Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(a)
Permit requirement.
(1) Prior to October 1,
1992, a permit shall not be required for a discharge composed entirely of storm
water, except:
(i) A discharge with respect
to which a permit has been issued prior to February 4, 1987;
(ii) A discharge associated with industrial
activity (see section 122.26(a)(4)(a)(4));
(iii) A discharge from a large municipal
separate storm sewer system;
(iv) A
discharge from a medium municipal separate storm sewer system;
(v) A discharge which the Department or the
EPA Regional Administrator determines to contribute to a violation of a water
quality standard or is a significant contributor of pollutants to waters of the
State. This designation may include a discharge from any conveyance or system
of conveyances used for collecting and conveying storm water runoff or a system
of discharges from municipal separate storm sewers, except for those discharges
from conveyances which do not require a permit under paragraph (a)(2) of this
section or agricultural storm water runoff which is exempted from the
definition of point source at section 122.2. The Department may designate
discharges from municipal separate storm sewers on a system-wide or
jurisdiction-wide basis. In making this determination the Department may
consider the following factors:
(A) The
location of the discharge with respect to waters of the State as defined at
section 122.2;
(B) The size of the
discharge;
(C) The quantity and
nature of the pollutants discharged to waters of the State; and
(D) Other relevant factors.
(2) The Department may
not require a permit for discharges of storm water runoff from mining
operations or oil and gas exploration, production, processing or treatment
operations or transmission facilities, composed entirely of flows which are
from conveyances or systems of conveyances (including but not limited to pipes,
conduits, ditches, and channels) used for collecting and conveying
precipitation runoff and which are not contaminated by contact with or that has
not come into contact with, any overburden, raw material, intermediate
products, finished product, byproduct or waste products located on the site of
such operations.
(3) Large and
medium municipal separate storm sewer systems.
(i) Permits must be obtained for all
discharges from large and medium municipal separate storm sewer
systems.
(ii) The Department may
either issue one system-wide permit covering all discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers within a large or medium municipal storm sewer system or
issue distinct permits for appropriate categories of discharges within a large
or medium municipal separate storm sewer system including, but not limited to:
all discharges owned or operated by the same municipality; located within the
same jurisdiction; all discharges within a system that discharge to the same
watershed; discharges within a system that are similar in nature; or for
individual discharges from municipal separate storm sewers within the
system.
(iii) The operator of a
discharge from a municipal separate storm sewer which is part of a large or
medium municipal separate storm sewer system must either:
(A) Participate in a permit application (to
be a permittee or a co-permittee) with one or more other operators of
discharges from the large or medium municipal storm sewer system which covers
all, or a portion of all, discharges from the municipal separate storm sewer
system;
(B) Submit a distinct
permit application which only covers discharges from the municipal separate
storm sewers for which the operator is responsible; or
(C) A regional authority may be responsible
for submitting a permit application under the following guidelines:
(1) The regional authority together with
co-applicants shall have authority over a storm water management program that
is in existence, or shall be in existence at the time part 1 of the application
is due:
(2) The permit applicant or
co-applicants shall establish their ability to make a timely submission of part
1 and part 2 of the municipal application;
(3) Each of the operators of municipal
separate storm sewers within the systems described in paragraphs (b)(4)(i),
(ii) and (iii) or (b)(7)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this section, that are under
the purview of the designated regional authority, shall comply with the
application requirements of paragraph (d) of this section.
(iv) One permit application may be
submitted for all or a portion of all municipal separate storm sewers within
adjacent or interconnected large or medium municipal separate storm sewer
systems. The Department may issue one system-wide permit covering all, or a
portion of all municipal separate storm sewers in adjacent or interconnected
large or medium municipal separate storm sewer systems.
(v) Permits for all or a portion of all
discharges from large or medium municipal separate storm sewer systems that are
issued on a system-wide, jurisdiction-wide, watershed or other basis may
specify different conditions relating to different discharges covered by the
permit, including different management programs for different drainage areas
which contribute storm water to the system.
(vi) Co-permittees need only comply with
permit conditions relating to discharges from the municipal separate storm
sewers for which they are operators.
(4) Discharges through large and medium
municipal separate storm sewer systems. In addition to meeting the requirements
of paragraph (c) of this section, an operator of a storm water discharge
associated with industrial activity which discharges through a large or medium
municipal separate storm sewer system shall submit to the operator of the
municipal separate storm sewer system receiving the discharge no later than May
15, 1991, or 180 days prior to commencing such discharge: the name of the
facility; a contact person and phone number; the location of the discharge; a
description, including Standard Industrial Classification, which best reflects
the principal products or services provided by each facility; and any existing
NPDES permit number.
(5) Other
municipal separate storm sewers. The Department may issue permits for municipal
separate storm sewers that are designated under paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this
section on a system-wide basis, jurisdiction-wide basis, watershed basis or
other appropriate basis, or may issue permits for individual
discharges.
(6) Non-municipal
separate storm sewers. For storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity from point sources which discharge through a non-municipal or
non-publicly owned separate storm sewer system, the Department, in its
discretion, may issue: a single NPDES permit, with each discharger a
co-permittee to a permit issued to the operator of the portion of the system
that discharges into waters of the State; or, individual permits to each
discharger of storm water associated with industrial activity through the
non-municipal conveyance system.
(i) All
storm water discharges associated with industrial activity that discharge
through a storm water discharge system that is not a municipal separate storm
sewer must be covered by an individual permit, or a permit issued to the
operator of the portion of the system that discharges to waters of the State,
with each discharger to the non-municipal conveyance a co-permittee to that
permit.
(ii) Where there is more
than one operator of a single system of such conveyances, all operators of such
conveyances, all operators of storm water discharges associated with industrial
activity must submit applications.
(iii) Any permit covering more than one
operator shall identify the effluent limitations or other permit conditions, if
any, that apply to each operator.
(7) Combined sewer systems. Conveyances that
discharge storm water runoff combined with municipal sewage are point sources
that must obtain NPDES permits in accordance with the procedures of
section122.21 and are not subject to the provisions of this section.
(8) Whether a discharge from a municipal
separate storm sewer is or is not subject to regulation under this section
shall have no bearing on whether the owner or operator of the discharge is
eligible for funding under Title II, Title III or Title IV of the Clean Water
Act. See 40 CFR Part 35, subpart I, Appendix A(b)H.2.j.
(9)
(i) On
and after October 1, 1994, for discharges composed entirely of storm water,
that are not required by paragraph (a)(1) of this section to obtain a permit,
operators shall be required to obtain a NPDES permit only if:
(A) The discharge is from a small MS4
required to be regulated pursuant to section 122.32;
(B) The discharge is a storm water discharge
associated with small construction activity pursuant to paragraph (b)(15) of
this section ;
(C) Either the
Department or the EPA Regional Administrator determines that storm water
controls are needed for the discharge based on wasteload allocations that are
part of "total maximum daily loads" (TMDLs) that address the pollutant(s) of
concern; or
(D) Either the
Department or the EPA Regional Administrator determines that the discharge, or
category of discharges within a geographic area, contributes to a violation of
a water quality standard or is a significant contributor of pollutants to
waters of the United States.
(ii) Operators of small MS4s designated
pursuant to paragraphs (a)(9)(i)(A), (a)(9)(i)(C), or (a)(9)(i)(D) of this
section shall seek coverage under an NPDES permit in accordance with
sections122.33 through 122.35. Operators of non-municipal sources designated
pursuant to paragraphs (a)(9)(i)(B), (a)(9)(i)(C), or (a)(9)(i)(D) of this
section shall seek coverage under an NPDES permit in accordance with paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
(iii)
Operators of storm water discharges designated pursuant to paragraph
(a)(9)(i)(C) or (a)(9)(i)(D) of this section shall apply to the Department for
a permit within 180 days of receipt of notice, unless permission for a later
date is granted by the Department (see section 124.52[c] of this
chapter).
