(1) General requirements.
(a) Applicability and effective dates
(i) The requirements of R309-210-6. unless
otherwise indicated, apply to community water systems and non-transient
non-community water systems (hereinafter referred to as water systems or
systems).
(b)R309-210-6 establishes a treatment technique that includes requirements for corrosion
control treatment, source water treatment, lead service line replacement, and
public education. These requirements are triggered, in some cases, by lead and
copper action levels measured in samples collected at consumers'
taps.
(c) Corrosion control
treatment requirements
(i) All water systems
shall install and operate optimal corrosion control treatment. However, any
water system that complies with the applicable corrosion control treatment
requirements specified by the Director under R309-210-6(2) and R309-210-6(4)(a)
shall be deemed in compliance with this treatment requirement.
(d) Source water treatment
requirements
Any system exceeding the lead or copper action level shall
implement all applicable source water treatment requirements specified by the
Director under R309-210-6(4)(b).
(e) Lead service line replacement
requirements
Any system exceeding the lead action level after
implementation of applicable corrosion control and source water treatment
requirements shall complete the lead service line replacement requirements
contained in R309-210-6(4)(c).
(f) Public education requirements
Pursuant to R309-210-6(7), all water systems must provide a
consumer notice of lead tap water monitoring results to persons served at the
sites (taps) that are tested. Any system exceeding the lead action level shall
implement the public education requirements.
(g) Monitoring and analytical requirements
Tap water monitoring for lead and copper, monitoring for
water quality parameters, source water monitoring for lead and copper, and
analyses of the monitoring results shall be completed in compliance with
R309-210-6(3), R309-210-6(5), R309-210-6(6) and
R309-200-8.
(h) Reporting requirements
Systems shall report to the Director any information required
by the treatment provisions of this subpart and R309-210-6(8).
(i) Recordkeeping requirements
Systems shall maintain records in accordance with
R309-105-17(2).
(j) Violation of primary drinking
water rules
Failure to comply with the applicable requirements of
R309-210-6., including requirements established by the Director pursuant to
these provisions, shall constitute a violation of the primary drinking water
regulations for lead and/or copper.
(2) Applicability of corrosion control
treatment steps to small, medium-size and large water systems.
(a) Systems shall complete the applicable
corrosion control treatment requirements described in R309-210-6(4)(a) by the
deadlines established in this section.
(i) A
large system (serving greater than 50,000 persons) shall complete the corrosion
control treatment steps specified in R309-210-6(2)(d), unless it is deemed to
have optimized corrosion control under R309-210-6(2)(b)(ii) or
(b)(iii).
(ii) A small system
(serving less than 3300 persons) and a medium-size system (serving greater than
3,300 and less than 50,000 persons) shall complete the corrosion control
treatment steps specified in R309-210-6(2)(e), unless it is deemed to have
optimized corrosion control under R309-210-6(2)(b)(i), (b)(ii), or
(b)(iii).
(b) A system
is deemed to have optimized corrosion control and is not required to complete
the applicable corrosion control treatment steps identified in this section if
the system satisfies one of the criteria in paragraphs (b)(i) through (b)(iii)
of this section. Any such system deemed to have optimized corrosion control
under this paragraph, and which has treatment in place, shall continue to
operate and maintain optimal corrosion control treatment and meet any
requirements that the Director determines appropriate to ensure optimal
corrosion control treatment is maintained.
(i) A small or medium-size water system is
deemed to have optimized corrosion control if the system meets the lead and
copper action levels during each of two consecutive six-month monitoring
periods conducted in accordance with R309-210-6(3).
(ii) Any water system may be deemed by the
Director to have optimized corrosion control treatment if the system
demonstrates to the satisfaction of the Director that it has conducted
activities equivalent to the corrosion control steps applicable to such system
under this section. If the Director makes this determination, it shall provide
the system with written notice explaining the basis for its decision and shall
specify the water quality control parameters representing optimal corrosion
control in accordance with R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi). Water systems deemed to have
optimized corrosion control under this paragraph shall operate in compliance
with the Director designated optimal water quality control parameters in
accordance with R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii) and continue to conduct lead and copper
tap and water quality parameter sampling in accordance with
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iii) and R309-210-6(5)(d), respectively. A system shall
provide the Director with the following information in order to support a
determination under this paragraph:
(A) the
results of all test samples collected for each of the water quality parameters
in R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(C).
(B) a
report explaining the test methods used by the water system to evaluate the
corrosion control treatments listed in R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(A), the results of
all tests conducted, and the basis for the system's selection of optimal
corrosion control treatment;
(C) a
report explaining how corrosion control has been installed and how it is being
maintained to insure minimal lead and copper concentrations at consumers' taps;
and
(D) the results of tap water
samples collected in accordance with R309-210-6(3) at least once every six
months for one year after corrosion control has been installed.
