shall implement the following types of BMPs control measures to
prevent and control pollutants in the storm water discharges from the facility,
unless it can be demonstrated and documented that such controls are not
relevant to the discharges (e.g., there are no storage piles containing salt).
(1) Good housekeeping. The permittee shall keep clean all
exposed areas of the facility that are potential sources of pollutants to storm
water discharges. Typical problem areas include areas around trash containers,
storage areas, loading docks, and vehicle fueling and maintenance areas. The
plan shall include a schedule for regular pickup and disposal of waste
materials, along with routine inspections for leaks and conditions of drums,
tanks and containers. The introduction of raw, final or waste materials to
exposed areas of the facility shall be minimized to the maximum extent
practicable. The generation of dust, along with off-site vehicle tracking of
raw, final or waste materials, or sediments, shall be minimized to the maximum
extent practicable.
(2) Eliminating and minimizing exposure. To the extent
practicable, industrial materials and activities manufacturing,
processing, and material storage areas (including loading and unloading,
storage, disposal, cleaning, maintenance, and fueling operations) shall be
located inside, or protected by a storm-resistant covering to prevent exposure
to rain, snow, snowmelt, and runoff. Note: Eliminating exposure at all
industrial areas may make the facility eligible for the "Conditional
Exclusion for No Exposure" provision of 9VAC25-31-120 E, thereby
eliminating the need to have a permit.
(3) Preventive maintenance. The permittee shall have a
preventive maintenance program that includes regular inspection, testing,
maintenance and repairing of all industrial equipment and systems to avoid breakdowns
or failures situations that could result in leaks, spill spills
and other releases of pollutants in storm water discharged from the facility.
This program is in addition to the specific BMP control measure
maintenance required under Part III C (Maintenance of BMPs) (Maintenance
of control measures).
(4) Spill prevention and response procedures. The plan shall
describe the procedures that will be followed for preventing and responding to
spills and leaks., including:
(a) Preventive measures include, such as barriers
between material storage and traffic areas, secondary containment provisions,
and procedures for material storage and handling.;
(b) Response procedures shall include, including notification
of appropriate facility personnel, emergency agencies, and regulatory agencies,
and procedures for stopping, containing and cleaning up spills. Measures for cleaning
up hazardous material spills or leaks shall be consistent with applicable RCRA
regulations at 40 CFR Part 264 (2007) and 40 CFR Part 265 (2007).
Employees who may cause, detect or respond to a spill or leak shall be trained
in these procedures and have necessary spill response equipment available. If
possible, one of these individuals shall be a member of the Pollution
Prevention Team.;
(c) Procedures for plainly labeling containers (e.g., "used oil," "spent solvents," "fertilizers and pesticides," etc.) that could be susceptible to spillage or leakage to encourage proper handling and facilitate rapid response if spills or leaks occur; and
(c) (d) Contact information for individuals and
agencies that must be notified in the event of a spill shall be included in the
SWPPP, and in other locations where it will be readily available.
(5) Routine facility inspections. Facility personnel who
possess the knowledge and skills to assess conditions and activities that could
impact storm water quality at the facility, and who can also evaluate the
effectiveness of BMPs shall regularly inspect all areas of the facility where
industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water. These
inspections are in addition to, or as part of, the comprehensive site evaluation
required under Part III E. At least one member of the Pollution Prevention Team
shall participate in the routine facility inspections.
The inspection frequency shall be specified in the plan
based upon a consideration of the level of industrial activity at the facility,
but shall be a minimum of quarterly unless more frequent intervals are
specified elsewhere in the permit or written approval is received from the
department for less frequent intervals. The requirement for routine facility
inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active E3/E4
status. At least once each calendar year, the routine facility inspection must
be conducted during a period when a storm water discharge is occurring.
Any deficiencies in the implementation of the SWPPP that
are found shall be corrected as soon as practicable, but not later than within
30 days of the inspection, unless permission for a later date is granted in
writing by the director. The results of the inspections shall be documented in
the SWPPP, along with the date(s) and description(s) of any corrective actions
that were taken in response to any deficiencies or opportunities for
improvement that were identified.
(5) Salt storage piles or piles containing salt. Storage piles of salt or piles containing salt used for deicing or other commercial or industrial purposes shall be enclosed or covered to prevent exposure to precipitation. The permittee shall implement appropriate measures (e.g., good housekeeping, diversions, containment) to minimize exposure resulting from adding to or removing materials from the pile. All salt storage piles shall be located on an impervious surface. All runoff from the pile, and runoff that comes in contact with salt, including under drain systems, shall be collected and contained within a bermed basin lined with concrete or other impermeable materials, or within an underground storage tank or tanks, or within an above ground storage tank or tanks, or disposed of through a sanitary sewer (with the permission of the owner of the treatment facility). A combination of any or all of these methods may be used. In no case shall salt contaminated storm water be allowed to discharge directly to the ground or to surface waters.
(6) Employee training. The permittee shall implement a storm water employee training program for the facility. Employee training shall take place, at a minimum, once per calendar year. The storm water employee training program shall include initial training for new hires. The SWPPP shall include a schedule for all types of necessary training, and shall document all training sessions and the employees who received the training. Training shall be provided for all employees who work in areas where industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water, and for employees who are responsible for implementing activities identified in the SWPPP (e.g., inspectors, maintenance personnel, etc.). The training shall cover the components and goals of the SWPPP, and include such topics as spill response, good housekeeping, material management practices, BMP operation and maintenance, etc. The SWPPP shall include a summary of any training performed.
(7) Sediment and erosion control. The plan shall identify
areas at the facility that, due to topography, land disturbance (e.g.,
construction, landscaping, site grading), or other factors, have a potential
for soil erosion. The permittee shall identify and implement structural,
vegetative, and/or and stabilization BMPs to prevent or control
on-site and off-site erosion and sedimentation. Flow velocity dissipation
devices shall be placed at discharge locations and along the length of any
outfall channel if the flows would otherwise create erosive conditions.
(8) Management of runoff. The plan shall describe the storm water
runoff management practices (i.e., permanent structural BMPs) for the facility.
These types of BMPs control measures are typically used to
divert, infiltrate, reuse, or otherwise reduce pollutants in storm water
discharges from the site.
Structural BMPs may require a separate permit under § 404 of the CWA and the Virginia Water Protection Permit Program Regulation (9VAC25-210) before installation begins.
(9) Dust suppression and vehicle tracking of industrial materials. The permittee shall implement control measures to minimize the generation of dust and off-site tracking of raw, final, or waste materials. Storm water collected on-site may be used for the purposes of dust suppression or for spraying stockpiles. Potable water and well water may also be used for this purpose. There shall be no direct discharge to surface waters from dust suppression activities or as a result of spraying stockpiles.
5. Routine facility inspections. Facility personnel who possess the knowledge and skills to assess conditions and activities that could impact storm water quality at the facility and who can also evaluate the effectiveness of control measures shall regularly inspect all areas of the facility where industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water. These inspections are in addition to, or as part of, the comprehensive site evaluation required under Part III E. At least one member of the pollution prevention team shall participate in the routine facility inspections.
The inspection frequency shall be specified in the plan based upon a consideration of the level of industrial activity at the facility, but shall be at a minimum quarterly unless more frequent intervals are specified elsewhere in the permit or written approval is received from the department for less frequent intervals. Inspections shall be performed during periods when the facility is in operation. At least once each calendar year, the routine facility inspection shall be conducted during a period when a storm water discharge is occurring.
The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status. Note: Certain sectors in Part IV have additional inspection requirements. If the VEEP E3/E4 waiver language is not included for the sector specific inspections, these additional inspection requirements may not be waived.
Any deficiencies in the implementation of the SWPPP that are found shall be corrected as soon as practicable, but not later than within 30 days of the inspection, unless permission for a later date is granted in writing by the director. The results of the inspections shall be documented in the SWPPP and shall include at a minimum:
a. The inspection date and time;
b. The name(s) and signature(s) of the inspector(s);
c. Weather information and a description of any discharges occurring at the time of the inspection;
d. Any previously unidentified discharges of pollutants from the site;
e. Any control measures needing maintenance or repairs;
f. Any failed control measures that need replacement;
g. Any incidents of noncompliance observed; and
h. Any additional control measures needed to comply with the permit requirements.
C. Maintenance. All BMPs identified in the SWPPP shall be maintained
in effective operating condition. Storm water BMPs identified in the SWPPP
shall be observed during active operation (i.e., during a storm water runoff
event) to ensure that they are functioning correctly. Where discharge locations
are inaccessible, nearby downstream locations shall be observed. The
observations shall be documented in the SWPPP. The SWPPP shall include a
description of procedures and a regular schedule for preventive maintenance of
all BMPs, and shall include a description of the back-up practices that are in
place should a runoff event occur while a BMP is off-line. The effectiveness of
nonstructural BMPs shall also be maintained by appropriate means (e.g., spill
response supplies available and personnel trained, etc.).
All control measures and structural BMPs identified in the SWPPP shall be maintained in effective operating condition and shall be observed at least annually during active operation (i.e., during a storm water runoff event) to ensure that they are functioning correctly. Where discharge locations are inaccessible, nearby downstream locations shall be observed. The observations shall be documented in the SWPPP.
If site inspections required by Part III B 6 b (5) 5
(Routine facility inspections) or Part III E (Comprehensive site compliance
evaluation) identify BMPs that are not operating effectively, repairs or
maintenance shall be performed before the next anticipated storm event. If
maintenance prior to the next anticipated storm event is not possible,
maintenance shall be scheduled and accomplished as soon as practicable. In the
interim, back-up measures shall be employed and documented in the SWPPP until
repairs or maintenance is complete. Documentation shall be kept with the SWPPP
of maintenance and repairs of BMPs, including the date(s) of regular
maintenance, date(s) of discovery of areas in need of repair or replacement, and
date(s) for repairs, date(s) that the BMP(s) returned to full function,
and the justification for any extended maintenance or repair schedules.
D. Allowable nonstorm Nonstorm water discharges.
1. Discharges of certain sources of nonstorm water are
allowable discharges under this permit (see Part I B 1 - Allowable nonstorm
water discharges) provided the permittee includes the following information in
the SWPPP: (see Part I B, Special Condition No. 1 - Allowable nonstorm
water discharges). All other nonstorm water discharges are not authorized and
shall be either eliminated or covered under a separate VPDES permit.
a. Identification of each allowable nonstorm water source,
except for flows from fire fighting activities;
b. The location where the nonstorm water is likely to be
discharged; and
c. Descriptions of appropriate BMPs for each source.
2. If mist blown from cooling towers is included as one of
the allowable nonstorm water discharges from the facility, the permittee shall
specifically evaluate the discharge for the presence of chemicals used in the
cooling tower. The evaluation shall be included in the SWPPP. Annual
outfall evaluation for unauthorized discharges.
a. The SWPPP shall include documentation that all outfalls have been evaluated annually for the presence of unauthorized discharges (i.e., discharges other than storm water; the authorized nonstorm water discharges described in Part I B, Special Condition No. 1; or discharges covered under a separate VPDES permit, other than this permit). The documentation shall include:
(1) The date of the evaluation;
(2) A description of the evaluation criteria used;
(3) A list of the outfalls or on-site drainage points that were directly observed during the evaluation;
(4) A description of the results of the evaluation for the presence of unauthorized discharges; and
(5) The actions taken to eliminate unauthorized discharges if any were identified (i.e., a floor drain was sealed, a sink drain was rerouted to sanitary, or an VPDES permit application was submitted for a cooling water discharge).
b. The permittee may request in writing to the department that the facility be allowed to conduct annual outfall evaluations at 20% of the outfalls. If approved, the permittee shall evaluate at least 20% of the facility outfalls each year on a rotating basis such that all facility outfalls will be evaluated during the period of coverage under this permit.
E. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The permittee
shall conduct comprehensive site compliance evaluations at least once a each
calendar year after coverage under the permit begins. The
evaluations shall be done by qualified personnel who possess the knowledge and
skills to assess conditions and activities that could impact storm water
quality at the facility, and who can also evaluate the effectiveness of BMPs.
The personnel conducting the evaluations may be either facility employees or
outside constituents personnel hired by the facility.
1. Scope of the compliance evaluation. Evaluations shall include all areas where industrial materials or activities are exposed to storm water, as identified in Part III B 3. The personnel shall evaluate:
a. Industrial materials, residue or trash that may have or could come into contact with storm water;
b. Leaks or spills from industrial equipment, drums, barrels, tanks or other containers that have occurred within the past three years;
c. Off-site tracking of industrial or waste materials or sediment where vehicles enter or exit the site;
d. Tracking or blowing of raw, final, or waste materials from areas of no exposure to exposed areas;
e. Evidence of, or the potential for, pollutants entering the drainage system;
f. Evidence of pollutants discharging to surface waters at all facility outfalls, and the condition of and around the outfall, including flow dissipation measures to prevent scouring;
g. Review of storm water related training performed, inspections completed, maintenance performed, quarterly visual examinations, and effective operation of BMPs;
h. Annual A summary of the annual outfall
evaluation for unauthorized discharges required by subsection D 2 of this
section.
(1) The SWPPP shall include documentation that all outfalls
have been evaluated annually for the presence of unauthorized discharges (i.e.,
discharges other than: storm water; the authorized nonstorm water discharges
described in Part I B 1; or discharges covered under a separate VPDES permit,
other than this permit.) The documentation shall include:
(a) The date of the evaluation;
(b) A description of the evaluation criteria used;
(c) A list of the outfalls or on-site drainage points that
were directly observed during the evaluation;
(d) A description of the results of the evaluation for the
presence of unauthorized discharges; and
(e) The actions taken to eliminate unauthorized discharges,
if any were identified (i.e., a floor drain was sealed, a sink drain was
rerouted to sanitary, or an VPDES permit application was submitted for a
cooling water discharge.)
(2) The permittee may request in writing to the department
that the facility be allowed to conduct annual outfall evaluations at 20% of
the outfalls. If approved, the permittee shall evaluate at least 20% of the
facility outfalls each year on a rotating basis such that all facility outfalls
will be evaluated during the period of coverage under this permit.
i. Results of both visual and any analytical monitoring done during the past year shall be taken into consideration during the evaluation.
2. Based on the results of the evaluation, the SWPPP shall be modified as necessary (e.g., show additional controls on the map required by Part III B 2 c; revise the description of controls required by Part III B 6 to include additional or modified BMPs designed to correct problems identified). Revisions to the SWPPP shall be completed within 30 days following the evaluation, unless permission for a later date is granted in writing by the director. If existing BMPs need to be modified or if additional BMPs are necessary, implementation shall be completed before the next anticipated storm event, if practicable, but not more than 60 days after completion of the comprehensive site evaluation, unless permission for a later date is granted in writing by the department;
3. Compliance evaluation report. A report shall be written
summarizing the scope of the evaluation, name(s) of personnel making the
evaluation, the date of the evaluation, and all observations relating to the
implementation of the SWPPP, including elements stipulated in Part III E 1 (a)
through (f) (i) above. Observations shall include such things as:
the location(s) of discharges of pollutants from the site; location(s) of
previously unidentified sources of pollutants; location(s) of BMPs that need to
be maintained or repaired; location(s) of failed BMPs that need replacement;
and location(s) where additional BMPs are needed. The report shall identify any
incidents of noncompliance that were observed. Where a report does not identify
any incidents of noncompliance, the report shall contain a certification that
the facility is in compliance with the SWPPP and this permit. The report shall
be signed in accordance with Part II K and maintained with the SWPPP.
4. Where compliance evaluation schedules overlap with routine
inspections required under Part III B 6 b (5) 5 the annual
compliance evaluation may be used as one of the routine inspections.
F. Signature and plan review.
1. Signature/location Signature and location. The
SWPPP, including revisions to the SWPPP to document any corrective actions
taken as required by Part I A 5 6, shall be signed in accordance
with Part II K, dated, and retained on-site at the facility covered by this
permit in accordance with Part II B 2. All other changes to the SWPPP, and
other permit compliance documentation, must shall be signed and
dated by the person preparing the change or documentation. For inactive
facilities, the plan may be kept at the nearest office of the permittee.
2. Availability. The permittee shall make retain a
copy of the current SWPPP, annual site compliance evaluation
report, and other information required by this permit at the facility,
and it shall be immediately available to the department, EPA, or the
operator of an MS4 receiving discharges from the site at the time of an on-site
inspection or upon request.
3. Required modifications. The permittee shall modify the SWPPP whenever necessary to address all corrective actions required by Part I A 6 a (Data exceeding benchmark concentration values) or Part I A 6 b (Corrective actions). Changes to the SWPPP shall be made in accordance with the corrective action deadlines in Part I A 6 a and Part I A 6 b, and shall be signed and dated in accordance with Part III F 1.
The director may notify the permittee at any time that the SWPPP, BMPs, or other components of the facility's storm water program do not meet one or more of the requirements of this permit. The notification shall identify specific provisions of the permit that are not being met, and may include required modifications to the storm water program, additional monitoring requirements, and special reporting requirements. The permittee shall make any required changes to the SWPPP within 60 days of receipt of such notification, unless permission for a later date is granted in writing by the director, and shall submit a written certification to the director that the requested changes have been made.
G. Maintaining an updated SWPPP.
1. The permittee shall review and amend the SWPPP as appropriate whenever:
a. There is construction or a change in design, operation, or maintenance at the facility that has a significant effect on the discharge, or the potential for the discharge, of pollutants from the facility;
b. Routine inspections or compliance evaluations determine that there are deficiencies in the BMPs;
c. Inspections by local, state, or federal officials determine that modifications to the SWPPP are necessary;
d. There is a spill, leak or other release at the facility;
e. There is an unauthorized discharge from the facility; or
f. The department notifies the permittee that a TMDL has been developed and applies to the permitted facility, consistent with Part I B, Special Condition No. 6 (Discharges to waters subject to TMDL waste load allocations).
2. SWPPP modifications shall be made within 30 calendar days after discovery, observation or event requiring a SWPPP modification. Implementation of new or modified BMPs (distinct from regular preventive maintenance of existing BMPs described in Part III C) shall be initiated before the next storm event if possible, but no later than 60 days after discovery, or as otherwise provided or approved by the director. The amount of time taken to modify a BMP or implement additional BMPs shall be documented in the SWPPP.
3. If the SWPPP modification is based on a release or unauthorized discharge, include a description and date of the release, the circumstances leading to the release, actions taken in response to the release, and measures to prevent the recurrence of such releases. Unauthorized releases and discharges are subject to the reporting requirements of Part II G of this permit.
Part IV
Sector Specific Permit Requirements
The permittee must only comply with the additional requirements of Part IV (9VAC25-151-90 et seq.) that apply to the sector(s) of industrial activity located at the facility. These sector specific requirements are in addition to the "basic" requirements specified in Parts I, II and III of this permit. All numeric effluent limitations and benchmark monitoring concentration values reflect two significant digits, unless otherwise noted.
9VAC25-151-90. Sector A - Timber products facilities (including mulch, wood, and bark facilities and mulch dyeing facilities).
A. Discharges covered under this section.
1. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities generally classified under Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) Major Group 24 that are engaged in the following activities: cutting timber and pulpwood (those that have log storage or handling areas), mills, including merchant, lath, shingle, cooperage stock, planing, plywood and veneer, and producing lumber and wood materials; wood preserving, manufacturing wood buildings or mobile homes; and manufacturing finished articles made entirely of wood or related materials, except for wood kitchen cabinet manufacturers (SIC Code 2434), which are addressed under Sector W (9VAC25-151-300).
2. The requirements listed under this section also apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from mulch, wood, and bark facilities, including mulch dyeing operations (SIC Code 24991303).
B. Special conditions.
1. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. Discharges of storm water from areas where there may be contact with chemical formulations sprayed to provide surface protection are not authorized by this permit. These discharges must be covered under a separate VPDES permit. Discharge of wet dye drippings from mulch dyeing operations are also prohibited.
2. Authorized nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the discharges described in Part I B 1, the following nonstorm water discharges may be authorized by this permit provided the nonstorm water component of the discharge is in compliance with 9VAC25-151-90 C and the effluent limitations described in 9VAC25-151-90 D: discharges from the spray down of lumber and wood product storage yards where no chemical additives are used in the spray down waters and no chemicals are applied to the wood during storage.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: processing areas; treatment chemical storage areas; treated
wood and residue storage areas; wet decking areas; dry decking areas; untreated
wood and residue storage areas; and treatment equipment storage areas.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. Where information is available, facilities that have used chlorophenolic, creosote, or chromium-copper-arsenic formulations for wood surface protection or wood preserving activities on-site in the past shall identify in the inventory the following: areas where contaminated soils, treatment equipment, and stored materials still remain, and the management practices employed to minimize the contact of these materials with storm water runoff.
2. Storm water controls. The description of storm water
management controls shall address the following areas of the site: log, lumber
and other wood product storage areas; residue storage areas; loading and
unloading areas; material handling areas; chemical storage areas; and equipment/vehicle
equipment and vehicle maintenance, storage and repair areas. Facilities
that surface protect and/or or preserve wood products shall
address specific BMPs for wood surface protection and preserving activities. Facilities
that dye mulch shall address specific BMPs to prevent the discharge of wet dye
drippings and to prevent seepage of pollutants to groundwater.
The SWPPP shall address the following minimum components:
a. Good housekeeping. Good housekeeping measures in storage areas, loading and unloading areas, and material handling areas shall be designed to:
(1) Limit the discharge of wood debris;
(2) Minimize the leachate generated from decaying wood materials; and
(3) Minimize the generation of dust.
b. Routine facility inspections. Inspections at processing areas, transport areas, and treated wood storage areas of facilities performing wood surface protection and preservation activities shall be performed monthly to assess the usefulness of practices in minimizing the deposit of treatment chemicals on unprotected soils and in areas that will come in contact with storm water discharges. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
D. Numeric effluent limitations.
1. In addition to the numeric effluent limitations described in Part I A 1 c, the following limitations shall be met by existing and new facilities.
