Ariz. Admin. Code § R18-11-112 - Outstanding Arizona Waters
A. The
Director shall classify a surface water as an outstanding Arizona water (OAW)
by rule.
B. The Director may adopt,
under R18-11-115, a site-specific
standard to maintain and protect existing water quality in an OAW.
C. Any person may nominate a surface water
for classification as an OAW by filing a nomination with the Director. The
nomination shall include:
1. A map and a
description of the surface water;
2. A written statement in support of the
nomination, including specific reference to the applicable criteria for an OAW
classification prescribed in subsection (D);
3. Supporting evidence demonstrating that the
criteria prescribed in subsection (D) are met; and
4. Available water quality data relevant to
establishing the baseline water quality of the proposed OAW.
D. The Director may classify a
surface water as an OAW based upon the following criteria:
1. The surface water is a perennial or
intermittent water;
2. The surface
water is in a free-flowing condition. For purposes of this subsection, "in a
free-flowing condition" means that a surface water does not have an
impoundment, diversion, channelization, rip-rapping or other bank armor, or
another hydrological modification within the reach nominated for an OAW
classification;
3. The surface
water has good water quality. For purposes of this subsection, "good water
quality" means that the surface water has water quality that meets or is better
than applicable surface water quality standards. A surface water that is listed
as impaired under
R18-11-604(E) is
ineligible for OAW classification; and
4. The surface water meets one or both of the
following conditions:
a. The surface water is
of exceptional recreational or ecological significance because of its unique
attributes, such as the geology, flora and fauna, water quality, aesthetic
value, or the wilderness characteristic of the surface water;
b. An endangered or threatened species is
associated with the surface water and the existing water quality is essential
to the species' maintenance and propagation or the surface water provides
critical habitat for the threatened or endangered species. An endangered or
threatened species is identified in "Endangered and Threatened
Wildlife,"50 CFR
17.11 (revised 2005), and "Endangered and
Threatened Plants,"50 CFR
17.12 (revised 2005). This material is
incorporated by reference and does not include any later amendments or editions
of the incorporated material. Copies of the incorporated material are available
for inspection at the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality, 1110 West
Washington Street, Phoenix, Arizona 85007 or may be obtained from the National
Archives and Records Administration at
http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/cfr-table-search.html#page1.
E. The Director shall
hold at least one public meeting in the local area of a surface water that is
nominated for classification as an OAW to solicit public comment on the
nomination.
F. The Director shall
consider the following factors when deciding whether to classify a surface
water as an OAW:
1. Whether there is the
ability to manage the surface water and its watershed to maintain and protect
existing water quality;
2. The
social and economic impact of Tier 3 antidegradation protection;
3. The public comments in support of, or in
opposition to, an OAW classification;
4. The timing of the nomination relative to
the triennial review of surface water quality standards;
5. The consistency of an OAW classification
with applicable water quality management plans; and
6. Whether the nominated surface water is
located within a national or state park, national monument, national recreation
area, wilderness area, riparian conservation area, area of critical
environmental concern, or it has another special use designation (for example,
Wild and Scenic River).
G. The following surface waters are
classified as OAWs:
1. The West Fork of the
Little Colorado River, from its headwaters to Government Springs (approximately
9.1 river miles);
2. Oak Creek,
from its headwaters to its confluence with the Verde River (approximately 50.3
river miles);
3. West Fork of Oak
Creek, from its headwaters to its confluence with Oak Creek approximately 15.8
river miles);
4. Peeples Canyon
Creek, from its headwaters to its confluence with the Santa Maria River
(approximately 8.1 river miles);
5.
Burro Creek, from its headwaters at to its confluence with Boulder Creek
(approximately 29.5 miles);
6.
Francis Creek, from its headwaters at to its confluence with Burro Creek
(approximately 22.9 river miles);
7. Bonita Creek, from its boundary of the San
Carlos Indian Reservation to its confluence with the Gila River (approximately
14.7 river miles);
8. Cienega
Creek, from its confluence with Gardner Canyon to the USGS gaging station
(#09484600) (approximately 28.3 river miles);
9. Aravaipa Creek, from its confluence with
Stowe Gulch to the downstream boundary of the Aravaipa Canyon Wilderness Area
(approximately 15.5 river miles);
10. Cave Creek, from its headwaters to the
Coronado National Forest boundary (approximately 10.4 river miles);
11. South Fork of Cave Creek, from its
headwaters to its confluence with Cave Creek (approximately 8.6 river
miles);
12. Buehman Canyon Creek,
from its headwaters to its confluence with unnamed tributary at
32°24'31"/110°32'08" (approximately 9.8 river miles);
13. Lee Valley Creek, from its headwaters "
to Lee Valley Reservoir (approximately 1.6 river miles);
14. Bear Wallow Creek, from its headwaters to
the boundary of the San Carlos Indian Reservation (approximately 4.25 river
miles);
15. North Fork of Bear
Wallow Creek, from its headwaters to its confluence with Bear Wallow Creek
(approximately 3.8 river miles);
16. South Fork of Bear Wallow Creek, from its
headwaters to its confluence with Bear Wallow Creek (approximately 3.8 river
miles);
17. Snake Creek, from its
headwaters to its confluence with the Black River (approximately 6.2 river
miles);
18. Hay Creek, from its
headwaters to its confluence with the West Fork of the Black River
(approximately 5.5 river miles);
19. Stinky Creek, from the White Mountain
Apache Indian Reservation boundary to its confluence with the West Fork of the
Black River (approximately 3.0 river miles);
20. KP Creek, from its headwaters to its
confluence with the Blue River (approximately 12.7 river miles);
21. Davidson Canyon, from the unnamed spring
at 31°59'00"/110°38'49" to its confluence with Cienega Creek;
and
22. Fossil Creek, from its
headwaters at the confluence of Sandrock and Calf Pen Canyons above Fossil
Springs to its confluence with the Verde River (approximately 17.2 river
miles).
Notes
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