Current through Register Vol. 39, No. 6, September 16, 2024
(a)
The Commission shall classify surface waters of the State as outstanding
resource waters (ORW) upon finding, on a case-by-case basis, that such waters
are of exceptional State or national recreational or ecological significance
that require additional protection to maintain existing uses, as described in
this Rule, and that the waters meet the following conditions:
(1) the water quality is rated as excellent
based on physical, chemical or biological information; and
(2) the characteristics that make these
waters of exceptional State or national recreational or ecological significance
may not be protected by the assigned narrative and numerical water quality
standards.
(b) For
purposes of this Rule, a water body shall be deemed to be of exceptional State
or national recreational or ecological significance if it exhibits one or more
of the following ORW uses:
(1) there are
outstanding fish or commercially-important aquatic species habitat and
fisheries;
(2) there is a high
level of water-based recreation or the potential for such recreation;
(3) the waters have received a designation
such as a North Carolina or National Wild and Scenic River or a National
Wildlife Refuge, which do not provide any water quality protection;
(4) the waters represent an important
component of a State or national park or forest; or
(5) the waters are of ecological or
scientific significance, such as habitat for rare or endangered species or as
areas for research and education.
(c) Quality Standards for ORW.
(1) Freshwater: Water quality conditions
shall be maintained to protect the outstanding resource values of waters
classified ORW. Management strategies to protect resource values shall be
developed on a site-specific basis during the proceedings to classify waters as
ORW in accordance with Rule .0101 of the Subchapter. No new discharges or
expansions of existing discharges shall be permitted, and stormwater controls
for all new development activities requiring an Erosion and Sedimentation
Control Plan in accordance with rules established by the NC Sedimentation
Control Commission shall comply with the stormwater provisions set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1000, including the specific stormwater
management requirements for freshwater ORW areas set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1019 and
02H .1021.
(2) Saltwater: Water quality conditions shall
be maintained to protect the outstanding resource values of waters classified
ORW. Management strategies to protect resource values shall be developed on a
site-specific basis during the proceedings to classify waters as ORW in
accordance with Rule .0101 of this Subchapter. New development shall comply
with the stormwater provisions set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1000, including the specific stormwater
management requirements for saltwater ORW areas set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1019 and
02H .1021. No dredge or fill
activities shall be allowed if those activities would result in a reduction of
the beds of "submerged aquatic vegetation habitat" or "shellfish producing
habitat," defined in
15A NCAC
03I .0101, and incorporated by reference
including subsequent amendments and editions, except for maintenance dredging,
such as that required to maintain access to existing channels and facilities
located within the designated areas, or maintenance dredging for activities
such as agriculture. The Commission shall hold a public hearing before granting
a permit to discharge to waters classified as ORW.
Additional, site-specific actions to protect resource
values shall be considered during the proceedings to classify waters as ORW and
shall be specified in Paragraph (d) of this Rule. These actions may include
anything within the powers of the Commission, as set forth in
G.S.
143-21 and
G.S.
143B-282. The Commission shall also consider
local actions that have been taken to protect a water body in determining the
additional, site-specific actions.
(d) Listing of Waters Classified ORW with
Specific Actions.
(1) Roosevelt Natural Area
[White Oak River Basin, Index Nos. 20-36-9.5-(1) and 20-36-9.5-(2)], including
all fresh and saline waters within the property boundaries of the natural area:
New development on a site within 575 feet of and naturally draining to the
Roosevelt Natural Area shall comply with the low density option in the
stormwater rules set forth in
15A NCAC
02H .1019.
(2) Chattooga River ORW Area (Little
Tennessee River Basin and Savannah River Drainage Area): the following
undesignated waterbodies that are tributary to ORW designated segments shall
comply with Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule in order to protect the designated
waters as per Rule .0203 of this Section. However, expansions of existing
discharges to the following segments shall be allowed if there is no increase
in pollutant loading:
(A) North and South
Fowler Creeks and associated tributaries;
(B) Green and Norton Mill Creeks and
associated tributaries;
(C) Cane
Creek and associated tributaries;
(D) Ammons Branch and associated tributaries;
and
(E) Glade Creek and associated
tributaries.
(3) Henry
Fork ORW Area (Catawba River Basin): the following undesignated waterbodies
that are tributary to ORW designated segments shall comply with Subparagraph
(c)(1) of this Rule in order to protect the designated waters as per Rule .0203
of this Section:
(A) Ivy Creek and associated
tributaries; and
(B) Rock Creek and
associated tributaries.