(b)
Definitions.
(1) "Co-permittee" means a
permittee to an NPDES permit that is only responsible for permit conditions
relating to the discharge for which it is operator.
Note: "General permit application" is defined at
122.28(b)(4).
(2) "Illicit
discharge" means any discharge to a municipal separate storm sewer that is not
composed entirely of storm water except discharges pursuant to an NPDES permit
(other than the NPDES permit for discharges from the municipal separate storm
sewer) and discharges resulting from fire fighting activities.
(3) "Incorporated place" means a city, town,
township, or village that is incorporated under the laws of the State of South
Carolina.
(4) "Large municipal
separate storm sewer system" means all municipal separate storm sewers that are
either:
(i) Located in an incorporated place
with a population of 250,000 or more as determined by the 1990 Decennial Census
by the Bureau of the Census (Appendix F of this part); or
(ii) Located in the counties listed in
appendix H, except municipal separate storm sewers that are located in the
incorporated places, townships or towns within such counties; or
(iii) Owned or operated by a municipality
other than those described in paragraph (b)(4)(i) or (ii) of this section and
that are designated by the Department as part of the large or medium municipal
separate storm sewer system due to the interrelationship between the discharges
of the designated storm sewer and the discharges from municipal separate storm
sewers described under paragraph (b)(4)(i) or (ii) of this section. In making
this determination the Department may consider the following factors:
(A) Physical interconnections between the
municipal separate storm sewers;
(B) The location of discharges from the
designated municipal separate storm sewer relative to discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers described in paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this
section;
(C) The quantity and
nature of pollutants discharged to waters of the State;
(D) The nature of the receiving waters;
and
(E) Other relevant factors;
or
(iv) The Department
may, upon petition, designate as a large municipal separate storm sewer system,
municipal separate storm sewers located within the boundaries of a region
defined by a storm water management regional authority based on a
jurisdictional, watershed, or other appropriate basis that includes one or more
of the systems described in paragraph (b)(4)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this
section.
(5) "Major
municipal separate storm sewer outfall" (or "major outfall") means a municipal
separate storm sewer outfall that discharges from a single pipe with an inside
diameter of 36 inches or more or its equivalent (discharge from a single
conveyance other than circular pipe which is associated with a drainage area of
more than 50 acres); or for municipal separate storm sewers that receive storm
water from lands zoned for industrial activity (based on comprehensive zoning
plans or the equivalent), an outfall that discharges from a single pipe with an
inside diameter of 12 inches or more or from its equivalent (discharge from
other than a circular pipe associated with a drainage area of 2 acres or
more).
(6) "Major outfall" means a
major municipal separate storm sewer outfall.
(7) "Medium municipal" separate storm sewer
system means all municipal separate storm sewers that are either:
(i) Located in an incorporated place with a
population of 100,000 or more but less than 250,000, as determined by the 1990
Decennial Census by the Bureau of the Census (Appendix G); or
(ii) Located in the counties listed in
appendix I, except municipal separate storm sewers that are located in the
incorporated places, townships or towns within such counties; or
(iii) Owned or operated by a municipality
other than those described in paragraph (b) (7)(i) or (ii) of this section and
that are designated by the Department as part of the large or medium municipal
separate storm sewer system due to the interrelationship between the discharges
of the designated storm sewer and the discharges from municipal separate storm
sewers described under paragraph (b)(7)(i) or (ii) of this section. In making
this determination the Department may consider the following factors:
(A) Physical interconnections between the
municipal separate storm sewers;
(B) The location of discharges from the
designated municipal separate storm sewer relative to discharges from municipal
separate storm sewers described in paragraph (b)(7)(i) of this section
;
(C) The quantity and nature of
pollutants discharged to waters of the State;
(D) The nature of the receiving waters;
or
(E) Other relevant factors;
or
(iv) The Department
may, upon petition, designate as a medium municipal separate storm sewer
system, municipal separate storm sewers located within the boundaries of a
region defined by a storm water management regional authority based on a
jurisdictional, watershed, or other appropriate basis that includes one or more
of the systems described in paragraphs (b)(7)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this
section.
(8) "Municipal
separate storm sewer" means a conveyance or system of conveyances (including
roads with drainage systems, municipal streets, catch basins, curbs, gutters,
ditches, man-made channels, or storm drains):
(i) Owned or operated by a State, city, town,
borough, county, parish, district, association, or other public body (created
by or pursuant to State law) having jurisdiction over disposal of sewage,
industrial wastes, storm water, or other wastes, including special districts
under State law such as a sewer district, flood control district or drainage
district, or similar entity, or an Indian tribe or an authorized Indian tribal
organization, or a designated and approved management agency under section 208
of the CWA that discharges to waters of the State;
(ii) Designed or used for collecting or
conveying storm water;
(iii) Which
is not a combined sewer; and
(iv)
Which is not part of a Publicly Owned Treatment Works (POTW) as defined at
section 122.2.
Note: "Notice of Intent" is defined at 122.28(b)(4).
(9) "Outfall" means a
point source as defined by section 122.2 at the point where a municipal
separate storm sewer discharges to waters of the State and does not include
open conveyances connecting two municipal separate storm sewers, or pipes,
tunnels or other conveyances which connect segments of the same stream or other
waters of the State and are used to convey waters of the State.
(10) "Overburden" means any material of any
nature, consolidated or unconsolidated, that overlies a mineral deposit,
excluding topsoil or similar naturally-occurring surface materials that are not
disturbed by mining operations.
(11) "Runoff coefficient" means the fraction
of total rainfall that will appear at a conveyance as runoff.
(12) "Significant materials" includes, but is
not limited to: raw materials; fuels; materials such as solvents, detergents,
and plastic pellets; finished materials such as metallic products; raw
materials used in food processing or production; hazardous substances
designated under section 101(14)(14) of CERCLA; any chemical the facility is
required to report pursuant to section 313 of Title III of SARA; fertilizers;
pesticides; and waste products such as ashes, slag and sludge that have the
potential to be released with storm water discharges.
(13) "Storm water" means storm water runoff,
snow melt runoff and surface runoff and drainage.
(14) "Storm water discharge associated with
industrial activity" means the discharge from any conveyance that is used for
collecting and conveying storm water and that is directly related to
manufacturing, processing or raw materials storage areas at an industrial
plant. The term does not include discharges from facilities or activities
excluded from the NPDES program under this regulation. For the categories of
industries identified in this section, the term includes, but is not limited
to, storm water discharges from industrial plant yards; immediate access roads
and rail lines used or traveled by carriers of raw materials, manufactured
products, waste material, or by-products used or created by the facility;
material handling sites; refuse sites; sites used for the application or
disposal of process waste waters (as defined at 40 CFR Part 401); sites used
for the storage and maintenance of material handling equipment; sites used for
residual treatment, storage, or disposal; shipping and receiving areas;
manufacturing buildings; storage areas (including tank farms) for raw materials
and intermediate and final products; and areas where industrial activity has
taken place in the past and significant materials remain and are exposed to
storm water. For the purposes of this paragraph, material handling activities
include storage, loading and unloading, transportation, or conveyance of any
raw material, intermediate product, final product, by-product or waste product.
