These general requirements shall apply unless other
monitoring or compliance measurement requirements are specified in Rule
62-550.511 through
62-550.540,
62-550.821,
62-550.822, or 62-555.830,
F.A.C. This introductory text shall be effective on July 7, 2015.
(1) The Monitoring Framework. Monitoring by
public water systems shall be accomplished within a standardized monitoring
framework developed to address the issues of complexity, coordination between
various rules, and coordination of monitoring schedules. A compliance cycle is
a nine-year period during which all public water systems must monitor.
Compliance cycles begin January 1, 2002 and January 1, 2011, and every nine
years thereafter. Each compliance cycle is broken down into three three-year
compliance periods. For example, the three compliance periods that make up the
2002 through 2010 compliance cycle begin January 1, 2002, January 1, 2005, and
January 1, 2008.
(2) Monitoring
Frequencies. Monitoring frequencies for each group of contaminants or
disinfectant residuals are specified in Rules
62-550.511 through
62-550.520, plus
62-550.821, F.A.C., and are
summarized in Table 7.
(3)
Monitoring Schedule. Each public water system shall monitor at the time
designated by this subsection during each compliance cycle and compliance
period. Table 8 summarizes when public water systems shall perform initial or
routine monitoring.
(a) Systems that monitor
for a contaminant quarterly may do so any time during the quarter, except that
samples taken in consecutive quarters shall be taken at least 30 days
apart.
(b) Systems that monitor for
a contaminant annually may do so any time during the year, except that samples
taken in consecutive years shall be taken at least 90 days apart.
(c) Systems that monitor for a contaminant
every three years shall adhere to the following schedule:
1. Community water systems which serve more
than 3,300 persons shall monitor during the first year of each compliance
period.
2. Community water systems
which serve 3,300 or fewer persons shall monitor during the second year of each
compliance period.
3. Non-transient
non-community water systems shall monitor during the third year of each
compliance period.
(d)
Systems that monitor for a contaminant every six years shall monitor as
directed by the Department.
(e)
Systems that monitor for a contaminant every nine years shall monitor during
the first three-year compliance period of each nine-year compliance cycle
following the same schedule as in paragraph (c), above.
(f) In the event the population of a small
community system increases to more than 3,300 persons, the system shall
continue to monitor on the schedule originally prescribed in paragraphs (c) and
(d), above, for the remainder of the nine-year compliance cycle, At the
beginning of the next nine-year compliance cycle, the system shall begin
monitoring in the prescribed year according to its then current size or
classification.
(g) Upon request,
small community systems and non-transient non-community systems shall be
approved to monitor earlier during compliance periods or cycles than required
by paragraphs (c) through (e), above.
(4) Increased Monitoring. When specified by
the State Health Officer, the Department shall require more frequent monitoring
than specified in this section and shall require confirmation samples results
as needed to protect public health.
(5) Monitoring Locations.
(a) Ground water systems and subpart H
systems shall take a minimum of one sample at every entry point to the
distribution system that is representative of each source after treatment
(hereafter called a sampling point). The system shall take each sample at the
same sampling point unless conditions make another sampling point more
representative of each source or treatment plant.
(b) For purposes of Rules
62-550.500 through
62-550.590, F.A.C., subpart H
systems also include systems using a combination of surface water (or ground
water under the direct influence of surface water) and ground water not under
the direct influence of surface water.
(c) If a system draws water from more than
one source and the sources are combined before distribution, the system must
sample at an entry point to the distribution system during periods of typical
operating conditions (e.g., when water is representative of the sources being
used).
(6) Confirmation
Samples. The system shall take confirmation samples whenever a sample exceeds
the maximum contaminant level for nitrate or nitrite and whenever an
unregulated contaminant is detected. However, a system may take confirmation
samples for other inorganic contaminants, organic contaminants, radionuclides,
or secondary contaminants. For regulated contaminants, the results of
confirmation samples shall be averaged with the first sampling results and the
average used for the compliance determination as specified by subsection (7),
below. Confirmation samples shall be collected at the same sampling point as
soon as possible, but not later than two weeks, after the initial sample was
taken. The Department shall delete results of obvious sampling errors from this
calculation.
