Current through Register Vol.. 38, No. 17, April 11, 2022
In addition to the conditions established under
9VAC25-31-210
A, each VPDES permit shall include conditions meeting the following
requirements when applicable.
A.
1. Technology-based effluent limitations and
standards based on effluent limitations and standards promulgated under §
301 of the CWA, on new source performance standards promulgated under §
306 of CWA, on case-by-case effluent limitations determined under §
402(a)(1) of CWA, or a combination of the three. For new sources or new
dischargers, these technology-based limitations and standards are subject to
the provisions of
9VAC25-31-180
B (protection period).
2. The board
may authorize a discharger subject to technology-based effluent limitations
guidelines and standards in a VPDES permit to forego sampling of a pollutant
found at 40 CFR Subchapter N if the discharger has demonstrated through
sampling and other technical factors that the pollutant is not present in the
discharge or is present only at background levels from intake water and without
any increase in the pollutant due to activities of the discharger. This waiver
is good only for the term of the permit and is not available during the term of
the first permit issued to a discharger. Any request for this waiver must be
submitted when applying for a reissued permit or modification of a reissued
permit. The request must demonstrate through sampling or other technical
information, including information generated during an earlier permit term,
that the pollutant is not present in the discharge or is present only at
background levels from intake water and without any increase in the pollutant
due to activities of the discharger. Any grant of the monitoring waiver must be
included in the permit as an express permit condition and the reasons
supporting the grant must be documented in the permit's fact sheet or statement
of basis. This provision does not supersede certification processes and
requirements already established in existing effluent limitations guidelines
and standards.
B. Other
effluent limitations and standards.
1. Other
effluent limitations and standards under §§ 301, 302, 303, 307, 318,
and 405 of the CWA. If any applicable toxic effluent standard or prohibition
(including any schedule of compliance specified in such effluent standard or
prohibition) is promulgated under § 307(a) of the CWA for a toxic
pollutant and that standard or prohibition is more stringent than any
limitation on the pollutant in the permit, the board shall institute
proceedings under this chapter to modify or revoke and reissue the permit to
conform to the toxic effluent standard or prohibition.
2. Standards for sewage sludge use or
disposal under § 405(d) of the CWA and Part VI (
9VAC25-31-420
et seq.) of this chapter unless those standards have been included in a permit
issued under the appropriate provisions of Subtitle C of the Solid Waste
Disposal Act (
42 USC §
6901 et seq.), Part C of Safe Drinking Water
Act (
42
USC §
300f et seq.), the Marine
Protection, Research, and Sanctuaries Act of 1972 (
33 USC
§
1401 et seq.), or the Clean Air Act (
42 USC §
4701 et seq.), or in another permit issued by
the Department of Environmental Quality or any other appropriate state agency
under another permit program approved by the administrator. When there are no
applicable standards for sewage sludge use or disposal, the permit may include
requirements developed on a case-by-case basis to protect public health and the
environment from any adverse effects which may occur from toxic pollutants in
sewage sludge. If any applicable standard for sewage sludge use or disposal is
promulgated under § 405(d) of the CWA and that standard is more stringent
than any limitation on the pollutant or practice in the permit, the board may
initiate proceedings under this chapter to modify or revoke and reissue the
permit to conform to the standard for sewage sludge use or disposal.
3. Requirements applicable to cooling water
intake structures at new facilities under § 316 (b) of the CWA, in
accordance with
9VAC25-31-165.
C. Reopener clause. For any permit issued to
a treatment works treating domestic sewage (including sludge-only facilities),
the board shall include a reopener clause to incorporate any applicable
standard for sewage sludge use or disposal promulgated under § 405(d) of
the CWA. The board may promptly modify or revoke and reissue any permit
containing the reopener clause required by this subdivision if the standard for
sewage sludge use or disposal is more stringent than any requirements for
sludge use or disposal in the permit, or controls a pollutant or practice not
limited in the permit.