Wet deck storage area runoff. Nonstorm water discharges from areas used for the storage of logs where water, without chemical additives, is intentionally sprayed or deposited on logs to deter decay or infestation by insects are required to meet the following effluent limitations: pH shall be within the range of 6.0-9.0, and there will be no discharge of debris. Chemicals are not allowed to be applied to the stored logs. The term "debris" is defined as woody material such as bark, twigs, branches, heartwood or sapwood that will not pass through a 2.54 cm (1 in.) diameter round opening and is present in the discharge from a wet deck storage area. Permittees subject to these numeric limitations shall be in compliance with these limitations through the duration of permit coverage.
Table 90-1 |
|
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
Wet Decking Discharges at Log Storage and Handling Areas (SIC 2411) |
|
pH |
6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
Debris (woody material such as bark, twigs, branches, heartwood, or sapwood) |
No discharge of debris that will not pass through a 2.54 cm (1") diameter round opening. |
2. Compliance monitoring requirements. In addition to the parameters listed above, the permittee shall provide an estimate of the total volume (in gallons) of the discharge sampled.
E. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Timber product facilities; mulch, wood, and bark facilities; and mulch dyeing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in the appropriate section of Table 90-2.
Table 90-2 |
||
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
|
General Sawmills and Planing Mills (SIC 2421) |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
Wood Preserving Facilities (SIC 2491) |
||
Total Recoverable Arsenic1 |
50 μg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Chromium1 |
16 μg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Copper1 |
18 μg/L |
|
Log Storage and Handling Facilities (SIC 2411) |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
Hardwood Dimension and Flooring Mills; Special Products Sawmills, not elsewhere classified; Millwork, Veneer, Plywood and Structural Wood; Wood Containers; Wood Buildings and Mobile Homes; Reconstituted Wood Products; and Wood Products Facilities not elsewhere classified (SIC Codes 2426, 2429, 2431-2439 (except 2434), 2441, 2448, 2449, 2451, 2452, 2493, and 2499). |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
Mulch, Wood, and Bark Facilities (SIC Code 24991303) |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
30 mg/L |
|
Facilities with Mulch Dyeing/Coloring Operations (SIC Code 24991303): Monitor ONLY those outfalls from the facility that collect runoff from areas where mulch dyeing/coloring activities occur, including but not limited to areas where loading, transporting, and storage of dyed/colored mulch occurs.2 |
||
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
30 mg/L |
|
Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) |
120 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Arsenic |
150 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Cadmium |
2.1 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Chromium |
16 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Manganese |
64 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Mercury |
1.4 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Nickel |
470 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Selenium |
5.0 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Silver |
3.8 mg/L |
|
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 mg/L |
|
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
|
Total Phosphorus |
2.0 mg/L |
1Monitoring for metals (arsenic, chromium and copper) is not required for wood preserving facilities using only oil-based preservatives. |
||
2Benchmark monitoring waivers are available to facilities utilizing mulch dye or colorant products that do not contain the specified parameters provided that: (i) monitoring from samples collected during one monitoring period demonstrates that all parameters are nondetectable; (ii) a waiver request is submitted to and approved by the board; and (iii) a certification statement is submitted to the department annually that the facility does not use mulch dyeing products that contain any of the specified parameters. |
9VAC25-151-110. Sector C - Chemical and allied products manufacturing.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities engaged in manufacturing the following products and generally described by the SIC code shown:
1. Basic industrial inorganic chemicals (including SIC Code 281);
2. Plastic materials and synthetic resins, synthetic rubbers, and cellulosic and other humanmade fibers, except glass (including SIC Code 282);
3. Medicinal chemicals and pharmaceutical products, including the grading, grinding and milling of botanicals (including SIC Code 283).
4. Soap and other detergents, including facilities producing glycerin from vegetable and animal fats and oils; specialty cleaning, polishing, and sanitation preparations; surface active preparations used as emulsifiers, wetting agents, and finishing agents, including sulfonated oils; and perfumes, cosmetics, and other toilet preparations (including SIC Code 284);
5. Paints (in paste and ready-mixed form); varnishes; lacquers; enamels and shellac; putties, wood fillers, and sealers; paint and varnish removers; paint brush cleaners; and allied paint products (including SIC Code 285);
6. Industrial organic chemicals (including SIC Code 286);
7. Nitrogenous and phosphatic basic fertilizers, mixed fertilizer, pesticides, and other agricultural chemicals (including SIC Code 287). Note: SIC Code 287 includes Composting Facilities (SIC Code 2875);
8. Industrial and household adhesives, glues, caulking compounds, sealants, and linoleum, tile, and rubber cements from vegetable, animal, or synthetic plastics materials; explosives; printing ink, including gravure ink, screen process and lithographic inks; miscellaneous chemical preparations, such as fatty acids, essential oils, gelatin (except vegetable), sizes, bluing, laundry sours, and writing and stamp pad ink; industrial compounds, such as boiler and heat insulating compounds; and chemical supplies for foundries (including SIC Code 289); and
9. Ink and paints, including china painting enamels, India ink, drawing ink, platinum paints for burnt wood or leather work, paints for china painting, artists' paints and artists' water colors (SIC Code 3952, limited to those listed; for others in SIC Code 3952 not listed above, see Sector Y (9VAC25-151-320)).
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general prohibition of nonstorm water discharges in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: inks, paints, or substances (hazardous, nonhazardous, etc.) resulting from an on-site spill, including materials collected in drip pans; washwaters from material handling and processing areas; or washwaters from drum, tank, or container rinsing and cleaning.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In
addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum,
the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface runoff: processing and
storage areas; access roads, rail cars and tracks; areas where substances are
transferred in bulk; and operating machinery.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. A description of
the following sources and activities that have potential pollutants associated
with them: loading, unloading and transfer of chemicals; outdoor storage of
salt, pallets, coal, drums, containers, fuels, fueling stations; vehicle and
equipment maintenance/cleaning areas; areas where the treatment, storage or
disposal (on-site or off-site) of waste/wastewater occur; storage tanks and
other containers; processing and storage areas; access roads, rail cars and
tracks; areas where the transfer of substances in bulk occurs; and areas where
machinery operates.
2. Storm water controls. Good housekeeping. The SWPPP shall
include:
a. A schedule for regular pickup and disposal of garbage
and waste materials, or a description of other appropriate measures used to
reduce the potential for the discharge of storm water that has come into
contact with garbage or waste materials;
b. Routine inspections of the condition of drums, tanks and
containers for potential leaks.
D. C. Numeric effluent limitations. In addition
to the numeric effluent limitations described in Part I A 1 c, the following
effluent limitations shall be met by existing and new discharges with phosphate
fertilizer manufacturing runoff. The provisions of this paragraph are
applicable to storm water discharges from the phosphate subcategory of the
fertilizer manufacturing point source category (40 CFR 418.10 (2006)).
The term contaminated storm water runoff shall mean precipitation runoff, that
during manufacturing or processing, comes into contact with any raw materials,
intermediate product, finished product, by-products or waste product. The
concentration of pollutants in storm water discharges shall not exceed the
effluent limitations in Table 110-1.
Table 110-1 |
||
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Daily Maximum |
30-day Average |
|
Phosphate Subcategory of the Fertilizer Manufacturing Point
Source Category (40 CFR 418.10 |
||
Total Phosphorus (as P) |
105 mg/L |
35 mg/L |
Fluoride |
75 mg/L |
25 mg/L |
E. D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting
requirements. Agricultural chemical manufacturing facilities; industrial inorganic
chemical facilities; soaps, detergents, cosmetics, and perfume manufacturing
facilities; and plastics, synthetics, and resin manufacturing facilities are
required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern
listed in Table 110-2 below.
Table 110-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Agricultural Chemicals (SIC 2873-2879) |
|
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Total Phosphorus |
2.0 mg/L |
Industrial Inorganic Chemicals (SIC 2812-2819) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
Soaps, Detergents, Cosmetics, and Perfumes (SIC 2841-2844) |
|
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Plastics, Synthetics, and Resins (SIC 2821-2824) |
|
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Composting Facilities (SIC 2875) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
30 mg/L |
Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) |
120 mg/L |
Ammonia |
2.14 mg/L |
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
Total Phosphorus |
2.0 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-120. Sector D - Asphalt paving and roofing materials and lubricant manufacturers.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities engaged in the following activities: manufacturing asphalt paving and roofing materials, including those facilities commonly identified by SIC Codes 2951 and 2952; portable asphalt plants (also commonly identified by SIC Code 2951); and manufacturing miscellaneous products of petroleum and coal, including those facilities classified as SIC Code 2992 and 2999.
B. Limitations on coverage. The following storm water discharges associated with industrial activity are not authorized by this section of the permit:
1. Storm water discharges from petroleum refining facilities,
including those that manufacture asphalt or asphalt products, that are classified
as SIC Code 2911 subject to effluent limitation guidelines for the Petroleum
Refining Point Source Category (40 CFR 419);
2. Storm water discharges from oil recycling facilities; and
3. Storm water discharges associated with fats and oils rendering.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In
addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum,
the following item: routine facility inspections. Material storage and handling
areas, liquid storage tanks, hoppers or silos, vehicle and equipment
maintenance, cleaning, and fueling areas, material handling vehicles, equipment
and processing areas shall be inspected at least once per month, as part of the
maintenance program. The permittee shall ensure that appropriate action is
taken in response to the inspection by implementing tracking or follow-up
procedures.
D. C. Numeric effluent limitations. In addition
to the numeric effluent limitations listed in Part I A c, discharges from areas
where production of asphalt paving and roofing emulsions occurs may not exceed
the limitations in Table 120-1.
Table 120-1 |
||
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Daily Maximum |
30-day Average |
|
Discharges from areas where production of asphalt paving and roofing emulsions occurs (SIC 2951, 2952) |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
23 mg/L |
15 mg/L |
Oil and Grease |
15 mg/L |
10 mg/L |
pH |
6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
E. D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting
requirements. Asphalt paving and roofing materials manufacturing facilities are
required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern
listed in Table 120-2.
Table 120-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Asphalt Paving and Roofing Materials (SIC 2951, 2952) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-130. Sector E - Glass, clay, cement, concrete, and gypsum products.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities generally classified under SIC Major Group 32 that are engaged in either manufacturing the following products or performing the following activities: flat, pressed, or blown glass or glass containers; hydraulic cement; clay products including tile and brick; pottery and porcelain electrical supplies; gypsum products; nonclay refractories; minerals and earths, ground or otherwise treated; lime manufacturing; cut stone and stone products; asbestos products; and mineral wool and mineral wool insulation products.
Concrete block and brick facilities (SIC Code 3271), concrete products facilities, except block and brick (SIC Code 3272), and ready-mixed concrete facilities (SIC Code 3273) are not covered by this permit.
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum, the following items:
1. Site description and site map. The site map shall identify
the locations of the following, if applicable: bag house or other dust control
device; recycle/sedimentation recycle or sedimentation pond,
clarifier or other device used for the treatment of process wastewater and the
areas that drain to the treatment device.
2. Storm water controls. a. Good housekeeping.
(1) a. Facilities shall prevent or minimize the
discharge of: spilled cement; aggregate (including sand or gravel); kiln dust;
fly ash; settled dust; and other significant materials in storm water from
paved portions of the site that are exposed to storm water. Measures used to
minimize the presence of these materials may include regular sweeping, or other
equivalent measures. The plan shall indicate the frequency of sweeping or
equivalent measures. The frequency shall be determined based upon consideration
of the amount of industrial activity occurring in the area and frequency of
precipitation, but shall not be less than once per week if cement, aggregate,
kiln dust; fly ash, or settled dust are being handled or processed.
(2) b. Facilities shall prevent the exposure of
fine granular solids (such as cement, fly ash, kiln dust, etc.) to storm water.
Where practicable, these materials shall be stored in enclosed silos or
hoppers, buildings, or under other covering.
b. Routine facility inspections. The inspection shall take
place while the facility is in operation and shall include all of the following
areas that are exposed to storm water: material handling areas, aboveground
storage tanks, hoppers or silos, dust collection/containment systems, truck
wash down/equipment cleaning areas.
c. Certification of outfall evaluation for unauthorized
discharges. Facilities engaged in production of ready-mix concrete, concrete
block, brick or similar products shall include in the certification a description
of measures that ensure that process wastewater that results from washing of
trucks, mixers, transport buckets, forms or other equipment are discharged in
accordance with a separate VPDES permit or are recycled.
C. Numeric effluent limitations. In addition to the numeric effluent limitations described by Part I A 1 c, the following limitations shall be met by existing and new facilities: Cement manufacturing facility, material storage runoff. Any discharge composed of runoff that derives from the storage of materials including raw materials, intermediate products, finished products, and waste materials that are used in or derived from the manufacture of cement shall not exceed the limitations in Table 130-1. Runoff from the storage piles shall not be diluted with other storm water runoff or flows to meet these limitations. Any untreated overflow from facilities designed, constructed and operated to treat the volume of material storage pile runoff that is associated with a 10-year, 24-hour rainfall event shall not be subject to the TSS or pH limitations. Facilities subject to these numeric effluent limitations shall be in compliance with these limits upon commencement of coverage and for the entire term of this permit.
Table 130-1 |
||
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Daily Maximum |
30-day Average |
|
Cement Manufacturing Facility, Material Storage Runoff: Any discharge composed of runoff that derives from the storage of materials including raw materials, intermediate products, finished products, and waste materials that are used in or derived from the manufacture of cement. |
||
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
50 mg/L |
|
pH |
6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Clay product manufacturers (SIC 3251-3259, SIC 3261-3269) and lime and gypsum product manufacturers (SIC 3274, 3275) are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 130-2.
Table 130-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Clay Product Manufacturers (SIC 3251-3259, 3261-3269) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 ug/L |
Lime and Gypsum Product Manufacturers (SIC 3274, 3275) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
pH |
6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-140. Sector F - Primary metals.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from the following types of facilities in the primary metal industry, and generally described by the SIC code shown:
1. Steel works, blast furnaces, and rolling and finishing mills, including: steel wire drawing and steel nails and spikes; cold-rolled steel sheet, strip, and bars; and steel pipes and tubes (SIC Code 331).
2. Iron and steel foundries, including: gray and ductile iron, malleable iron, steel investment, and steel foundries not elsewhere classified (SIC Code 332).
3. Primary smelting and refining of nonferrous metals, including: primary smelting and refining of copper, and primary production of aluminum (SIC Code 333).
4. Secondary smelting and refining of nonferrous metals (SIC Code 334).
5. Rolling, drawing, and extruding of nonferrous metals, including: rolling, drawing, and extruding of copper; rolling, drawing and extruding of nonferrous metals except copper and aluminum; and drawing and insulating of nonferrous wire (SIC Code 335).
6. Nonferrous foundries (castings), including: aluminum die-castings, nonferrous die-castings, except aluminum, aluminum foundries, copper foundries, and nonferrous foundries, except copper and aluminum (SIC Code 336).
7. Miscellaneous primary metal products, not elsewhere classified, including: metal heat treating, and primary metal products, not elsewhere classified (SIC Code 339).
Activities covered include, but are not limited to, storm water discharges associated with coking operations, sintering plants, blast furnaces, smelting operations, rolling mills, casting operations, heat treating, extruding, drawing, or forging of all types of ferrous and nonferrous metals, scrap, and ore.
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following activities may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff: storage or disposal of wastes such as spent solvents/baths
solvents and baths, sand, slag/dross slag and dross;
liquid storage tanks/drums tanks and drums; processing areas
including pollution control equipment (e.g., baghouses); and storage areas of
raw materials such as coal, coke, scrap, sand, fluxes, refractories, or metal
in any form. In addition, indicate sources where an accumulation of significant
amounts of particulate matter could occur from such sources as furnace or oven
emissions, losses from coal/coke coal and coke handling
operations, etc., and that could result in a discharge of pollutants to surface
waters.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The inventory of
materials handled at the site that potentially may be exposed to precipitation/runoff
precipitation or runoff shall include areas where deposition of
particulate matter from process air emissions or losses during material
handling activities are possible.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping. The SWPPP shall consider implementation of the following measures, or equivalent measures, where applicable.
(1) Establishment of a cleaning/maintenance cleaning
and maintenance program for all impervious areas of the facility where
particulate matter, dust, or debris may accumulate, especially areas where
material loading/unloading loading and unloading, storage,
handling, and processing occur.
(2) The paving of areas, where practicable, where vehicle traffic or material storage occur, but where vegetative or other stabilization methods are not practicable. Sweeping programs shall be instituted in these areas as well.
(3) For unstabilized areas of the facility where sweeping is not practical, the permittee shall consider using storm water management devices such as sediment traps, vegetative buffer strips, filter fabric fence, sediment filtering boom, gravel outlet protection, or other equivalent measures, that effectively trap or remove sediment.
b. Routine facility inspections. Inspections shall be
conducted monthly, and quarterly. The requirement for routine
facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active
VEEP E3/E4 status. Inspections shall address all potential sources of
pollutants, including (if applicable):
(1) Air pollution control equipment (e.g., baghouses,
electrostatic precipitators, scrubbers, and cyclones) shall be inspected for any
signs of degradation (e.g., leaks, corrosion, or improper operation) that could
limit their efficiency and lead to excessive emissions. The permittee shall
consider monitoring air flow at inlets/outlets inlets and outlets,
or equivalent measures, to check for leaks (e.g., particulate deposition) or
blockage in ducts;
(2) All process or material handling equipment (e.g., conveyors, cranes, and vehicles) shall be inspected for leaks, drips, or the potential loss of materials; and
(3) Material storage areas (e.g., piles, bins or hoppers for
storing coke, coal, scrap, or slag, as well as chemicals stored in tanks/drums)
tanks and drums) shall be examined for signs of material losses due to
wind or storm water runoff.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Primary metals facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 140 below.
Table 140 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Steel Works, Blast Furnaces, and Rolling and Finishing Mills (SIC 3312-3317) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Iron and Steel Foundries (SIC 3321-3325) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Rolling, Drawing, and Extruding of Nonferrous Metals (SIC 3351-3357) |
|
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Nonferrous Foundries (SIC 3363-3369) |
|
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
9VAC25-151-150. Sector G - Metal mining (ore mining and dressing).
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from active, temporarily inactive and inactive metal mining and ore dressing facilities including mines abandoned on federal lands, as classified under SIC Major Group 10. Coverage is required for facilities that discharge storm water that has come into contact with, or is contaminated by, any overburden, raw material, intermediate product, finished product, byproduct, or waste product located on the site of the operation. SIC Major Group 10 includes establishments primarily engaged in mining of ores, developing mines, or exploring for metallic minerals (ores) and also includes ore dressing and beneficiating operations, whether performed at colocated, dedicated mills or at separate mills, such as custom mills. For the purposes of this section, the term "metal mining" includes any of the separate activities listed above. Covered discharges include:
1. All storm water discharges from inactive facilities;
2. Storm water discharges from the following areas of active
and temporarily inactive metal mining facilities: waste rock/overburden rock
and overburden piles if composed entirely of storm water and not combining
with mine drainage; topsoil piles; off-site haul/access haul and
access roads; on-site haul/access haul and access roads
constructed of waste rock/overburden rock and overburden if
composed entirely of storm water and not combining with mine drainage; on-site haul/access
haul and access roads not constructed of waste rock/overburden/spent
rock, overburden, or spent ore except if mine drainage is used for dust
control; runoff from tailings dams/dikes dams and dikes when not
constructed of waste rock/tailings rock or tailings and no
process fluids are present; runoff from tailings dams/dikes dams or
dikes when constructed of waste rock/tailings rock or tailings
and no process fluids are present if composed entirely of storm water and not
combining with mine drainage; concentration building if no contact with
material piles; mill site if no contact with material piles; office/administrative
office or administrative building and housing if mixed with storm water
from industrial area; chemical storage area; docking facility if no excessive
contact with waste product that would otherwise constitute mine drainage;
explosive storage; fuel storage; vehicle/equipment vehicle and
equipment maintenance area/building area and building;
parking areas (if necessary); power plant; truck wash areas if no excessive
contact with waste product that would otherwise constitute mine drainage;
unreclaimed, disturbed areas outside of active mining area; reclaimed areas
released from reclamation bonds prior to December 17, 1990; and partially/inadequately
partially or inadequately reclaimed areas or areas not released
from reclamation bonds;
3. Storm water discharges from exploration and development of
metal mining and/or and ore dressing facilities; and
4. Storm water discharges from facilities at mining sites undergoing reclamation.
B. Limitations on coverage. Storm water discharges from active
metal mining facilities that are subject to the effluent limitation guidelines
for the Ore Mining and Dressing Point Source Category (40 CFR Part 440 (2007))
are not authorized by this permit.
Note: Discharges that come in contact with overburden/waste
overburden and waste rock are subject to 40 CFR Part 440 (2007),
providing: the discharges drain to a point source (either naturally or as a
result of intentional diversion), and they combine with mine drainage that is
otherwise regulated under 40 CFR Part 440 (2007). Discharges from overburden/waste
overburden and waste rock can be covered under this permit if they are
composed entirely of storm water and do not combine with sources of mine
drainage that are subject to 40 CFR Part 440 (2007).
C. Special Conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water
discharges. In addition to the general prohibition of nonstorm water discharges
in Part I B 1, the following discharges are discharge is not
covered by this permit: adit drainage or contaminated springs or seeps.
Contaminated seeps and springs discharging from waste rock dumps that do not
directly result from precipitation events are also not authorized by
this permit.
