Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R. 62-520.600 - Ground Water Monitoring Requirements and Exemptions
(1) The purpose of a ground water monitoring
plan is to provide the data needed to evaluate an installation 's compliance
with the ground water requirements contained in this chapter. Unless otherwise
exempted by Department rule, any installation discharging into ground water
shall establish a monitoring program as described in subsection (3), below.
Subsection 62-520.310(4),
F.A.C., provides that other Department rules with different ground water
requirements for specific types of installations will supersede these generally
applicable requirements. If requested by the permittee, a monitoring program
instituted under some other state, federal, or local government regulation or
permit shall be substituted for this program if it is in substantial compliance
with subsection (3), below. All field and laboratory activities performed under
a monitoring program shall meet the quality assurance requirements in Chapter
62-160, F.A.C.
(2) Plan Submission.
(a) New installations shall submit to the
Department monitoring plans in conjunction with its initial permit
applications.
(b) Existing
installations shall have submitted to the Department an acceptable monitoring
plan on or before March 1984.
(c)
Installations that were not required to submit monitoring plans by March 1984,
but were thereafter required by rule to submit monitoring plans must do so in
accordance with the applicable rule.
(d) Installations exempt from obtaining
permits to discharge to ground water shall develop a monitoring plan upon
Department order that the installation owner obtain a permit defining ground
water discharge.
(3)
Monitoring Plan Contents. Unless otherwise specified in program-specific
Department rules, the installation owner shall provide the Department with a
plan containing findings and recommendations for ground water monitoring
derived from site -specific information. Any information submitted as part of a
permit application does not have to be resubmitted as part of the ground water
monitoring plan. The plan shall evaluate facility operations, discharges,
actual and potential environmental risk, and provide a design that ensures
compliance with applicable program-specific rules and water quality criteria
depending on where the discharge will take place. The design shall be such that
the permittee can detect and monitor adverse impact upon ground water and upon
surface waters affected by ground water by facility activities. Design of a
ground water monitoring plan is variable and dependant on the complexity of the
site hydrogeology, type of facility, and method and characteristics of the
discharge. The Department 's document, Guidance for Ground Water Monitoring Plan
Design, 2008, is adopted as guidance to assist permittees and installation
owners in designing and placing monitoring wells to demonstrate whether
compliance with the requirements in this chapter are being achieved. Copies of
this document are available from the Department of Environmental Protection,
Bureau of Water Facilities Regulation, MS 3580, 2600 Blair Stone Road,
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2400 or at the Department Internet site at
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/water/groundwater/pubs.htm.
Pursuant to Chapters 492 and 471, F.S., the ground water monitoring plan shall
be signed and sealed by the professional geologist or professional engineer who
prepared or approved it. The Department shall evaluate the adequacy of the plan
upon submittal; however, the applicant should arrange a pre-application meeting
with the Department to resolve the needed information at an early stage. The
plan shall:
(a) Describe the physical and
hydrogeologic characteristics of the facility and surrounding area including:
1. Direction and rate of ground water flow
and ambient ground water characteristics,
2. Primary and secondary porosity, and
horizontal and vertical permeability for the receiving aquifer (s),
3. The depth to, and lithology of, the first
confining bed(s),
4. Vertical
permeability, thickness, competence, and extent of any confining beds,
5. Topography, soil information,
and surface water drainage systems surrounding the site ,
(b) Show the locations of the proposed
monitoring wells labeled as background , intermediate, or compliance well,
(c) Provide construction and
development details of the monitoring wells,
(d) Provide a water sampling and chemical
analysis protocol,
(e) Provide a
water sampling schedule,
(f)
Demonstrate the quality of the receiving ground water prior to discharge,
(g) Indicate how to determine
natural background (where available) or background quality of the ground water
in the vicinity of the site and any deviations in the quality of the receiving
ground water in the downgradient monitoring wells,
(h) Show the locations of all surface waters
and their classifications including springs within a one mile radius of the
site , and on-site sinkholes with depths exceeding the seasonal high water table
or that are perched; and,
(i)
Identify the location and use of all wells within 1000 feet of the
site .
(4) Plan Approval.
The plan shall be approved if it will provide the data needed to evaluate an
installation 's compliance with the ground water requirements contained in this
chapter. If the plan is approved, it will become part of the permit. If a
permit is not associated with the plan, a letter of approval, denial, or
request for modification will be sent to the applicant. A letter of approval or
denial shall have a notice of rights for an administrative hearing under
Sections 120.569 and
120.57, F.S.
