Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
A supplier must report specific information to the Agency as
this Section provides.
a) Reporting
for Tap, Lead, and Copper, and Water Quality Parameter Monitoring
1) Notwithstanding Section
611.840(a) and
except as subsection (a)(1)(H) provides otherwise, a supplier must report the
information subsections (a)(1)(A) through (a)(1)(I) specify for all samples and
for all water quality parameter samples Section
611.357 specifies within ten
days after the end of each applicable tap sampling period Sections
611.356 and
611.357 specify (i.e., every six
months, annually, triennially, or every nine years). For a tap monitoring cycle
shorter than six months, the end of the tap monitoring cycle is the last date
on which the supplier may collect samples during that tap sampling period, as
Sections 611.356 and
611.357 specify.
A) The results of all tap samples for lead
and copper, including the location of each site and the criteria under Section
611.356(a)(3) through
(a)(10) the supplier used as the basis for
selecting the site for its sampling pool, accounting for Section
611.356(a)(11);
B) Supporting documents for each tap water
lead or copper sample the supplier requests the Agency invalidate under Section
611.356(f)(2);
C) A supplier having lead, galvanized
requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service lines in its lead service
line inventory under Section
611.354(a) must
re-evaluate the tap sampling locations the supplier uses in its sampling pool
prior to the compliance date Section
611.350(a)
specifies, then the more frequent of annually or prior to the each subsequent
round of tap sampling the supplier conducts, whichever is more frequent;
i) Before the first applicable tap monitoring
cycle under Section 611.356(d), the
supplier must submit a site sample plan to the Agency under Section 611.356,
including a list of tap sample site locations identified in the inventory under
Section 611.354(a), and
a list a tap sampling WQP sites the supplier selected under Section
611.357(a)(1).
The supplier must update and submit the site sample plan to the Agency before
changing any sample site locations. The Agency may issue a SEP requiring the
supplier to modify its site sample plan as necessary.
ii) For a supplier having lead service line
sites but an insufficient number to meet the minimum number Section
611.356 requires, the supplier
must document support for its conclusion that it has an insufficient number of
lead service line sites complying with the applicable of
40 CFR Section
141.86(a)(3) or (a)(4) (for
a CWS supplier) or 40 CFR
Section 141.86(a)(8) (for an
NTNCWS supplier);
D) The
90th percentile lead and copper concentrations the
supplier measures from among all lead and copper tap samples the supplier
collects during each tap sampling period (calculated under Section
611.350(c)(4)),
unless the Agency calculates the supplier's 90th
percentile lead and copper concentrations under subsection (h);
E) With the exception of initial tap sampling
under Section 611.356(d)(1),
the supplier must identify any site it did not sample during previous tap
sampling periods and explain why sampling sites have changed;
F) The results of all water quality parameter
tap samples the supplier must collect under Section
611.357(b) through
(g);
G) The results of all samples the supplier
collects at entry points for applicable water quality parameters under Section
611.357(b) through
(e);
H) A supplier must report the results of all
water quality parameter samples the supplier collects under Section
611.357(c) through
(f) during each six-month water quality
monitoring period Section
611.357(d)
specifies within the first ten days following the end of the water quality
monitoring period, unless the Agency specifies a more frequent reporting
requirement in a SEP; and
I) Before
the first applicable tap sampling period under Section
611.356(d), the
supplier must submit to the Agency, a copy of the tap sampling protocol the
supplier provides to persons sampling. The Agency must verify that the supplier
uses wide-mouth collection bottles and the supplier does not recommend
pre-stagnation flushing or aerator cleaning or removal before collecting
samples under Section
611.356(b). The
tap sampling protocol must contain instructions for correctly collecting a
first draw sample at a site without a lead service line and a first draw and a
fifth liter sample at a site with a lead service line, as applicable. If the
supplier seeks to modify the tap sampling protocol it submitted this subsection
(a)(1)(I), the supplier must submit the updated version of the protocol to the
Agency for review and approval at least 60 days before using it.
2) For an NTNCWS supplier, or a
CWS supplier complying with Section
611.356 (b)(5),
not having enough taps for first-draw or fifth liter tap samples, the supplier
must do one of two things:
A) The supplier
must identify to the Agency in writing standing times and locations for enough
non-first-draw and fifth liter tap samples to make up its sampling pool under
Section 611.356(b)(5)
by the start of the first applicable monitoring period under Section
611.356(d),
unless the Agency waives prior Agency approval of non-first-draw and fifth
liter tap sampling sites the supplier selects under Section
611.356(b)(5);
or
B) If the Agency waives prior
approval of non-first-draw sampling sites the supplier selects, the supplier
must identify each site that did not meet the six-hour minimum standing time
and the length of standing time for that particular substitute sample collected
under Section 611.356(b)(5)
in writing and include this information with the lead and copper tap sample
results the supplier must submit under subsection (a)(1)(A).