D. Special definitions. The following definitions are not intended to supersede the definitions of active and inactive mining facilities established by 40 CFR 122.26(b)(14)(iii), and are only for this section of the general permit:
"Active metal mining facility" means a place where work or other related activity to the extraction, removal, or recovery of metal ore is being conducted. For surface mines, this definition does not include any land where grading has returned the earth to a desired contour and reclamation has begun.
"Active phase" means activities including each
step from the extraction through production of a salable product,
removal, or recovery of metal ore. For surface mines, this definition does not
include any land where grading has returned the earth to a desired contour and
reclamation has begun.
"Construction phase" means the building of site access roads and removal of overburden and waste rock to expose mineable minerals. The construction phase is not considered part of "mining operations."
"Exploration and development phase" entails
exploration and land disturbance activities to determine the financial
viability of a site. Development includes the building of site access roads
and removal of overburden and waste rock to expose mineable minerals. The
exploration phase is not considered part of "mining operations."
"Final stabilization" - a site or portion of a site
is "finally stabilized" when: all applicable federal and
state reclamation requirements have been implemented.
1. All soil-disturbing activities at the site have been
completed and either of the two following criteria are met:
a. A uniform (e.g., evenly distributed, without large bare
areas) perennial vegetative cover with a density of 70% of the native
background vegetative cover for the area has been established on all unpaved
areas and areas not covered by permanent structures, or
b. Equivalent permanent stabilization measures (such as the
use of riprap, gabions, or geotextiles) have been employed.
2. When background native vegetation will cover less than
100% of the ground (e.g., arid areas, beaches), the 70% coverage criteria is
adjusted as follows: if the native vegetation covers 50% of the ground, 70% of
50% (0.70 x 0.50 = 0.35) would require 35% total cover for final stabilization.
On a beach with no natural vegetation, no stabilization is required.
"Inactive metal mining facility" means a site or
portion of a site where metal mining and/or or milling occurred
in the past but is not an active facility as defined in this permit, and where
the inactive portion is not covered by an active mining permit issued by the
applicable federal or state governmental agency. An inactive metal
mining facility has an identifiable owner or operator. Sites where mining
claims are being maintained prior to disturbances associated with the
extraction, beneficiation, or processing of mined materials and sites where
minimal activities are undertaken for the sole purpose of maintaining a mining
claim are not considered either active or inactive mining facilities and do not
require a VPDES industrial stormwater permit.
"Mining operation" typically consists of three
the active and temporarily inactive phases, any one of which
individually qualifies as a "mining activity." The phases are the
exploration and development phase, the active phase, and the reclamation phase
and the reclamation phase, but excludes the exploration and construction
phases.
"Reclamation phase" means activities undertaken,
in compliance with applicable mined land reclamation requirements, following
the cessation of the "active phase," intended to return the land
to its premining use. an appropriate post-mining land use in order to
meet applicable federal and state reclamation requirements. The reclamation
phase is considered part of "mining operations."
"Temporarily inactive metal mining facility" means a
site or portion of a site where metal mining and/or or milling
occurred in the past but currently are not being actively undertaken, and the
facility is covered by an active mining permit issued by the applicable federal
or state government agency.
E. Clearing, grading, and excavation activities. Clearing,
grading, and excavation activities being conducted as part of the exploration
and development construction phase of a mining operation
activities are covered under this permit.
1. Management practices for clearing, grading, and excavation activities.
a. Selecting and installing control measures. A combination of erosion and sedimentation control measures are required to achieve maximum pollutant prevention and removal. All control measures shall be properly selected, installed, and maintained in accordance with any relevant manufacturer specifications and good engineering practices.
b. Removal of sediment. If sediment escapes the site,
off-site accumulations of sediment shall be removed at a frequency sufficient
to prevent off-site impacts.
c. b. Good housekeeping. Litter, debris, and
chemicals shall be prevented from becoming a pollutant source in storm water
discharges.
d. Velocity dissipation. Velocity dissipation devices shall
be placed at discharge locations and along the length of any outfall channel to
provide a nonerosive flow velocity from disturbed areas and from any storm
water retention or detention facilities to a water course so that the natural
physical and biological characteristics and functions are maintained and protected
(e.g., no significant changes in the hydrological regime of the receiving
water).
e. c. Retention and detention of storm water
runoff. For drainage locations serving more than one acre, sediment basins and/or
or temporary sediment traps should be used. At a minimum, silt fences,
vegetative buffer strips, or equivalent sediment controls are required for all
down slope boundaries (and for those side slope boundaries deemed appropriate
as dictated by individual site conditions) of the development area unless a
sediment basin providing storage for a calculated volume of runoff from a
two-year, 24-hour storm or 3,600 cubic feet of storage per acre drained is
provided. Sediment shall be removed from sediment traps or sedimentation
ponds when the design capacity has been reduced by 50%.
f. d. Temporary stabilization of disturbed
areas. Stabilization measures shall be initiated immediately in portions of the
site where development activities have temporarily or permanently ceased,
but in no case more than 14 days after the construction activity clearing,
grading, and excavation activities in that portion of the site has have
temporarily or permanently ceased. In arid, semiarid, and
drought-stricken areas, or in areas subject to snow or freezing conditions,
where initiating perennial vegetative stabilization measures is not possible
within 14 days after mining, exploration, or construction activity has
temporarily or permanently ceased, final temporary vegetative
stabilization measures shall be initiated as soon as possible practicable.
Until full temporary vegetative stabilization is achieved,
interim measures such as erosion control blankets with an appropriate
seed base and tackifiers shall be employed. In areas of the site where
exploration or construction has permanently ceased prior to active mining,
temporary stabilization measures shall be implemented to minimize mobilization
of sediment or other pollutants until such time as the active mining phase
commences.
2. Requirements for inspection of clearing, grading, and excavation activities.
a. Inspection frequency. Inspections shall be conducted at
least once every seven calendar days or at least once every 14 calendar days
and within 24 hours of the end of a storm event of 0.5 inches or greater.
Inspection frequency may be reduced to at least once every month if the entire
site is temporarily stabilized, if runoff is unlikely due to winter conditions
(e.g., site is covered with snow, ice, or the ground is frozen) snow or
ice) or frozen conditions, or construction is occurring during seasonal arid
dry periods in arid areas and semi-arid areas.
b. Qualified personnel for inspections. Inspections shall
be conducted by qualified personnel. "Qualified personnel" means a
person knowledgeable in the principles and practice of erosion and sediment
control who possesses the skills to assess conditions at the construction site
that could impact storm water quality and the effectiveness of any sediment and
erosion control measures selected to control the quality of storm water
discharges from the clearing, grading, and excavation activities.
c. b. Location of inspections. Inspections shall
include all areas of the site disturbed by clearing, grading, and excavation
activities and areas used for storage of materials that are exposed to
precipitation. Sedimentation and erosion control measures identified in the
SWPPP shall be observed to ensure proper operation. Discharge locations shall
be inspected to ascertain whether erosion control measures are effective in
preventing significant impacts to state surface waters, where
accessible. Where discharge locations are inaccessible, nearby downstream
locations shall be inspected to the extent that such inspections are
practicable. Locations where vehicles enter or exit the site shall be inspected
for evidence of off-site sediment tracking.
d. c. Inspection reports. For each inspection
required above, an inspection report shall be completed. At a minimum, the
inspection report shall include:
(1) The inspection date;
(2) Names, titles, and qualifications of personnel making the inspection;
(3) Weather information for the period since the last inspection (or note if it is the first inspection) including a best estimate of the beginning of each storm event, duration of each storm event, approximate amount of rainfall for each storm event (in inches), and whether any discharges occurred;
(4) Weather information and a description of any discharges occurring at the time of the inspection;
(5) Location(s) of discharges of sediment or other pollutants from the site;
(6) Location(s) of BMPs that need to be maintained;
(7) Location(s) of BMPs that failed to operate as designed or proved inadequate for a particular location;
(8) Location(s) where additional BMPs are needed that did not exist at the time of inspection; and
(9) Corrective action(s) required, including any changes to the SWPPP necessary and implementation dates.
A record of each inspection and of any actions taken in accordance with this section shall be retained as part of the SWPPP for at least three years from the date that permit coverage expires or is terminated. The inspection reports shall identify any incidents of noncompliance with the permit conditions. Where a report does not identify any incidents of noncompliance, the report shall contain a certification that the clearing, grading, and excavation activities are in compliance with the SWPPP and this permit. The report shall be signed in accordance with Part II K of the permit.
3. Maintenance of controls for clearing, grading, and
excavation activities.
a. Maintenance of BMPs. All erosion and sediment control
measures and other protective measures identified in the SWPPP shall be
maintained in effective operating condition. If site inspections required by
subdivision 2 of this subsection identify BMPs that are not operating
effectively, maintenance shall be performed as soon as possible and before the
next storm event whenever practicable to maintain the continued effectiveness
of storm water controls.
b. Modification of BMPs. Existing BMPs need to be modified
or, if additional BMPs are necessary for any reason, implementation shall be
completed before the next storm event whenever practicable. If implementation
before the next storm event is impracticable, the situation shall be documented
in the SWPPP and alternative BMPs shall be implemented as soon as possible.
c. Maintenance of sediment traps and ponds. Sediment from
sediment traps or sedimentation ponds shall be removed when design capacity has
been reduced by 50%.
4. 3. Requirements for cessation of clearing,
grading, and excavation activities.
a. Inspections and maintenance. Inspections and maintenance of control measures, including BMPs associated with clearing, grading, and excavation activities being conducted as part of the exploration and construction phase of a mining operation shall continue until final stabilization has been achieved on all portions of the disturbed area, or until the commencement of the active mining phase for those areas that have been temporarily stabilized as a precursor to mining.
b. Final stabilization. Stabilization measures shall be
initiated immediately in portions of the site where development exploration
or construction activities have permanently ceased, but in no case more
than 14 days after the exploration or construction activity in that
portion of the site has permanently ceased. In arid, semiarid, and
drought-stricken areas, or in areas subject to snow or freezing conditions,
where initiating perennial vegetative stabilization measures is not possible
within 14 days after exploration or construction activity has temporarily
or permanently ceased, final vegetative stabilization measures shall be
initiated as soon as possible. Until final stabilization is achieved temporary
stabilization measures, such as erosion control blankets with an
appropriate seed base and tackifiers, shall be used.
F. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements for active, inactive, and temporarily inactive metal mining facilities and sites undergoing reclamation. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. SWPPP requirements for active, inactive, and temporarily
inactive metal mining facilities, and sites undergoing reclamation.
a. 1. Site description.
(1) a. Activities at the facility. A description
of the mining and associated activities taking place at the site that can
potentially affect storm water discharges covered by this permit. The
description shall include a general description of the location of the site
relative to major transportation routes and communities.
(2) b. Site map. The site map shall identify the
locations of the following, as appropriate: mining/milling mining and
milling site boundaries; access and haul roads; an outline of the drainage
areas of each storm water outfall within the facility, and an indication of the
types of discharges from the drainage areas; location(s) of all permitted
discharges covered under an individual VPDES permit; outdoor equipment
storage, fueling and maintenance areas; materials handling areas; outdoor
manufacturing, storage or material disposal areas; outdoor storage areas
for chemicals and explosives; areas used for storage of overburden, materials, soils
or wastes; location of mine drainage (where water leaves mine) or any other
process water; tailings piles/ponds piles and ponds, both
proposed and existing; heap leach pads; points of discharge from the property
for mine drainage/process drainage and process water; surface
waters; boundary of tributary areas that are subject to effluent limitations
guidelines; and location(s) of reclaimed areas.
b. 2. Summary of potential pollutant sources. For
each area of the mine/mill mine or mill site where storm water
discharges associated with industrial activities occur, the plan shall identify
the types of pollutants likely to be present in significant amounts (e.g.,
heavy metals, sediment). The following factors shall be considered: the mineralogy
of the ore and waste rock (e.g., acid forming); toxicity and quantity of
chemicals used, produced or discharged; the likelihood, if any, of
contact with storm water; vegetation of site, if any; and history
of significant leaks/spills leaks and spills of toxic or
hazardous pollutants. A summary of any existing ore or waste rock/overburden
rock and overburden characterization data and test results for potential
generation of acid rock shall also be included. If the ore or waste rock/overburden
rock and overburden characterization data are updated due to a change in
the ore type being mined, the SWPPP shall be updated with the new data.
c. 3. Storm water controls.
(1) a. Routine facility inspections. Sites
Except for areas subject to clearing, grading, and excavation activities
subject to subdivision E 2 of this section, sites shall be inspected at
least monthly quarterly unless adverse weather conditions make
the site inaccessible. The requirement for routine facility inspections is
waived for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
(2) b. Employee training. Employee training
shall be conducted at least annually at active mining and temporarily inactive
sites. All employee training shall be documented in the SWPPP.
(3) c. Structural BMPs control
measures. Each of the following BMPs control measures shall
be considered in the SWPPP. The potential pollutants identified in subpart F
subdivision 1 b above of this subsection shall determine
the priority and appropriateness of the BMPs control measures
selected. If BMPs control measures are implemented or planned but
are not listed here (e.g., substituting a less toxic chemical for a more toxic
one), descriptions of them shall be included in the SWPPP.
(a) Sediment and erosion control. The measures to consider
include: diversion of flow away from areas susceptible to erosion (measures
such as interceptor dikes and swales, diversion dikes, curbs and berms);
stabilization methods to prevent or minimize erosion (such as temporary or
permanent seeding; vegetative buffer strips; protection of trees; topsoiling;
soil conditioning; contouring; mulching; geotextiles (matting, netting, or
blankets); riprap; gabions; and retaining walls); and structural methods for
controlling sediment (such as check dams; rock outlet protection; level
spreaders; gradient terraces; straw bale barriers; silt fences; gravel or stone
filter berms; brush barriers; sediment traps; grass swales; pipe slope drains;
earth dikes; other controls such as entrance stabilization, waterway crossings
or wind breaks; or other equivalent measures).
(b) (1) Storm water diversion. A description of
how and where storm water will be diverted away from potential pollutant
sources to prevent storm water contamination. BMP options may include the
following: interceptor dikes and swales; diversion dikes, curbs and berms; pipe
slope drains; subsurface drains; drainage/storm drainage and storm
water conveyance systems (channels or gutters, open top box culverts and
waterbars; rolling dips and road sloping; roadway surface water deflector and
culverts) or equivalent measures.
(c) Management of runoff. The potential pollutant sources
given in subdivision 1 b of this subsection shall be considered when
determining reasonable and appropriate measures for managing runoff.
(d) (2) Capping. When capping of a contaminant
source is necessary, the source being capped and materials and procedures used
to cap the contaminant source shall be identified.
(e) (3) Treatment. If treatment of a storm water
discharge is necessary to protect water quality, include a description of the
type and location of storm water treatment that will be used. Storm water
treatments include the following: chemical or physical systems; oil/water
oil and water separators; artificial wetlands; etc. The permittee is
encouraged to use both passive and/or and active treatment
of storm water runoff. Treated runoff may be discharged as a storm water source
regulated under this permit provided the discharge is not combined with
discharges subject to effluent limitation guidelines for the Ore Mining and
Dressing Point Source Category (40 CFR Part 440 (2007)).
(f) (4) Certification of discharge testing. The
permittee shall test or evaluate all outfalls covered under this permit for the
presence of specific mining-related nonstorm water discharges such as seeps or
adit discharges or discharges subject to effluent limitations guidelines (e.g.,
40 CFR Part 440 (2007)), such as mine drainage or process water.
Alternatively (if applicable), the permittee may certify in the SWPPP that a
particular discharge composed of commingled storm water and nonstorm water is
covered under a separate VPDES permit; and that permit subjects the nonstorm
water portion to effluent limitations prior to any commingling. This
certification shall identify the nonstorm water discharges, the applicable
VPDES permit(s), the effluent limitations placed on the nonstorm water
discharge by the permit(s), and the points at which the limitations are
applied.
2. G. Termination of permit coverage.
a. 1. Termination of permit coverage for sites
reclaimed after December 17, 1990. A site or a portion of a site that has been
released from applicable state or federal reclamation requirements after
December 17, 1990, is no longer required to maintain coverage under this permit,
provided that the covered storm water discharges do not have the potential to
cause or contribute to violations of state water quality standards. If the
site or portion of a site reclaimed after December 17, 1990, was not subject to
reclamation requirements, the site or portion of the site is no longer required
to maintain coverage under this permit if the site or portion of the site has
been reclaimed as defined in subpart 2 b below subdivision 2 of this
subsection.
b. 2. Termination of permit coverage for sites
reclaimed before December 17, 1990. A site or portion of a site that was
released from applicable state or federal reclamation requirements before
December 17, 1990, or that was otherwise reclaimed before December 17, 1990, is
no longer required to maintain coverage under this permit if the site or
portion of the site has been reclaimed. A site or portion of a site is
considered to have been reclaimed if: (i) storm water runoff that comes into
contact with (i) raw materials, intermediate byproducts, finished
products, and waste products does not have the potential to cause or contribute
to violations of state water quality standards, (ii) soil-disturbing activities
related to mining at the sites or portion of the site have been completed,
(iii) the site or portion of the site has been stabilized to minimize soil
erosion, and (iv) as appropriate depending on location, size, and the potential
to contribute pollutants to storm water discharges, the site or portion of the
site has been revegetated, will be amenable to natural revegetation, or will be
left in a condition consistent with the post-mining land use.
H. Inactive and unstaffed sites. Permittees in Sector G seeking to exercise a waiver from the quarterly visual assessment and routine facility inspection requirements for inactive and unstaffed sites (including temporarily inactive sites) are conditionally exempt from the requirement to certify that "there are no industrial materials or activities exposed to stormwater" in Part I A 4.
This exemption is conditioned on the following:
1. If circumstances change and the facility becomes active or staffed, this exception no longer applies and the permittee shall immediately begin complying with the quarterly visual assessment and routine facility inspection requirements; and
2. The board retains the authority to revoke this exemption and the monitoring waiver when it is determined that the discharge causes, has a reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an instream excursion above an applicable water quality standard, including designated uses.
Subject to the two conditions in subdivisions 1 and 2 of this subsection, if a facility is inactive and unstaffed, the permittee is waived from the requirement to conduct quarterly visual assessments and routine facility inspections. The permittee is not waived from conducting the Part III E comprehensive site inspection. The board encourages the permittee to inspect the site more frequently when there is reason to believe that severe weather or natural disasters may have damaged control measures.
G. I. Benchmark monitoring and reporting
requirements. Note: There are no benchmark monitoring requirements for
inactive and unstaffed sites that have received a waiver in accordance with
Part I A 4 (Inactive and unstaffed sites).
1. Copper ore mining and dressing facilities. Active copper ore mining and dressing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 150-1 below.
2. Discharges from waste rock and overburden piles at active
sites, inactive sites, and sites undergoing reclamation. Discharges from
waste rock and overburden piles at active sites, inactive sites, and sites
undergoing reclamation shall be analyzed for the parameters listed in Table
150-2. Facilities shall also monitor for the parameters listed in Table 150-3.
The director may also notify the facility that additional monitoring must be
performed to accurately characterize the quality and quantity of pollutants
discharged from the waste rock/overburden rock or overburden
piles.
Table 150-1 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Active Copper Ore Mining and Dressing Facilities (SIC 1021) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Table 150-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Iron Ores; Copper Ores; Lead and Zinc Ores; Gold and Silver Ores; Ferroalloy Ores Except Vanadium; Miscellaneous Metal Ores (SIC Codes 1011, 1021, 1031, 1041, 1044, 1061, 1081, 1094, 1099) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Turbidity (NTUs) |
50 NTU |
pH |
6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
Hardness (as CaCO3) |
no benchmark value |
Total Recoverable Antimony |
640 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Arsenic |
50 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Beryllium |
130 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Cadmium |
2.1 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Mercury |
1.4 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Nickel |
470 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Selenium |
5.0 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Silver |
3.8 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Table 150-3 |
|||
Type of Ore Mined |
Pollutants of Concern |
||
TSS (mg/L) |
pH |
Metals, Total Recoverable |
|
Tungsten Ore |
X |
X |
Arsenic, Cadmium (H), Copper (H), Lead (H), Zinc (H). |
Nickel Ore |
X |
X |
Arsenic, Cadmium (H), Copper (H), Lead (H), Zinc (H). |
Aluminum Ore |
X |
X |
Iron. |
Mercury Ore |
X |
X |
Nickel (H). |
Iron Ore |
X |
X |
Iron (Dissolved). |
Platinum Ore |
|
|
Cadmium (H), Copper (H), Mercury, Lead (H), Zinc (H). |
Titanium Ore |
X |
X |
Iron, Nickel (H), Zinc (H). |
Vanadium Ore |
X |
X |
Arsenic, Cadmium (H), Copper (H), Lead (H), Zinc (H). |
Copper, Lead, Zinc, Gold, Silver and Molybdenum |
X |
X |
Arsenic, Cadmium (H), Copper (H), Lead (H), Mercury, Zinc (H). |
Uranium, Radium and Vanadium |
X |
X |
Chemical Oxygen Demand, Arsenic, Radium (Dissolved and Total Recoverable), Uranium, Zinc (H). |
Note: (H) indicates that hardness |
9VAC25-151-160. Sector H - Coal mines and coal mining-related facilities.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from coal mining-related areas (SIC Major Group 12) if (i) they are
not subject to effluent limitations guidelines under 40 CFR Part 434 (2007)
or (ii) they are not subject to the standards of the Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA) (30 USC § 1201 et seq.) and the Virginia
Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy's individual permit requirements.