(5) Implementation of Monitoring Program.
(a) The following apply except for
installations already discharging to ground water that are later required to
install ground water monitoring wells:
1. All
ground water monitoring wells shall be installed before the application of
waste or wastewater; and,
2. After
well installation and well development, but before the application of the waste
or wastewater for which the ground water monitoring plan was required, the
permittee shall sample one or more of the ground water monitoring wells
specified in the Department -approved monitoring plan or permit for the primary
and secondary drinking water parameters included in Chapter 62-550, F.A.C.
(excluding asbestos, acrylamide, Dioxin, butachlor, epichlorohydrin,
pesticides, and PCBs, unless reasonably expected to be a constituent of the
discharge or an artifact of the site ). In addition, volatile organics and
extractable semivolatile organics shall be analyzed. Results of this sampling
shall be submitted to the Department within 60 days after
sampling.
(b) With the
application for permit renewal, the permittee shall submit, to the Department 's
office that issued the permit, the results of sampling monitoring wells
specified in the Department -approved monitoring plan for the primary and
secondary drinking water parameters included in Chapter 62-550, F.A.C.
(excluding asbestos, acrylamide, Dioxin, butachlor, epichlorohydrin,
pesticides, and PCBs, unless reasonably expected to be a constituent of the
discharge or an artifact of the site ). Additional volatile and semivolatile
parameters as specified in the ground water monitoring plan or permit shall be
analyzed. Sampling shall occur no sooner than 180 days before submittal of the
renewal application.
(6)
Location, Design, and Construction of Monitoring Wells to Detect Migration of
Contaminants. Monitoring wells shall be as follows:
(a) One upgradient well located as close as
possible to the site , without being affected by that site 's discharge, to
determine the natural background quality where available, or background of the
ground water (background well);
(b)
One well downgradient from the site and within the zone of discharge designed
to detect the chemical, physical, and microbiological characteristics of the
discharge plume (intermediate well); and,
(c) One well at the edge of the zone of
discharge downgradient from the site (compliance well);
(d) Such other wells as are dictated by the
complexity of the hydrogeology of the site , the magnitude and direction of the
plume, or the likelihood of threat to the public health, to ensure adequate and
reliable monitoring data in generally accepted engineering or hydrogeological
practice. The Department shall exempt a facility from installing a background
or intermediate well when not practicable or necessary because of site
hydrogeology, effluent quality, site location, or surrounding land
use;
(e) The Department 's
Monitoring Well Design and Construction Guidance Manual, (2008), is adopted as
guidance to assist permittees and installation owners in monitoring well design
and construction . Copies of this document are available from the Department of
Environmental Protection, Bureau of Water Facilities Regulation, MS 3580, 2600
Blair Stone Road, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-2400 or at the Department 's
Internet site :
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/water/groundwater/pubs.htm;
(f) Monitoring well design shall be submitted
to the Department ;
(g) Before
construction of new ground water monitoring wells, a soil boring shall be made
at each new monitoring well location to properly determine monitoring well
specifications such as well depth, screen interval, screen slot, and filter
pack;
(h) Before the installation
of any monitoring well, the permittee shall give at least 72 hours notice to
the appropriate permitting program at the Department 's District office that
issued the permit;
(i) Within 60
days after installation of any monitoring well, a properly scaled figure
depicting monitoring well locations (active and abandoned) with identification
numbers shall be submitted to the appropriate permitting program at the
Department 's District office that issued the permit. The figure also shall
include the monitoring well, top of casing, and ground surface elevations
referenced to the National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD) of 1929 or to the
North American Vertical Datum (NAVD 1988) and measured to the nearest 0.01
foot, along with monitoring well location latitude and longitude to the nearest
0.1 seconds;
(j) Within 30 days
after installation of the monitoring wells, well completion reports and soil
boring/lithologic logs shall be sent to the Department 's District office that
issued the permit. The information is to be submitted for each well on DEP Form
62-520.900(3),
Monitoring Well Completion Report, incorporated herein and listed in Rule
62-520.900, F.A.C.;
(k) Within 60 days after completion of
construction of the monitoring wells, all piezometers and wells that are not
reasonably expected to be used are to be plugged and abandoned in accordance
with subsection 62-532.500(4),
F.A.C. The permittee shall submit a written report to the Department 's office
that issued the permit providing verification of the plugging including the
well abandonment log when available;
(l) If any monitoring well becomes inoperable
or damaged to the extent that sampling or well integrity may be affected, the
permittee shall notify the Department 's office that issued the permit within
two business days from discovery, and a detailed written report shall follow
within ten days after notification to the Department . The written report shall
detail what problem has occurred and remedial measures that have been taken to
prevent recurrence or request approval for replacement of the monitoring well.