The term excludes areas located on plant lands separate from the plant's
industrial activities, such as office buildings and accompanying parking lots
as long as the drainage from the excluded areas is not mixed with storm water
drained from the above described areas. Industrial facilities (including
industrial facilities that are federally, State, or municipally owned or
operated that meet the description of the facilities listed in paragraphs
(b)(14)(i) through (xi) of this section) include those facilities designated
under the provisions of paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this section. The following
categories of facilities are considered to be engaging in "industrial activity"
for purposes of paragraph (b)(14):
(i)
Facilities subject to storm water effluent limitations guidelines, new source
performance standards, or toxic pollutant effluent standards under 40 CFR
subchapter N (except facilities with toxic pollutant effluent standards which
are exempted under category (xi) in paragraph (b)(14) of this section
);
(ii) Facilities classified as
Standard Industrial Classifications 24 (except 2434), 26 (except 265 and 267),
28 (except 283), 29, 311, 32 (except 323), 33, 3441, 373;
(iii) Facilities classified as Standard
Industrial Classifications 10 through 14 (mineral industry) including active or
inactive mining operations (except for areas of coal mining operations no
longer meeting the definition of a reclamation area under
40 CFR
434.11(1) because the
performance bond issued to the facility by the appropriate SMCRA authority has
been released, or except for areas of non-coal mining operations which have
been released from applicable State or Federal reclamation requirements after
December 17, 1990) and oil and gas exploration, production, processing, or
treatment operations, or transmission facilities that discharge storm water
contaminated by contact with or that has come into contact with, any
overburden, raw material, intermediate products, finished products, byproducts
or waste products located on the site of such operations; (inactive mining
operations are mining sites that are not being actively mined but which have an
identifiable owner/operator; inactive mining sites do not include sites where
mining claims are being maintained prior to disturbances associated with the
extraction, beneficiation, or processing of mined materials, nor sites where
minimal activities are undertaken for the sole purpose of maintaining a mining
claim);
(iv) Hazardous waste
treatment, storage, or disposal facilities, including those that are operating
under interim status or a permit under subtitle C of RCRA;
(v) Landfills, land application sites, and
open dumps that receive or have received any industrial wastes (waste that is
received from any of the facilities described under this subsection) including
those that are subject to regulation under subtitle D of RCRA;
(vi) Facilities involved in the recycling of
materials, including metal scrapyards, battery reclaimers, salvage yards and
automobile junkyards, including but limited to those classified as Standard
Industrial Classification 5015 and 5093;
(vii) Steam electric power generating
facilities, including coal handling sites;
(viii) Transportation facilities classified
as Standard Industrial Classifications 40, 41, 42 (except 4221-25), 43, 44, 45,
and 5171 which have vehicle maintenance shops, equipment cleaning operations,
or airport deicing operations. Only those portions of the facility that are
either involved in vehicle maintenance (including vehicle rehabilitation,
mechanical repairs, painting, fueling, and lubrication), equipment cleaning
operations, airport deicing operations, or which are otherwise identified under
paragraphs (b)(14)(i)-(vii) or (ix)-(xi) of this section are associated with
industrial activity;
(ix) Treatment
works treating domestic sewage or any other sewage sludge or wastewater
treatment device or system, used in the storage treatment, recycling, and
reclamation of municipal or domestic sewage, including land dedicated to the
disposal of sewage sludge that are located within the confines of the facility,
with a design flow of 1.0 mgd or more, or required to have an approved
pretreatment program under R.61-9.403. Not included are farm lands, domestic
gardens or lands used for sludge management where sludge is beneficially reused
and which are not physically located in the confines of the facility, or areas
that are in compliance with section 405 of the CWA;
(x) Construction activity including clearing,
grading, and excavation, except operations that result in the disturbance of
less than five acres of total land area. Construction activity also includes
the disturbance of less than five acres of total land area that is a part of a
larger common plan of development or sale if the larger common plan will
ultimately disturb five acres or more;
(xi) Facilities under Standard Industrial
Classifications 20, 21, 22, 23, 2434, 25, 265, 267, 27, 283, 285, 30, 31
(except 311), 323, 34 (except 3441), 35, 36, 37 (except 373), 38, 39, and
4221-25;
(15) Storm
water discharge associated with small construction activity means the discharge
of storm water from:
(i) Construction
activities including clearing, grading, and excavating that result in land
disturbance of equal to or greater than one acre and less than five acres and,
in coastal counties within one-half (1/2) mile of a receiving water body (but
not for single-family homes which are not part of a subdivision development),
that result in any land disturbance less than five acres. Small construction
activity also includes the disturbance of less than one acre of total land area
that is part of a larger common plan of development or sale if the larger
common plan will ultimately disturb equal to or greater than one and less than
five acres. Small construction activity does not include routine maintenance
that is performed to maintain the original line and grade, hydraulic capacity,
or original purpose of the facility. The Department may waive the otherwise
applicable requirements in a general permit for a storm water discharge from
construction activities that disturb less than five acres where:
(A) The value of the rainfall erosivity
factor ("R" in the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation) is less than five
during the period of construction activity. The rainfall erosivity factor is
determined in accordance with Chapter 2 of Agriculture Handbook Number 703,
Predicting Soil Erosion by Water: A Guide to Conservation Planning With the
Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE), pages 21-64, dated January 1997.
The Director of the Federal Register approves this incorporation by reference
in accordance with
5
U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part
51. Copies may be obtained from EPA's Water Resource Center, Mail Code RC4100,
401 M St. S.W., Washington, DC 20460. A copy is also available for inspection
at the U.S. EPA Water Docket , 401 M Street S.W., Washington, DC. 20460, or the
Office of the Federal Register, 800 N. Capitol Street N.W. Suite 700,
Washington, DC. An operator must certify to the Department that the
construction activity will take place during a period when the value of the
rainfall erosivity factor is less than five; or
(B) Storm water controls are not needed based
on a "total maximum daily load" (TMDL) approved or established by EPA that
addresses the pollutant(s) of concern or, for non-impaired waters that do not
require TMDLs, an equivalent analysis that determines allocations for small
construction sites for the pollutant(s) of concern or that determines that such
allocations are not needed to protect water quality based on consideration of
existing in-stream concentrations, expected growth in pollutant contributions
from all sources, and a margin of safety. For the purpose of this paragraph,
the pollutant(s) of concern include sediment or a parameter that addresses
sediment (such as total suspended solids, turbidity or siltation) and any other
pollutant that has been identified as a cause of impairment of any water body
that will receive a discharge from the construction activity. The operator must
certify to the Department that the construction activity will take place, and
storm water discharges will occur, within the drainage area addressed by the
TMDL or equivalent analysis.
(ii) Any other construction activity
designated by the Department, or in States with approved NPDES programs either
the Department or the EPA Regional Administrator, based on the potential for
contribution to a violation of a water quality standard or for significant
contribution of pollutants to waters of the United States.
Exhibit 1 to section 122.26(b)(15) Summary of
Coverage of "Storm Water Discharges Associated with Small Construction
Activity" Under the NPDES Storm Water Program
|
Automatic Designation: Required Nationwide
Coverage
|
Construction activities that result in a land
disturbance of equal to or greater than one acre and less than five
acres.
Construction activities disturbing less than one
acre if part of a larger common plan of development or sale with a planned
disturbance of equal to or greater than one acre and less than five acres. (See
section 122.26(b)(15)(i).)
|
Potential Designation: Optional Evaluation and
Designation by the NPDES Permitting Authority or EPA Regional
Administrator.
|
Construction activities that result in a land
disturbance of less than one acre based on the potential for contribution to a
violation of a water quality standard or for significant contribution of
pollutants. (See section 122.26(b)(15)(ii).)
|
Potential Waiver: Waiver from Requirements as
Determined by the NPDES Permitting Authority.
|
Any automatically designated construction activity
where the operator certifies: (1) A rainfall erosivity factor of less than five
or (2) that the activity will occur within an area where controls are not
needed based on a TMDL or, for non-impaired waters that do not require a TMDL,
an equivalent analysis for the pollutants of concern. (See section
122.26(b)(15)(i).)
|
(C) As of
December 21, 2020, all certifications submitted in compliance with paragraphs
(b)(15)(i)(A) and (B) of this section must be submitted electronically by the
owner or operator to the Department, as defined in
40
CFR 127.2(b), in compliance
with this section and 40 CFR Part 3 (including, in all cases, subpart D to Part
3), section ?122.22, and 40 CFR Part 127. Part 127 is not intended to undo
existing requirements for electronic reporting. Prior to this date, and
independent of Part 127, owners or operators may be required to report
electronically if specified by a particular permit or if required to do so by
State law.