D. Water
quality standards and state requirements. Any requirements in addition to or
more stringent than promulgated effluent limitations guidelines or standards
under §§ 301, 304, 306, 307, 318, and 405 of the CWA necessary to:
1. Achieve water quality standards
established under the law and § 303 of the CWA, including state narrative
criteria for water quality.
a. Limitations
must control all pollutants or pollutant parameters (either conventional,
nonconventional, or toxic pollutants) which the board determines are or may be
discharged at a level which will cause, have the reasonable potential to cause,
or contribute to an excursion above any Virginia water quality standard,
including Virginia narrative criteria for water quality.
b. When determining whether a discharge
causes, has the reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an in-stream
excursion above a narrative or numeric criteria within a Virginia water quality
standard, the board shall use procedures which account for existing controls on
point and nonpoint sources of pollution, the variability of the pollutant or
pollutant parameter in the effluent, the sensitivity of the species to toxicity
testing (when evaluating whole effluent toxicity), and where appropriate, the
dilution of the effluent in the receiving water.
c. When the board determines, using the
procedures in subdivision 1 b of this subsection, that a discharge causes, has
the reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an in-stream excursion
above the allowable ambient concentration of a Virginia numeric criteria within
a Virginia water quality standard for an individual pollutant, the permit must
contain effluent limits for that pollutant.
d. Except as provided in this subdivision,
when the board determines, using the procedures in subdivision 1 b of this
subsection, toxicity testing data, or other information, that a discharge
causes, has the reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an in-stream
excursion above a narrative criterion within an applicable Virginia water
quality standard, the permit must contain effluent limits for whole effluent
toxicity. Limits on whole effluent toxicity are not necessary where the board
demonstrates in the fact sheet or statement of basis of the VPDES permit, using
the procedures in subdivision 1 b of this subsection, that chemical-specific
limits for the effluent are sufficient to attain and maintain applicable
numeric and narrative Virginia water quality standards.
e. Where Virginia has not established a water
quality criterion for a specific chemical pollutant that is present in an
effluent at a concentration that causes, has the reasonable potential to cause,
or contributes to an excursion above a narrative criterion within an applicable
Virginia water quality standard, the board must establish effluent limits using
one or more of the following options:
(1)
Establish effluent limits using a calculated numeric water quality criterion
for the pollutant which the board demonstrates will attain and maintain
applicable narrative water quality criteria and will fully protect the
designated use. Such a criterion may be derived using a proposed Virginia
criterion, or an explicit policy or regulation interpreting Virginia's
narrative water quality criterion, supplemented with other relevant information
which may include: EPA's Water Quality Standards Handbook, August 1994, risk
assessment data, exposure data, information about the pollutant from the Food
and Drug Administration, and current EPA criteria documents;
(2) Establish effluent limits on a
case-by-case basis, using EPA's water quality criteria, published under §
307(a) of the CWA, supplemented where necessary by other relevant information;
or
(3) Establish effluent
limitations on an indicator parameter for the pollutant of concern, provided:
(a) The permit identifies which pollutants
are intended to be controlled by the use of the effluent limitation;
(b) The fact sheet required by
9VAC25-31-280 sets
forth the basis for the limit, including a finding that compliance with the
effluent limit on the indicator parameter will result in controls on the
pollutant of concern which are sufficient to attain and maintain applicable
water quality standards;
(c) The
permit requires all effluent and ambient monitoring necessary to show that
during the term of the permit the limit on the indicator parameter continues to
attain and maintain applicable water quality standards; and
(d) The permit contains a reopener clause
allowing the board to modify or revoke and reissue the permit if the limits on
the indicator parameter no longer attain and maintain applicable water quality
standards.
f.
When developing water quality-based effluent limits under this subdivision the
board shall ensure that:
(1) The level of
water quality to be achieved by limits on point sources established under this
subsection is derived from, and complies with all applicable water quality
standards; and
(2) Effluent limits
developed to protect a narrative water quality criterion, a numeric water
quality criterion, or both, are consistent with the assumptions and
requirements of any available wasteload allocation for the discharge prepared
by Virginia and approved by EPA pursuant to
40
CFR
130.7;
2. Attain or maintain a specified water
quality through water quality related effluent limits established under the law
and § 302 of the CWA;
3.
Conform to the conditions of a Virginia Water Protection Permit (VWPP) issued
under the law and § 401 of the CWA;
4. Conform to applicable water quality
requirements under § 401(a)(2) of the CWA when the discharge affects a
state other than Virginia;
5.