All monitoring well design and replacement shall be approved by the Department
before installation .
(7)
Monitoring Requirements for Class G-III Ground Water . Discharges to Class G-III
ground water shall be analyzed to assure compliance with the standards in Rule
62-520.400, F.A.C.;
alternatively, the permittee may institute a ground water monitoring program,
which shall demonstrate that the criteria in Rule
62-520.400, F.A.C., are not
violated.
(8) Monitoring
Requirements for Class G-IV Ground Water . The Department shall specify
applicable monitoring criteria as part of an underground injection control well
permit issued under Chapter 62-528, F.A.C.
(9) Monitoring Exemptions. The Department
shall exempt the following installations that discharge to ground water from
ground water monitoring requirements:
(a)
Domestic sewage treatment installations with less than 100, 000 gallons per day
(gpd) design capacity except those described in subsection (10), below;
stormwater facilities; agricultural fields, ditches and canals; and waste
management systems for animal feeding operations exempted from ground water
monitoring under Chapter 62-670, F.A.C.; as long as the discharges present no
potential hazard to human health or the environment, or do not endanger a
source of drinking water; and as long as the facilities do not discharge
directly to ground water .
(b)
Wastewater impoundments containing effluent or reclaimed water , cooling water,
or other discharge waters meeting the minimum criteria of Rule
62-520.400, F.A.C., and the
applicable standards for the receiving ground water and contiguous surface
waters; provided, however, that if necessary to ensure that the water quality
criteria and standards are being met, the Department shall require the
installation owner to determine the background , or natural background where
available, water quality of the receiving ground water and regularly sample the
quality of the discharge prior to contact with ground
water .
(10) New domestic
wastewater facilities that discharge to ground water with less than 100, 000
gpd design capacity (excluding onsite sewage disposal systems) which have filed
a complete permit application after July 1, 1994, shall install and analyze
samples (as described below) from one downgradient monitoring well designed to
evaluate the impact of such facilities to the ground water quality. One ground
water sample from within the upper 20 feet of the zone of saturation shall be
collected and analyzed semiannually for the ground water monitoring parameters
listed in Chapter 62-601, F.A.C.
(11) Reporting Requirements. Installations
required to monitor shall submit the following reports:
(a) The permittee shall, within 90 days after
the permittee has begun the discharge that is expected to result in a discharge
to ground water , submit a report stating the volume, and chemical, physical,
and microbiological composition of the discharge unless otherwise specified in
the installation 's permit or ground water monitoring plan.
(b) On a quarterly basis thereafter, or such
other frequency specified in the permit, the permittee shall submit reports on
all monitoring wells indicating the type, number and concentration of discharge
constituents or parameters that have been approved by the Department as
appropriate criteria to monitor in the monitoring program based upon their
potential to exceed the minimum criteria contained in Rule
62-520.400, F.A.C., and the
appropriate standards for the particular class of water adjacent to the zone of
discharge as described in Rules
62-520.420 through
62-520.470, F.A.C.
(c) Water levels shall be recorded before
evacuating wells for sample collection. Elevation shall be referenced to the
National Geodetic Vertical Datum (NGVD) of 1929 or to the North American
Vertical Datum (NAVD 1988) and measured to a precision of plus or minus 0.01
foot.
(d) In order to obtain
representative seasonal variations in the ground water , there shall be a
minimum of 45 days between any two consecutive quarterly sampling events, a
minimum of 90 days between consecutive semi-annual sampling events, and a
minimum of 180 days between consecutive yearly sampling
events.
Notes
Rulemaking Authority 403.061 FS. Law Implemented 403.021, 403.061, 403.087, 403.0877, 403.088 FS.
New 9-8-92, Amended 4-14-94, Formerly 17-522.600, 62-522.600, Amended 7-12-09.
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