3) At a time the Agency specifies
in a SEP, a supplier must document adding a new source or any change in water
treatment to the Agency describing the addition or change. If the Agency does
not specify a time in a SEP, the supplier must document the changes to the
Agency as early as possible but no later than six months before adding a new
source or any change in water treatment. The Agency may issue a SEP requiring a
supplier to take actions before or after adding a new source or making a
long-term change in treatment to ensure the supplier will operate and maintain
OCCT, such as additional water quality parameter monitoring, additional lead or
copper tap sampling, and re-evaluating corrosion control treatment.
BOARD NOTE: USEPA gives examples of long-term changes in
treatment as including adding a new treatment process or modifying an existing
treatment process. USEPA gives examples of modifying treatment as including
switching secondary disinfectants, coagulants (e.g., alum to
ferric chloride), or corrosion inhibitor (e.g., orthophosphate
to blended phosphate). USEPA said that long-term changes can also include dose
changes to existing chemicals if the supplier plans long-term changes to its
finished water pH or residual inhibitor concentration. USEPA said that
long-term treatment changes would not include chemical dose fluctuations
associated with daily raw water quality changes where the supplier does not add
a new source.
4) A small
supplier applying for a monitoring waiver under Section
611.356(g) or
subject to a waiver granted under Section
611.356(g)(3)
must provide certain information to the Agency in writing before the applicable
deadline:
A) Before the start of the first
applicable tap monitoring cycle in Section
611.356(d), a
small supplier applying for a monitoring waiver must provide the documents
demonstrating that the supplier qualifies for a waiver under Section
611.356(g)(1) and
(g)(2).
B) No later than nine years after the
monitoring the supplier previously conducted under Section
611.356(g)(2)
or Section 611.356(g)(4)(A),
a small supplier wanting to maintain its monitoring waiver must provide the
information Section 611.356(g)(4)(A) and (g)(4)(B)
requires.
C) No later than 60 days after the small
supplier becomes aware that it is no longer free of lead-containing or
copper-containing material, a small supplier having a monitoring waiver must
notify the Agency in writing, stating the circumstances introducing lead- or
copper-containing materials into the system and describing any corrective
action the supplier plans to remove these materials.
5) A GWS supplier limiting its water quality
parameter monitoring to a subset of entry points under Section
611.357(c)(3)
must identify its selected entry points to the Agency in writing, including
information sufficiently demonstrating that the sites represent water quality
and treatment conditions throughout the supplier's system.
b) Reporting for Source Water Monitoring
1) A supplier must report its sampling
results for all source water samples it collects under Section
611.358 within ten days after
the end of each source water monitoring period Section
611.358 specifies.
2) With the exception of the first round of
source water sampling a supplier conducts under Section
611.358(b), a
supplier must specify any site it did not sample during source water monitoring
periods, explaining why the supplier changed the sampling point.
c) Reporting for Corrosion Control
Treatment. Before the applicable dates under Section
611.351, a supplier must report
certain information:
1) A supplier
demonstrating that it already optimized corrosion control must provide the
information Section 611.351(b)(1) through
(b)(3) requires.
2) A supplier that must optimize corrosion
control must provide its recommendation regarding OCCT under Section
611.352(a).
3) A supplier that must evaluate the
effectiveness of corrosion control treatments under Section
611.352(c) must
provide the information Section
611.352(c)
requires.
4) A supplier that must
install optimal corrosion control the Agency approves under Section
611.352(d) must
provide a copy of the Agency permit letter, which acts as certification that
the supplier completed installing the permitted treatment.
d) Reporting for Source Water Treatment.
Before the applicable dates in Section
611.353, a supplier must provide
certain information to the Agency:
1) If
Section 611.353(b)(1)
requires, the supplier must provide its recommendation on source water
treatment; or
2) A supplier that
must install source water treatment under Section
611.353(b)(2)
must provide a copy of the Agency permit letter, which acts as certification
that the supplier completed installing the Agency-approved treatment within 24
months after Agency approval.
e) Reporting for Lead Service Line Inventory
and Replacement. A supplier must report certain information to the Agency
demonstrating it complies with Sections
611.354 and
611.355:
1) No later than October 16, 2024, the
supplier must submit an inventory of service lines to the Agency, as Section
611.354(a)
requires.