(7) Measurement of
Compliance. Compliance with Rule
62-550.310, F.A.C., shall be
determined based on the analytical results obtained at each sampling point. If
one sampling point is in violation of an MCL, the system is in violation of the
MCL.
(a) For systems that are taking more
than one sample per year, compliance is determined by a running annual average
of all samples taken at each sampling point. If the running annual average of
any sampling point is greater than the maximum contaminant level, then the
system is out of compliance. If the initial sample or a subsequent sample would
cause the running annual average to be exceeded, then the system is immediately
out of compliance. Any sample results which are below the regulatory detection
limit shall be calculated as zero for purposes of determining the running
annual average. If a system fails to collect the required number of samples,
compliance with the MCL will be based on the total number of samples collected.
Systems shall include all samples, taken within a quarter and analyzed under
the provisions of this section (even if that number is greater than the minimum
required), to obtain an average for the quarter to determine compliance with
these rules.
(b) A system
monitoring annually or less frequently for the inorganic contaminants, other
than nitrate or nitrite, listed in subsection
62-550.310(1),
F.A.C., the volatile organic contaminants listed in paragraph
62-550.310(4)(a),
F.A.C., the synthetic organic contaminants listed in paragraph
62-550.310(4)(b),
F.A.C., or the radiological contaminants listed in subsection
62-550.310(6),
F.A.C., whose sample result exceeds the maximum contaminant level will not be
considered in violation of the maximum contaminant level until it has completed
one year of quarterly sampling. If the running annual average of any sampling
point is greater than the maximum contaminant level, then the system is out of
compliance. If the initial sample or a subsequent sample would cause the
running annual average to exceed the maximum contaminant level, then the system
is immediately out of compliance. For the purpose of calculating the running
annual average, the initial exceedance is considered to be the first quarterly
sample. Any sample result that is below the regulatory detection limit shall be
calculated as zero for purposes of determining the running annual average. If a
system fails to collect the required number of samples, compliance with the MCL
will be based on the total number of samples collected. Rule
62-550.512, F.A.C., governs
nitrate and nitrite, which are considered acute contaminants.
(c) The Department shall delete results of
obvious sampling or analytic errors.
(8) Systems Not in Compliance with a Maximum
Contaminant Level (MCL) or Maximum Residual Disinfectant Level (MRDL). A system
that is not in compliance with an MCL or MRDL shall notify the Department
within 48 hours of receiving the results (except for violations of the
microbiological, nitrate, or nitrite MCL and acute violations of the MRDL for
chlorine dioxide), and notify the public in accordance with Rule
62-560.410, F.A.C.
(9) Waivers from Monitoring. Systems may
request to receive a waiver from the requirement to monitor for organic
contaminants pursuant to Rule
62-560.545, F.A.C.
(10) Reporting the results of analyses. All
public water systems shall forward the results of analyses to the Department
pursuant to Rule
62-550.730, F.A.C.
(11) New Systems or Sources. All new systems
or systems that use a new source of water shall demonstrate compliance with all
maximum contaminant levels. The system shall comply with the initial sampling
frequencies as specified in this chapter. Routine and increased monitoring
frequencies shall be conducted in accordance with the requirements in this
chapter.
Notes
Fla. Admin. Code Ann. R.
62-550.500
Rulemaking Authority
403.8055,
403.861(9) FS.
Law Implemented 403.853(1),
(3),
403.859(1),
403.861(16),
(17)
FS.
New 11-19-87, Formerly 17-22.300, Amended 1-18-89,
5-7-90, 1-1-93, 1-26-93, 7-4-93, Formerly 17-550.500, Amended 9-7-94, 8-1-00,
11-27-01, 4-14-03, 11-28-04, 12-30-11, Amended by
Florida
Register Volume 41, Number 135, July 14, 2015 effective
7/7/2015, Amended by
Florida
Register Volume 51, Number 028, February 11, 2025 effective
2/26/2025.
New 11-19-87, Formerly 17-22.300, Amended 1-18-89, 5-7-90,
1-1-93, 1-26-93, 7-4-93, Formerly 17-550.500, Amended 9-7-94, 8-1-00, 11-27-01,
4-14-03, 11-28-04, 12-30-11,
7-7-15.