The requirements of this section shall apply to storm water discharges from coal mining-related activities exempt from SMCRA, including the public financed exemption, the 16-2/3% exemption, the private use exemption, the under 250 tons exemption, the nonincidental tipple exemption, and the exemption for coal piles and preparation plants associated with the end user. Storm water discharges from the following portions of eligible coal mines and coal mining related facilities may be eligible for this permit: haul roads (nonpublic roads on which coal or coal refuse is conveyed), access roads (nonpublic roads providing light vehicular traffic within the facility property and to public roadways), railroad spurs, sidings, and internal haulage lines (rail lines used for hauling coal within the facility property and to off-site commercial railroad lines or loading areas); conveyor belts, chutes, and aerial tramway haulage areas (areas under and around coal or refuse conveyor areas, including transfer stations); and equipment storage and maintenance yards, coal handling buildings and structures, coal tipples, coal loading facilities and inactive coal mines and related areas (abandoned and other inactive mines, refuse disposal sites and other mining-related areas).
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general prohibition of nonstorm water discharges in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: discharges from pollutant seeps or underground drainage from inactive coal mines and refuse disposal areas that do not result from precipitation events and discharges from floor drains in maintenance buildings and other similar drains in mining and preparation plant areas.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff:
(1) Drainage direction and discharge points from all
applicable mining-related areas described in subsection A of this section Haul
and access roads;
(2) Railroad spurs, sliding, and internal hauling lines;
(3) Conveyor belts, chutes, and aerial tramways;
(4) Equipment storage and maintenance yards;
(5) Coal handling buildings and structures;
(6) Inactive mines and related areas;
(2) (7) Acidic spoil, refuse or unreclaimed
disturbed areas; and
(3) (8) Liquid storage tanks containing
pollutants such as caustics, hydraulic fluids and lubricants.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. A description of
the potential pollutant sources from the following activities: truck traffic on
haul roads and resulting generation of sediment subject to runoff and dust
generation; fuel or other liquid storage; pressure lines containing slurry,
hydraulic fluid or other potential harmful liquids; and loading or temporary
storage of acidic refuse/spoil refuse or spoil.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping. As part of the facility's good housekeeping program, the permittee shall consider the following: using sweepers, covered storage, and watering of haul roads to minimize dust generation; and conservation of vegetation (where possible) to minimize erosion.
b. Preventive maintenance. The permittee shall also perform inspections of storage tanks and pressure lines for fuels, lubricants, hydraulic fluid or slurry to prevent leaks due to deterioration or faulty connections; or other equivalent measures.
c. Routine facility inspections. Sites shall be inspected at least quarterly unless adverse weather conditions make the site inaccessible. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
3. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The evaluation
program shall also include inspections for pollutants entering the drainage
system from activities located on or near coal mining-related areas. Among the
areas to be inspected: haul and access roads; railroad spurs, sliding and
internal hauling lines; conveyor belts, chutes and aerial tramways; equipment
storage and maintenance yards; coal handling buildings/structures buildings
and structures; and inactive mines and related areas.
D. Inactive and unstaffed sites. Permittees in Sector H seeking to exercise a waiver from the quarterly visual assessment and routine facility inspection requirements for inactive and unstaffed sites (including temporarily inactive sites) are conditionally exempt from the requirement to certify that "there are no industrial materials or activities exposed to stormwater" in Part I A 4.
This exemption is conditioned on the following:
1. If circumstances change and the facility becomes active or staffed, this exception no longer applies and the permittee shall immediately begin complying with the quarterly visual assessment requirements and routine facility inspection requirements; and
2. The board retains the authority to revoke this exemption and the monitoring waiver when it is determined that the discharge causes, has a reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an instream excursion above an applicable water quality standard, including designated uses.
Subject to the two conditions in subdivisions 1 and 2 of this subsection, if a facility is inactive and unstaffed, the permittee is waived from the requirement to conduct quarterly visual assessments and routine facility inspections. The permittee is not waived from conducting the Part III E comprehensive site inspection. The board encourages the permittee to inspect the site more frequently when there is reason to believe that severe weather or natural disasters may have damaged control measures.
D. E. Benchmark monitoring and reporting
requirements. Coal mining facilities are required to monitor their storm water
discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 160. Note: There
are no benchmark monitoring requirements for inactive and unstaffed sites that
have received a waiver in accordance with Part I A 4 (Inactive and unstaffed
sites).
Table 160 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Coal Mines and Related Areas (SIC 1221-1241) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-170. Sector I - Oil and gas extraction and refining.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity from oil and gas extraction and refining facilities listed
under SIC Major Group 13 which have had a discharge of a reportable quantity
(RQ) of oil or a hazardous substance for which notification is required under
40 CFR 110.6 (2007), 40 CFR 117.21 (2007) or 40 CFR 302.6 (2007).
These include oil and gas exploration, production, processing, or treatment
operations, or transmission facilities that discharge storm water contaminated
by contact with or that has come into contact with any overburden raw material,
intermediate products, finished products, by-products or waste products located
on the site of such operations. Industries in SIC Major Group 13 include the
extraction and production of crude oil, natural gas, oil sands and shale; the
production of hydrocarbon liquids and natural gas from coal; and associated
oilfield service, supply and repair industries. This section also covers
petroleum refineries listed under SIC Code 2911.
Contaminated storm water discharges from petroleum refining or
drilling operations that are subject to nationally established BAT or BPT
guidelines found at 40 CFR Part 419 (2006) and 40 CFR Part 435 (2007)
respectively are not authorized by this permit.
Note: most contaminated discharges from petroleum refining and drilling facilities are subject to these effluent guidelines and are not eligible for coverage under this permit.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general prohibition of nonstorm water discharges in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: discharges of vehicle and equipment washwater, including tank cleaning operations. Alternatively, washwater discharges must be authorized under a separate VPDES permit, or be discharged to a sanitary sewer in accordance with applicable industrial pretreatment requirements.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: reportable quantity (RQ) releases; locations used for the
treatment, storage or disposal of wastes; processing areas and storage areas;
chemical mixing areas; construction and drilling areas; all areas subject to
the effluent guidelines requirement of "No Discharge" in accordance
with 40 CFR 435.32 (2007) and the structural controls to achieve compliance
with the "No Discharge" requirement.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources.
(1) The plan shall also include a description of the potential pollutant sources from the following activities: chemical, cement, mud or gel mixing activities; drilling or mining activities; and equipment cleaning and rehabilitation activities.
(2) The plan shall include information about the RQ release which triggered the permit application requirements, including: the nature of the release (e.g., spill of oil from a drum storage area); the amount of oil or hazardous substance released; amount of substance recovered; date of the release; cause of the release (e.g., poor handling techniques and lack of containment in the area); areas affected by the release, including land and waters; procedure to cleanup release; actions or procedures implemented to prevent or improve response to a release; and remaining potential contamination of storm water from release (taking into account human health risks, the control of drinking water intakes, and the designated uses of the receiving water).
2. Storm water controls. a. Routine facility inspections.
All equipment and areas addressed in the SWPPP shall be inspected at least
monthly. Equipment and vehicles which store, mix (including all on-site and
off-site mixing tanks) or transport chemicals/hazardous materials (including
those transporting supplies to oil field activities) will be inspected on a
monthly basis. For temporarily or permanently inactive oil and gas extraction
facilities within Major SIC Group 13, which are remotely located and unstaffed,
the inspections shall be performed at least annually. b. : Sediment
and erosion control. The erosion control requirement for well drillings and sand/shale
sand or shale mining areas are as follows:
(1) a. Site description. Each plan shall provide
a description of the following:
(a) (1) A description of the nature of the
exploration activity;
(b) (2) Estimates of the total area of the site
and the area of the site that is expected to be disturbed due to the
exploration activity;
(c) (3) An estimate of the runoff coefficient of
the site;
(d) (4) A site map indicating drainage patterns
and approximate slopes; and
(e) (5) The name of all receiving water(s).
(2) b. Vegetative controls. The SWPPP shall
include a description of vegetative practices designed to preserve existing
vegetation where attainable and revegetate open areas as soon as practicable
after grade drilling. Such practices may include: temporary or permanent
seeding, mulching, sod stabilization, vegetative buffer strips, tree protection
practices. The permittee shall initiate appropriate vegetative practices on all
disturbed areas within 14 calendar days of the last activity at that area.
(3) Off-site vehicle tracking of sediments shall be
minimized.
(4) c. Procedures in the plan shall provide that
all erosion controls on the site are inspected at least once every seven
calendar days.
c. Good housekeeping measures.
(1) Vehicle and equipment storage areas. The storage of vehicles
and equipment awaiting or having completed maintenance shall be confined to
designated areas (delineated on the site map). The plan shall describe measures
that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from these
areas (e.g., drip pans under equipment, indoor storage, use of berms and dikes,
or other equivalent measures.
(2) Materials and chemical storage areas. Storage units of
all chemicals and materials shall be maintained in good condition so as to
prevent contamination of storm water. Hazardous materials shall be plainly
labeled.
(3) Chemical mixing areas. The plan shall describe measures
that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from chemical
mixing areas.
d. Contact with waste water pollutants at exploration and
production facilities. The permittee shall take all measures necessary to
prevent the discharge of storm water that has come into contact with waste
water pollutants from any sources associated with production, field
exploration, drilling, well completion, or well treatment (i.e., produced
water, drilling muds, drill cuttings, and produced sand).
Sector J Mineral Mining and Dressing (SIC 1411-1499). Facilities described by this sector are not covered by this general permit. Facilities with storm water discharges that fall under this sector should apply for coverage under the VPDES Nonmetallic Mineral Mining General Permit (VAG 84).
9VAC25-151-180. Sector K - Hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal facilities.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity from facilities that treat, store, or dispose of hazardous
wastes, including those that are operating under interim status or a permit
under subtitle C of RCRA (Industrial Activity Code "HZ"). Disposal
facilities that have been properly closed and capped, or clean closed,
and have no significant materials exposed to storm water, are considered
inactive and do not require permits this permit.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general prohibition of nonstorm water discharges in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids, contaminated ground water, laboratory-derived wastewater and contact washwater from washing truck, equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that have come in direct contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
C. Definitions.
"Contaminated storm water" means storm water that comes in direct contact with landfill wastes, the waste handling and treatment areas, or landfill wastewater as defined in this section. Some specific areas of a landfill that may produce contaminated storm water include, but are not limited to: the open face of an active landfill with exposed waste (no cover added); the areas around wastewater treatment operations; trucks, equipment or machinery that has been in direct contact with the waste; and waste dumping areas.
"Drained free liquids" means aqueous wastes drained from waste containers (e.g., drums, etc.) prior to landfilling.
"Land treatment facility" means a facility or
part of a facility at which hazardous waste is applied onto or incorporated
into the soil surface; such facilities are disposal facilities if the waste
will remain after closure.
"Landfill" means an area of land or an excavation in
which wastes are placed for permanent disposal, that is not a land application
or land treatment unit, surface impoundment, underground injection well, waste
pile, salt dome formation, a salt bed formation, an underground mine or a cave
as these terms are defined in 40 CFR 257.2 (2006), 40 CFR 258.2 (2006)
and 40 CFR 260.10 (2007).
"Landfill wastewater" as defined in 40 CFR Part 445 (2007)
(Landfills Point Source Category) means all wastewater associated with, or
produced by, landfilling activities except for sanitary wastewater,
noncontaminated storm water, contaminated ground water, and wastewater from
recovery pumping wells. Landfill wastewater includes, but is not limited to,
leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids, laboratory derived
wastewater, contaminated storm water and contact washwater from washing truck,
equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that have come in direct
contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
"Leachate" means liquid that has passed through or emerged from solid waste and contains soluble, suspended, or miscible materials removed from such waste.
"Noncontaminated storm water" means storm water that
does not come into direct contact with landfill wastes, the waste handling and
treatment areas, or landfill wastewater as defined above. Noncontaminated storm
water includes storm water that flows off the cap, cover, intermediate cover,
daily cover, and/or or final cover of the landfill.
"Pile" means any noncontainerized accumulation of
solid, nonflowing hazardous waste that is used for treatment or storage and
that is not a containment building.
"Surface impoundment" means a facility or part of
a facility that is a natural topographic depression, man-made excavation or
diked area formed primarily of earthen materials (although it may be lined with
man-made materials), which is designed to hold an accumulation of liquid wastes
or wastes containing free liquids, and which is not an injection well. Examples
of surface impoundments are holding, storage, settling, and aeration pits,
ponds and lagoons.
D. Numeric effluent limitations. As set forth at 40 CFR Part
445 Subpart A (2007), the numeric limitations in Table 180-1 apply to
contaminated storm water discharges from hazardous waste landfills subject to
the provisions of RCRA Subtitle C at 40 CFR Parts 264 (Subpart N) (2007)
and 265 (Subpart N) (2007) except for any of the following
facilities described in subdivisions 1 through 4 of this subsection:
1. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or commercial operations when the landfill only receives wastes generated by the industrial or commercial operation directly associated with the landfill;
2. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or
commercial operations when the landfill receives wastes generated by the
industrial or commercial operation directly associated with the landfill and
also receives other wastes provided the other wastes received for disposal are
generated by a facility that is subject to the same provisions in 40 CFR
Subchapter N (2007) as the industrial or commercial operation or the
other wastes received are of similar nature to the wastes generated by the
industrial or commercial operation;
3. Landfills operated in conjunction with Centralized Waste
Treatment (CWT) facilities subject to 40 CFR Part 437 (2007) so long as
the CWT facility commingles the landfill wastewater with other nonlandfill
wastewater for discharge. A landfill directly associated with a CWT facility is
subject to this part if the CWT facility discharges landfill wastewater
separately from other CWT wastewater or commingles the wastewater from its
landfill only with wastewater from other landfills; or
4. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or commercial operations when the landfill receives wastes from public service activities so long as the company owning the landfill does not receive a fee or other remuneration for the disposal service.
Table 180-1 |
||
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Maximum Daily |
Maximum Monthly Average |
|
Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage, or Disposal Facilities
(Industrial Activity Code "HZ") Subject to the Provisions of 40 CFR
Part 445 Subpart A |
||
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
220 mg/L |
56 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
88 mg/L |
27 mg/L |
Ammonia |
10 mg/L |
4.9 mg/L |
Alpha Terpineol |
0.042 mg/L |
0.019 mg/L |
Aniline |
0.024 mg/L |
0.015 mg/L |
Benzoic Acid |
0.119 mg/L* |
0.073 mg/L |
Naphthalene |
0.059 mg/L |
0.022 mg/L |
p-Cresol |
0.024 mg/L |
0.015 mg/L |
Phenol |
0.048 mg/L |
0.029 mg/L |
Pyridine |
0.072 mg/L |
0.025 mg/L |
Arsenic (Total) |
1.1 mg/L |
0.54 mg/L |
Chromium (Total) |
1.1 mg/L |
0.46 mg/L |
Zinc (Total) |
0.535 mg/L* |
0.296 mg/L* |
pH |
Within the range of 6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
|
*These effluent limitations are three significant digits for reporting purposes. |
E. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Permittees with hazardous waste treatment, storage, or disposal facilities (TSDFs) are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 180-2. These benchmark monitoring cutoff concentrations apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity other than contaminated storm water discharges from landfills subject to the numeric effluent limitations set forth in Table 180-1.
Table 180-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Hazardous Waste Treatment, Storage, or Disposal Facilities (Industrial Activity Code "HZ") |
|
Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN) |
1.5 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Organic Carbon (TOC) |
110 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Arsenic |
50 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Cadmium |
2.1 μg/L |
Total Cyanide |
22 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Magnesium |
64 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Mercury |
1.4 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Selenium |
5.0 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Silver |
3.8 μg/L |
9VAC25-151-190. Sector L - Landfills, land application sites and open dumps.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from waste disposal at landfills, land application sites, and open
dumps that receive or have received industrial wastes (Industrial Activity Code
"LF"), including sites subject to regulation under Subtitle D of
RCRA. Open dumps are solid waste disposal units that are not in compliance
with state/federal criteria established under RCRA Subtitle D. Landfills,
land application sites, and open dumps that have storm water discharges from
other types of industrial activities such as vehicle maintenance, truck
washing, and/or and recycling may be subject to additional
requirements specified elsewhere in this permit. This permit does not cover
discharges from landfills that receive only municipal wastes. Landfills that
have been properly closed and capped in accordance with 9VAC20-81-160 and
9VAC20-81-170 and have no significant materials exposed to storm water do not
require this permit. Landfills closed in accordance with regulations or permits
in effect prior to December 21, 1988, do not require this permit, unless
significant materials are exposed to storm water.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids, contaminated ground water, laboratory wastewater, and contact washwater from washing truck, equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that have come in direct contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
C. Definitions.
"Contaminated storm water" means storm water that
comes in direct contact with landfill wastes, the waste handling and treatment
areas, or landfill wastewater as defined below. Some specific
areas of a landfill that may produce contaminated storm water include, but are
not limited to:, the open working face of an active
landfill with exposed waste (no cover added); the areas around
wastewater treatment operations; trucks, equipment, or machinery that
has been in direct contact with the waste; and waste dumping areas.
"Drained free liquids" means aqueous wastes drained from waste containers (e.g., drums, etc.) prior to landfilling.
"Landfill wastewater" as defined in 40 CFR Part 445 (2007)
(Landfills Point Source Category) means all wastewater associated with, or
produced by, landfilling activities except for sanitary wastewater,
noncontaminated storm water, contaminated groundwater, and wastewater from
recovery pumping wells. Landfill process wastewater includes, but is not
limited to, leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free liquids,
laboratory derived wastewater, contaminated storm water and contact washwater
from washing truck, equipment, and railcar exteriors and surface areas that
have come in direct contact with solid waste at the landfill facility.
"Leachate" means liquid that has passed through or emerged from solid waste and contains soluble, suspended, or miscible materials removed from such waste.
"Noncontaminated storm water" means storm water that
does not come into direct contact with landfill wastes, the waste handling and
treatment areas, or landfill wastewater as defined above. Noncontaminated storm
water includes storm water that flows off the cap, cover, intermediate
cover, daily cover, and/or or final cover of the landfill.
"Open dump" means a site on which any solid waste is placed, discharged, deposited, injected, dumped, or spilled so as to present a threat of a release of harmful substances into the environment or present a hazard to human health. Such a site is subject to the open dump criteria in 9VAC20-81-45.
D. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements in Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: active and closed landfill cells or trenches; active and
closed land application areas; locations where open dumping is occurring or has
occurred; locations of any known leachate springs or other areas where
uncontrolled leachate may commingle with runoff; and leachate collection and
handling systems.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The SWPPP shall
also include a description of potential pollutant sources associated with any
of the following: fertilizer, herbicide, and pesticide application; earth/soil
earth and soil moving; waste hauling and loading/unloading loading
and unloading; outdoor storage of significant materials including daily,
interim and final cover material stockpiles as well as temporary waste storage
areas; exposure of active and inactive landfill and land application areas;
uncontrolled leachate flows; and failure or leaks from leachate collection and
treatment systems.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Preventive maintenance program. As part of the preventive
maintenance program, the permittee shall maintain: all containers used for
outdoor chemical/significant materials storage to prevent leaking; all
elements of leachate collection and treatment systems to prevent commingling of
leachate with storm water; and the integrity and effectiveness of any
intermediate or final cover (including making repairs to the cover as necessary
necessary), to minimize the effects of settlement, sinking, and erosion)
erosion.
b. Good housekeeping measures. As part of the good
housekeeping program, the permittee shall consider providing protected storage
areas for pesticides, herbicides, fertilizer and other significant materials.
c. b. Routine facility inspections.
(1) Inspections of active sites. Operating landfills, open
dumps, and land application sites shall be inspected at least once every seven
days. Qualified personnel shall inspect areas of landfills that have not yet
been finally stabilized, active land application areas, areas used for storage
of materials/wastes materials or wastes that are exposed to
precipitation, stabilization and structural control measures, leachate collection
and treatment systems, and locations where equipment and waste trucks enter and
exit the site. Erosion and sediment control measures shall be observed to
ensure they are operating correctly. For stabilized sites and areas where land
application has been completed, or where the climate is seasonally arid (annual
rainfall averages from 0 to 10 inches) or semi-arid (annual rainfall averages
from 10 to 20 inches), inspections shall be conducted at least once every
month.
(2) Inspections of inactive sites. Inactive landfills, open dumps, and land application sites shall be inspected at least quarterly. Qualified personnel shall inspect landfill (or open dump) stabilization and structural erosion control measures and leachate collection and treatment systems, and all closed land application areas.
d. c. Recordkeeping and internal reporting
procedures. Landfill and open dump owners shall provide for a tracking system
for the types of wastes disposed of in each cell or trench of a landfill or
open dump. Land application site owners shall track the types and quantities of
wastes applied in specific areas.
e. Certification of d. Annual outfall evaluation
for unauthorized discharges. The discharge test and certification evaluation
shall also be conducted for the presence of leachate and vehicle washwater.
f. e. Sediment and erosion control plan.
Landfill and open dump owners shall provide for temporary stabilization of
materials stockpiled for daily, intermediate, and final cover. Stabilization
practices to consider include, but are not limited to, temporary seeding,
mulching, and placing geotextiles on the inactive portions of the stockpiles.
Landfill and open dump owners shall provide for temporary stabilization of
inactive areas of the landfill or open dump which have an intermediate cover
but no final cover. Landfill and open dump owners shall provide for temporary
stabilization of any landfill or open dumping areas which have received a final
cover until vegetation has established itself. Land application site owners
shall also stabilize areas where waste application has been completed until
vegetation has been established.
g. f. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation.
Areas contributing to a storm water discharge associated with industrial
activities at landfills, open dumps and land application sites shall be
evaluated for evidence of, or the potential for, pollutants entering the
drainage system.