(4) South Fork New and New Rivers ORW Area
[New River Basin (Index Nos. 10-1-33.5 and 10)]: the following management
strategies, in addition to the discharge requirements set forth in Subparagraph
(c)(1) of this Rule, shall apply to the designated ORW areas:
(A) Stormwater controls described in
Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule shall apply to land within one mile of and
that drains to the designated ORW areas;
(B) New or expanded National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permitted wastewater discharges located
upstream of the designated ORW (for the North Fork New River ORW area, see
Subparagraph (14) of this Paragraph) shall be permitted such that the following
water quality standards are maintained in the ORW segment:
(i) the total volume of treated wastewater
for all upstream discharges combined shall not exceed 50 percent of the total
instream flow in the designated ORW under 7Q10 conditions, which are defined in
Rule .0206(a)(1) of this Section;
(ii) a safety factor shall be applied to any
chemical allocation such that the effluent limitation for a specific chemical
constituent shall be the more stringent of either the limitation allocated
under design conditions pursuant to Rule .0206 of this Section for the normal
standard at the point of discharge, or the limitation allocated under design
conditions for one-half the normal standard at the upstream border of the ORW
segment;
(iii) a safety factor
shall be applied to any discharge of complex wastewater (those containing or
potentially containing toxicants) to protect for chronic toxicity in the ORW
segment by setting the whole effluent toxicity limitation at the higher
effluent concentration determined under design conditions pursuant to Rule
.0206 of this Section for either the instream effluent concentration at the
point of discharge or twice the effluent concentration calculated as if the
discharge were at the upstream border of the ORW segment;
(C) New or expanded NPDES permitted
wastewater discharges located upstream of the designated ORW (for the North
Fork New River ORW area, see Subparagraph (14) of this Paragraph) shall comply
with the following:
(i) Oxygen Consuming
Wastes: Effluent limitations for oxygen consuming wastes shall be BOD = 5 mg/1,
and NH3-N = 2 mg/1;
(ii) Total
Suspended Solids: Discharges of total suspended solids (TSS) shall be limited
to effluent concentrations of 10 mg/1 for trout waters and to 20 mg/1 for all
other waters;
(iii) Emergency
Requirements: Reliable treatment designs shall be employed, such as stand-by
power capability for entire treatment works, dual train design for all
treatment components, or other reliable treatment designs in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .0124;
(iv) Nutrients: If nutrient overenrichment is
projected to be a concern, effluent limitations shall be set for phosphorus,
nitrogen, or both;
(5) Old Field Creek (New River Basin): the
undesignated portion of Old Field Creek from its source to Call Creek shall
comply with Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule in order to protect the designated
waters as per Rule .0203 of this Section;
(6) In the following designated waterbodies,
no additional restrictions shall be placed on new or expanded marinas. The only
new or expanded NPDES permitted discharges that shall be allowed shall be
non-domestic, non-process industrial discharges. The Alligator River Area
(Pasquotank River Basin), extending from the source of the Alligator River to
the U.S. Highway 64 bridge, including New Lake Fork, North West Fork Alligator
River, Juniper Creek, Southwest Fork Alligator River, Scouts Bay, Gum Neck
Creek, Georgia Bay, Winn Bay, Stumpy Creek Bay, Stumpy Creek, Swann Creek
(Swann Creek Lake), Whipping Creek (Whipping Creek Lake), Grapevine Bay,
Rattlesnake Bay, The Straits, The Frying Pan, Coopers Creek, Babbitt Bay, Goose
Creek, Milltail Creek, Boat Bay, Sandy Ridge Gut (Sawyer Lake) and Second
Creek, but excluding the Intracoastal Waterway (Pungo River-Alligator River
Canal) and all other tributary streams and canals;
(7) In the following designated waterbodies,
the only type of new or expanded marina that shall be allowed shall be those
marinas located in upland basin areas, or those with fewer than 10 slips having
no boats over 24 feet in length and no boats with heads. The only new or
expanded NPDES permitted discharges that shall be allowed shall be
non-domestic, non-process industrial discharges:
(A) the Northeast Swanquarter Bay Area
including all waters northeast of a line from a point at Lat. 35E 23N 51O and
Long. 76E 21N 02O thence southeast along the Swanquarter National Wildlife
Refuge hunting closure boundary (as defined by the 1935 Presidential
Proclamation and depicted on the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Swanquarter
National Wildlife Refuge map at
https://www.fws.gov/southeast/pdf/map/swanquarter-national-wildlife-refuge.pdf,
incorporated by reference) to Drum Point;
(B) the Neuse-Southeast Pamlico Sound Area
(Southeast Pamlico Sound Section of the Southeast Pamlico, Core and Back Sound
Area); (Neuse River Basin) including all waters within an area defined by a
line extending from the southern shore of Ocracoke Inlet northwest to the
Tar-Pamlico River and Neuse River basin boundary, then southwest to Ship
Point;
(C) the Core Sound Section
of the Southeast Pamlico, Core and Back Sound Area (White Oak River Basin),
including all waters of Core Sound and its tributaries, but excluding Nelson
Bay, Little Port Branch and Atlantic Harbor at its mouth, and those tributaries
of Jarrett Bay that are closed to shellfishing;
(D) the Western Bogue Sound Section of the
Western Bogue Sound and Bear Island Area (White Oak River Basin), including all
waters within an area defined by a line from Bogue Inlet to the mainland at SR
1117 to a line across Bogue Sound from the southwest side of Gales Creek to
Rock Point and including Taylor Bay and the Intracoastal Waterway;
(E) the Stump Sound Area (Cape Fear River
Basin), including all waters of Stump Sound and Alligator Bay from marker
Number 17 to the western end of Permuda Island, but excluding Rogers Bay, the
Kings Creek Restricted Area, and Mill Creek; and
(F) the Topsail Sound and Middle Sound Area
(Cape Fear River Basin), including all estuarine waters from New Topsail Inlet
to Mason Inlet and including the Intracoastal Waterway and Howe Creek, but
excluding Pages Creek and Futch Creek.