Incorporate any more stringent limitations, treatment standards, or schedule of
compliance requirements established under the law or regulations in accordance
with § 301(b)(1)(C) of the CWA;
6. Ensure consistency with the requirements
of a Water Quality Management plan approved by EPA under § 208(b) of the
CWA;
7. Incorporate § 403(c)
criteria under 40 CFR Part 125, Subpart M, for ocean discharges; or
8. Incorporate alternative effluent
limitations or standards where warranted by fundamentally different factors,
under 40 the CFR Part 125, Subpart D.
E. Technology-based controls for toxic
pollutants. Limitations established under subsection A, B, or D of this
section, to control pollutants meeting the criteria listed in subdivision 1 of
this subsection. Limitations will be established in accordance with subdivision
2 of this subsection. An explanation of the development of these limitations
shall be included in the fact sheet.
1.
Limitations must control all toxic pollutants which the board determines (based
on information reported in a permit application or in a notification required
by the permit or on other information) are or may be discharged at a level
greater than the level which can be achieved by the technology-based treatment
requirements appropriate to the permittee; or
2. The requirement that the limitations
control the pollutants meeting the criteria of subdivision 1 of this subsection
will be satisfied by:
a. Limitations on those
pollutants; or
b. Limitations on
other pollutants which, in the judgment of the board, will provide treatment of
the pollutants under subdivision 1 of this subsection to the levels required by
the law and 40 CFR Part 125, Subpart A.
F. A notification level which exceeds the
notification level of
9VAC25-31-200
A 1 a, b, or c, upon a petition from the permittee or on the board's
initiative. This new notification level may not exceed the level which can be
achieved by the technology-based treatment requirements appropriate to the
permittee.
G. Twenty-four-hour
reporting. Pollutants for which the permittee must report violations of maximum
daily discharge limitations under
9VAC25-31-190
L 7 b (3) (24-hour reporting) shall be listed in the permit. This list shall
include any toxic pollutant or hazardous substance, or any pollutant
specifically identified as the method to control a toxic pollutant or hazardous
substance.
I. Monitoring requirements. The following
monitoring requirements:
1. Requirements
concerning the proper use, maintenance, and installation, when appropriate, of
monitoring equipment or methods (including biological monitoring methods when
appropriate);
2. Required
monitoring including type, intervals, and frequency sufficient to yield data
which are representative of the monitored activity including, when appropriate,
continuous monitoring;
3.
Applicable reporting requirements based upon the impact of the regulated
activity and as specified in
9VAC25-31-190,
subdivisions 5 through 8 of this subsection, and Part XI (
9VAC25-31-950
et seq.) of this chapter. Reporting shall be no less frequent than specified in
the above regulation;
4. To assure
compliance with permit limitations, requirements to monitor:
a. The mass (or other measurement specified
in the permit) for each pollutant limited in the permit;
b. The volume of effluent discharged from
each outfall;
c. Other measurements
as appropriate including pollutants in internal waste streams; pollutants in
intake water for net limitations; frequency, rate of discharge, etc., for
noncontinuous discharges; pollutants subject to notification requirements; and
pollutants in sewage sludge or other monitoring as specified in Part VI
(
9VAC25-31-420
et seq.) of this chapter; or as determined to be necessary on a case-by-case
basis pursuant to the law and § 405(d)(4) of the CWA; and
d. According to sufficiently sensitive test
procedures (i.e., methods) approved under 40 CFR Part 136 for the analysis of
pollutants or pollutant parameters or required under 40 CFR Chapter I,
Subchapter N or O.
(1) For the purposes of
this subdivision, a method is "sufficiently sensitive" when:
(a) The method minimum level (ML) is at or
below the level of the effluent limit established in the permit for the
measured pollutant or pollutant parameter; or
(b) The method has the lowest ML of the
analytical methods approved under 40 CFR Part 136 or required under 40 CFR
Chapter I, Subchapter N or O for the measured pollutant or pollutant
parameter.
(2) In the
case of pollutants or pollutant parameters for which there are no approved
methods under 40 CFR Part 136 or methods are not otherwise required under 40
CFR Chapter I, Subchapter N or O, monitoring shall be conducted according to a
test procedure specified in the permit for such pollutants or pollutant
parameters;
5.