E. Numeric effluent limitations. As set forth at 40 CFR Part
445 Subpart B (2007), the numeric limitations in Table 190-1 apply to
contaminated storm water discharges from municipal solid waste landfills
(MSWLFs) that have not been closed in accordance with 40 CFR 258.60 (2006),
and contaminated storm water discharges from those landfills that are subject
to the provisions of 40 CFR Part 257 (2006) (these include CDD landfills
(also known as C&D landfills), and industrial landfills) except for
discharges from any of the following facilities described in
subdivisions 1 through 4 of this subsection:
1. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or commercial operations when the landfill only receives wastes generated by the industrial or commercial operation directly associated with the landfill;
2. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or
commercial operations when the landfill receives wastes generated by the
industrial or commercial operation directly associated with the landfill and
also receives other wastes provided the other wastes received for disposal are
generated by a facility that is subject to the same provisions in 40 CFR
Subchapter N (2007) as the industrial or commercial operation or the
other wastes received are of similar nature to the wastes generated by the
industrial or commercial operation;
3. Landfills operated in conjunction with centralized waste
treatment (CWT) facilities subject to 40 CFR Part 437 (2007) so long as
the CWT facility commingles the landfill wastewater with other nonlandfill
wastewater for discharge. A landfill directly associated with a CWT facility is
subject to this part if the CWT facility discharges landfill wastewater
separately from other CWT wastewater or commingles the wastewater from its
landfill only with wastewater from other landfills; or
4. Landfills operated in conjunction with other industrial or commercial operations when the landfill receives wastes from public service activities so long as the company owning the landfill does not receive a fee or other remuneration for the disposal service.
Table 190-1 |
||
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Maximum Daily |
Maximum Monthly Average |
|
Landfills (Industrial Activity Code "LF") that are
Subject to the Requirements of 40 CFR Part 445 Subpart B |
||
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
140 mg/L |
37 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
88 mg/L |
27 mg/L |
Ammonia |
10 mg/L |
4.9 mg/L |
Alpha Terpineol |
0.033 mg/L |
0.016 mg/L |
Benzoic Acid |
0.12 mg/L |
0.071 mg/L |
p-Cresol |
0.025 mg/L |
0.014 mg/L |
Phenol |
0.026 mg/L |
0.015 mg/L |
Zinc (Total) |
0.20 mg/L |
0.11 mg/L |
pH |
Within the range of 6.0 - 9.0 s.u. |
F. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Landfill/land
application/open Landfill, land application, and open dump sites are
required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern
listed in Table 190-2. These benchmark monitoring cutoff concentrations apply
to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity other than
contaminated storm water discharges from landfills subject to the numeric
effluent limitations set forth in Table 190-1.
Table 190-2 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Landfills, Land Application Sites and Open Dumps (Industrial Activity Code "LF"). |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
|
|
|
|
9VAC25-151-200. Sector M - Automobile salvage yards.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from facilities engaged in dismantling or wrecking used motor vehicles
for parts recycling/resale recycling or resale, and for scrap
(SIC Code 5015).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items:
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The map shall include the location of each
monitoring point, and an estimation (in acres) of the total area used for industrial
activity including, but not limited to, dismantling, storage, and maintenance
of used motor vehicle parts. The site map shall also identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: vehicle storage areas; dismantling areas; parts storage
areas (e.g., engine blocks, tires, hub caps, batteries, hoods, mufflers); and
liquid storage tanks and drums for fuel and other fluids.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The permittee shall assess the potential for the following activities to contribute pollutants to storm water discharges: vehicle storage areas; dismantling areas; parts storage areas (e.g., engine blocks, tires, hub caps, batteries, and hoods); fueling stations.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Spill and leak prevention procedures. All vehicles that are intended to be dismantled shall be properly drained of all fluids prior to being dismantled or crushed, or other equivalent means shall be taken to prevent leaks or spills of fluids.
b. Inspections. Upon arrival at the site, or as soon thereafter as feasible, vehicles shall be inspected for leaks. Any equipment containing oily parts, hydraulic fluids, any other types of fluids, or mercury switches shall be inspected at least quarterly (four times per year) for signs of leaks. All vessels and areas where hazardous materials and general automotive fluids are stored, including, but not limited to, mercury switches, brake fluid, transmission fluid, radiator water, and antifreeze, shall be inspected at least quarterly for leaks.
c. Employee training. Employee training shall, at a minimum, address the following areas when applicable to a facility: proper handling (collection, storage, and disposal) of oil, used mineral spirits, anti-freeze, mercury switches, and solvents.
d. Management of runoff. The plan shall consider management practices, such as berms or drainage ditches on the property line, to help prevent runon from neighboring properties. Berms shall be considered for uncovered outdoor storage of oily parts, engine blocks, and aboveground liquid storage. The permittee shall consider the installation of detention ponds, filtering devices, and oil/water separators.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Automobile salvage yards are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 200.
Table 200 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Automobile Salvage Yards (SIC 5015) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 μg/L |
9VAC25-151-210. Sector N - Scrap recycling and waste recycling facilities and material recovery facilities (MRF).
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed
under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from facilities that are engaged in the processing, reclaiming and
wholesale distribution of scrap and waste materials such as ferrous and
nonferrous metals, paper, plastic, cardboard, glass, animal hides (these types
of activities are typically identified as SIC Code 5093), and facilities that
are engaged in reclaiming and recycling liquid wastes such as used oil,
antifreeze, mineral spirits, and industrial solvents (also identified as SIC
Code 5093). Separate permit requirements have been established for recycling
facilities that only receive source-separated recyclable materials primarily
from nonindustrial and residential sources (also identified as SIC Code 5093)
(e.g., common consumer products including paper, newspaper, glass, cardboard,
plastic containers, aluminum and tin cans). This includes recycling
facilities commonly referred to as material recovery facilities (MRF).
Separate permit requirements have also been established for facilities that are engaged in dismantling ships, marine salvaging, and marine wreckingships for scrap (SIC 4499, limited to those listed; for others in SIC 4499 not listed above, see Sector Q (9VAC25-151-240)).
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B 1, nonstorm water discharges from turnings containment areas are not covered by this permit (see also subdivision C 2 c of this section). Discharges from containment areas in the absence of a storm event are prohibited unless covered by a separate VPDES permit.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, all facilities are required to comply with the general SWPPP requirement in subdivision 1 of this subsection.
Subdivisions 2 through 5 of this subsection have SWPPP requirements for specific types of recycling facilities. The permittee shall implement and describe in the SWPPP a program to address those items that apply. Included are lists of BMP options that, along with any functional equivalents, shall be considered for implementation. Selection or deselection of a particular BMP or approach is up to the best professional judgment of the permittee, as long as the objective of the requirement is met.
1. Site description. Site map. The site map shall identify the
locations where any of the following activities or sources may be exposed to precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff: scrap and waste material storage,
outdoor scrap and waste processing equipment, and containment areas for
turnings exposed to cutting fluids.
2. Scrap recycling and waste recycling facilities (nonsource-separated, nonliquid recyclable materials). The following SWPPP special conditions have been established for facilities that receive, process and do wholesale distribution of nonliquid recyclable wastes (e.g., ferrous and nonferrous metals, plastics, glass, cardboard and paper). These facilities may receive both nonrecyclable and recyclable materials. This section is not intended for those facilities that only accept recyclable materials primarily from nonindustrial and residential sources.
a. Inbound recyclable and waste material control program. The plan shall include a recyclable and waste material inspection program to minimize the likelihood of receiving materials that may be significant pollutant sources to storm water discharges. BMP options:
(1) Provide information/education information and
education flyers, brochures and pamphlets to suppliers of scrap and
recyclable waste materials on draining and properly disposing of residual
fluids prior to delivery to the facility (e.g., from vehicles and equipment
engines, radiators, and transmissions, oil-filled transformers, and individual
containers or drums), and on removal of mercury switches prior to delivery to
the facility;
(2) Establish procedures to minimize the potential of any
residual fluids from coming in contact with precipitation/runoff precipitation
or runoff;
(3) Establish procedures for accepting scrap lead-acid batteries. Additional requirements for the handling, storage and disposal or recycling of batteries are contained in the scrap lead-acid battery program provisions in subdivision 2 f of this subsection;
(4) Provide training targeted for those personnel engaged in the inspection and acceptance of inbound recyclable materials;
(5) Establish procedures to ensure that liquid wastes, including used oil, are stored in materially compatible and nonleaking containers and disposed or recycled in accordance with all requirements under the Resource Recovery and Conservation Act (RCRA), and other state or local requirements.
b. Scrap and waste material stockpiles/storage stockpiles
and storage (outdoor). The plan shall describe measures and controls to
minimize contact of storm water runoff with stockpiled materials, processed
materials and nonrecyclable wastes. BMP options:
(1) Permanent or semipermanent covers;
(2) The use of sediment traps, vegetated swales and strips, catch basin filters and sand filters to facilitate settling or filtering of pollutants;
(3) Diversion of runoff away from storage areas via dikes, berms, containment trenches, culverts and surface grading;
(4) Silt fencing;
(5) Oil/water separators, sumps and dry adsorbents for areas where potential sources of residual fluids are stockpiled (e.g., automotive engine storage areas).
c. Stockpiling of turnings exposed to cutting fluids (outdoor storage). The plan shall implement measures necessary to minimize contact of surface runoff with residual cutting fluids. BMP options (use singularly or in combination):
(1) Storage of all turnings exposed to cutting fluids under some form of permanent or semipermanent cover. Storm water discharges from these areas are permitted provided the runoff is first treated by an oil/water separator or its equivalent. Procedures to collect, handle, and dispose or recycle residual fluids that may be present shall be identified in the plan;
(2) Establish dedicated containment areas for all turnings that have been exposed to cutting fluids. Storm water runoff from these areas can be discharged provided:
(a) The containment areas are constructed of either concrete, asphalt or other equivalent type of impermeable material;
(b) There is a barrier around the perimeter of the containment areas to prevent contact with storm water runon (e.g., berms, curbing, elevated pads, etc.);
(c) There is a drainage collection system for runoff generated from containment areas;
(d) There is a schedule to maintain the oil/water separator (or its equivalent); and
(e) Procedures are identified for the proper disposal or recycling of collected residual fluids.
d. Scrap and waste material stockpiles/storage stockpiles
and storage (covered or indoor storage). The plan shall address measures
and controls to minimize contact of residual liquids and particulate matter
from materials stored indoors or under cover from coming in contact with
surface runoff. BMP options:
(1) Good housekeeping measures, including the use of dry
absorbent or wet vacuum clean up cleanup methods, to contain or
dispose/recycle, dispose, or recycle residual liquids originating
from recyclable containers, or mercury spill kits from storage of mercury
switches;
(2) Prohibiting the practice of allowing washwater from tipping floors or other processing areas from discharging to the storm sewer system;
(3) Disconnecting or sealing off all floor drains connected to the storm sewer system.
e. Scrap and recyclable waste processing areas. The plan shall include measures and controls to minimize surface runoff from coming in contact with scrap processing equipment. In the case of processing equipment that generate visible amounts of particulate residue (e.g., shredding facilities), the plan shall describe measures to minimize the contact of residual fluids and accumulated particulate matter with runoff (i.e., through good housekeeping, preventive maintenance, etc.). BMP options:
(1) A schedule of regular inspections of equipment for leaks, spills, malfunctioning, worn or corroded parts or equipment;
(2) A preventive maintenance program for processing equipment;
(3) Removal of mercury switches from the hood and trunk lighting units, and removal of anti-lock brake system units containing mercury switches;
(4) Use of dry-absorbents or other cleanup practices to
collect and to dispose/recycle spilled/leaking dispose of or recycle
spilled or leaking fluids, or use of mercury spill kits for spills from
storage of mercury switches;
(5) Installation of low-level alarms or other equivalent protection devices on unattended hydraulic reservoirs over 150 gallons in capacity. Alternatively, provide secondary containment with sufficient volume to contain the entire volume of the reservoir.
(6) Containment or diversion structures such as dikes, berms, culverts, trenches, elevated concrete pads, and grading to minimize contact of storm water runoff with outdoor processing equipment or stored materials;
(7) Oil/water separators or sumps;
(8) Permanent or semipermanent covers in processing areas where there are residual fluids and grease;
(9) Retention and detention basins or ponds, sediment traps,
vegetated swales or strips, to facilitate pollutant settling/ filtration
settling and filtration;
(10) Catch basin filters or sand filters.
f. Scrap lead-acid battery program. The plan shall address measures and controls for the proper handling, storage and disposal of scrap lead-acid batteries. BMP options:
(1) Segregate scrap lead-acid batteries from other scrap materials;
(2) A description of procedures and/or and
measures for the proper handling, storage and disposal of cracked or broken
batteries;
(3) A description of measures to collect and dispose of leaking lead-acid battery fluid;
(4) A description of measures to minimize and, whenever possible, eliminate exposure of scrap lead-acid batteries to precipitation or runoff;
(5) A description of employee training for the management of scrap batteries.
g. Spill prevention and response procedures. The SWPPP shall
include measures to minimize storm water contamination at loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas, and from equipment or container failures.
BMP options:
(1) Description of spill prevention and response measures to address areas that are potential sources of fluid leaks or spills;
(2) Immediate containment and clean up of spills/leaks spills
and leaks. If malfunctioning equipment is responsible for the spill/leak
spill or leak, repairs shall also be conducted as soon as possible;
(3) Cleanup procedures shall be identified in the plan, including the use of dry absorbents. Where dry absorbent cleanup methods are used, an adequate supply of dry absorbent material shall be maintained on-site. Used absorbent material shall be disposed of properly;
(4) Drums containing liquids, especially oil and lubricants, shall be stored: indoors; in a bermed area; in overpack containers or spill pallets; or in similar containment devices;
(5) Overfill prevention devices shall be installed on all fuel pumps or tanks;
(6) Drip pans or equivalent measures shall be placed under any leaking piece of stationary equipment until the leak is repaired. The drip pans shall be inspected for leaks and potential overflow and all liquids properly disposed of in accordance with RCRA requirements;
(7) An alarm and/or or pump shut off system
shall be installed on outdoor equipment with hydraulic reservoirs exceeding 150
gallons in order to prevent draining the tank contents in the event of a line
break. Alternatively, the equipment may have a secondary containment system
capable of containing the contents of the hydraulic reservoir plus adequate
freeboard for precipitation. A mercury spill kit shall be used for any release
of mercury from switches, anti-lock brake systems, and switch storage areas.
h. Inspection program. All designated areas of the facility
and equipment identified in the plan shall be inspected at least monthly
quarterly. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for
facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
i. Supplier notification program. The plan shall include a program to notify major suppliers which scrap materials will not be accepted at the facility or are only accepted under certain conditions.
3. Waste recycling facilities (liquid recyclable materials).
a. Waste material storage (indoor). The plan shall include
measures and controls to minimize/eliminate minimize or eliminate
contact between residual liquids from waste materials stored indoors and
surface runoff. The plan may refer to applicable portions of other existing
plans such as SPCC plans required under 40 CFR Part 112 (2007). BMP
options:
(1) Procedures for material handling (including labeling and marking);
(2) A sufficient supply of dry-absorbent materials or a wet vacuum system to collect spilled or leaked materials (note: spilled or leaking mercury should never be vacuumed);
(3) An appropriate containment structure, such as trenches, curbing, gutters or other equivalent measures;
(4) A drainage system, including appurtenances (e.g., pumps or ejectors, or manually operated valves), to handle discharges from diked or bermed areas. Drainage shall be discharged to an appropriate treatment facility, sanitary sewer system, or otherwise disposed of properly. Discharges from these areas may require coverage under a separate VPDES permit or industrial user permit under the pretreatment program.
b. Waste material storage (outdoor). The plan shall describe
measures and controls to minimize contact between stored residual liquids and
precipitation or runoff. The plan may refer to applicable portions of other
existing plans such as SPCC plans required under 40 CFR Part 112 (2007).
Discharges of precipitation from containment areas containing used oil shall
also be in accordance with applicable sections of 40 CFR Part 112 (2007).
BMP options:
(1) Appropriate containment structures (e.g., dikes, berms, curbing, pits) to store the volume of the largest single tank, with sufficient extra capacity for precipitation;
(2) Drainage control and other diversionary structures;
(3) For storage tanks, provide corrosion protection and/or
or leak detection systems;
(4) Dry-absorbent materials or a wet vacuum system to collect spills.
c. Truck and rail car waste transfer areas. The plan shall
describe measures and controls to minimize pollutants in discharges from truck
and rail car loading/unloading loading and unloading areas. The
plan shall also address measures to clean up minor spills/leaks spills
and leaks resulting from the transfer of liquid wastes. BMP options:
(1) Containment and diversionary structures to minimize contact with precipitation or runoff;
(2) Use of dry cleanup methods, wet vacuuming, roof coverings, or runoff controls.
d. Inspections. Inspections shall be made monthly quarterly
and shall also include all areas where waste is generated, received, stored,
treated or disposed that are exposed to either precipitation or storm water
runoff. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for
facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
4. Recycling facilities (source separated materials). The following SWPPP special conditions have been established for facilities that receive only source-separated recyclable materials primarily from nonindustrial and residential sources.
a. Inbound recyclable material control. The plan shall include an inbound materials inspection program to minimize the likelihood of receiving nonrecyclable materials (e.g., hazardous materials) that may be a significant source of pollutants in surface runoff. BMP options:
(1) Provide information and education measures to inform suppliers of recyclable materials on the types of materials that are acceptable and those that are not acceptable;
(2) A description of training measures for drivers responsible for pickup of recyclable materials;
(3) Clearly mark public drop-off containers regarding which materials can be accepted;
(4) Rejecting nonrecyclable wastes or household hazardous wastes at the source;
(5) Establish procedures for the handling and disposal of nonrecyclable materials.
b. Outdoor storage. The plan shall include procedures to minimize the exposure of recyclable materials to surface runoff and precipitation. The plan shall include good housekeeping measures to prevent the accumulation of particulate matter and fluids, particularly in high traffic areas. BMP options:
(1) Provide totally-enclosed drop-off containers for the public;
(2) Install a sump/pump sump and pump with each
containment pit, and treat or discharge collected fluids to a sanitary
sewer system;
(3) Provide dikes and curbs for secondary containment (e.g., around bales of recyclable waste paper);
(4) Divert surface runoff away from outside material storage areas;
(5) Provide covers over containment bins, dumpsters, roll-off boxes;
(6) Store the equivalent one day's volume of recyclable materials indoors.
c. Indoor storage and material processing. The plan shall include measures to minimize the release of pollutants from indoor storage and processing areas. BMP options:
(1) Schedule routine good housekeeping measures for all storage and processing areas;
(2) Prohibit a practice of allowing tipping floor washwaters from draining to any portion of the storm sewer system; and
(3) Provide employee training on pollution prevention practices.
d. Vehicle and equipment maintenance. The plan shall also provide for BMPs in those areas where vehicle and equipment maintenance is occurring outdoors. BMP options:
(1) Prohibit vehicle and equipment washwater from discharging to the storm sewer system;
(2) Minimize or eliminate outdoor maintenance areas, wherever possible;
(3) Establish spill prevention and clean-up procedures in fueling areas;
(4) Avoid topping off fuel tanks;
(5) Divert runoff from fueling areas;
(6) Store lubricants and hydraulic fluids indoors;
(7) Provide employee training on proper, handling, storage of hydraulic fluids and lubricants.
5. Facilities engaged in dismantling ships, marine salvaging, and marine wreckingships for scrap. The following SWPPP special conditions have been established for facilities that are engaged in dismantling ships, marine salvaging, and marine wreckingships for scrap.
Vessel Breaking/Scrapping Activities breaking and
scrapping activities. Scrapping of vessels shall be accomplished ashore beyond
the range of mean high tide, whenever practicable. If this activity must be
conducted while a vessel is afloat or grounded in state waters, then the
permittee shall employ BMPs to reduce the amount of pollutants released. The
following BMPs shall be implemented during those periods when vessels (ships,
barges, yachts, etc.) are brought to the facility's site for recycling,
scrapping and storage prior to scrapping.
a. Fixed or floating platforms sufficiently sized and
constructed to catch and prevent scrap materials and pollutants from entering state
surface waters (or equivalent measures approved by the department)
board) shall be used as work surfaces when working on or near the water
surface. These platforms shall be cleaned as required to prevent pollutants
from entering state surface waters and at the end of each work
shift. All scrap metals and pollutants shall be collected in a manner to
prevent releases (containerization is recommended).
b. There shall be no discharge of oil or oily wastewater at the facility. Drip pans and other protective devices shall be required for all oil and oily waste transfer operations to catch incidental spillage and drips from hose nozzles, hose racks, drums or barrels. Drip pans and other protective devices shall be inspected and maintained to prevent releases. Oil and oily waste shall be disposed at a permitted facility and adequate documentation of off-site disposition shall be retained for review by the board upon request.
c. During the storage/breaking/scrapping storage,
breaking, and scrapping period, oil containment boom(s) shall be deployed
either around the vessel being scrapped, or across the mouth of the facility's
wetslip, to contain pollutants in the event of a spill. Booms shall be
inspected, maintained, and repaired as needed. Oil, grease and fuel spills
shall be prevented from reaching state surface waters. Cleanup
shall be carried out promptly after an oil, grease, and/or or
fuel spill is detected.
d. Paint and solvent spills shall be immediately cleaned up to
prevent pollutants from reaching storm drains, deck drains, and state surface
waters.
e. Contaminated bilge and ballast water shall not be
discharged to state surface waters. If it becomes necessary to
dispose of contaminated bilge and ballast waters during a vessel breaking
activity, the wastewater shall be disposed at a permitted facility and adequate
documentation of off-site disposition shall be retained for review by the board
upon request.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Scrap
recycling and waste recycling facilities (nonsource-separated facilities
only) (both source-separated and nonsource-separated facilities),
and facilities engaged in dismantling ships, marine salvaging, and marine
wreckingships for scrap are required to monitor their storm water discharges
for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 210.