(8) In the following designated waterbodies,
no new or expanded NPDES permitted discharges and only new or expanded marinas
with fewer than 10 slips having no boats over 24 feet in length and no boats
with heads shall be allowed:
(A) the
Swanquarter Bay and Juniper Bay Area (Tar-Pamlico River Basin), including all
waters within a line beginning at Juniper Bay Point and running south and then
west below Great Island, then northwest to Shell Point and including Shell,
Swanquarter, and Juniper Bays and their tributaries, but excluding all waters
northeast of a line from a point at Lat. 35E 23N 51O and Long. 76E 21N 02O
thence southeast along the Swanquarter National Wildlife Refuge hunting closure
boundary (as defined by the 1935 Presidential Proclamation and depicted on the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Swanquarter National Wildlife Refuge map at
https://www.fws.gov/southeast/pdf/map/swanquarter-national-wildlife-refuge.pdf,
incorporated by reference) to Drum Point and also excluding the Blowout,
Hydeland, Juniper, and Quarter Canals;
(B) the Back Sound Section of the Southeast
Pamlico, Core and Back Sound Area (White Oak River Basin), including that area
of Back Sound extending from Core Sound west along Shackleford Banks, then
north to the westernmost point of Middle Marshes and along the northwest shore
of Middle Marshes (to include all of Middle Marshes), then west to Rush Point
on Harker's Island, and along the southern shore of Harker's Island back to
Core Sound;
(C) the Bear Island
Section of the Western Bogue Sound and Bear Island Area (White Oak River
Basin), including all waters within an area defined by a line from the western
most point on Bear Island to the northeast mouth of Goose Creek on the
mainland, east to the southwest mouth of Queen Creek, then south to green
marker No. 49, then northeast to the northern most point on Huggins Island,
then southeast along the shoreline of Huggins Island to the southeastern most
point of Huggins Island, then south to the northeastern most point on Dudley
Island, then southwest along the shoreline of Dudley Island to the eastern tip
of Bear Island; and
(D) the
Masonboro Sound Area (Cape Fear River Basin), including all waters between the
Barrier Islands and the mainland from Carolina Beach Inlet to Masonboro
Inlet.
(9) Black and
South Rivers ORW Area (Cape Fear River Basin) [Index Nos. 18-68-(0.5),
18-68-(3.5), 18-68-(11.5), 18-68-12-(0.5), 18-68-12-(11.5), and 18-68-2]: the
following management strategies shall be required in addition to the discharge
requirements specified in Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule:
(A) Stormwater controls described in
Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule shall apply to land within one mile of and
that drains to the designated ORW areas;
(B) New or expanded NPDES permitted
wastewater discharges located one mile upstream of the stream segments
designated ORW (upstream on the designated mainstem and upstream into direct
tributaries to the designated mainstem) shall comply with the following
discharge restrictions:
(i) Oxygen Consuming
Wastes: Effluent limitations shall be as follows: BOD shall not exceed 5 mg/l
and NH3-N shall not exceed 2 mg/l;
(ii) Total Suspended Solids: Discharges of
total suspended solids (TSS) shall be limited to effluent concentrations of 20
mg/l;
(iii) Emergency Requirements:
Reliable treatment designs shall be employed, such as stand-by power capability
for entire treatment works, dual train design for all treatment components, or
other reliable treatment designs in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .0124;
(iv) Nutrients: If nutrient overenrichment is
projected to be a concern, effluent limitations shall be set for phosphorus,
nitrogen, or both.
(v) Toxic
substances: If complex discharges (those containing or potentially containing
toxicants) may be currently present in the discharge, a safety factor shall be
applied to any chemical or whole effluent toxicity allocation. The limit for a
specific chemical constituent shall be allocated at one-half of the normal
standard at design conditions. Whole effluent toxicity shall be allocated to
protect for chronic toxicity at an effluent concentration equal to twice that
which is acceptable under flow design criteria pursuant to Rule .0206 of the
Section.
