Ariz. Admin. Code § R18-9-D302 - 3.02 General Permit: Process Water Discharges From Water Treatment Facilities
A. A 3.02
General Permit allows filtration backwash and discharges obtained from
sedimentation and coagulation in the water treatment process from facilities
that treat water for industrial process or potable uses. The permittee shall
ensure that:
1. Liquid fraction. The
discharge meets:
a. All numeric Aquifer Water
Quality Standards for inorganic chemicals, organic chemicals, and pesticides
established in R18-11-406(B) through (D);
b. The discharge meets one of the following
criteria for microbiological contaminants:
i.
Either the concentration of fecal coliform organisms is not more than 2/100 ml
or the concentration of E. coli bacteria is not more than 1/ 100 ml,
or
ii. Either the concentration of
fecal coliform organisms is less than 200/100 ml or the concentration of E.
coli bacteria is less than 126/ 100 ml if the average daily flow processed by
the water treatment facility is less than 250,000 gallons;
and
2. Solid
Fraction. The solid material in the discharge qualifies as inert material, as
defined in A.R.S. § 49201(22).
B. Notice of Intent to Discharge. In addition
to the Notice of Intent to Discharge requirements specified in
R18-9-A301(B), an
applicant shall submit:
1. A characterization
of the discharge, including a representative chemical and biological analysis
of expected discharges and all source waters; and
2. The design capacity of any impoundment
covered by this general permit.
C. Impoundment design and siting
requirements. An applicant shall:
1. Ensure
that the depth to the static groundwater table is greater than 20
feet;
2. Not locate the area of
discharge immediately above karstic or fractured bedrock, unless the discharge
meets the microbial limits specified in subsection (A)(1)(b)(i);
3. Maintain a minimum horizontal setback of
100 feet between the facility and any water supply well;
4. Design and construct an impoundment to
maintain, using design volume or mechanical systems, normal operating volumes
and any inflow from the 100-year, 24-hour storm event. The applicant shall:
a. Divert any surface water run-on from the
100-year, 24-hour storm event around the facility if not intended for capture
by facility design; and
b. Design
the facility to maintain 2 feet of freeboard or an alternative level of
freeboard that the applicant demonstrates is reasonable, considering
meteorological factors, the size of the impoundment, and other site-specific
factors; or
c. Discharge to surface
water under the conditions of an AZPDES permit; and
5. Manage off-site disposal of sludge
according to A.R.S. Title 49, Chapter 4.
D. Operational requirements.
1. Inorganic chemical, organic chemical, and
pesticide monitoring.
a. The permittee shall
monitor any discharge annually to determine compliance with the requirements of
subsection (A).
b. If the
concentration of any pollutant exceeds the numeric Aquifer Water Quality
Standard, the permittee shall submit a report to the Department with a proposal
for mitigation and shall increase monitoring frequency for that pollutant to
quarterly.
c. If, in the quarterly
sampling, the condition in subsection (D)(1)(b) continues for two consecutive
quarters, the permittee shall submit an application for an individual
permit.
2.
Microbiological contaminant monitoring.
a. The
permittee shall monitor any discharge annually to determine compliance with the
requirements of subsection (A)(1)(b).
b. If the concentration of any pollutant
exceeds the limits established in subsection (A)(1)(b), the permittee shall
submit a report to the Department with a proposal for mitigation and increase
monitoring frequency for that pollutant to monthly.
c. If, in the monthly sampling, the condition
in subsection (D)(2)(b) continues for three consecutive months, the permittee
shall submit an application for an individual
permit.
E.
Recordkeeping. A permittee shall maintain at the site, the following
information, if applicable for the disposal method, for at least 10 years, and
make it available to the Department upon request:
1. Construction drawings and as-built plans,
if available;
2. A log book or
similar documentation to record inspection results, repair and maintenance
activities, monitoring results, and facility closure;
3. Water quality data collected under
subsection (D);
4. Standard
operating procedures; and
5.
Records of any discharge other than those identified under subsection
(B).