2) No later than October
16, 2024, a supplier that inventoried a lead, galvanized requiring replacement,
or lead status unknown service line in its distribution system must submit a
lead service line replacement plan to the Agency, as Section
141.84(b)
requires.
3) The supplier must
provide the Agency with an updated version of its inventory under Section
611.354(a)
consistent with its tap monitoring cycle schedule under Section
611.356(d), but
no more frequently than annually. The supplier must submit its updated
inventory within 30 days after the end of each tap monitoring cycle.
A) If the supplier demonstrates that it has
no lead, galvanized requiring replacement, or lead status unknown service lines
in its inventory, the supplier needs no longer submit inventory updates to the
Agency, except as subsection (e)(3)(B) requires.
B) If a supplier complying with subsection
(e)(3)(A) subsequently discovers that it must replace any service lines in its
distribution system, the supplier must notify the Agency within 30 days after
identifying the service lines and prepare an updated inventory under Section
611.354(a) on a
schedule the Agency establishes in a SEP.
4) Within 30 days after the end of each tap
monitoring cycle, the supplier must certify replacing any encountered lead
goosenecks, pigtails, and connectors under Section
611.354(c).
5) Within 30 days after the end of each tap
monitoring cycle, the supplier must certify to the Agency that the supplier
made any partial and full lead service line replacements under Section
611.354(d) and
(e).
6) If it fails to meet the 45-day deadline
for completing a customer-initiated lead service line replacement under Section
611.354(d)(4),
a supplier must notify the Agency within 30 days after the deadline to request
that the Agency extend the deadline up to 180 days for completing the
customer-initiated lead service line replacement. The supplier must annually
certify that it has completed all customer-initiated lead service line
replacements under Section
611.354(d)(4).
7) No later than 30 days after the end of the
supplier's annual period for replacing lead service lines under Section
611.354(f) or
(g), the supplier must submit certain
information to the Agency and continue submitting the information each year the
supplier conducts lead service line replacements under Section
611.354(f) or
(g):
A) The
number of lead service lines, as Section
611.354(a)(4)
defines the term, in its inventory at the beginning of the annual
period;
B) The number of galvanized
requiring replacement service lines in its inventory at the beginning of the
annual period;
C) The number of
lead status unknown service lines, as Section
611.354(a)(4)
defines the term, in its inventory at the beginning of the annual
period;
D) The number of full lead
service line replacements the supplier has made and the street address for each
service line the supplier replaced;
E) The number of galvanized requiring
replacement service lines the supplier replaced and the street address for each
service line the supplier replaced;
F) The number of lead status unknown service
lines, as Section 611.354(a)(4)
defines the term, remaining in its inventory;
G) The total number of lead status unknown
service lines the supplier determines are non-lead, as Section
611.354(a)(4)
defines the terms; and
H) The total
number of service lines the supplier initially inventoried as non-lead later
and later discovered are lead or galvanized requiring replacement service
lines.
8) No later than
30 days after the end of each tap sampling period, a supplier that received a
customer refusal for a lead service line replacement or no customer response
after the supplier makes a minimum of two good-faith efforts to contact
customers regarding a full lead service line replacement under Section
611.354(g)(7)
must certify to the Agency the number of customer refusals or non-responses it
received from customers the supplier serves through a lead or galvanized
requiring replacement service line. The supplier must maintain these
documents.
9) No later than 12
months after the end of a tap sampling period during which a supplier exceeds
the lead action level in sampling under Section 611.356, the supplier must
provide to the Agency its schedule for annually replacing an average annual
rate of at least three percent on a two-year rolling average basis, or as
specified in Section 611.354(g), of
the number of known lead service lines and galvanized lines requiring
replacement when the lead trigger or action level was first exceeded and lead
status unknown service lines at the beginning of each year that required
replacement occurs in its distribution system.
10) No later than 12 months after the end of
a sampling period during which a supplier exceeds the lead trigger level in
monitoring under Section
611.356 and every 12 months
after that, the supplier must certify to the Agency in writing:
A) That the supplier conducted consumer
notification, as Sections
611.354(f)(4)
and 611.355(g)
require; and
B) That the supplier
delivered public education materials to the affected consumers, as specified in
Section 611.355(a).
C) If a supplier does not fulfill its annual
service line replacement goal under Section
611.354(f), it
must certify to the Agency in writing that the supplier conducted public
outreach, as Section 141.85(h)
requires. The supplier must also submit the outreach materials it used to the
Agency.