(16) Small municipal separate storm sewer
system means all separate storm sewers that are:
(i) Owned or operated by the United States, a
State, city, town, borough, county, parish, district, association, or other
public body (created by or pursuant to State law) having jurisdiction over
disposal of sewage, industrial wastes, storm water, or other wastes, including
special districts under State law such as a sewer district, flood control
district, or drainage district, or similar entity, or an Indian tribe or an
authorized Indian tribal organization, or a designated and approved management
agency under section 208 of the CWA that discharges to waters of the United
States and
(ii) Not defined as
"large" or "medium" municipal separate storm sewer systems pursuant to
paragraphs (b)(4) and (b)(7) of this section, or designated under paragraph
(a)(1)(v) of this section.
(iii)
This term includes systems similar to separate storm sewer systems in
municipalities, such as systems at military bases, large hospital or prison
complexes, and highways and other thoroughfares. The term does not include
separate storm sewers in very discrete areas, such as individual
buildings.
(17) Small
MS4 means a small municipal separate storm sewer system.
(18) Municipal separate storm sewer system
means all separate storm sewers that are defined as "large" or "medium" or
"small" municipal separate storm sewer systems pursuant to paragraphs (b)(4),
(b)(7), and (b)(16) of this section, or designated under paragraph (a)(1)(v) of
this section.
(19) MS4 means a
municipal separate storm sewer system.
(20) Uncontrolled sanitary landfill means a
landfill or open dump whether in operation or closed, that does not meet the
requirements for runon or runoff controls established pursuant to subtitle D of
the Solid Waste Disposal Act.
(21)
"Storm water point source" means a conveyance or system of conveyances
(including but not limited to pipes, conduits, ditches and channels) primarily
used for collecting and conveying storm water runoff and that:
(i) Is located in an urbanized area as
designated by the Bureau of the Census;
(ii) Discharges from lands of facilities used
for industrial or commercial activities; or
(iii) Is referenced under section 122.26
(Storm Water Discharges).
(d) Application requirements for
large and medium municipal separate storm sewer discharges. The operator of a
discharge from a large or medium municipal separate storm sewer or a municipal
separate storm sewer that is designated by the Department under paragraph
(a)(1)(v) of this section, may submit a jurisdiction-wide or system-wide permit
application. Where more than one public entity owns or operates a municipal
separate storm sewer within a geographic area (including adjacent or
interconnected municipal separate storm sewer systems), such operators may be a
co-applicant to the same application. Permit applications for discharges from
large and medium municipal storm sewers or municipal storm sewers designated
under paragraph (a)(1)(v) of this section shall include:
(1) Part 1. Part 1 of the application shall
consist of:
(i) General information. The
applicant's name, address, telephone number of contact person, ownership
status, and status as a State or local government entity.
(ii) Legal authority. A description of
existing legal authority to control discharges to the municipal separate storm
sewer system. When existing legal authority is not sufficient to meet the
criteria provided in paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section, the description shall
list additional authorities as will be necessary to meet the criteria and shall
include a schedule and commitment to seek such additional authority that will
be needed to meet the criteria.
(iii) Source identification.
(A) A description of the historic use of
ordinances, guidance or other controls which limited the discharge of non-storm
water discharges to any Publicly Owned Treatment Works serving the same area as
the municipal separate storm sewer system.
(B) A USGS 7.5 minute topographic map (or
equivalent topographic map with a scale between 1:10,000 and 1:24,000 if cost
effective) extending one mile beyond the service boundaries of the municipal
storm sewer system covered by the permit application. The following information
shall be provided:
(1) The location of known
municipal storm sewer system outfalls discharging to waters of the
State:
(2) A description of the
land use activities (e.g. divisions indicating undeveloped, residential,
commercial agricultural and industrial uses) accompanied with estimates of
population densities and projected growth for a ten year period within the
drainage area served by the separate storm sewer. For each land use type, an
estimate of an average runoff coefficient shall be provided;
(3) The location and a description of the
activities of the facility of each currently operating or closed municipal
landfill or other treatment, storage or disposal facility for municipal
waste;
(4) The location and the
permit number of any known discharge to the municipal storm sewer that has been
issued an NPDES permit;
(5) The
location of major structural controls for storm water discharge (retention
basins, detention basins, major infiltration devices, etc.); and
(6) The identification of publicly owned
parks, recreational areas, and other open lands.
(iv) Discharge characterization.
(A) Monthly mean rain and snow fall estimates
(or summary of weather bureau data) and the monthly average number of storm
events.
(B) Existing quantitative
data describing the volume and quality of discharges from the municipal storm
sewer, including a description of the outfalls sampled, sampling procedures and
analytical methods used.
(C) A list
of water bodies that receive discharges from the municipal separate storm sewer
system, including downstream segments, lakes and estuaries, where pollutants
from the system discharges may accumulate and cause water degradation and a
brief description of known water quality impacts. At a minimum, the description
of impacts shall include a description of whether the water bodies receiving
such discharges have been:
(1) Assessed and
reported in section 305(b)(b) reports submitted by the State, the basis for the
assessment (evaluated or monitored), a summary of designated use support and
attainment of Clean Water Act (CWA) goals (fishable and swimmable waters) and
causes of nonsupport of designated uses;
(2) Listed under
section304(l)(1)(B)(l)(1)(A)(i), section 304(l)(1)(A)(i)(l)(1)(A)(ii) or
section304(l)(1)(A)(ii)(l)(1)(B) of the CWA that is not expected to meet water
quality standards or water quality goals;
(3) Listed in State Nonpoint Source
Assessments required by section 319(a)(a) of the CWA that, without additional
action to control nonpoint sources of pollution, cannot reasonably be expected
to attain or maintain water quality standards due to storm sewers,
construction, highway maintenance and runoff from municipal landfills and
municipal sludge adding significant pollution (or contributing to a violation
of water quality standards);
(4)
Identified and classified according to eutrophic condition of publicly owned
lakes listed in State reports required under section 314(a)(a) of the CWA
(include the following: a description of those publicly owned lakes for which
uses are known to be impaired; a description of procedures, processes and
methods to control the discharge of pollutants from municipal separate storm
sewers into such lakes; and a description of methods and procedures to restore
the quality of such lakes);
(5)
[Reserved]
(6) Designated estuaries
under the National Estuary Program under section 320 of the CWA;
(7) Recognized by the applicant as highly
valued or sensitive waters;
(8)
Defined by the State or U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's National Wetlands
Inventory as wetlands; and
(9)
Found to have pollutants in bottom sediments, fish tissue or biosurvey
data.