Table 210 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Scrap Recycling and Waste Recycling Facilities (nonsource-separated facilities only) (SIC 5093) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Cadmium |
2.1 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Chromium |
16 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Scrap Recycling and Waste Recycling Facilities (source-separated facilities) (SIC 5093) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Aluminum1 |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Cadmium1 |
2.1 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Chromium1 |
16 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper1 |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron1 |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead1 |
120 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc1 |
120 μg/L |
1Metals monitoring is only required at source-separated facilities if metals are received at the facility. |
|
Facilities Engaged in Dismantling Ships, Marine Salvaging, and
Marine Wrecking - Ships |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Cadmium |
2.1 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Chromium |
16 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Lead |
120 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-220. Sector O - Steam electric generating facilities.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from steam electric power generating facilities using coal, natural gas, oil, nuclear energy, etc. to produce a steam source, including coal handling areas (Industrial Activity Code "SE").
Storm water discharges from coal pile runoff subject to numeric effluent limitations are eligible for coverage under this permit, but are subject to the limitations established by Part I A 1 c (2).
Storm water discharges from ancillary facilities (e.g., fleet
centers, gas turbine stations, and substations) that are not contiguous to a
steam electric power generating facility are not covered by this permit. Heat
capture/heat recovery heat capture and heat recovery combined cycle
generation facilities are also not covered by this permit; however, dual fuel
co-generation facilities that generate electric power are included.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B 1, nonstorm water discharges subject to effluent limitation guidelines are also not covered by this permit.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the plan shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description. Site map. The site map shall identify the
locations of any of the following activities or sources that may be exposed to precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff: storage tanks, scrap yards, general
refuse areas; short and long term storage of general materials (including, but
not limited to: supplies, construction materials, paint equipment, oils, fuels,
used and unused solvents, cleaning materials, paint, water treatment chemicals,
fertilizer, and pesticides); landfills; construction sites; and stock pile
areas (such as coal or limestone piles).
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping measures.
(1) Fugitive dust emissions. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize fugitive dust emissions from coal and ash handling areas. The permittee shall consider establishing procedures to minimize off-site tracking of coal dust and ash such as installing specially designed tires, or washing vehicles in a designated area before they leave the site, and controlling the wash water.
(2) Delivery vehicles. The plan shall describe measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water runoff from delivery vehicles arriving on the plant site. At a minimum the permittee shall consider the following:
(a) Develop procedures for the inspection of delivery vehicles arriving on the plant site, and ensure overall integrity of the body or container; and
(b) Develop procedures to deal with leakage/spillage leakage
and spillage from vehicles or containers.
(3) Fuel oil unloading areas. The plan shall describe measures
that prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff from fuel oil unloading areas. At a minimum the permittee
shall consider using the following measures, or an equivalent:
(a) Use of containment curbs in unloading areas;
(b) During deliveries, having station personnel familiar with
spill prevention and response procedures present to ensure that any leaks/spills
leaks and spills are immediately contained and cleaned up; and
(c) Use of spill and overflow protection (e.g., drip pans,
drip diapers, and/or or other containment devices placed beneath
fuel oil connectors to contain potential spillage during deliveries or from
leaks at the connectors).
(4) Chemical loading/unloading loading and unloading
areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or
minimize the contamination of precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff from chemical loading/unloading loading and
unloading areas. At a minimum the permittee shall consider using the
following measures (or their equivalents):
(a) Use of containment curbs at chemical loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas to contain spills;
(b) During deliveries, having station personnel familiar with
spill prevention and response procedures present to ensure that any leaks/spills
leaks or spills are immediately contained and cleaned up; and
(c) Covering chemical loading/unloading loading and
unloading areas, and storing chemicals indoors.
(5) Miscellaneous loading/unloading loading and
unloading areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that
prevent or minimize the contamination of storm water runoff from loading and
unloading areas. The permittee shall consider the following, at a minimum (or
their equivalents):
(a) covering the loading area;
(b) grading, berming, or curbing around the loading area to divert runon; or
(c) locating the loading/unloading loading and
unloading equipment and vehicles so that leaks are contained in existing
containment and flow diversion systems.
(6) Liquid storage tanks. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water runoff from aboveground liquid storage tanks. At a minimum the permittee shall consider employing the following measures (or their equivalents):
(a) Use of protective guards around tanks;
(b) Use of containment curbs;
(c) Use of spill and overflow protection; and
(d) Use of dry cleanup methods.
(7) Large bulk fuel storage tanks. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water runoff from large bulk fuel storage tanks. At a minimum the permittee shall consider employing containment berms (or its equivalent). The permittee shall also comply with applicable state and federal laws, including Spill Prevention Control and Countermeasures (SPCC).
(8) Spill reduction measures. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures to reduce the potential for an oil/chemical oil or
chemical spill, or reference the appropriate section of their SPCC plan. At
a minimum the structural integrity of all aboveground tanks, pipelines, pumps
and other related equipment shall be visually inspected on a weekly basis
regularly. All repairs deemed necessary based on the findings of the
inspections shall be completed immediately to reduce the incidence of spills
and leaks occurring from such faulty equipment.
(9) Oil bearing equipment in switchyards. The permittee shall describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination of surface runoff from oil bearing equipment in switchyard areas. The permittee shall consider the use of level grades and gravel surfaces to retard flows and limit the spread of spills, and the collection of storm water runoff in perimeter ditches.
(10) Residue hauling vehicles. All residue hauling vehicles shall be inspected for proper covering over the load, adequate gate sealing and overall integrity of the container body. Vehicles without load coverings or adequate gate sealing, or with leaking containers or beds shall be repaired as soon as practicable.
(11) Ash loading areas. The permittee shall describe and
implement procedures to reduce or control the tracking of ash/residue ash
and residue from ash loading areas where. Where practicable,
clear the ash building floor and immediately adjacent roadways of spillage,
debris and excess water before departure of each loaded vehicle.
(12) Areas adjacent to disposal ponds or landfills. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water runoff from areas adjacent to disposal ponds or landfills. The permittee shall develop procedures to:
(a) Reduce ash residue which may be tracked on to access roads traveled by residue trucks or residue handling vehicles; and
(b) Reduce ash residue on exit roads leading into and out of residue handling areas.
(13) Landfills, scrapyards, surface impoundments, open dumps,
general refuse sites. The plan shall address and include appropriate BMPs for
to minimize the potential for contamination of runoff from landfills,
scrapyards, surface impoundments, open dumps and general refuse sites.
(14) Vehicle maintenance activities. For vehicle
maintenance activities performed on the plant site, the permittee shall use the
applicable BMPs outlined in Sector P (9VAC25-151-230).
(15) Material storage areas. The permittee shall describe
and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water
runoff from material storage areas (including areas used for temporary storage
of miscellaneous products, and construction materials stored in lay-down
areas). The permittee shall consider the use of the following measures (or
their equivalents): flat yard grades; runoff collection in graded swales or ditches;
erosion protection measures at steep outfall sites (e.g., concrete chutes,
riprap, stilling basins); covering lay-down areas; storing materials indoors;
and covering materials temporarily with polyethylene, polyurethane,
polypropylene, or hypalon. Storm water runon may be minimized by constructing
an enclosure or building a berm around the area.
b. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. As part of the
evaluation, qualified facility personnel shall inspect the following areas on a
monthly basis: coal handling areas, loading/unloading loading and
unloading areas, switchyards, fueling areas, bulk storage areas, ash
handling areas, areas adjacent to disposal ponds and landfills, maintenance
areas, liquid storage tanks, and long term and short term material storage
areas.
D. Numeric effluent limitations. Permittees with point sources
of coal pile runoff associated with steam electric power generation shall
monitor these storm water discharges for the presence of TSS and for pH at
least annually (one time per year) in accordance with PART Part I
A 1 c (2).
E. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Steam electric power generating facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 220.
Table 220 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Steam Electric Generating Facilities (Industrial Activity Code "SE") |
|
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-230. Sector P - Land transportation and warehousing.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity from ground transportation facilities and rail
transportation facilities (generally identified by SIC Codes 40, 41, 42, 43,
and 5171), that have vehicle and equipment maintenance shops (vehicle and
equipment rehabilitation, mechanical repairs, painting, fueling and
lubrication) and/or or equipment cleaning operations. Also
covered under this section are facilities found under SIC Codes 4221 through
4225 (public warehousing and storage) that do not have vehicle and equipment
maintenance shops and/or or equipment cleaning operations.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water
discharges. This permit does not authorize the discharge of vehicle/equipment/surface
vehicle, equipment, or surface washwater, including tank-cleaning
operations. Such discharges must be authorized under a separate VPDES permit,
discharged to a sanitary sewer in accordance with applicable industrial
pretreatment requirements, or recycled on-site.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description. Site Map map. The site map
shall identify the locations of any of the following activities and indicate
whether the activities may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff: fueling stations; vehicle/equipment vehicle
and equipment maintenance or cleaning areas; storage areas for vehicle/equipment
vehicle and equipment with actual or potential fluid leaks; loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas; areas where treatment, storage or disposal
of wastes occur; liquid storage tanks; processing areas; and storage areas.
2. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall
describe and assess the potential for the following to contribute pollutants to
storm water discharges: on-site waste storage or disposal; dirt/gravel dirt
or gravel parking areas for vehicles awaiting maintenance; plumbing
connections between shop floor drains and the stormwater conveyance system; and
fueling areas.
3. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping.
(1) Vehicle and equipment storage areas. The storage of vehicles and equipment awaiting maintenance with actual or potential fluid leaks shall be confined to designated areas (delineated on the site map). The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their equivalents): the use of drip pans under vehicles and equipment; indoor storage of vehicles and equipment; installation of berms or dikes; use of absorbents; roofing or covering storage areas; and cleaning pavement surface to remove oil and grease.
(2) Fueling areas. The permittee shall describe and implement
measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from
fueling areas. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their
equivalents): covering the fueling area; using spill/overflow spill
and overflow protection and cleanup equipment; minimizing storm water runon/runoff
runon and runoff to the fueling area; using dry cleanup methods; and
treating and/or or recycling collected storm water runoff.
(3) Material storage areas. Storage vessels of all materials
(e.g., for used oil/oil oil or oil filters, spent solvents, paint
wastes, hydraulic fluids) shall be maintained in good condition, so as to prevent
contamination of storm water, and plainly labeled (e.g., "used oil,"
"spent solvents," etc.). The permittee shall consider the following
measures (or their equivalents): indoor storage of the materials; installation
of berms/dikes berms and dikes around the areas, minimizing
runoff of storm water to the areas; using dry cleanup methods; and treating and/or
or recycling the collected storm water runoff.
(4) Vehicle and equipment cleaning areas. The permittee shall
describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm
water runoff from all areas used for vehicle/equipment vehicle and
equipment cleaning. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or
their equivalents): performing all cleaning operations indoors; covering the
cleaning operation; ensuring that all washwaters drain to a proper collection
system (i.e., not the storm water drainage system unless VPDES permitted); and
treating and/or or recycling the collected storm water runoff.
(5) Vehicle and equipment maintenance areas. The permittee
shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of
the storm water runoff from all areas used for vehicle/equipment vehicle
and equipment maintenance. The permittee shall consider the following measures
(or their equivalents): performing maintenance activities indoors; using drip
pans; keeping an organized inventory of materials used in the shop; draining
all parts of fluids prior to disposal; prohibiting wet clean up practices where
the practices would result in the discharge of pollutants to storm water
drainage systems; using dry cleanup methods; treating and/or or
recycling collected storm water runoff; and minimizing runon/runoff
runon and runoff of storm water to maintenance areas.
(6) Locomotive sanding (loading sand for traction) areas. The
plan shall describe measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the
storm water runoff from areas used for locomotive sanding. The permittee shall
consider the following measures (or their equivalents): covering sanding areas;
minimizing storm water runon/runoff runon and runoff; or
appropriate sediment removal practices to minimize the off-site transport of
sanding material by storm water.
b. Routine facility inspections. The following areas/activities
areas and activities shall be included in all inspections: storage area
for vehicles/equipment vehicles and equipment awaiting
maintenance; fueling areas; indoor and outdoor vehicle/equipment vehicle
and equipment maintenance areas; material storage areas; vehicle/equipment
vehicle and equipment cleaning areas; and loading/unloading loading
and unloading areas.
c. Employee training. Employee training shall take place, at a minimum, annually (once per calendar year). Employee training shall address the following as applicable: used oil and spent solvent management; fueling procedures; general good housekeeping practices; proper painting procedures; and used battery management.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Land transportation and warehousing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 230.
Table 230 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Land Transportation and Warehousing Facilities (SIC 4011, 4013, 4111-4173, 4212-4231, 4311, and 5171) |
|
Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH) * |
15.0 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
*Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons |
9VAC25-151-240. Sector Q - Water transportation.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from water transportation facilities (generally identified by SIC
Major Group 44), that have vehicle (vessel) maintenance shops and/or or
equipment cleaning operations. The water transportation industry includes
facilities engaged in foreign or domestic transport of freight or passengers in
deep sea or inland waters; marine cargo handling operations; ferry operations;
towing and tugboat services; and marinas.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: bilge and ballast water, sanitary wastes, pressure wash water, and cooling water originating from vessels.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify the locations where
any of the following activities may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff: fueling; engine maintenance/repair maintenance
or repair; vessel maintenance/repair, maintenance or repair;
pressure washing; painting; sanding; blasting; welding; metal fabrication; loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas; locations used for the treatment, storage
or disposal of wastes; liquid storage tanks; liquid storage areas (e.g., paint,
solvents, resins); and material storage areas (e.g., blasting media, aluminum,
steel, scrap iron).
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall describe the following additional sources and activities that have potential pollutants associated with them: outdoor manufacturing or processing activities (i.e., welding, metal fabricating); and significant dust or particulate generating processes (e.g., abrasive blasting, sanding, painting).
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping.
(1) Pressure washing area. If pressure washing is used to
remove marine growth from vessels, the discharge water must be permitted by a
separate VPDES permit. The SWPPP shall describe: the measures to collect or
contain the discharge from the pressure washing area; the method for the
removal of the visible solids; the methods of disposal of the collected solids;
and where the discharge will be released. As defined by this permit,
process wastewater related to hull work at water transportation facilities
shall be any water used on a vessel's hull for any purpose, regardless of
application pressure, including but not limited to the activities of removing
marine salts, sediments, marine growth and paint, or other hull, weather deck,
or superstructure cleaning activities using water, such as preparing those
areas for inspection or work (cutting, welding, grinding, coating, etc.). The
discharge water shall be permitted as a process wastewater by a separate VPDES
permit.
(2) Blasting and painting areas. The permittee shall describe
and implement measures to prevent spent abrasives, paint chips, and overspray
from discharging into the receiving water or the storm sewer system. The
permittee may consider containing all blasting/painting blasting or
painting activities, or the use of other measures to prevent or minimize
the discharge of contaminants (e.g., hanging plastic barriers or tarpaulins
during blasting or painting operations to contain debris). Storm water
conveyances shall be regularly cleaned to remove deposits of abrasive blasting
debris and paint chips. The plan shall include any standard operating practices
with regard to blasting and painting activities, such as the prohibition of
uncontained blasting/painting blasting or painting over open
water, or the prohibition of blasting/painting blasting or painting
during windy conditions which can render containment ineffective.
(3) Material storage areas. All containerized materials (e.g.,
fuels, paints, solvents, waste oil, antifreeze, batteries) shall be plainly
labeled and stored in a protected, secure location away from drains. The
permittee shall describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize the
contamination of precipitation/surface precipitation or surface
runoff from the storage areas. The plan shall specify which materials are
stored indoors and consider containment or enclosure for materials that are
stored outdoors. The permittee shall consider implementing an inventory control
plan to limit the presence of potentially hazardous materials on-site. Where
abrasive blasting is performed, the plan shall specifically include a discussion
on the storage and disposal of spent abrasive materials generated at the
facility.
(4) Engine maintenance and repair areas. The permittee shall
describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff from all areas used for engine
maintenance and repair. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or
their equivalent): performing all maintenance activities indoors; maintaining
an organized inventory of materials used in the shop; draining all parts of
fluids prior to disposal; prohibiting the practice of hosing down the shop
floor using dry cleanup methods; and treating and/or or recycling
storm water runoff collected from the maintenance area.
(5) Material handling areas. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff from material handling operations and
areas (e.g., fueling, paint and solvent mixing, disposal of process wastewater
streams from vessels). The permittee shall consider the following measures (or
their equivalents): covering fueling areas; using spill/overflow spill
and overflow protection; mixing paints and solvents in a designated area
(preferably indoors or under a shed); and minimizing runon of storm water to
material handling areas.
(6) Drydock activities. The plan shall address the routine
maintenance and cleaning of the drydock to minimize the potential for
pollutants in the storm water runoff. The plan shall describe the procedures
for cleaning the accessible areas of the drydock prior to flooding and final
cleanup after the vessel is removed and the dock is raised. Cleanup procedures
for oil, grease, or fuel spills occurring on the drydock shall also be included
within the plan. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their
equivalents): sweeping rather than hosing off debris/spent debris and
spent blasting material from the accessible areas of the drydock prior to
flooding; and having absorbent materials and oil containment booms readily
available to contain/cleanup contain or cleanup any spills.
(7) General yard area. The plan shall include a schedule for routine yard maintenance and cleanup. Scrap metal, wood, plastic, miscellaneous trash, paper, glass, industrial scrap, insulation, welding rods, packaging, etc., shall be routinely removed from the general yard area.
b. Preventative Maintenance. As part of the facility's preventive maintenance program, storm water management devices shall be inspected and maintained in a timely manner (e.g., oil/water separators and sediment traps cleaned to ensure that spent abrasives, paint chips and solids are intercepted and retained prior to entering the storm drainage system). Facility equipment and systems shall also be inspected and tested to uncover conditions that could cause breakdowns or failures resulting in discharges of pollutants to surface waters.
c. Routine facility inspections. The following areas shall be
included in all monthly quarterly inspections: pressure washing
area; blasting, sanding, and painting areas; material storage areas; engine
maintenance and repair areas; material handling areas; drydock area; and
general yard area. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived
for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
d. Employee training. Training shall address, at a minimum, the following activities (as applicable): used oil management; spent solvent management; disposal of spent abrasives; disposal of vessel wastewaters; spill prevention and control; fueling procedures; general good housekeeping practices; painting and blasting procedures; and used battery management.
e. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The permittee
shall conduct regularly scheduled evaluations at least once a year and address
those areas contributing to a storm water discharge associated with industrial
activity (e.g., pressure washing area, blasting/sanding areas, painting areas,
material storage areas, engine maintenance/repair areas, material handling
areas, and drydock area). These sources shall be inspected for evidence of, or
the potential for, pollutants entering the drainage system.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Water transportation facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 240.
Table 240 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Water Transportation Facilities (SIC 4412-4499) |
|
|
|
|
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
9VAC25-151-250. Sector R - Ship and boat building or repair yards.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities engaged in ship building and repairing and boat building and repairing (SIC Code 373). (According to the U.S. Coast Guard, a vessel 65 feet or greater in length is referred to as a ship and a vessel smaller than 65 feet is a boat.)
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: bilge and ballast water, pressure wash water, sanitary wastes, and cooling water originating from vessels.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify the locations where
any of the following activities may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff: fueling; engine maintenance/repair maintenance
or repair; vessel maintenance/repair maintenance or repair; pressure
washing; painting; sanding; blasting; welding; metal fabrication; loading/unloading
loading and unloading areas; locations used for the treatment, storage
or disposal of wastes; liquid storage tanks; liquid storage areas (e.g., paint,
solvents, resins); and material storage areas (e.g., blasting media, aluminum,
steel, scrap iron).
b. Potential pollutant sources. The plan shall include a
description of the following additional sources and activities that have
potential pollutants associated with them (if applicable): outdoor manufacturing/processing
manufacturing and processing activities (e.g., welding, metal
fabricating); and significant dust/particulate dust and particulate
generating processes (e.g., abrasive blasting, sanding, painting).
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping measures.
(1) Pressure washing area. If pressure washing is used to
remove marine growth from vessels, the discharge water must be permitted as a
process wastewater by a separate VPDES permit. As defined by this permit,
process wastewater related to hull work at ship and boat building or repair
yard facilities shall be any water used on a vessel's hull for any purpose,
regardless of application pressure, including but not limited to the activities
of removing marine salts, sediments, marine growth and paint, or other hull,
weather deck, or superstructure cleaning activities using water, such as
preparing those areas for inspection or work (cutting, welding, grinding,
coating, etc.). The discharge water shall be permitted as a process wastewater
by a separate VPDES permit.
(2) Blasting and painting areas. The permittee shall describe
and implement measures to prevent spent abrasives, paint chips and overspray
from discharging into the receiving waterbody or the storm sewer system. To
prevent the discharge of contaminants, the permittee shall consider containing
all blasting/painting blasting and painting activities or using
other methods, such as hanging plastic barriers or tarpaulins during blasting
or painting operations to contain debris. The plan shall include a schedule for
regularly cleaning storm systems to remove deposits of abrasive blasting debris
and paint chips. The plan shall include any standard operating practices with
regard to blasting and painting activities, such as the prohibition of
uncontained blasting/painting blasting or painting over open
water or the prohibition of blasting/painting blasting or painting
during windy conditions that can render containment ineffective.
