(a)
Water supply surveys.
(1) The operator shall conduct a premining
survey and may conduct a postmining survey of the quantity and quality of all
water supplies within the permit and adjacent areas, except when the landowner
denies the operator access to the site to conduct a survey and the operator has
complied with the notice procedure in this section. Premining surveys shall be
conducted prior to the time a water supply is susceptible to mining-related
effects. Survey information must include the following information to the
extent that it can be collected without excessive inconvenience to the
landowner:
(i) The location and type of water
supply.
(ii) The existing and
reasonably foreseeable uses of the water supply.
(iii) The chemical and physical
characteristics of the water, including, at a minimum, total dissolved solids
or specific conductance corrected to 25°C, pH, total iron, total manganese,
hardness, total coliform, acidity, alkalinity and sulfates. An operator who
obtains water samples in a premining or postmining survey shall utilize a
certified laboratory to analyze the samples.
(iv) The quantity of the water.
(v) The physical description of the water
supply, including the depth and diameter of the well, length of casing and
description of the treatment and distribution systems.
(vi) Hydrogeologic data such as the static
water level and yield determination.
(2) The operator shall submit copies of the
results of the analyses, as well as the results of any quantitative analysis,
to the Department and to the landowner within 30 days of their receipt by the
operator.
(3) If the operator
cannot make a premining or postmining survey because the owner will not allow
access to the site, the operator shall submit evidence to the Department of the
following:
(i) The operator notified the
landowner by certified mail or personal service of the landowner's rights in
sections 5.1-5.3 of The Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land Conservation Act
(52
P. S. §§
1406.5a-1406.5c), and the effect on
the landowner of the landowner's denial to the operator of access to the site
as described in section 5.2(d) of The Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land
Conservation Act.
(ii) The
operator's attempt to conduct a survey.
(iii) The landowner failed to authorize
access to the operator to conduct a survey within 10 days of receipt of the
operator's notice of intent to conduct a survey.
(b)
Restoration or replacement of
water supplies. When underground mining activities conducted on or
after August 21, 1994, affect a public or private water supply by
contamination, diminution or interruption, the operator shall promptly restore
or replace the affected water supply with a permanent alternate source which
adequately serves the premining uses of the water supply and any reasonably
foreseeable uses of the water supply. The operator shall be relieved of any
responsibility under The Bituminous Mine Subsidence and Land Conservation Act
(
52
P. S. §§
1406.1-
1406.21) to restore or
replace a water supply if the operator demonstrates that one of the provisions
of §
89.152 (relating to water supply
replacement: special provisions) relieves the operator of further
responsibility. This subsection does not apply to water supplies affected by
underground mining activities which are covered by Chapter 87 (relating to
surface mining of coal).
(c) Within
24 hours of an operator's receipt of a claim of water supply contamination,
diminution or interruption, the operator shall notify the Department of the
claim.
(d)
Investigation and
reporting of water supply damage complaints. Upon receipt of
notification that a water supply has been contaminated, diminished or
interrupted and that the operator's underground mining activities may have
caused the contamination, diminution or interruption, the operator shall
diligently investigate the complaint and notify the Department in a timely
manner of the results of the operator's investigation. This subsection does not
apply to water supplies affected by underground mining activities which are
governed by Chapter 87.
(e)
Temporary water supplies.
(1)
If the affected water supply is within the rebuttable presumption area and the
rebuttable presumption applies and the landowner or water user is without a
readily available alternate source, the operator shall provide a temporary
water supply within 24 hours of being contacted by the landowner or water
supply user or the Department, whichever occurs first.
(2) An operator shall promptly provide a
temporary water supply if the operator or the Department finds that the
operator's underground mining activities have caused contamination, diminution
or interruption of an EPACT water supply, and the landowner or water user is
without a readily available alternate source of water. This requirement applies
regardless of whether the water supply is located within, or outside of, the
rebuttable presumption area.
(3)
The temporary water supply provided under this subsection must meet the
requirements of subsection (f)(2) and provide a sufficient amount of water to
meet the water supply user's needs.
(f)
Adequacy of permanently restored
or replaced water supply. A permanently restored or replaced water
supply shall include any well, spring, municipal water supply system or other
supply approved by the Department, which meets the criteria for adequacy as
follows:
(1)
Reliability, maintenance
and control. A restored or replaced water supply, at a minimum, must:
(i) Be as reliable as the previous water
supply.
(ii) Be as permanent as the
previous water supply.
(iii) Not
require excessive maintenance.
(iv)
Provide the owner and the user with as much control and accessibility as
exercised over the previous water supply.
(2)
Quality. A restored or
replaced water supply will be deemed adequate when it differs in quality from
the premining water supply, if it meets the Pennsylvania Safe Drinking Water
Act (35 P. S. §§
721.1-721.17), or is comparable to
the premining water supply when that water supply did not meet these
standards.
(3)
Adequate
quantity. A restored or replaced water supply will be deemed adequate
in quantity if it meets one of the following:
(i) It delivers the amount of water necessary
to satisfy the water user's needs and the demands of any reasonably foreseeable
uses.
(ii) It is established
through a connection to a public water supply system which is capable of
delivering the amount of water necessary to satisfy the water user's needs and
the demands of any reasonably foreseeable uses.
(iii) For purposes of this paragraph and with
respect to agricultural water supplies, the term reasonably foreseeable uses
includes the reasonable expansion of use where the water supply available prior
to mining exceeded the farmer's actual use.
(4)
Water source
serviceability. A replacement of a water supply must include the
installation of any piping, pumping equipment and treatment equipment necessary
to put the replaced water source into service.
(5)
Cost to landowner or water
user. A restored or replacement water supply must meet the following
costs criteria:
(i) The restored or
replacement water supply may not cost the landowner or water user more to
operate and maintain than the previous water supply.
(ii) If the operation and maintenance costs
of the restored or replacement water supply are more than the operation and
maintenance costs of the previous water supply, the operator shall provide for
the permanent payment of the increased operating and maintenance cost of the
restored or replacement water supply.
(iii) Upon agreement by the operator and the
landowner or water user, the obligation to pay the increased operation and
maintenance costs may be satisfied by a one-time payment in an amount which
covers the present worth of the increased annual operation and maintenance
costs for a period agreed to by the operator and the landowner or water user.