F. Reporting
requirements. The permittee shall:
1. Report
unauthorized flows into the impoundment to the Department within five days of
discovery, and
2. Submit the report
required in subsections (D)(1)(b) or (2)(b) within 30 days of receiving the
analytical results.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
A. A 3.02 General Permit allows filtration backwash and discharges obtained from sedimentation and coagulation in the water treatment process from facilities that treat water for industrial process or potable uses. The permittee shall ensure that:
1. Liquid fraction. The discharge meets:
a. All numeric Aquifer Water Quality Standards for inorganic chemicals, organic chemicals, and pesticides established in R18-11-406(B) through (D);
b. The discharge meets one of the following criteria for microbiological contaminants:
i. Either the concentration of fecal coliform organisms is not more than 2/100 ml or the concentration of E. coli bacteria is not more than 1/100 ml, or
ii. Either the concentration of fecal coliform organisms is less than 200/100 ml or the concentration of E. coli bacteria is less than 126/100 ml if the average daily flow processed by the water treatment facility is less than 250,000 gallons; and
2. Solid Fraction. The solid material in the discharge qualifies as inert material, as defined in A.R.S. § 49-201(19).
B. Notice of Intent to Discharge. In addition to the Notice of Intent to Discharge requirements specified in R18-9-A301(B), an applicant shall submit:
1. A characterization of the discharge, including a representative chemical and biological analysis of expected discharges and all source waters; and
2. The design capacity of any impoundment covered by this general permit.
C. Impoundment design and siting requirements. An applicant shall:
1. Ensure that the depth to the static groundwater table is greater than 20 feet;
2. Not locate the area of discharge immediately above karstic or fractured bedrock, unless the discharge meets the microbial limits specified in subsection (A)(1)(b)(i);
3. Maintain a minimum horizontal setback of 100 feet between the facility and any water supply well;
4. Design and construct an impoundment to maintain, using design volume or mechanical systems, normal operating volumes and any inflow from the 100-year, 24-hour storm event. The applicant shall:
a. Divert any surface water run-on from the 100-year, 24-hour storm event around the facility if not intended for capture by facility design; and
b. Design the facility to maintain 2 feet of freeboard or an alternative level of freeboard that the applicant demonstrates is reasonable, considering meteorological factors, the size of the impoundment, and other site-specific factors; or
c. Discharge to surface water under the conditions of an AZPDES permit; and
5. Manage off-site disposal of sludge according to A.R.S. Title 49, Chapter 4.
D. Operational requirements.
1. Inorganic chemical, organic chemical, and pesticide monitoring.
a. The permittee shall monitor any discharge annually to determine compliance with the requirements of subsection (A).
b. If the concentration of any pollutant exceeds the numeric Aquifer Water Quality Standard, the permittee shall submit a report to the Department with a proposal for mitigation and shall increase monitoring frequency for that pollutant to quarterly.
c. If, in the quarterly sampling, the condition in subsection (D)(1)(b) continues for two consecutive quarters, the permittee shall submit an application for an individual permit.
2. Microbiological contaminant monitoring.
a. The permittee shall monitor any discharge annually to determine compliance with the requirements of subsection (A)(1)(b).
b. If the concentration of any pollutant exceeds the limits established in subsection (A)(1)(b), the permittee shall submit a report to the Department with a proposal for mitigation and increase monitoring frequency for that pollutant to monthly.
c. If, in the monthly sampling, the condition in subsection (D)(2)(b) continues for three consecutive months, the permittee shall submit an application for an individual permit.
E. Recordkeeping. A permittee shall maintain at the site, the following information, if applicable for the disposal method, for at least 10 years, and make it available to the Department upon request:
1. Construction drawings and as-built plans, if available;
2. A log book or similar documentation to record inspection results, repair and maintenance activities, monitoring results, and facility closure;
3. Water quality data collected under subsection (D);
4. Standard operating procedures; and
5. Records of any discharge other than those identified under subsection (B).
F. Reporting requirements. The permittee shall:
1. Report unauthorized flows into the impoundment to the Department within five days of discovery, and
2. Submit the report required in subsections (D)(1)(b) or (2)(b) within 30 days of receiving the analytical results.