(3) Material storage areas. All containerized materials
(fuels, paints, solvents, waste oil, antifreeze, batteries) shall be plainly
labeled and stored in a protected, secure location away from drains. The
permittee shall describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination
of precipitation/surface precipitation or surface runoff from the
storage areas. The plan shall specify which materials are stored indoors and
consider containment or enclosure for materials that are stored outdoors. The
permittee shall consider implementing an inventory control plan to limit the
presence of potentially hazardous materials on-site. Where abrasive blasting is
performed, the plan shall specifically include a discussion on the storage and
disposal of spent abrasive materials generated at the facility.
(4) Engine maintenance and repair areas. The permittee shall
describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff from all areas used for engine
maintenance and repair. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or
their equivalent): performing all maintenance activities indoors; maintaining
an organized inventory of materials used in the shop; draining all parts of
fluids prior to disposal; prohibiting the practice of hosing down the shop
floor; using dry cleanup methods; and treating and/or or recycling
storm water runoff collected from the maintenance area.
(5) Material handling areas. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures to prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff from material handling operations and
areas (e.g., fueling, paint and solvent mixing, disposal of process wastewater
streams from vessels). The permittee shall consider the following methods (or
their equivalents): covering fueling areas; using spill/overflow spill
and overflow protection; mixing paints and solvents in a designated area
(preferably indoors or under a shed); and minimizing runon of storm water to
material handling areas.
(6) Drydock activities. The plan shall address the routine
maintenance and cleaning of the drydock to minimize the potential for
pollutants in the storm water runoff. The plan shall describe the procedures
for cleaning the accessible areas of the drydock prior to flooding and final
cleanup after the vessel is removed and the dock is raised. Cleanup procedures
for oil, grease, or fuel spills occurring on the drydock shall also be included
within the plan. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their
equivalents): sweeping rather than hosing off debris/spent debris and
spent blasting material from the accessible areas of the drydock prior to
flooding and having absorbent materials and oil containment booms readily
available to contain/cleanup contain or cleanup any spills.
(7) General yard area. The plan shall include a schedule for routine yard maintenance and cleanup. Scrap metal, wood, plastic, miscellaneous trash, paper, glass, industrial scrap, insulation, welding rods, packaging, etc., shall be routinely removed from the general yard area.
b. Preventative maintenance. As part of the facility's preventive maintenance program, storm water management devices shall be inspected and maintained in a timely manner (e.g., oil/water separators and sediment traps cleaned to ensure that spent abrasives, paint chips and solids are intercepted and retained prior to entering the storm drainage system). Facility equipment and systems shall also be inspected and tested to uncover conditions that could cause breakdowns or failures resulting in discharges of pollutants to surface waters.
c. Routine facility inspections. The following areas shall be
included in all monthly quarterly routine inspections: pressure
washing area; blasting, sanding, and painting areas; material storage areas;
engine maintenance/repair maintenance or repair areas; material
handling areas; drydock area; and general yard area. The requirement for
routine facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an
active VEEP E3/E4 status.
d. Employee training. Training shall address, at a minimum, the following activities (as applicable): used oil management; spent solvent management; proper disposal of spent abrasives; proper disposal of vessel wastewaters, spill prevention and control; fueling procedures; general good housekeeping practices; painting and blasting procedures; and used battery management.
e. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The permittee
shall conduct regularly scheduled evaluations at least once a year and address
those areas contributing to a storm water discharge associated with industrial
activity (e.g., pressure washing area, blasting/sanding areas, painting areas,
material storage areas, engine maintenance/repair areas, material handling
areas, and drydock area). These areas shall be inspected for evidence of, or
the potential for, pollutants entering the drainage system.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Ship and boat building or repairing yards are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 250.
Table 250 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Ship and Boat Building or Repairing Yards (SIC 3731, 3732) |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
9VAC25-151-260. Sector S - Air transportation.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity from air transportation facilities including airports, airport
terminal services, air transportation (scheduled and nonscheduled), flying
fields, air courier services, and establishments engaged in operating and
maintaining airports, and servicing, repairing or maintaining aircraft
(generally classified under SIC Code 45), which have vehicle maintenance shops,
material handling facilities, equipment cleaning operations, or airport and/or
or aircraft deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing
operations. For the purpose of this section, the term "deicing" is
defined as the process to remove frost, snow, or ice and "anti-icing"
is the process which prevents the accumulation of frost, snow, or ice. Only
those portions of the facility that are either involved in vehicle maintenance
(including vehicle rehabilitation, mechanical repairs, painting, fueling, and
lubrication), equipment cleaning operations, or deicing/anti-icing deicing
or anti-icing operations are addressed under this section.
B. Special definitions. The following definitions are only for this section of the general permit:
"Aircraft deicing fluid" or "ADF" means a fluid (other than hot water) applied to aircraft to remove or prevent any accumulation of snow or ice on the aircraft. This includes deicing and anti-icing fluids.
"Airfield pavement" means all paved surfaces on the airside of an airport.
"Airside" means the part of an airport directly involved in the arrival and departure of aircraft, including runways, taxiways, aprons, and ramps.
"Annual non-propeller aircraft departures" means the average number of commercial turbine-engine aircraft that are propelled by jet (i.e., turbojet or turbofan) that take off from an airport on an annual basis, as tabulated by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
"Available ADF" means 75% of the normalized Type I aircraft deicing fluid and 10% of the normalized Type IV aircraft deicing fluid, excluding aircraft deicing fluids used for defrosting or deicing for safe taxiing.
"Collection requirement" means, for new sources, the requirement for permittee to collect available ADF.
"Defrosting" means the removal of frost contamination from an aircraft when there has been no active precipitation.
"Deicing" mean procedures and practices to remove or prevent any accumulation of snow or ice on:
(1) An aircraft; or
(2) Airfield pavement.
"Normalized Type I or Type IV aircraft deicing fluid" means ADF less any water added by the manufacturer or customer before ADF application.
"Primary airport" means an airport defined at 49 USC § 47102 (15).
C. Special conditions.1. Prohibition of nonstorm
water discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part
I B 1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: aircraft,
ground vehicle, runway and equipment washwaters, and dry weather discharges of deicing/anti-icing
deicing or anti-icing chemicals. These discharges must be covered by a
separate VPDES permit. Note: Discharge resulting from snowmelt is not a dry
weather discharge.
2. Releases of reportable quantities of hazardous substances
and oil. Each individual permittee is required to report spills as described at
Part I B 3. If an airport authority is the sole permittee, then the sum total
of all spills at the airport shall be assessed against the reportable quantity.
If the airport authority is a copermittee with other deicing/anti-icing
operators at the airport, such as numerous different airlines, the assessed
amount shall be the summation of spills by each copermittee. If separate,
distinct individual permittees exist at the airport, then the amount spilled by
each separate permittee shall be the assessed amount for the reportable
quantity determination.
C. D. Storm water pollution prevention plan
requirements. SWPPPs developed for areas of the facility occupied by tenants of
the airport shall be integrated with the plan for the entire airport. For the
purposes of this permit, tenants of the airport facility include .airline
passenger or cargo companies, fixed based operators and other parties who have
contracts with the airport authority to conduct business operations on airport
property and whose operations result in storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP
shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify the location of the
following activities and indicate any of the activities that may be exposed to precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff: aircraft and runway deicing/anti-icing
deicing or anti-icing operations; fueling stations; aircraft, ground
vehicle and equipment maintenance/cleaning maintenance and cleaning
areas; and storage areas for aircraft, ground vehicles and equipment awaiting
maintenance.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall
include a narrative description of the potential pollutant sources from the
following activities: aircraft, runway, ground vehicle and equipment
maintenance and cleaning; aircraft and runway deicing/anti-icing deicing
or anti-icing operations (including apron and centralized aircraft deicing/anti-icing
deicing or anti-icing stations, runways, taxiways, and ramps).
Facilities which conduct deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing
operations shall maintain a record of the types (including the Material
Safety Data Sheets (MSDS)) safety data sheets (SDS)) and monthly
quantities of deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing chemicals
used, either as measured amounts, or in the absence of metering, as estimated
amounts. This includes all deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing
chemicals, not just glycols and urea (e.g., potassium acetate). Tenants and
fixed-base operators who conduct deicing/anti-icing deicing or
anti-icing operations shall provide the above information to the airport
authority for inclusion in the storm water pollution prevention plan for the
entire facility.
c. Deicing season. The SWPPP shall define the average seasonal timeframe (e.g., December-February, October-March, etc.) during which deicing activities typically occur at the facility. Implementation of BMPs, facility inspections, and effluent limitation monitoring shall be conducted with particular emphasis throughout the defined deicing season.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping.
(1) Aircraft, ground vehicle and equipment maintenance areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize the contamination of storm water runoff from all areas used for aircraft, ground vehicle and equipment maintenance (including the maintenance conducted on the terminal apron and in dedicated hangars). The following practices (or their equivalents) shall be considered: performing maintenance activities indoors; maintaining an organized inventory of materials used in the maintenance areas; draining all parts of fluids prior to disposal; preventing the practice of hosing down the apron or hangar floor; using dry cleanup methods; and collecting the storm water runoff from the maintenance area and providing treatment or recycling.
(2) Aircraft, ground vehicle and equipment cleaning areas. Permittees shall ensure that cleaning of equipment is conducted in designated areas only and clearly identify these areas on the ground and delineate them on the site map. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize the contamination of the storm water runoff from cleaning areas.
(3) Aircraft, ground vehicle and equipment storage areas. The storage of aircraft, ground vehicles and equipment awaiting maintenance shall be confined to designated areas (delineated on the site map). The following BMPs (or their equivalents) shall be considered: indoor storage of aircraft and ground vehicles; the use of drip pans for the collection of fluid leaks; and perimeter drains, dikes or berms surrounding storage areas.
(4) Material storage areas. Storage vessels of all materials
(e.g., used oils, hydraulic fluids, spent solvents, and waste aircraft fuel)
shall be maintained in good condition, so as to prevent or minimize contamination
of storm water, and plainly labeled (e.g., "used oil,"
"Contaminated Jet A," etc.). The permittee shall describe and
implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of precipitation/runoff
precipitation or runoff from storage areas. The following BMPs or their
equivalents shall be considered: indoor storage of materials; centralized
storage areas for waste materials; and installation of berms/dikes berms
and dikes around storage areas.
(5) Airport fuel system and fueling areas. The permittee shall
describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize the discharge of fuels
to the storm sewer/surface sewer or surface waters resulting from
fuel servicing activities or other operations conducted in support of the
airport fuel system. The following BMPs (or their equivalents) shall be
considered: implementing spill and overflow practices (e.g., placing absorptive
materials beneath aircraft during fueling operations); using dry cleanup
methods; and collecting the storm water runoff.
b. Source reduction. Owners who conduct deicing/anti-icing
deicing or anti-icing operations shall consider alternatives to the use
of urea and glycol-based deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing
chemicals to reduce the aggregate amount of deicing/anti-icing deicing
or anti-icing chemicals used and/or and lessen the
environmental impact. Chemical options to replace ethylene glycol, propylene
glycol and urea include: potassium acetate; magnesium acetate; calcium acetate;
anhydrous sodium acetate.
(1) Runway deicing operations. Owners shall evaluate present application rates to ensure against excessive over application by analyzing application rates and adjusting as necessary, consistent with considerations of flight safety. Also the following BMP options shall be considered (or their equivalents): metered application of chemicals; prewetting dry chemical constituents prior to application; installation of runway ice detection systems; implementing anti-icing operations as a preventive measure against ice buildup.
(2) Aircraft deicing/anti-icing deicing
operations. Owners shall determine whether excessive application of deicing/anti-icing
deicing chemicals occurs, and adjust as necessary, consistent with
considerations of flight safety. This evaluation shall be carried out by the
personnel most familiar with the particular aircraft and flight operations in
question (versus an outside entity such as the airport authority). The use of
alternative deicing/anti-icing deicing or anti-icing agents as
well as containment measures for all applied chemicals shall be considered.
Also, the following BMP options (or their equivalents) shall be considered for
reducing deicing fluid use: forced-air deicing systems; computer-controlled
fixed-gantry systems; infrared technology; hot water; varying glycol content to
air temperature; enclosed-basket deicing trucks; mechanical methods; solar
radiation; hangar storage; aircraft covers; and thermal blankets for MD-80s and
DC-9s. The use of ice-detection systems and airport traffic flow strategies and
departure slot allocation systems shall also be considered.
c. Management of runoff. Where deicing/anti-icing deicing
operations occur, owners shall describe and implement a program to control or
manage contaminated runoff to reduce the amount of pollutants being discharged
from the site. The plan shall describe the controls used for collecting or
containing contaminated melt water from collection areas used for disposal of
contaminated snow. The following BMPs (or their equivalents) shall be
considered: establishing a dedicated deicing facility with a runoff collection/recovery
collection and recovery system; using vacuum/collection vacuum
or collection trucks; storing contaminated storm water/deicing water
or deicing fluids in tanks and releasing controlled amounts to a publicly
owned treatment works; collecting contaminated runoff in a wet pond for
biochemical decomposition (be aware of attracting wildlife that may prove
hazardous to flight operations); and directing runoff into vegetative swales or
other infiltration measures. The plan shall consider the recovery of deicing/anti-icing
deicing and anti-icing materials when these materials are applied during
nonprecipitation events (e.g., covering storm sewer inlets, using booms,
installing absorptive interceptors in the drains, etc.) to prevent these
materials from later becoming a source of storm water contamination. Used
deicing fluid shall be recycled whenever possible.
d. Routine facility inspections. The inspection frequency
shall be specified in the plan. At a minimum, inspections shall be conducted
once per month during deicing/anti-icing deicing and anti-icing
season (e.g., October through April for most airports). If deicing occurs
before or after this period, the inspections shall be expanded to include all
months during which deicing chemicals may be used. Also, if significantly or
deleteriously large quantities of deicing chemicals are being spilled or
discharged, or if water quality impacts have been reported, the inspection frequency
shall be increased to weekly until such time as the chemical spills/discharges
or impacts are reduced to acceptable levels. The director may specifically
require increased inspections and the SWPPP to be reevaluated as necessary.
e. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The annual
site compliance evaluations shall be conducted by qualified facility personnel
during periods of actual deicing operations, if possible. If not practicable
during active deicing or if the weather is too inclement, the evaluations shall
be conducted when deicing operations are likely to occur and the materials and
equipment for deicing are in place.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements.
Airports that use more than 100,000 gallons of glycol-based deicing/anti-icing
chemicals and/or 100 tons or more of urea on an average annual basis shall
sample their storm water discharges for the parameters listed in Table 260.
Only those outfalls from the airport facility that collect runoff from areas
where deicing/anti-icing activities occur shall be monitored.
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E. Numeric effluent limitations. The average deicing season identified in the SWPPP is the time frame during which any effluent limitation monitoring samples shall be obtained.
1. Airfield pavement deicing. Existing and new primary airports with at least 1,000 annual jet departures (non-propeller aircraft) that have discharges associated with airport pavement deicing comingled with storm water shall either use airfield deicing products that do not contain urea or alternatively, airfield pavement discharges at every discharge point shall achieve the numeric limitations for ammonia in Table 260-1, prior to any dilution or commingling with any non-deicing discharge.
Table 260-1 |
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Airfield Pavement Deicing |
|
Parameter |
Effluent Limitations - Daily Maximum |
Ammonia as Nitrogen |
14.7 mg/L |
2. Aircraft deicing. Airports in cold climate zones meeting the definition of a new source (new airports) with 10,000 annual departures, shall collect at least 60% of available ADF after deicing. New airports shall achieve the performance standards in Table 260-2 for available ADF collected. The limitation shall be met at the location where the effluent leaves the on-site treatment system utilized for meeting these requirements and before commingling with any non-deicing discharge.
Table 260-2 |
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Aircraft Deicing |
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Parameter |
Effluent Limitations |
|
Daily Maximum |
Weekly Average |
|
Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) |
271 mg/L |
154 mg/L |
3. Monitoring, reporting, and recordkeeping requirements. New airports subject to the effluent limitations in subdivision 2 of this subsection shall comply with the monitoring, reporting, and recordkeeping requirements outlined in 40 CFR 449.20(a)(1) and 40 CFR449.20 (a) (2).
F. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Storm water discharges from those portions of air transportation facilities where vehicle maintenance (including vehicle rehabilitation, mechanical repairs, painting, fueling, and lubrication), and equipment cleaning is performed shall be sampled for the parameters listed in Table 260-3. Note: The benchmark monitoring requirements apply year round and are not limited to the deicing season.
Table 260-3 |
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Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Air Transportation Facilities (SIC 45). |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH)* |
15.0 mg/L |
*Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH) is the sum of individual gasoline range organics and diesel range organics (TPH-GRO and TPH-DRO) to be measured by EPA SW 846 Method 8015 for gasoline and diesel range organics, or by EPA SW 846 Methods 8260 Extended and 8270 Extended. |
9VAC25-151-270. Sector T - Treatment works.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from treatment works treating domestic sewage or any other sewage sludge or wastewater treatment device or system, used in the storage, treatment, recycling, and reclamation of municipal or domestic sewage, including lands dedicated to the disposal of sewage sludge that are located within the confines of the facility with a design flow of 1.0 MGD or more, or required to have an approved pretreatment program under 9VAC25-31-730 (Industrial Activity Code "TW"). Farm lands, domestic gardens or lands used for sludge management where sludge is beneficially reused and that are not physically located within the facility, or areas that are in compliance with § 405 of the CWA are not required to have permit coverage.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water
discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B
1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: sanitary and
industrial wastewater; and equipment/vehicle equipment and vehicle
washwaters.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: grit, screenings, and other solids handling, storage,
or disposal areas; sludge drying beds; dried sludge piles; compost piles;
septage or hauled waste receiving station; and storage areas for process
chemicals, petroleum products, solvents, fertilizers, herbicides, and
pesticides.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall
include a description of the potential pollutant sources from the following
activities, as applicable: grit, screenings, and other solids handling,
storage, or disposal areas; sludge drying beds; dried sludge piles;
compost piles; septage or hauled waste receiving station; and access roads/rail
roads and rail lines.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Best Management Practices (BMPs) Control measures.
In addition to the other BMPs control measures considered, the
following BMPs measures shall be considered: routing storm water
to the treatment works; or covering exposed materials (i.e., from the following
areas: grit, screenings, and other solids handling, storage, or
disposal areas; sludge drying beds; dried sludge piles; compost piles; septage
or hauled waste receiving station).
b. Inspections. The following areas shall be included in all
inspections: access roads/rail roads and rail lines, grit,
screenings, and other solids handling, storage, or disposal
areas; sludge drying beds; dried sludge piles; compost piles; septage or hauled
waste receiving station areas.
c. Employee training. Employee training shall, at a minimum, address the following areas when applicable to a facility: petroleum product management; process chemical management; spill prevention and control; fueling procedures; general good housekeeping practices; proper procedures for using fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides.
9VAC25-151-280. Sector U - Food and kindred products.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from food and kindred products processing facilities (commonly identified by SIC Code 20), including: meat products; dairy products; canned, frozen and preserved fruits, vegetables, and food specialties; grain mill products; bakery products; sugar and confectionery products; fats and oils; beverages; and miscellaneous food preparations and kindred products and tobacco products manufacturing (SIC Code 21).
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water
discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B
1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: boiler blowdown,
cooling tower overflow and blowdown, ammonia refrigeration purging, and vehicle
washing/clean-out washing and clean-out operations.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify the locations of the
following activities if they are exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation
or surface runoff: vents/stacks vents and stacks from
cooking, drying, and similar operations; dry product vacuum transfer lines;
animal holding pens; spoiled product; and broken product container storage
areas.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. In addition to food and kindred products processing-related industrial activities, the plan shall also describe application and storage of pest control chemicals (e.g., rodenticides, insecticides, fungicides, etc.) used on plant grounds.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Routine facility inspections. At a minimum, the following
areas, where the potential for exposure to storm water exists, shall be
inspected on a monthly quarterly basis: loading and unloading
areas for all significant materials; storage areas, including associated
containment areas; waste management units; vents and stacks emanating from
industrial activities; spoiled product and broken product container holding
areas; animal holding pens; staging areas; and air pollution control equipment.
The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for facilities
that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
b. Employee training. The employee training program shall also address pest control.
D. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Dairy products, grain mills and fats and oils products facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 280.
Table 280 |
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Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Dairy Products (SIC 2021-2026) |
|
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
30 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Grain Mill Products (SIC 2041-2048) |
|
Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN) |
1.5 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Fats and Oils Products (SIC 2074-2079) |
|
Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD5) |
30 mg/L |
Total Nitrogen |
2.2 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-290. Sector V - Textile mills, apparel, and other fabric products.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from textile mills, apparel and other fabric product manufacturing, generally described by SIC 22 and 23. This section also covers facilities engaged in manufacturing finished leather and artificial leather products (SIC 31, except 3111). Facilities in this sector are primarily engaged in the following activities: textile mill products, of and regarding facilities and establishments engaged in the preparation of fiber and subsequent manufacturing of yarn, thread, braids, twine, and cordage, the manufacturing of broad woven fabrics, narrow woven fabrics, knit fabrics, and carpets and rugs from yarn; processes involved in the dyeing and finishing of fibers, yarn fabrics, and knit apparel; the integrated manufacturing of knit apparel and other finished articles of yarn; the manufacturing of felt goods (wool), lace goods, nonwoven fabrics, miscellaneous textiles, and other apparel products.
B. Special conditions. Prohibition of nonstorm water
discharges. In addition to the general nonstorm water prohibition in Part I B
1, the following discharges are not covered by this permit: discharges of
wastewater (e.g., wastewater as a result of wet processing or from any
processes relating to the production process); reused/recycled reused
or recycled water; and waters used in cooling towers. These discharges must
be covered under a separate VPDES permit.
C. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall include a description of the potential pollutant sources from the following activities: industry-specific significant materials and industrial activities (e.g., backwinding, beaming, bleaching, backing, bonding carbonizing, carding, cut and sew operations, desizing, drawing, dyeing, flocking, fulling, knitting, mercerizing, opening, packing, plying, scouring, slashing, spinning, synthetic-felt processing, textile waste processing, tufting, turning, weaving, web forming, winging, yarn spinning, and yarn texturing).
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping measures.
(1) Material storage areas. All containerized materials (e.g.,
fuels, petroleum products, solvents, dyes, etc.) shall be clearly labeled and
stored in a protected area, away from drains. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of storm water runoff
from such storage areas, and shall include a description of the containment
area or enclosure for those materials that are stored outdoors. The permittee
may consider an inventory control plan to prevent excessive purchasing of
potentially hazardous substances. The permittee shall ensure that empty
chemical drums/containers drums and containers are clean
(triple-rinsing shall be considered) and residuals are not subject to contact
with precipitation/runoff precipitation or runoff. Washwater from
these cleanings shall be collected and disposed of properly.
(2) Material handling area. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water
runoff from materials handling operations and areas. The permittee shall
consider the following measures (or their equivalents): use of spill/overflow
spill and overflow protection; covering fueling areas; and covering and
enclosing areas where the transfer of materials may occur. Where applicable,
the plan shall address the replacement or repair of leaking connections,
valves, transfer lines and pipes that may carry chemicals, dyes, or wastewater.
(3) Fueling areas. The permittee shall describe and implement
measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from
fueling areas. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their
equivalents): covering the fueling area; using spill and overflow protection;
minimizing runon of storm water to the fueling areas; using dry cleanup
methods; and treating and/or or recycling storm water runoff
collected from the fueling area.
(4) Aboveground storage tank areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from aboveground storage tank areas, including the associated piping and valves. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their equivalents): regular cleanup of these areas; preparation of a spill prevention control and countermeasure program (SPCC) to provide spill and overflow protection; minimizing runon of storm water from adjacent areas; restricting access to the area; insertion of filters in adjacent catch basins; absorbent booms in unbermed fueling areas; use of dry cleanup methods; and permanently sealing drains within critical areas that may discharge to a storm drain.
b. Routine facility inspections. Inspections shall be conducted at least monthly, and shall include the following activities and areas (at a minimum): transfer and transmission lines; spill prevention; good housekeeping practices; management of process waste products; all structural and nonstructural management practices. The requirement for routine facility inspections is waived for facilities that have maintained an active VEEP E3/E4 status.
c. Employee training. Employee training shall, at a minimum
address, the following areas when applicable to a facility: use of reused/recycled
reused or recycled waters; solvents management; proper disposal of dyes;
proper disposal of petroleum products and spent lubricants; spill prevention
and control; fueling procedures; and general good housekeeping practices.
d. Comprehensive Site Compliance Evaluation. Regularly
scheduled evaluations shall be conducted at least once a year and address those
areas contributing to a storm water discharge associated with industrial
activity. Inspections shall look for evidence of, or the potential for,
pollutants entering the drainage system from the following areas, as
appropriate: storage tank areas; waste disposal and storage areas; dumpsters
and open containers stored outside; materials storage areas; engine maintenance
and repair areas; material handling areas and loading dock areas.
9VAC25-151-300. Sector W - Furniture and fixtures.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from facilities involved in the manufacturing of wood kitchen cabinets (generally described by SIC Code 2434), and furniture and fixtures (generally classified under SIC Major Group 25), including: household furniture (SIC 251); office furniture (SIC 252); public buildings and related furniture (SIC 253); partitions, shelving, lockers, and office and store fixtures (SIC 254); and miscellaneous furniture and fixtures (SIC 259).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following item:
Site Map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: material storage areas (including tanks or other vessels
used for liquid or waste storage); outdoor material processing areas; areas
where wastes are treated, stored or disposed; access roads; and rail spurs.
9VAC25-151-310. Sector X - Printing and publishing.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements
listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with
industrial activity from printing and publishing facilities (generally
classified under SIC Major Group 27), and include the following types of
facilities: newspaper, periodical, and book publishing and/or and
printing (SIC Codes 271 through 273); miscellaneous publishing (SIC Code 274);
commercial printing (SIC Code 275); manifold business forms, greeting cards,
bankbooks, looseleaf binders and book binding and related work (SIC Codes 276
through 278); and service industries for the printing trade (SIC 279).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items:
1. Site description. a. Site map. The site map shall
identify where any of the following may be exposed to precipitation/surface
runoff: aboveground storage tanks, drums and barrels permanently stored
outside. b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall include
a description of the following additional sources and activities that have
potential pollutants associated with them, as applicable: loading and unloading
operations; outdoor storage activities; significant dust or particulate
generating processes; and on-site waste disposal practices (e.g., blanket
wash). Also, the pollutant or pollutant parameter (e.g., oil and grease, scrap
metal, etc.) associated with each pollutant source shall be identified.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping measures.
(1) Material storage areas. All containerized materials
(skids, pallets, solvents, bulk inks, and hazardous waste, empty drums, portable/mobile
portable or mobile containers of plant debris, wood crates, steel racks,
fuel oil, etc.) shall be properly labeled and stored in a protected area, away
from drains. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent
or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from such storage areas and
shall include a description of the containment area or enclosure for those
materials which are stored outdoors. The permittee may consider an inventory
control plan to prevent excessive purchasing of potentially hazardous
substances.
(2) Material handling areas. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water
runoff from material handling operations and areas (e.g., blanket wash, mixing
solvents, loading/unloading loading and unloading materials). The
permittee shall consider the following measures (or their equivalents): the use
of spill/overflow spill and overflow protection; covering fuel
areas; and covering/enclosing covering or enclosing areas where
the transfer of materials may occur. When applicable, the plan shall address
the replacement or repair of leaking connections, valves, transfer lines and
pipes that may carry chemicals, or wastewater.
(3) Fueling areas. The permittee shall describe and implement
measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from
fueling areas. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their
equivalents): covering the fueling area; using spill and overflow protection;
minimizing runon of storm water to the fueling area; using dry cleanup methods;
and treating and/or or recycling storm water runoff collected
from the fueling areas.
(4) Aboveground storage tank areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water runoff from aboveground storage tank areas, including the associated piping and valves. The permittee shall consider the following measures (or their equivalents): regular cleanup of these areas; preparation of a spill prevention control and countermeasure program (SPCC) to provide spill and overflow protection; minimizing runon of storm water from adjacent facilities and properties; restricting access to the area; insertion of filters in adjacent catch basins; absorbent booms in unbermed fueling areas; use of dry cleanup methods; and permanently sealing drains within critical areas that may discharge to a storm drain.
b. Employee training. Employee training shall, at a minimum, address the following areas when applicable to a facility: spent solvent management; spill prevention and control; used oil management; fueling procedures; and general good housekeeping practices.
9VAC25-151-320. Sector Y - Rubber, miscellaneous plastic products, and miscellaneous manufacturing industries.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from rubber and miscellaneous plastic products manufacturing facilities (SIC Major Group 30) and miscellaneous manufacturing industries, except jewelry, silverware, and plated ware (SIC Major Group 39, except 391).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items:
1. Site description. Summary of potential pollutant sources. Rubber manufacturing facilities shall review the use of zinc at the facility and the possible pathways through which zinc may be discharged in storm water runoff.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Controls for rubber manufacturers. Rubber manufacturing facilities shall describe and implement specific controls to minimize the discharge of zinc in storm water discharges from the facility. Listed below are possible sources of zinc. These shall be reviewed and the accompanying BMPs (or their equivalents) shall be considered in the SWPPP. Also, some general BMP options to consider include: using chemicals that are purchased in pre-weighed, sealed polyethylene bags; storing materials that are in use in sealable containers; ensuring an airspace between the container and the cover to minimize "puffing" losses when the container is opened; and using automatic dispensing and weighing equipment.
(1) Inadequate housekeeping Zinc bags. All
permittees shall review the handling and storage of zinc bags at their facilities
and consider the following BMP options: employee training regarding the handling/storage
handling and storage of zinc bags; indoor storage of zinc bags; cleanup
of zinc spills without washing the zinc into the storm drain; and the use of
2,500-pound sacks of zinc rather than 50- to 100-pound sacks.
(2) Dumpsters. The following BMPs shall be considered to reduce discharges of zinc from dumpsters: providing a cover for the dumpster; move the dumpster to an indoor location; or provide a lining for the dumpster.
(3) Malfunctioning dust Dust collectors or
baghouses. Permittees shall review dust collectors/baghouses collectors
and baghouses as possible sources in of zinc in storm water
runoff. Improperly operating dust collectors/baghouses collectors and
baghouses shall be replaced or repaired as appropriate.
(4) Grinding operations. Permittees shall review dust generation from rubber grinding operations at their facility and, as appropriate, install a dust collection system.
(5) Zinc stearate coating operations. Permittees shall include
in the SWPPP appropriate measures to prevent or clean up drips/spills drips
and spills of zinc stearate slurry that may be released to the storm drain.
Alternate compounds to zinc stearate shall also be considered.
b. Controls for plastic products manufacturers. Plastic products manufacturing facilities shall describe and implement specific controls to minimize the discharge of plastic resin pellets in stormwater discharges from the facility. The following BMPs (or their equivalents) shall be considered in the SWPPP: minimizing spills; cleaning up of spills promptly and thoroughly; sweeping thoroughly; pellet capturing; employee education; and disposal precautions.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Rubber product manufacturing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 320.
Table 320 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Tires and Inner Tubes; Rubber Footwear; Gaskets, Packing and Sealing Devices; Rubber Hose and Belting; and Fabricated Rubber Products, Not Elsewhere Classified (SIC 3011-3069). |
|
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 µg/L |
9VAC25-151-330. Sector Z - Leather tanning and finishing.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from leather tanning, currying and finishing (commonly identified by SIC Code 3111).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: processing and storage areas of the beamhouse, tanyard, retan-wet
finishing and dry finishing operations; and haul roads, access roads and
rail spurs.
b. Summary of potential pollutant sources. A description of
potential pollutant sources including (as appropriate): temporary or permanent
storage of fresh and brine cured hides; chemical drums, bags, containers and
aboveground tanks; leather dust, scraps, trimmings and shavings; spent
solvents; and extraneous hide substances and hair; empty chemical
containers and bags; floor sweepings/washings; refuse, waste piles and sludge;
and significant dust/particulate generating processes (e.g., buffing).
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping.
(1) Storage areas for raw, semiprocessed, or finished tannery
by-products. Pallets/bales Pallets and bales of raw, semiprocessed
or finished tannery by-products (e.g., splits, trimmings, shavings, etc.) shall
be stored indoors or protected by polyethylene wrapping, tarpaulins, roofed
storage area or other suitable means. Materials shall be placed on an
impermeable surface, the area shall be enclosed or bermed, or other equivalent
measures shall be employed to prevent runon/runoff runon or runoff
of storm water.
(2) Material storage areas. Storage units of all materials should be labeled (e.g., specific chemicals, hazardous materials, spent solvents, waste materials). The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contact with storm water.
(3) Buffing and shaving areas. The permittee shall describe
and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm
water runoff with leather dust from buffing/shaving buffing and
shaving areas. The permittee may consider dust collection enclosures,
preventive inspection/maintenance inspection and maintenance
programs or other appropriate preventive measures.
(4) Receiving, unloading, and storage areas. The permittee
shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of
the storm water runoff from receiving, unloading, and storage areas. The
following measures (or their equivalents) shall be considered for exposed
receiving, unloading and storage areas: hides and chemical supplies protected
by a suitable cover; diversion of drainage to the process sewer; and grade berming/curbing
berming or curbing area to prevent runoff of storm water.
(5) Outdoor storage of contaminated equipment. The permittee shall describe and implement measures that prevent or minimize contact of storm water with contaminated equipment. The following measures (or their equivalents) shall be considered: equipment protected by suitable cover; diversion of drainage to the process sewer; thorough cleaning prior to storage.
(6) Waste management. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures that prevent or minimize contamination of the storm water
runoff from waste storage areas. The permittee shall consider the following
measures (or their equivalents): inspection/maintenance inspection
and maintenance programs for leaking containers or spills; covering
dumpsters; moving waste management activities indoors; covering waste piles
with temporary covering material such as tarpaulins or polyethylene; and
minimizing storm water runoff by enclosing the area or building berms around
the area.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Leather tanning and finishing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 330.
Table 330 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Leather Tanning and Finishing (SIC 3111) |
|
Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN) |
1.5 mg/L |
9VAC25-151-340. Sector AA - Fabricated metal products.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from the fabricated metals industry listed below, except for electrical related industries: fabricated metal products, except machinery and transportation equipment (SIC Code 34); and jewelry, silverware, and plated ware (SIC Code 391).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a minimum, the following items.
1. Site description.
a. Site Map. The site map shall identify where any of the
following may be exposed to precipitation/surface precipitation or
surface runoff: raw metal storage areas; finished metal storage areas;
scrap disposal collection sites; equipment storage areas; retention and
detention basins; temporary/permanent temporary or permanent diversion
dikes or berms; right-of-way or perimeter diversion devices; sediment traps/barriers
traps or barriers; processing areas including outside painting areas;
wood preparation; recycling; and raw material storage.
b. Spills and Leaks. When listing significant spills/leaks
spills and leaks, the permittee shall pay attention to the following
materials, at a minimum: chromium, toluene, pickle liquor, sulfuric acid, zinc
and other water priority chemicals and hazardous chemicals and wastes.
c. Summary of potential pollutant sources. The plan shall include a description of the potential pollutant sources from the following activities: loading and unloading operations for paints, chemicals and raw materials; outdoor storage activities for raw materials, paints, empty containers, corn cob, chemicals, scrap metals; outdoor manufacturing or processing activities such as grinding, cutting, degreasing, buffing, brazing, etc.; and on-site waste disposal practices for spent solvents, sludge, pickling baths, shavings, ingots pieces, refuse and waste piles.
2. Storm water controls.
a. Good housekeeping.
(1) Raw steel handling storage. The permittee shall describe
and implement measures controlling for managing or recovering
scrap metals, fines, and iron dust, including measures for containing materials
within storage handling areas.
(2) Paints and painting equipment. The permittee shall describe and implement measures to prevent or minimize exposure of paint and painting equipment from exposure to storm water.
b. Spill prevention and response procedures. The permittee
shall ensure that the necessary equipment to implement a clean up cleanup
is available to personnel. The following areas shall be addressed:
(1) Metal fabricating areas. The permittee shall describe and implement measures for maintaining clean, dry, orderly conditions in these areas. Use of dry clean-up techniques shall be considered in the plan.
(2) Storage areas for raw metal. The permittee shall describe and implement measures to keep these areas free of conditions that could cause, or impede appropriate timely response to, spills or leakage of materials. The following measures (or their equivalents) shall be considered: storage areas maintained such that there is easy access in the event of a spill; stored materials labeled to aid in identifying spill contents.
(3) Receiving, unloading, and storage areas. The permittee
shall describe and implement measures to prevent spills and leaks; plan for
quick remedial clean up and instruct employees on clean-up techniques and
procedures.
(4) Storage of equipment. The permittee shall describe and
implement measures for preparing equipment for storage and the proper method to
store equipment. The following measures (or their equivalents) shall be
considered: protecting with covers; storing indoors; and cleaning potential
pollutants from equipment to be stored outdoors.
(5) (3) Metal working fluid storage areas. The
permittee shall describe and implement measures for storage of metal working
fluids.
(6) (4) Cleaners and rinse water. The permittee
shall describe and implement measures to control/cleanup control and
clean up spills of solvents and other liquid cleaners; control sand buildup
and disbursement from sand-blasting operations; and prevent exposure of
recyclable wastes. Environmentally benign cleaners shall be substituted when
possible.
(7) (5) Lubricating oil and hydraulic fluid
operations. The permittee shall describe and implement measures to minimize
the potential for storm water contamination from lubricating oil and hydraulic
fluid operations. The permittee shall consider using devices or monitoring
equipment or other devices to detect and control leaks/overflows leaks
and overflows. The installation of perimeter controls such as dikes, curbs,
grass filter strips, or other equivalent measures shall also be considered.
(8) (6) Chemical storage areas. The permittee
shall describe and implement proper storage methods that prevent storm water
contamination and accidental spillage. The plan shall include a program to
inspect containers, and identify proper disposal methods.
c. Inspections. Metal fabricators shall at a minimum include the following areas for inspection: raw metal storage areas; finished product storage areas; material and chemical storage areas; recycling areas; loading and unloading areas; equipment storage areas; paint areas; and vehicle fueling and maintenance areas.
d. Comprehensive site compliance evaluation. The site compliance evaluation shall also include inspections of: areas associated with the storage of raw metals; storage of spent solvents and chemicals; outdoor paint areas; and roof drainage. Potential pollutants include chromium, zinc, lubricating oil, solvents, aluminum, oil and grease, methyl ethyl ketone, steel and other related materials.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Metal fabricating facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 340.
Table 340 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Fabricated Metal Products Except Coating (SIC 3411-3471, 3482-3499, 3911-3915) |
|
Total Recoverable Aluminum |
750 µg/L |
Total Recoverable Iron |
1.0 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 µg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Fabricated Metal Coating and Engraving (SIC 3479) |
|
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 µg/L |
9VAC25-151-350. Sector AB - Transportation equipment, industrial, or commercial machinery.
A. Discharges covered under this section. The requirements listed under this section apply to storm water discharges associated with industrial activity from transportation equipment, industrial or commercial machinery manufacturing facilities (commonly described by SIC Major Group 35 (except SIC Code 357), and SIC Major Group 37 (except SIC Code 373)).
B. Storm water pollution prevention plan requirements. In
addition to the requirements of Part III, the SWPPP shall include, at a
minimum, the following items item:
1. Site description. Site map. The site map shall
identify where any of the following may be exposed to precipitation/surface
precipitation or surface runoff: vents and stacks from metal processing
and similar operations.
2. Storm water controls. Nonstorm water discharges. For
facilities that discharge wastewater, other than solely domestic wastewater, to
the sanitary sewer system, the permittee shall notify the operator of the
sanitary sewer and associated treatment works of its discharge. In such cases,
a copy of a notification letter shall be attached to the plan. Any specific
permit conditions shall be considered in the plan.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Transportation equipment manufacturing facilities are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 350.
Table 350 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Transportation equipment manufacturing facilities (SIC 35, except 357, and SIC 37, except 373) |
|
Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH)* |
15.0 mg/L |
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
Total Recoverable Copper |
18 μg/L |
Total Recoverable Zinc |
120 μg/L |
*Total Petroleum Hydrocarbons (TPH) is the sum of individual gasoline range organics and diesel range organics (TPH-GRO and TPH-DRO) to be measured by EPA SW 846 Method 8015 for gasoline and diesel range organics, or by EPA SW 846 Methods 8260 Extended and 8270 Extended. |
9VAC25-151-370. Sector AD - Nonclassified facilities/storm water discharges designated by the board as requiring permits.
A. Discharges covered under this section. Sector AD is used to
provide permit coverage for facilities designated by the board as needing a
storm water permit, or any discharges of industrial activity that do not
meet the description of an industrial activity covered by Sectors A-AC under
the provisions of 9VAC25-31-120 A 1 c or under 9VAC25-31-120 A 7 a (1) or (2)
of the VPDES Permit Regulation. Therefore, almost any type of storm water
discharge could be covered under this sector. Permittees shall be assigned to
Sector AD by the director board and may not choose Sector AD as
the sector describing the facility's activities.
B. Additional requirements. No additional sector-specific requirements apply to this sector.
C. Benchmark monitoring and reporting requirements. Nonclassified facilities/storm water discharges designated by the board as requiring permits are required to monitor their storm water discharges for the pollutants of concern listed in Table 370.
Table 370 |
|
Pollutants of Concern |
Benchmark Concentration |
Nonclassified Facilities/Storm Water Discharges Designated By the Board As Requiring Permits |
|
Total Suspended Solids (TSS) |
100 mg/L |
FORMS (9VAC25-151)
Department of Environmental Quality Water Quality Division
Permit Application Fee Form (rev. 1/08).
VPDES General Permit Registration Statement Industrial
Activity Storm Water Discharges, SWGP VAR05-RS (eff. 7/09).
VPDES General Permit Notice of Termination Industrial
Activity Storm Water Discharges, SWGP VAR05-NOT (eff. 7/09).
Virginia Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (VPDES)
Discharge Monitoring Report (DMR) Industrial Activity Storm Water Discharges
(eff. 7/09).
Department of Environmental Quality Water Quality Division Permit Application Fee Form (rev. 5/13).
Virginia Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Change of Ownership Form (undated).
DOCUMENTS INCORPORATED BY REFERENCE (9VAC25-151)
Standard Industrialization Classification (SIC) Manual, 1987, Office of Management and Budget.
Modified DRO Method for Determining Diesel Range Organics,
PUBL-SW-141, September 1995, Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
Method 8015C, Nonhalogenated Organics Using GC/FID, Revision 3, November 2000, U.S. Government Printing Office.
Method 8015C, Nonhalogenated Organics Using GC/FID, Revision 3, February 2007, U.S. Government Printing Office.
Method 8260B, Volatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS), Revision 2, December 1996, U.S. Government Printing Office.
Method 8260C, Volatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS), Revision 3, August 2006, U.S. Government Printing Office.
Method 8270C, Semivolatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS), Revision 3, December 1996, U.S. Government Printing Office.
Method 8270D, Semivolatile Organic Compounds by Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS), Revision 4, February 2007, U.S. Government Printing Office.