(10)
Lake Waccamaw ORW Area (Lumber River Basin) [Index No. 15-2]: all undesignated
waterbodies that are tributary to Lake Waccamaw shall comply with Paragraph (c)
of this Rule in order to protect the designated waters as per Rule .0203 of
this Section;
(11) Swift Creek and
Sandy Creek ORW Area (Tar-Pamlico River Basin) [portion of Index No.
28-78-(0.5) and Index No. 28-78-1-(19)]: all undesignated waterbodies that
drain to the designated waters shall comply with Paragraph (c) of this Rule in
order to protect the designated waters as per Rule .0203 of this Section and to
protect outstanding resource values found in the designated waters as well as
in the undesignated waters that drain to the designated waters;
(12) Fontana Lake North Shore ORW Area
(Little Tennessee River Basin and Savannah River Drainage Area) [Index Nos.
2-96 through 2-164] (excluding all waterbodies that drain to the south shore of
Fontana Lake) consists of the entire watersheds of all creeks that drain to the
north shore of Fontana Lake between Eagle and Forney Creeks, including Eagle
and Forney Creeks. In addition to the requirements set forth in Subparagraph
(c)(1) of this Rule, any person conducting development activity disturbing
greater than or equal to 5,000 square feet of land area in the designated ORW
area shall undertake the following actions to protect the outstanding resource
values of the designated ORW and downstream waters:
(A) investigate for the presence of and
identify the composition of acid-producing rocks by exploratory drilling or
other means and characterize the net neutralization potential of the
acid-producing rocks prior to commencing the land-disturbing
activity;
(B) to the maximum extent
practicable, taking into account site-specific factors including technical and
cost considerations as well as protection of water quality, avoid areas where
acid-producing rocks are found with net neutralization potential of -5 or
less;
(C) establish background
levels of acidity and mineralization prior to commencing land-disturbing
activity and monitor and maintain baseline water quality conditions for the
duration of the land-disturbing activity and thereafter for a period of at
least two years as determined by the Division as part of a certification issued
in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .0500 or stormwater permit issued
pursuant to this Rule;
(D) obtain a
NPDES permit for construction pursuant to Rule
15A NCAC
02H .0126 prior to initiating land-disturbing
activity;
(E) design stormwater
control systems to control and treat stormwater runoff from all surfaces
generated by one inch of rainfall, in accordance with
15A NCAC
02H .1003(3),
02H .1003(5), and .1050;
and
(F) post development, replicate
pre-development runoff characteristics and mimic the natural hydrology of the
site.
(13) Horsepasture
River ORW Area (Savannah Drainage Area) [Index No. 4-13-(0.5) and Index No.
4-13-(12.5)]: all undesignated waterbodies that are located within the
Horsepasture River watershed shall comply with Subparagraph (c)(1) of this Rule
in order to protect the designated waters as per Rule .0203 of this Section and
to protect outstanding resource values throughout the watershed. However, new
domestic wastewater discharges and expansions of existing wastewater discharges
shall be allowed provided that:
(A) Oxygen
Consuming Wastes: Effluent limitations shall be as follows: BOD shall not
exceed 5 mg/l and NH3-N shall not exceed 2 mg/l;
(B) Total Suspended Solids: Discharges of
total suspended solids (TSS) shall be limited to effluent concentrations of 10
mg/1 for trout waters and to 20 mg/l for all other waters except for mining
operations, which shall be held to their respective NPDES TSS permit
limits;
(C) Nutrients: If nutrient
overenrichment is projected to be a concern, effluent limitations shall be set
for phosphorus, nitrogen, or both; and
(D) Volume: The total volume of treated
wastewater for all discharges combined shall not exceed 25 percent of the total
instream flow in the designated ORW under 7Q10 conditions, as defined in Rule
.0206(a)(1) of this Section;
(14) North Fork New River ORW Area (New River
Basin) [Index Nos. 10-2-(1), 10-2-(11) and 10-2-(12)]: all non-ORW waterbodies,
including Little Buffalo Creek and Claybank Creek [Index Nos. 10-2-20-1 and
10-2-20-1-1], that are located within the North Fork New River watershed shall
comply with Rule .0224 of this Section in order to protect the ORW designated
waters.
Authority
G.S.
143-214.1; S.L. 2005-97;
Eff.
October 1, 1995;
Amended Eff. August 1, 2003 (see S.L. 2003-433,
s.2); August 1, 2000; April 1, 1996; January 1, 1996;
Temporary
Amendment Eff. October 7, 2003;
Amended Eff. December 1, 2010; July
1, 2009; January 1, 2007; June 1, 2004;
Readopted Eff. November 1,
2019.