(iii) Any water system is deemed
to have optimized corrosion control if it submits results of tap water
monitoring conducted in accordance with R309-210-6(3) and source water
monitoring conducted in accordance with R309-210-6(6) that demonstrates for two
consecutive six-month monitoring periods that the difference between the 90th
percentile tap water lead level computed under
R309-200-5(2)(c),
and the highest source water lead concentration, is less than the Practical
Quantitation Level (PQL) for lead as specified in R309-104-8.
(A) Those systems whose highest source water
lead level is below the Method Detection Limit may also be deemed to have
optimized corrosion control under this paragraph if the 90th percentile tap
water lead level is less than or equal to the Practical Quantitation Level for
lead for two consecutive 6-month monitoring periods.
(B) Any water system deemed to have optimized
corrosion control in accordance with this paragraph shall continue monitoring
for lead and copper at the tap no less frequently than once every three
calendar years using the reduced number of sites specified in R309-210-6(3)(c)
and collecting the samples at times and locations specified in
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv)(D). Any such system that has not conducted a round of
monitoring pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(d) since September 30, 1997, shall
complete a round of monitoring pursuant to this paragraph no later than
September 30, 2000.
(C) Any water
system deemed to have optimized corrosion control pursuant to this paragraph
shall notify the Director in writing pursuant to R309-210-6(8)(a)(iii) of any
upcoming long-term change in treatment or addition of a new source as described
in that section. The Director must review and approve the addition of a new
source or long- term change in water treatment before it is implemented by the
water system. The Director may require any such system to conduct additional
monitoring or to take other action the Director deems appropriate to ensure
that such systems maintain minimal levels of corrosion in the distribution
system.
(D) As of July 12, 2001, a
system is not deemed to have optimized corrosion control under this paragraph,
and shall implement corrosion control treatment pursuant to paragraph
(b)(iii)(E) of this section unless it meets the copper action level.
(E) Any system triggered into corrosion
control because it is no longer deemed to have optimized corrosion control
under this paragraph shall implement corrosion control treatment in accordance
with the deadlines in paragraph (e) of this section. Any such large system
shall adhere to the schedule specified in that paragraph for medium- size
systems, with the time periods for completing each step being triggered by the
date the system is no longer deemed to have optimized corrosion control under
this paragraph.
(c) Any small or medium-size water system
that is required to complete the corrosion control steps due to its exceedance
of the lead or copper action level may cease completing the treatment steps
whenever the system meets both action levels during each of two consecutive
monitoring periods conducted pursuant to R309-210-6(3) and submits the results
to the Director. If any such water system thereafter exceeds the lead or copper
action level during any monitoring period, the system (or the Director, as the
case may be) shall recommence completion of the applicable treatment steps,
beginning with the first treatment step which was not previously completed in
its entirety. The Director may require a system to repeat treatment steps
previously completed by the system where the Director determines that this is
necessary to implement properly the treatment requirements of this section. The
Director shall notify the system in writing of such a determination and explain
the basis for its decision. The requirement for any small or medium size system
to implement corrosion control treatment steps in accordance with paragraph (e)
of this section (including systems deemed to have optimized corrosion control
under paragraph (b)(i) of this section) is triggered whenever any small or
medium size system exceeds the lead or copper action level.
(d) Treatment steps and deadlines for large
systems
Except as provided in R309-210-6(2)(b)(ii) and (b)(iii),
large systems shall complete the following corrosion control treatment steps by
the indicated dates.
(i) Step 1: The
system shall conduct initial monitoring (R309-210-6(3)(d)(i) and
R309-210-6(5)(b)) during two consecutive six-month monitoring periods by
January 1, 1993.
(ii) Step 2: The
system shall complete corrosion control studies (R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)) by
July 1, 1994.
(iii) Step 3: The
Director shall designate optimal corrosion control treatment
(R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv)) by January 1, 1995.
(iv) Step 4: The system shall install optimal
corrosion control treatment (R309-210-6(4)(a)(v)) by January 1,
1997.
(v) Step 5: The system shall
complete follow-up sampling (R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii) and R309-210-6(5)(c)) by
January 1, 1998.
(vi) Step 6: The
Director shall review installation of treatment and designate optimal water
quality control parameters (R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi)) by July 1, 1998.
(vii) Step 7: The system shall operate in
compliance with the Director specified optimal water quality control parameters
(R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii)) and continue to conduct tap sampling
(R309-210-6(3)(d)(iii) and R309-210-6(5)(d)).
(e) Treatment steps and deadlines for small
and medium-size systems
Except as provided in R309-210-6(2)(b), small and medium-size
systems shall complete the following corrosion control treatment steps by the
indicated time periods.
(i) Step 1:
The system shall conduct initial tap sampling (R309-210-6(3)(d)(i) and
R309-210-6(5)(b) until the system either exceeds the lead or copper action
level or becomes eligible for reduced monitoring under R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv). A
system exceeding the lead or copper action level shall recommend optimal
corrosion control treatment (R309-210-6(4)(a)) within six months after the end
of the monitoring period during which it exceeds one of the action
levels.