(D) Field
screening. Results of a field screening analysis for illicit connections and
illegal dumping for either selected field screening points or major outfalls
covered in the permit application. At a minimum, a screening analysis shall
include a narrative description, for either each field screening point or major
outfall, of visual observations made during dry weather periods. If any flow is
observed, two grab samples shall be collected during a 24 hour period with a
minimum period of four hours between samples. For all such samples, a narrative
description of the color, odor, turbidity, the presence of an oil sheen or
surface scum as well as any other relevant observations regarding the potential
presence of non-storm water discharges or illegal dumping shall be provided. In
addition, a narrative description of the results of a field analysis using
suitable methods to estimate pH, total chlorine, total copper, total phenol,
and detergents (or surfactants) shall be provided along with a description of
the flow rate. Where the field analysis does not involve analytical methods
approved under 40 CFR Part 136, the applicant shall provide a description of
the method used including the name of the manufacturer of the test method along
with the range and accuracy of the test. Field screening points shall be either
major outfalls or other outfall points (or any other point of access such as
manholes) randomly located throughout the storm sewer system by placing a grid
over a drainage system map and identifying those cells of the grid which
contain a segment of the storm sewer system or major outfall. The field
screening points shall be established using the following guidelines and
criteria:
(1) A grid system consisting of
perpendicular north-south and east-west lines spaced 1/4 mile apart shall be
overlaid on a map of the municipal storm sewer system, creating a series of
cells;
(2) All cells that contain a
segment of the storm sewer system shall be identified; one field screening
point shall be selected in each cell; major outfalls may be used as field
screening points;
(3) Field
screening points should be located downstream of any sources of suspected
illegal or illicit activity;
(4)
Field screening points shall be located to the degree practicable at the
farthest manhole or other accessible location downstream in the system, within
each cell; however, safety of personnel and accessibility of the location
should be considered in making this determination;
(5) Hydrological conditions; total drainage
area of the site; population density of the site; traffic density; age of the
structures or buildings in the area; history of the area; and land use
types;
(6) For medium municipal
separate storm sewer systems, no more than 250 cells need to have identified
field screening points; in large municipal separate storm sewer systems, no
more than 500 cells need to have identified field screening points; cells
established by the grid that contain no storm sewer segments will be eliminated
from consideration; if fewer than 250 cells in medium municipal sewers are
created, and fewer than 500 in large systems are created by the overlay on the
municipal sewer map, then all those cells which contain a segment of the sewer
system shall be subject to field screening (unless access to the separate storm
sewer system is impossible); and
(7) Large or medium municipal separate storm
sewer systems which are unable to utilize the procedures described in
paragraphs (d)(1)(iv)(D)(1) through (6) of this section, because a sufficiently
detailed map of the separate storm sewer systems is unavailable, shall field
screen no more than 500 or 250 major outfalls respectively (or all major
outfalls in the system, if less); in such circumstances, the applicant shall
establish a grid system consisting of north-south and east-west lines spaced
1/4 mile apart as an overlay to the boundaries of the municipal storm sewer
system, thereby creating a series of cells; the applicant will then select
major outfalls in as many cells as possible until at least 500 major outfalls
(large municipalities) or 250 major outfalls (medium municipalities) are
selected; a field screening analysis shall be undertaken at these major
outfalls.
(E)
Characterization plan. Information and a proposed program to meet the
requirements of paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of this section. Such description shall
include: the location of outfalls or field screening points appropriate for
representative data collection under paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section,
a description of why the outfall or field screening point is representative,
the seasons during which sampling is intended, a description of the sampling
equipment. The proposed location of outfalls or field screening points for such
sampling should reflect water quality concerns (see paragraph (d)(1)(iv)(C) of
this section) to the extent practicable.
(v) Management Programs.
(A) A description of the existing management
programs to control pollutants from the municipal separate storm sewer system.
The description shall provide information on existing structural and source
controls, including operation and maintenance measures for structural controls,
that are currently being implemented. Such controls may include, but are not
limited to: procedures to control pollution resulting from construction
activities; floodplain management controls; wetland protection measures; best
management practices for new subdivisions; and emergency spill response
programs. The description may address controls established under State law as
well as local requirements.
(B) A
description of the existing program to identify illicit connections to the
municipal storm sewer system. The description should include inspection
procedures and methods for detecting and preventing illicit discharges and
describe areas where this program has been implemented.
(vi) Fiscal resources. A description of the
financial resources currently available to the municipality to complete part 2
of the permit application. A description of the municipality's budget for
existing storm water programs, including an overview of the municipality's
financial resources and budget, including overall indebtedness and assets, and
sources of funds for storm water programs.
(2) Part 2. Part 2 of the application shall
consist of:
(i) Adequate legal authority. A
demonstration that the applicant can operate pursuant to legal authority
established by statute, ordinance or series of contracts which authorizes or
enables the applicant at a minimum to:
(A)
Control through ordinance, permit, contract, order or similar means, the
contribution of pollutants to the municipal storm sewer by storm water
discharges associated with industrial activity and the quality of storm water
discharged from sites of industrial activity;
(B) Prohibit through ordinance, order or
similar means, illicit discharges to the municipal separate storm
sewer;
(C) Control through
ordinance, order or similar means the discharge to a municipal separate storm
sewer of spills, dumping, or disposal of materials other than storm
water;
(D) Control through
interagency agreements among co-applicants the contribution of pollutants from
one portion of the municipal system to another portion of the municipal
system;
(E) Require compliance with
conditions in ordinances, permits, contracts or orders; and
(F) Carry out all inspection, surveillance
and monitoring procedures necessary to determine compliance and noncompliance
with permit conditions including the prohibition on illicit discharges to the
municipal separate storm sewer.
(ii) Source identification. The location of
any major outfall that discharges to waters of the State that was not reported
under paragraph (d)(1)(iii)(B)(1) of this section. Provide an inventory,
organized by watershed of the name and address, and a description (such as SIC
codes) which best reflects the principal products or services provided by each
facility which may discharge to the municipal separate storm sewer, storm water
associated with industrial activity;
(iii) Characterization data. When
"quantitative data" for a pollutant are required under paragraph
(d)(2)(iii)(A)(3) of this paragraph, the applicant must collect a sample of
effluent in accordance with section 122.21(g)(7)(g)(7) and analyze it for the
pollutant in accordance with analytical methods approved under 40 CFR Part 136.
When no analytical method is approved, the applicant may use any suitable
method but must provide a description of the method. The applicant must provide
information characterizing the quality and quantity of discharges covered in
the permit application, including:
(A)
Quantitative data from representative outfalls designated by the Department
(based on information received in part 1 of the application, the Department
shall designate between five and ten outfalls or field screening points as
representative of the commercial, residential and industrial land use
activities of the drainage area contributing to the system, or where there are
less than five outfalls covered in the application, the Department shall
designate all outfalls) developed as follows:
(1) For each outfall or field screening point
designated under this subparagraph, samples shall be collected of storm water
discharges from three storm events occurring at least one month apart in
accordance with the requirements at section 122.21(g)(7)(g)(7) (the Department
may allow exemptions to sampling three storm events when climatic conditions
create good cause for such exemptions);
(2) A narrative description shall be provided
of the date and duration of the storm event(s) sampled, rainfall estimates of
the storm event which generated the sampled discharge and the duration between
the storm event sampled and the end of the previous measurable (greater than
0.1 inch rainfall) storm event;
(3)
For samples collected and described under paragraphs (d)(2)(iii)(A)(1) and
(A)(2) of this section, quantitative data shall be provided for: the organic
pollutants listed in Table II; the pollutants listed in Table III (toxic
metals, cyanide, and total phenols) of appendix D, and for the following
pollutants;
(a) Total suspended solids
(TSS)
(b) Total dissolved solids
(TDS)
(c) COD
(d) BOD5
(e) Oil and grease
(f) Fecal coliform
(g) Fecal streptococcus
(h) pH
(i) Total Kjeldahl nitrogen
(j) Nitrate plus nitrite
(k) Dissolved phosphorus
(l) Total ammonia plus organic
nitrogen
(m) Total
phosphorus
(4)
Additional limited quantitative data required by the Department for determining
permit conditions (the Department may require that quantitative data shall be
provided for additional parameters, and may establish sampling conditions such
as the location, season of sample collection, form of precipitation (snow melt,
rainfall) and other parameters necessary to insure
representativeness);
(B)
Estimates of the annual pollutant load of the cumulative discharges to waters
of the State from all identified municipal outfalls and the event mean
concentration of the cumulative discharges to waters of the State from all
identified municipal outfalls during a storm event (as described under section
122.21(g)(7)(g)(7)) for BOD5, COD, TSS, dissolved
solids, total nitrogen, total ammonia plus organic nitrogen, total phosphorus,
dissolved phosphorus, cadmium, copper, lead, and zinc. Estimates shall be
accompanied by a description of the procedures for estimating constituent loads
and concentrations, including any modelling, data analysis, and calculation
methods;
(C) A proposed schedule to
provide estimates for each major outfall identified in either paragraph
(d)(2)(ii) or (d)(1)(iii)(B)(1) of this section of the seasonal pollutant load
and of the event mean concentration of a representative storm for any
constituent detected in any sample required under paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of
this section ; and
(D) A proposed
monitoring program for representative data collection for the term of the
permit that describes the location of outfalls or field screening points to be
sampled (or the location of instream stations), why the location is
representative, the frequency of sampling, parameters to be sampled, and a
description of sampling equipment.