Except as provided in subdivisions 7 and 8 of this subsection, requirements to
report monitoring results shall be established on a case-by-case basis with a
frequency dependent on the nature and effect of the discharge, but in no case
less that once a year. For sewage sludge use or disposal practices,
requirements to monitor and report results shall be established on a
case-by-case basis with a frequency dependent on the nature and effect of the
sewage sludge use or disposal practice; minimally this shall be as specified in
Part VI (
9VAC25-31-420
et seq.) of this chapter (where applicable), but in no case less than once a
year. All results shall be electronically reported in compliance with 40 CFR
Part 3 (including, in all cases, 40 CFR Part 3 Subpart D),
9VAC25-31-110,
and Part XI (
9VAC25-31-950
et seq.) of this chapter;
6.
Requirements to report monitoring results for stormwater discharges associated
with industrial activity which are subject to an effluent limitation guideline
shall be established on a case-by-case basis with a frequency dependent on the
nature and effect of the discharge, but in no case less than once a
year;
7. Requirements to report
monitoring results for stormwater discharges associated with industrial
activity (other than those addressed in subdivision 6 of this subsection) shall
be established on a case-by-case basis with a frequency dependent on the nature
and effect of the discharge. At a minimum, a permit for such a discharge must
require:
a. The discharger to conduct an
annual inspection of the facility site to identify areas contributing to a
stormwater discharge associated with industrial activity and evaluate whether
measures to reduce pollutant loading identified in a stormwater pollution
prevention plan are adequate and properly implemented in accordance with the
terms of the permit or whether additional control measures are
needed;
b. The discharger to
maintain for a period of three years a record summarizing the results of the
inspection and a certification that the facility is in compliance with the plan
and the permit, and identifying any incidents of noncompliance;
c. Such report and certification be signed in
accordance with
9VAC25-31-110;
and
d. Permits for stormwater
discharges associated with industrial activity from inactive mining operations
may, where annual inspections are impracticable, require certification once
every three years by a Registered Professional Engineer that the facility is in
compliance with the permit, or alternative requirements;
and
8. Permits that do
not require the submittal of monitoring result reports at least annually shall
require that the permittee report all instances of noncompliance not reported
under
9VAC25-31-190
L 1, 4, 5, 6, and 7 at least annually.
J. Pretreatment program for POTWs.
Requirements for POTWs to:
1. Identify, in
terms of character and volume of pollutants, any significant indirect
dischargers into the POTW subject to pretreatment standards under § 307(b)
of the CWA and Part VII (
9VAC25-31-730
et seq.) of this chapter;
2. Submit
a local program when required by and in accordance with Part VII of this
chapter to assure compliance with pretreatment standards to the extent
applicable under § 307(b) of the CWA. The local program shall be
incorporated into the permit as described in Part VII of this chapter. The
program shall require all indirect dischargers to the POTW to comply with the
reporting requirements of Part VII of this chapter;
3. Provide a written technical evaluation of
the need to revise local limits under Part VII of this chapter following permit
issuance or reissuance; and
4. For
POTWs that are sludge-only facilities, a requirement to develop a pretreatment
program under Part VII of this chapter when the board determines that a
pretreatment program is necessary to assure compliance with Part VI of this
chapter.
K. Best
management practices to control or abate the discharge of pollutants when:
1. Authorized under § 304(e) of the CWA
for the control of toxic pollutants and hazardous substances from ancillary
industrial activities;
2.
Authorized under § 402(p) of the CWA for the control of stormwater
discharges;
3. Numeric effluent
limitations are infeasible; or
4.
The practices are reasonably necessary to achieve effluent limitations and
standards or to carry out the purposes and intent of the law and the
CWA.
L. Reissued permits.
1. In the case of effluent limitations
established on the basis of § 402(a)(1)(B) of the CWA, a permit may not be
renewed, reissued, or modified on the basis of effluent guidelines promulgated
under § 304(b) of the CWA subsequent to the original issuance of such
permit, to contain effluent limitations which are less stringent than the
comparable effluent limitations in the previous permit. In the case of effluent
limitations established on the basis of § 301(b)(1)(C) or 303(d) or (e) of
the CWA, a permit may not be renewed, reissued, or modified to contain effluent
limitations that are less stringent than the comparable effluent limitations in
the previous permit except in compliance with § 303(d)(4) of the
CWA.
2. Exceptions. A permit with
respect to which subdivision 1 of this subsection applies may be renewed,
reissued, or modified to contain a less stringent effluent limitation
applicable to a pollutant, if:
a. Material and
substantial alterations or additions to the permitted facility occurred after
permit issuance which justify the application of a less stringent effluent
limitation;
b.
