Illinois Administrative Code
Title 35 - ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
Part 611 - PRIMARY DRINKING WATER STANDARDS
Subpart G - LEAD AND COPPER
Section 611.353 - Source Water Treatment
Universal Citation: 35 IL Admin Code ยง 611.353
Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
A supplier must complete source water monitoring and treatment requirements (under subsection (b) and Sections 611.356 and 611.358) before specific deadlines.
a) Deadlines for Completing Source Water Treatment Steps
1) Step 1: A
supplier exceeding the lead or copper action level must complete lead and
copper source water monitoring (under Section
611.358(b)) and
recommend treatment to the Agency (under subsection (b)(1)) within 180 days
after the end of the tap monitoring period during which the supplier exceeded
the action level.
2) Step 2: The
Agency must issue a SEP determining source water treatment (under subsection
(b)(2)) within six months after the supplier submits monitoring results under
step 1.
3) Step 3: If the Agency
requires installing source water treatment, the supplier must install that
treatment (under subsection (b)(3)) within 24 months after the Agency completes
step 2.
4) Step 4: The supplier
must complete follow-up tap water monitoring (under Section
611.356(d)(2))
and source water monitoring (under Section
611.358(c))
within 36 months after completion of step 2.
5) Step 5: The Agency must issue a SEP
reviewing the supplier's installation and operation of source water treatment
and specify MPCs for lead and copper (under subsection (b)(4)) within six
months after the supplier completes step 4.
6) Step 6: The supplier must comply with the
Agency-specified lead and copper MPCs (under subsection (b)(4)) and continue
source water monitoring (under Section
611.358(d)).
b) Source Water Treatment Requirements
1) System Treatment
Recommendation. Any supplier exceeding the lead or copper action level must
recommend to the Agency in writing one of the source water treatments in
subsection (b)(2). A supplier may recommend installing no treatment based on a
demonstration that source water treatment is not necessary to minimize lead and
copper levels at users' taps.
2)
Agency Determination Regarding Source Water Treatment
A) The Agency must evaluate the results of
all source water samples the supplier submitted to determine whether source
water treatment is necessary to minimize lead or copper levels in water the
supplier delivers to users' taps.
B) If the Agency determines treatment is
necessary, the Agency must issue a SEP requiring the supplier to install and
operate either the source water treatment the supplier recommended (if any) or
another from among specific source water treatment techniques:
i) ion exchange;
ii) reverse osmosis;
iii) lime softening; or
iv) coagulation/filtration.
C) The Agency may require the
supplier to submit, on or before a certain date, any additional information as
the Agency determines is necessary to aid its review.
D) The Agency must notify the supplier in
writing of its determination, stating the basis for its decision.
3) Installing Source Water
Treatment. A supplier must properly install and operate the source water
treatment the Agency approves under subsection (b)(2).
4) Agency Reviewing Source Water Treatment
and Specifying Maximum Permissible Source Water Levels (MPCs)
A) The Agency must review the source water
samples the supplier took both before and after the supplier installs source
water treatment and determine whether the supplier properly installs and
operates the approved source water treatment.
B) Based on its review, the Agency must issue
a SEP approving the lead and copper MPCs for finished water entering the
supplier's distribution system. The MPC levels must reflect the contaminant
removal capability of the treatment when properly operated and
maintained.
C) The SEP issued under
subsection (b)(4)(B) must include the Agency's explanation of the basis for its
decision under subsection (b)(4)(B).
5) Continued Operation and Maintenance. A
supplier must maintain lead and copper levels below the MPCs the Agency
approved at every sampling point the supplier monitors under Section 611.358.
The supplier does not comply with this subsection (b) if the level of lead or
copper at any sampling point is greater than the MPC the Agency approved under
subsection (b)(4)(B).
6) Modifying
Agency Treatment Decisions
A) On its own
initiative, or in response to a request by the supplier, the Agency may issue a
SEP modifying its determination of the source water treatment under subsection
(b)(2) or the lead and copper MPCs under subsection (b)(4).
B) A supplier must make a request to modify
in writing, explaining the propriety of the modification, and providing
supporting documentation.
C) The
Agency may issue a SEP modifying its determination if it concludes that the
change is necessary to ensure that the supplier continues minimizing lead and
copper concentrations in source water.
D) A revised determination under subsection
(b)(6)(C) must state the new treatment requirements, explain the basis for the
Agency's decision, and provide a schedule for completing the treatment
modifications.
E) Any interested
person may submit information to the Agency in writing bearing on whether the
Agency should exercise its discretion and issue a SEP modifying its
determination under subsection (b)(2). An Agency determination not to act on
information an interested person submits is not an Agency determination for the
purposes of Sections 39 and 40 of the Act.
7) USEPA Treatment Decisions. Under
40 CFR
142.19, USEPA reserves the prerogative to
review Agency treatment determinations under subsections (b)(2), (b)(4), or
(b)(6) and issue federal treatment determinations consistent with
40 CFR
141.83(b)(2), (b)(4), and
(b)(6) if USEPA finds that certain conditions
exist:
A) the Agency fails to issue a
treatment determination by the applicable deadline in subsection (a);
B) the Agency abuses its discretion in a
substantial number of instances or in instances affecting a substantial
population; or
C) the technical
aspects of the Agency's determination would be indefensible in a federal
enforcement action taken against the supplier.
BOARD NOTE: This Section derives from 40 CFR 141.83.
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