(iv) Proposed management program. A proposed
management program covers the duration of the permit. It shall include a
comprehensive planning process which involves public participation and where
necessary intergovernmental coordination, to reduce the discharge of pollutants
to the maximum extent practicable using management practices, control
techniques and system, design and engineering methods, and such other
provisions which are appropriate. The program shall also include a description
of staff and equipment available to implement the program. Separate proposed
programs may be submitted by each co-applicant. Proposed programs may impose
controls on a system-wide basis, a watershed basis, a jurisdiction basis, or on
individual outfalls. Proposed programs will be considered by the Department
when developing permit conditions to reduce pollutants in discharges to the
maximum extent practicable. Proposed management programs shall describe
priorities for implementing controls. Such programs shall be based on:
(A) A description of structural and source
control measures to reduce pollutants from runoff from commercial and
residential areas that are discharged from the municipal storm sewer system
that are to be implemented during the life of the permit, accompanied with an
estimate of the expected reduction of pollutant loads and a proposed schedule
for implementing such controls. At a minimum, the description shall include:
(1) A description of maintenance activities
and a maintenance schedule for structural controls to reduce pollutants
(including floatables) in discharges from municipal separate storm
sewers;
(2) A description of
planning procedures including a comprehensive master plan to develop, implement
and enforce controls to reduce the discharge of pollutants from municipal
separate storm sewers which receive discharges from areas of new development
and significant redevelopment. Such plan shall address controls to reduce
pollutants in discharges from municipal separate storm sewers after
construction is completed. (Controls to reduce pollutants in discharges from
municipal separate storm sewers containing construction site runoff are
addressed in paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(D) of this section ;
(3) A description of practices for operating
and maintaining public streets, roads and highways and procedures for reducing
the impact on receiving waters of discharges from municipal storm sewer
systems, including pollutants discharged as a result of deicing
activities;
(4) A description of
procedures to assure that flood management projects assess the impacts on the
water quality of receiving water bodies and that existing structural flood
control devices have been evaluated to determine if retrofitting the device to
provide additional pollutant removal from storm water is feasible;
(5) A description of a program to monitor
pollutants in runoff from operating or closed municipal landfills or other
treatment, storage or disposal facilities for municipal waste, which shall
identify priorities and procedures for inspections and establishing and
implementing control measures for such discharges (this program can be
coordinated with the program developed under paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(C) of this
section); and
(6) A description of
a program to reduce to the maximum extent practicable, pollutants in discharges
from municipal separate storm sewers associated with the application of
pesticides, herbicides and fertilizer which will include, as appropriate,
controls such as educational activities, permits, certifications and other
measures for commercial applicators and distributors, and controls for
application in public right-of-ways and at municipal facilities;
(B) A description of a program,
including a schedule, to detect and remove (or require the discharger to the
municipal separate storm sewer to obtain a separate NPDES permit for) illicit
discharges and improper disposal into the storm sewer. The proposed program
shall include:
(1) A description of a
program, including inspections, to implement and enforce an ordinance, orders
or similar means to prevent illicit discharges to the municipal separate storm
sewer system; this program description shall address all types of illicit
discharges; however, the following category of non-storm water discharges or
flows shall be addressed where such discharges are identified by the
municipality as sources of pollutants to waters of the State:; water line
flushing, landscape irrigation, diverted stream flows, rising ground waters,
uncontaminated ground water infiltration (as defined at
40
CFR 35.2005(20)) to
separate storm sewers, uncontaminated pumped ground water, discharges from
potable water sources, foundation drains, air conditioning condensation,
irrigation water, springs, water from crawl space pumps, footing drains, lawn
watering, individual residential car washing, flows from riparian habitats and
wetlands, dechlorinated swimming pool discharges, and street wash water
(program descriptions shall address discharges or flows from fire fighting only
where such discharges or flows are identified as significant sources of
pollutants to waters of the State);
(2) A description of procedures to conduct
on-going field screening activities during the life of the permit, including
areas or locations that will be evaluated by such field screens;
(3) A description of procedures to be
followed to investigate portions of the separate storm sewer system that, based
on the results of the field screen, or other appropriate information, indicate
a reasonable potential of containing illicit discharges or other sources of
non-storm water (such procedures may include: sampling procedures for
constituents such as fecal coliform, fecal streptococcus, surfactants (MBAS),
residual chlorine, fluorides, and potassium; testing with fluorometric dyes; or
conducting in storm sewer inspections where safety and other considerations
allow. Such description shall include the location of storm sewers that have
been identified for such evaluation);
(4) A description of procedures to prevent,
contain, and respond to spills that may discharge into the municipal separate
storm sewer;
(5) A description of a
program to promote, publicize, and facilitate public reporting of the presence
of illicit discharges or water quality impacts associated with discharges from
municipal separate storm sewers;
(6) A description of educational activities,
public information activities, and other appropriate activities to facilitate
the proper management and disposal of used oil and toxic materials;
and
(7) A description of controls
to limit infiltration of seepage from municipal sanitary sewers to municipal
separate storm sewer systems where necessary;
(C) A description of a program to monitor and
control pollutants in storm water discharges to municipal systems from
municipal landfills, hazardous waste treatment, disposal and recovery
facilities, industrial facilities that are subject to section 313 of Title III
of the Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 (SARA), and
industrial facilities that the municipal permit applicant determines are
contributing a substantial pollutant loading to the municipal storm sewer
system. The program shall:
(1) Identify
priorities and procedures for inspections and establishing and implementing
control measures for such discharges;
(2) Describe a monitoring program for storm
water discharges associated with the industrial facilities identified in
paragraph (d)(2)(iv)(C) of this section, to be implemented during the term of
the permit, including the submission of quantitative data on the following
constituents: any pollutants limited in effluent guidelines subcategories,
where applicable; any pollutant listed in an existing NPDES permit for a
facility; oil and grease, COD, pH, BOD5, TSS, total
phosphorus, total Kjeldahl nitrogen, nitrate plus nitrite nitrogen, and any
information on discharges required under section 122.21(g)(7)(vi) and
(vii)(g)(7)(vi) and (vii).
(D) A description of a program to implement
and maintain structural and non-structural best management practices to reduce
pollutants in storm water runoff from construction sites to the municipal storm
sewer system, which shall include;
(1) A
description of procedures for site planning which incorporate consideration of
potential water quality impacts;
(2) A description of requirements for
nonstructural and structural best management practices;
(3) A description of procedures for
identifying priorities for inspecting sites and enforcing control measures
which consider the nature of the construction activity, topography, and the
characteristics of soils and receiving water quality; and
(4) A description of appropriate educational
and training measures for construction site operators.
(v) Assessment of controls.
Estimated reductions in loadings of pollutants from discharges of municipal
storm sewer constituents from municipal storm sewer systems expected as the
result of the municipal storm water quality management program. The assessment
shall also identify known impacts of storm water controls on ground
water.