11) The annual
certification the supplier submits to the Agency under subsection (e)(10) must
certify that the supplier provided the results from samples it collected
between three months and six months after fully or partially replacing a lead
service line to the resident within the timeframe Section
611.355(d)(2)
requires. A mailed notice postmarked within three business days after receiving
the results is timely.
12) Any
supplier collecting samples following partial lead service line replacement
Section 611.354 requirements must report
the results to the Agency before the tenth day of the next month after the
supplier receives the laboratory results or as the Agency specifies in a SEP.
The Agency may issue a SEP waiving the supplier reporting these monitoring
results, but the supplier must retain these records. A supplier must also
report any additional information the Agency specifies in a time and manner the
Agency prescribes to verify that the supplier completed all partial lead
service line replacement activities.
13) A supplier having lead service lines in
its inventory must certify on an annual basis that the supplier complied with
consumer notification of service line containing lead under Section
611.355(e).
f) Reporting for Public Education
Program
1) A supplier subject to Section
611.355 must send documents to
the Agency containing certain items within ten days after the end of each
period in which the supplier must perform public education under Section
611.355(b):
A) The public education materials the
supplier delivered, and documents showing that the supplier delivered the
public education materials complying with the content requirements in Sections
611.355(a) and
the delivery requirements in Section
611.355(b);
and
B) A list of all newspapers,
radio stations, television stations, and facilities and organizations to which
the supplier delivered public education materials when this Subpart G required
the supplier to perform public education tasks.
2) Unless the Agency issues a SEP requiring a
supplier to do so, a supplier that previously submitted the information
subsection (f)(1)(B) requires need not resubmit the information subsection
(f)(1)(B) requires, as long as no changes in the distribution list occurred,
and the supplier certifies that it distributed the public education materials
to the same list the supplier previously submitted.
3) No later than three months after the end
of the tap sampling period, each supplier must mail a sample copy of the
consumer notification of tap water monitoring results to the Agency, certifying
that the supplier distributed the notification in a manner complying with
Section 611.355(d).
4) The supplier must demonstrate to the
Agency before July 1 of each year that the supplier delivered annual consumer
notice and lead service line information materials under Section
611.355(e) to
affected consumers the supplier serves through a lead, galvanized requiring
replacement, or lead status unknown service line during the previous calendar
year. The supplier must also provide a copy of the consumer notice and
information materials to the Agency.
5) The supplier must demonstrate to the
Agency before July 1 of each year that the supplier conducted an outreach
activity under Section
611.355(h) if
the supplier failed to meet the lead service line replacement goal under
Section 611.354(f)
during the previous calendar year. The supplier must also submit a copy to the
Agency of the outreach it provided to customers.
6) The supplier must certify to the Agency
before July 1 of each year that the supplier delivered notice to affected
customers under Section
611.355(f)
after any lead service line disturbance during the previous calendar year. The
supplier must also submit a copy of the notice to the Agency.
7) The supplier must certify to the Agency
before July 1 of each year that the supplier delivered the required
find-and-fix information to the Agency and local health departments under
Section 611.356(i)
during the previous calendar year.
g) Reporting Additional Monitoring Data. Any
supplier collecting more samples than the required minimum must report those
sampling data results to the Agency within the first ten days following the end
of the applicable sampling periods Sections
611.356 through
611.358 specify during which the
supplier collected the samples. This includes the monitoring data for
"find-and-fix" under Sections
611.356(h) and
611.357(g). The
supplier must certify to the Agency the number of customer refusals or
nonresponses for follow-up sampling it received under Section
611.352(j) with
information supporting the accuracy of the refusals or non-responses. The
supplier must certify within the first ten days after the end of the applicable
tap sampling period during which any individual sample exceeded the lead action
level.
h) Reporting
90th Percentile Lead and Copper Concentrations If
the Agency Calculates a Supplier's 90th Percentile
Concentrations. A water supplier needs not report its
90th percentile lead and copper concentrations
during each tap monitoring cycle, as subsection (a)(1)(D) requires, under
certain circumstances:
1) The Agency
previously notified the supplier that the Agency will calculate the supplier's
90th percentile lead and copper concentrations based
on the lead and copper tap results the supplier submitted under subsection
(h)(2)(A), and the supplier provides the results from lead and copper tap water
samples no later than ten days after the end of the applicable tap monitoring
cycle;
2) The supplier provides the
specific information to the Agency before the date subsection (h)(1) specifies:
A) The results from all tap water samples for
lead and copper, including the location of each site and the Section
611.356(a)(3) through
(a)(10) criteria under which the supplier
selected the site for its sampling pool; and
B) The supplier must identify sampling sites
it used during the current tap monitoring cycle that it did not sample during
previous tap monitoring cycles, explaining why the supplier changed sampling
sites; and
3) The Agency
provides the written results of calculating the 90th
percentile lead and copper concentrations to the supplier within 15 days after
the end of the tap sampling period.