(1) Information is available that was not
available at the time of permit issuance (other than revised regulations,
guidance, or test methods) and that would have justified the application of a
less stringent effluent limitation at the time of permit issuance; or
(2) The board determines that technical
mistakes or mistaken interpretations of law were made in issuing the permit
under § 402(a)(1)(B) of the CWA;
c. A less stringent effluent limitation is
necessary because of events over which the permittee has no control and for
which there is no reasonably available remedy;
d. The permittee has received a permit
modification under the law and § 301(c), 301(g), 301(h), 301(i), 301(k),
301(n), or 316(a) of the CWA; or
e.
The permittee has installed the treatment facilities required to meet the
effluent limitations in the previous permit and has properly operated and
maintained the facilities but has nevertheless been unable to achieve the
previous effluent limitations, in which case the limitations in the reviewed,
reissued, or modified permit may reflect the level of pollutant control
actually achieved (but shall not be less stringent than required by effluent
guidelines in effect at the time of permit renewal, reissuance, or
modification).
Subdivision 2 b of this subsection shall not apply to any
revised waste load allocations or any alternative grounds for translating water
quality standards into effluent limitations, except where the cumulative effect
of such revised allocations results in a decrease in the amount of pollutants
discharged into the concerned waters, and such revised allocations are not the
result of a discharger eliminating or substantially reducing its discharge of
pollutants due to complying with the requirements of the law or the CWA or for
reasons otherwise unrelated to water quality.
3. In no event may a permit with respect to
which subdivision 2 of this subsection applies be renewed, reissued, or
modified to contain an effluent limitation that is less stringent than required
by effluent guidelines in effect at the time the permit is renewed, reissued,
or modified. In no event may such a permit to discharge into waters be renewed,
issued, or modified to contain a less stringent effluent limitation if the
implementation of such limitation would result in a violation of a Virginia
water quality standard applicable to such waters.
M. For a privately owned treatment works, any
conditions expressly applicable to any user, as a limited co-permittee, that
may be necessary in the permit issued to the treatment works to ensure
compliance with applicable requirements under this part. Alternatively, the
board may issue separate permits to the treatment works and to its users, or
may require a separate permit application from any user. The board's decision
to issue a permit with no conditions applicable to any user, to impose
conditions on one or more users, to issue separate permits, or to require
separate applications, and the basis for that decision, shall be stated in the
fact sheet for the draft permit for the treatment works.
N. Any conditions imposed in grants made by
the board to POTWs under §§ 201 and 204 of the CWA that are
reasonably necessary for the achievement of effluent limitations under §
301 of the CWA and the law.
O.
Requirements governing the disposal of sewage sludge from publicly owned
treatment works or any other treatment works treating domestic sewage for any
use regulated by Part VI of this chapter.
P. When a permit is issued to a facility that
may operate at certain times as a means of transportation over water, a
condition that the discharge shall comply with any applicable regulations
promulgated by the secretary of the department in which the Coast Guard is
operating, that establish specifications for safe transportation, handling,
carriage, and storage of pollutants.
Q. Navigation. Any conditions that the
Secretary of the Army considers necessary to ensure that navigation and
anchorage will not be substantially impaired in accordance with
9VAC25-31-330.
Notes
9 Va. Admin.
Code §
25-31-220
Derived from Virginia
Register Volume 12, Issue 20, eff. July 24, 1996; amended, Virginia Register
Volume 16, Issue 25, eff. September 27, 2000; Volume 17, Issue 13, eff. April
11, 2001; Volume 18, Issue 9, eff. February 15, 2002; Volume 21, Issue 9, eff.
February 9, 2005; Volume 22, Issue 24, eff. September 6, 2006; Volume 24, Issue
6, eff. January 1, 2008; Volume 28, Issue 10, eff. February 15, 2012; Amended,
Virginia
Register Volume 33, Issue 22, eff.
7/26/2017; Amended,
Virginia
Register Volume 37, Issue 01, eff.
10/1/2020.
Statutory Authority: §
62.1-44.15
of the Code of Virginia; § 402 of the federal Clean Water Act; 40 CFR
Parts 122, 123, 124, 403, and 503.