(vi) Fiscal analysis. For
each fiscal year to be covered by the permit, a fiscal analysis of the
necessary capital and operation and maintenance expenditures necessary to
accomplish the activities of the programs under paragraphs (d)(2)(iii) and (iv)
of this section. Such analysis shall include a description of the source of
funds that are proposed to meet the necessary expenditures, including legal
restrictions on the use of such funds.
(vii) Where more than one legal entity
submits an application, the application shall contain a description of the
roles and responsibilities of each legal entity and procedures to ensure
effective coordination.
(viii)
Where requirements under paragraph (d)(1)(iv)(E), (d)(2)(ii), (d)(2)(iii)(B)
and (d)(2)(iv) of this section are not practicable or are not applicable, the
Department may exclude any operator of a discharge from a municipal separate
storm sewer which is designated under paragraph (a)(1)(v), (b)(4)(ii) or
(b)(7)(ii) of this section from such requirements. The Department shall not
exclude the operator of a discharge from a municipal separate storm sewer
identified in Appendix F, G, H, or I from any of the permit application
requirements under this paragraph, except where authorized under this
section.
(e)
Application deadlines. Any operator of a point source required to obtain a
permit under paragraph (a)(1) of this section that does not have an effective
NPDES permit covering its storm water outfalls shall submit an application in
accordance with the following deadlines;
(1)
Storm water discharges associated with industrial activity.
(i) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(1)(ii) of this section, for any storm water discharge associated with
industrial activity identified in paragraphs (b)(14)(i) through (xi) of this
section, that is not part of a group application as described in paragraph
(c)(2) of this section or which is not authorized by a storm water general
permit, a permit application made pursuant to paragraph (C) of this section
shall be submitted to the Department by October 1, 1992;
(ii) For any storm water discharge associated
with industrial activity from a facility that is owned or operated by a
municipality with a population of less than 100,000 that is not authorized by a
general or individual permit, other than an airport, power plant, or
uncontrolled sanitary landfill, the permit application must be submitted to the
Department by March 10, 2003.
(2) For any group application submitted in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this section :
(i) Part 1.
(A) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(2)(i)(B) of this section, part 1 of the application shall be submitted to
the Department by September 30, 1991;
(B) Any municipality with a population of
less than 250,000 shall not be required to submit a part 1 application before
May 18, 1992.
(C) For any storm
water discharge associated with industrial activity from a facility that is
owned or operated by a municipality with a population of less than 100,000
other than an airport, powerplant, or uncontrolled sanitary landfill, permit
applications requirements are reserved.
(ii) Based on information in the part 1
application, the Department will approve or deny the members in the group
application within 60 days after receiving part 1 of the group
application.
(iii) Part 2.
(A) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, part 2 of the application shall be submitted to
the Department by October 1, 1992;
(B) Any municipality with a population of
less than 250,000 shall not be required to submit a part 2 application before
May 17, 1993.
(C) For any storm
water discharge associated with industrial activity from a facility that is
owned or operated by a municipality with a population of less than 100,000
other than an airport, powerplant, or uncontrolled sanitary landfill, permit
applications requirements are reserved.
(iv) Rejected facilities.
(A) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(2)(iv)(B) of this section, facilities that are rejected as members of the
group shall submit an individual application (or obtain coverage under an
applicable general permit) no later than 12 months after the date of receipt of
the notice of rejection or October 1, 1992, whichever comes first.
(B) Facilities that are owned or operated by
a municipality and that are rejected as members of part 1 group application
shall submit an individual application no later than 180 days after the date of
receipt of the notice of rejection or October 1, 1992, whichever is
later.
(v) A facility
listed under paragraph (b)(14)(i)-(xi) of this section may add on to a group
application submitted in accordance with paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section at
the discretion of the Department, and only upon a showing of good cause by the
facility and the group applicant; the request for the addition of the facility
shall be made no later than February 19, 1992; the addition of the facility
shall not cause the percentage of the facilities that are required to submit
quantitative data to be less than 10%, unless there are over 100 facilities in
the group that are submitting quantitative data; approval to become part of
group application must be obtained from the group or the trade association
representing the individual facilities.
(3) For any discharge from a large municipal
separate storm sewer system;
(i) Part 1 of
the application shall be submitted to the Department by November 18,
1991;
(ii) Based on information
received in the part 1 application, the Department will approve or deny a
sampling plan under paragraph (d)(1)(iv)(E) of this section within 90 days
after receiving the part 1 application;
(iii) Part 2 of the application shall be
submitted to the Department by November 16, 1992.
(4) For any discharge from a medium municipal
separate storm sewer system;
(i) Part 1 of the
application shall be submitted to the Department by May 18, 1992.
(ii) Based on information received in the
part 1 application, the Department will approve or deny a sampling plan under
paragraph (d)(i)(iv)(E) of this section within 90 days after receiving the part
1 application.
(iii) Part 2 of the
application shall be submitted to the Department by May 17, 1993.
(5) A permit application shall be
submitted to the Department within 180 days of notice, unless permission for a
later date is granted by the Department [see R.61-9.124.52(c)(c)], for:
(i) A storm water discharge that either the
Department or the EPA Regional Administrator determines that the discharge
contributes to a violation of a water quality standard or is a significant
contributor of pollutants to waters of the United States [see paragraphs
(a)(1)(v) and (b)(15)(ii) of this section ];
(ii) A storm water discharge subject to
paragraph (c)(1)(v) of this section.
(6) Facilities with existing NPDES permits
for storm water discharges associated with industrial activity shall maintain
existing permits. New applications shall be submitted in accordance with the
requirements of section s122.21 and 122.26(c) 180 days before the expiration of
such permits. Facilities with expired permits or permits due to expire before
May 18, 1992, shall submit applications in accordance with the deadline set
forth under paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
(7) The Department shall issue or deny
permits for discharges composed entirely of storm water under this section in
accordance with the following schedule:
(i)
(A) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(7)(i)(B) of this section, the Department shall issue or deny permits for
storm water discharges associated with an industrial activity no later than
October 1, 1993, or, for new sources or existing sources which fail to submit a
complete permit application by October 1, 1992, one year after receipt of a
complete permit application;
(B)
For any municipality with a population of less than 250,000 which submits a
timely Part I group application under paragraph (e)(2)(i)(B) of this section,
the Department shall issue or deny permits for storm water discharges
associated with an industrial activity no later than May 17, 1994, or, for any
such municipality which fails to complete a Part II group permit application by
May 17, 1993, one year after receipt of a complete permit
application;
(ii) The
Department shall issue or deny permits for large municipal separate storm sewer
systems no later than November 16, 1993, or, for new sources or existing
sources which fail to submit a complete permit application by November 16,
1992, one year after receipt of a complete permit application;
(iii) The Department shall issue or deny
permits for medium municipal separate storm sewer systems no later than May 17,
1994, or, for new sources or existing sources which fail to submit a complete
permit application by May 17, 1993, one year after receipt of a complete permit
application.
(8) For any
storm water discharge associated with small construction activity identified in
paragraph (b)(15)(i) of this section, see section 122.21(c)(1)(c)(1).
Discharges from these sources require permit authorization by March 10, 2003,
unless designated for coverage before then.
(9) For any discharge from a regulated small
MS4, the permit application made under section 122.33 must be submitted to the
Department by:
(i) March 10, 2003 if
designated under section 122.32(a)(1)(a)(1) unless your MS4 serves a
jurisdiction with a population under 10,000 and the NPDES permitting authority
has established a phasing schedule under section
40
CFR 123.35(d)(3) (see
section 122.32(a)(1)22.33(c)(1)); or
(ii) Within 180 days of notice, unless the
NPDES permitting authority grants a later date, if designated under
section122.32(a)(2)(a)(2). (See section 122.33(c)(2)(c)(2)).
(f) Petitions.