i) Reporting Requirements for CWS Public
Education and Sampling in Schools and Child Care Facilities
1) A CWS supplier must report to the Agency
before July 1 of each year the previous calendar year's activity. The report
must include certain information:
A) The
supplier must certify that it made a good faith effort to identify schools and
child care facilities under Section
611.362(e). The
good faith effort may include reviewing customer records and requesting lists
of schools and child care facilities from the Agency, the Department of
Children and Family Services, the State Board of Education, or other pertinent
local agency. A supplier certifying that it serves no schools or child care
facilities needs not include the information subsections (i)(1)(B) through
(i)(1)(D) require in the report. If changes occur to schools and child care
facilities a supplier serves, the supplier must submit an updated list at least
once every five years under Section
611.362(e).
BOARD NOTE: The Department of Children and Family Services
regulates daycare facilities in Illinois, and the State Board of Education
regulates primary and secondary schools. Local agencies may play a role, and
many facilities and schools are not regulated under Illinois law. E.g.,
225 ILCS
10 and
105 ILCS 5.
B) The supplier must certify that it
delivered information about health risks from lead in drinking water to the
school and child care facilities it serves under Section
611.362(a)(2) and
(g)(1).
C) The supplier must certify that it
completed notifying and sampling under Section
611.362 and subsections
(i)(1)(C)(i) through (i)(1)(C)(v) at a minimum of 20 percent of elementary
schools and 20 percent of child care facilities the supplier serves. The
supplier must certify that it completed notifying and sampling under Section
611.362(g) and
subsections (i)(1)(C)(i), (i)(1)(C)(ii), and (i)(1)(C)(v) for secondary schools
the supplier sampled. After a supplier completes one cycle of required sampling
in all elementary schools and child care facilities it identified under Section
611.362(a)(1),
the supplier must subsequently certify that it completed notifying and sampling
under Section 611.362(g) and
subsections (i)(1)(C)(i), (i)(1)(C)(ii), and (i)(1)(C)(v) for all sampling the
supplier later completes in any school or child care facility.
i) The number of schools and child care
facilities the supplier serves;
ii)
The number of schools and child care facilities the supplier sampled in the
calendar year;
iii) The number of
schools and child care facilities that refused sampling;
iv) Information about outreach attempts for
sampling that a school or child care facility declined; and
v) The analytical results for all schools and
child care facilities the supplier sampled in the calendar
year.
D) The supplier
must certify that it provided its sampling results to schools, child care
facilities, and the Illinois Department of Public Health and local health
agencies.
2) This
subsection (i)(2) corresponds with
40 CFR
141.90(i)(2), which USEPA
marked "reserved". This statement maintains structural consistency with the
corresponding USEPA rules.
3) The
Agency has provided the results of the 90th
percentile lead and copper calculations, in writing, to the supplier before the
end of the monitoring period.
j) Reporting Requirements for Small Supplier
Compliance Flexibility Options. Before the times subsections (j)(1) and (j)(2)
provide, a supplier implementing a small supplier compliance option under
Section 611.363 must provide certain
information to the Agency:
1) Point-of-Use
Device Option. A small CWS or NTNCWS supplier implementing the point-of-use
device option under Section
611.363(a)(3),
must report the results from tap sampling under Section
611.363 no later than ten days
after the end of the tap monitoring cycle. If results exceed the lead trigger
level, the supplier must reach out to the homeowner or building management or,
if applicable, both within 24 hours after receiving the tap sample results. The
supplier must complete corrective action within 30 days. If the supplier does
not complete corrective action within 30 days, the supplier must document to
the Agency within 30 days of the failure explaining why the supplier was unable
to correct the issue. A supplier selecting the point-of-use device option under
Section 611.363(a)(3)
must document to the Agency certifying that the supplier maintains the
point-of-use devices, unless the Agency issues a SEP waiving this
requirement.
2) Replacing
Lead-Bearing Plumbing Option. A small CWS or NTNCWS supplier implementing the
option of replacing all lead-bearing plumbing under Section
611.363(a)(4)
must certify to the Agency that the supplier replaced all lead-bearing material
on the schedule the Agency establishes in a SEP within one year after
designating the option under Section
611.363(a)(4).
BOARD NOTE: This Section derives from
40 CFR
141.90.