(1) Any operator of a municipal separate
storm sewer system may petition the Department to require a separate NPDES
permit for any discharge into the municipal separate storm sewer
system.
(2) Any person may petition
the Department to require a NPDES permit for a discharge which is composed
entirely of storm water which contributes to a violation of a water quality
standard or is a significant contributor of pollutants to waters of the
State.
(3) The owner or operator of
a municipal separate storm sewer system may petition the Department to reduce
the Census estimates of population served by such separate system to account
for storm water discharged to combined sewers as defined by
40
CFR 35.2005(b)(11) that is
treated in a publicly owned treatment works. In municipalities in which
combined sewers are operated, the Census estimates of population may be reduced
proportional to the fraction, based on estimated lengths, of the length of
combined sewers over the sum of the length of combined sewers and municipal
separate storm sewers where an applicant has submitted the NPDES permit number
associated with each discharge point and a map indicating areas served by
combined sewers and the location of any combined sewer overflow discharge
point.
(4) Any person may petition
the Department for the designation of a large, medium, or small municipal
separate storm sewer system as defined by paragraph (b)(4)(iv), (b)(7)(iv), or
(b)(16) of this section.
(5) The
Department shall make a final determination on any petition received under this
section within 90 days after receiving the petition with the exception of
petitions to designate a small MS4 in which case the Department shall make a
final determination on the petition within 180 days after its
receipt.
(g) Conditional
exclusion for "no exposure" of industrial activities and materials to storm
water. Discharges composed entirely of storm water are not storm water
discharges associated with industrial activity if there is "no exposure" of
industrial materials and activities to rain, snow, snowmelt and/or runoff, and
the discharger satisfies the conditions in paragraphs (g)(1) through (g)(4) of
this section. "No exposure" means that all industrial materials and activities
are protected by a storm resistant-shelter to prevent exposure to rain, snow,
snowmelt, and/or runoff. Industrial materials or activities include, but are
not limited to, material handling equipment or activities, industrial
machinery, raw materials, intermediate products, by-products, final products,
or waste products. Material handling activities include the storage, loading
and unloading, transportation, or conveyance of any raw material, intermediate
product, final product or waste product.
(1)
Qualification. To qualify for this exclusion, the operator of the discharge
must:
(i) Provide a storm resistant shelter
to protect industrial materials and activities from exposure to rain, snow,
snowmelt, and runoff;
(ii) Complete
and sign (according to section 122.22) a certification that there are no
discharges of storm water contaminated by exposure to industrial materials and
activities from the entire facility, except as provided in paragraph (g)(2) of
this section ;
(iii) Submit the
signed certification to the NPDES permitting authority once every five (5)
years. As of December 21, 2020, all certifications submitted in compliance with
this section must be submitted electronically by the owner or operator to the
Department, as defined in
40
CFR 127.2(b), in compliance
with this section and 40 CFR Part 3 (including, in all cases, subpart D to Part
3), section ?122.22, and 40 CFR Part 127. Part 127 is not intended to undo
existing requirements for electronic reporting. Prior to this date, and
independent of Part 127, owners or operators may be required to report
electronically if specified by a particular permit or if required to do so by
State law.
(iv) Allow the
Department to inspect the facility to determine compliance with the "no
exposure" conditions;
(v) Allow the
Department to make any "no exposure" inspection reports available to the public
upon request; and
(vi) For
facilities that discharge through an MS4, upon request, submit a copy of the
certification of "no exposure" to the MS4 operator, as well as allow inspection
and public reporting by the MS4 operator.
(2) Industrial materials and activities not
requiring storm resistant shelter. To qualify for this exclusion, storm
resistant shelter is not required for:
(i)
Drums, barrels, tanks, and similar containers that are tightly sealed, provided
those containers are not deteriorated and do not leak ("Sealed" means banded or
otherwise secured and without operational taps or valves);
(ii) Adequately maintained vehicles used in
material handling; and
(iii) Final
products, other than products that would be mobilized in storm water discharge
(e.g., rock salt).
(3)
Limitations.
(i) Storm water discharges from
construction activities identified in paragraphs (b)(14)(x) and (b)(15) are not
eligible for this conditional exclusion.
(ii) This conditional exclusion from the
requirement for an NPDES permit is available on a facility-wide basis only, not
for individual outfalls. If a facility has some discharges of storm water that
would otherwise be "no exposure" discharges, individual permit requirements
should be adjusted accordingly.
(iii) If circumstances change and industrial
materials or activities become exposed to rain, snow, snowmelt, and/or runoff,
the conditions for this exclusion no longer apply. In such cases, the discharge
becomes subject to enforcement for un-permitted discharge. Any conditionally
exempt discharger who anticipates changes in circumstances should apply for and
obtain permit authorization prior to the change of circumstances.
(iv) Notwithstanding the provisions of this
paragraph, the Department retains the authority to require permit authorization
(and deny this exclusion) upon making a determination that the discharge
causes, has a reasonable potential to cause, or contributes to an instream
excursion above an applicable water quality standard, including designated
uses.
(4) Certification.
The no exposure certification must require the submission of the following
information, at a minimum, to aid the Department in determining if the facility
qualifies for the no-exposure exclusion:
(i)
The legal name, address and phone number of the discharger [see section
122.21(b)(b)];
(ii) The facility
name and address, the county name, and the latitude and longitude where the
facility is located;
(iii) The
certification must indicate that none of the following materials or activities
are, or will be in the foreseeable future, exposed to precipitation:
(A) Using, storing, or cleaning industrial
machinery or equipment, and areas where residuals from using, storing, or
cleaning industrial machinery or equipment remain and are exposed to storm
water;
(B) Materials or residuals
on the ground or in storm water inlets from spills/leaks;
(C) Materials or products from past
industrial activity;
(D) Material
handling equipment (except adequately maintained vehicles);
(E) Materials or products during
loading/unloading or transporting activities;
(F) Materials or products stored outdoors
(except final products intended for outside use, e.g., new cars, where exposure
to storm water does not result in the discharge of pollutants);
(G) Materials contained in open, deteriorated
or leaking storage drums, barrels, tanks, or similar containers;
(H) Materials or products handled/stored on
roads or railways owned or maintained by the discharger;
(I) Waste material (except waste in covered,
non-leaking containers, e.g., dumpsters);
(J) Application or disposal of process
wastewater (unless otherwise permitted); and
(K) Particulate matter or visible deposits of
residuals from roof stacks/vents not otherwise regulated, i.e., under an air
quality control permit, and evident in the storm water outflow;
(iv) All "no exposure"
certifications must include the following certification statement, and be
signed in accordance with the signatory requirements of section 122.22: "I
certify under penalty of law that I have read and understand the eligibility
requirements for claiming a condition of "no exposure" and obtaining an
exclusion from NPDES storm water permitting; and that there are no discharges
of storm water contaminated by exposure to industrial activities or materials
from the industrial facility identified in this document (except as allowed
under paragraph (g)(2)) of this section. I understand that I am obligated to
submit a no exposure certification form once every five years to the Department
and, if requested, to the operator of the local MS4 into which this facility
discharges (where applicable). I understand that I must allow the Department,
or MS4 operator where the discharge is into the local MS4, to perform
inspections to confirm the condition of no exposure and to make such inspection
reports publicly available upon request. I understand that I must obtain
coverage under an NPDES permit prior to any point source discharge of storm
water from the facility. I certify under penalty of law that this document and
all attachments were prepared under my direction or supervision in accordance
with a system designed to assure that qualified personnel properly gathered and
evaluated the information submitted. Based upon my inquiry of the person or
persons who manage the system, or those persons directly involved in gathering
the information, the information submitted is to the best of my knowledge and
belief true, accurate, and complete. I am aware there are significant penalties
for submitting false information, including the possibility of fine and
imprisonment for knowing violations."