(ii) Step 2: Within 12
months after the end of the monitoring period during which a system exceeds the
lead or copper action level, the Director may require the system to perform
corrosion control studies (R309-210-6(4)(b)). If the Director does not require
the system to perform such studies, the Director shall specify optimal
corrosion control treatment (R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv)) within the following
time-frames:
(A) for medium-size systems,
within 18 months after the end of the monitoring period during which such
system exceeds the lead or copper action level,
(B) for small systems, within 24 months after
the end of the monitoring period during which such system exceeds the lead or
copper action level.
(iii) Step 3: If the Director requires a
system to perform corrosion control studies under step 2, the system shall
complete the studies (R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)) within 18 months after the
Director requires that such studies be conducted.
(iv) Step 4: If the system has performed
corrosion control studies under step 2, the Director shall designate optimal
corrosion control treatment (R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv)) within 6 months after
completion of step 3.
(v) Step 5:
The system shall install optimal corrosion control treatment
(R309-210-6(4)(a)(v)) within 24 months after the Director designates such
treatment.
(vi) Step 6: The system
shall complete follow-up sampling (R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii) and R309-210-6(5)(c))
within 36 months after the Director designates optimal corrosion control
treatment.
(vii) Step 7: The
Director shall review the system's installation of treatment and designate
optimal water quality control parameters (R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi)) within 6
months after completion of step 6.
(viii) Step 8: The system shall operate in
compliance with the Director-designated optimal water quality control
parameters (R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii)) and continue to conduct tap sampling
(R309-210-6(3)(d)(iii) and R309-210-6(5)(d)).
(3) Monitoring requirements for lead and
copper in tap water.
(a) Sample site location
(i) By the applicable date for commencement
of monitoring under R309-210-6(3)(d)(i), each water system shall complete a
materials evaluation of its distribution system in order to identify a pool of
targeted sampling sites that meets the requirements of this section, and which
is sufficiently large to ensure that the water system can collect the number of
lead and copper tap samples required in R309-210-6(3)(c). All sites from which
first draw samples are collected shall be selected from this pool of targeted
sampling sites. Sampling sites may not include faucets that have point-of-use
or point-of-entry treatment devices designed to remove inorganic
contaminants.
(ii) A water system
shall use the information on lead, copper, and galvanized steel when conducting
a materials evaluation. When an evaluation of this information is insufficient
to locate the requisite number of lead and copper sampling sites that meet the
targeting criteria in R309-210-6(3)(a), the water system shall review the
sources of information listed below in order to identify a sufficient number of
sampling sites. In addition, the system shall seek to collect such information
where possible in the course of its normal operations (e.g., checking service
line materials when reading water meters or performing maintenance activities):
(A) all plumbing codes, permits, and records
in the files of the building department(s) which indicate the plumbing
materials that are installed within publicly and privately owned structures
connected to the distribution system;
(B) all inspections and records of the
distribution system that indicate the material composition of the service
connections that connect a structure to the distribution system; and
(C) all existing water quality information,
which includes the results of all prior analyses of the system or individual
structures connected to the system, indicating locations that may be
particularly susceptible to high lead or copper concentrations.
(iii) The sampling sites selected
for a community water system's sampling pool ("tier 1 sampling sites") shall
consist of single family structures that:
(A)
contain copper pipes with lead solder installed after 1982 or contain lead
pipes; and/or
(B) are served by a
lead service line.
When multiple-family residences comprise at least 20 percent
of the structures served by a water system, the system may include these types
of structures in its sampling pool.
(iv) Any community water system with
insufficient tier 1 sampling sites shall complete its sampling pool with "tier
2 sampling sites", consisting of buildings, including multiple-family
residences that:
(A) contain copper pipes
with lead solder installed after 1982 or contain lead pipes; and/or
(B) are served by a lead service
line.
(v) Any community
water system with insufficient tier 1 and tier 2 sampling sites shall complete
its sampling pool with "tier 3 sampling sites", consisting of single family
structures that contain copper pipes with lead solder installed before 1983. A
community water system with insufficient tier 1, tier 2 and tier 3 sampling
sites shall complete its sampling pool with representative sites throughout the
distribution system. For the purpose of this paragraph, a representative site
is a site in which the plumbing materials used at that site would be commonly
found at other sites served by the water system.
(vi) The sampling sites selected for a
non-transient non-community water system ("tier 1 sampling sites") shall
consist of buildings that:
(A) contain copper
pipes with lead solder installed after 1982 or contain lead pipes;
and/or
(B) are served by a lead
service line.
(vii) A
non-transient non-community water system with insufficient tier 1 sites that
meet the targeting criteria in R309-210-6(3)(a)(vi) shall complete its sampling
pool with sampling sites that contain copper pipes with lead solder installed
before 1983. If additional sites are needed to complete its sampling pool, the
non-transient non-community water system shall use representative sites
throughout the distribution system. For the purpose of this paragraph, a
representative site is a site in which the plumbing materials used at that site
would be commonly found at other sites served by the water system.
(viii) Any water system whose distribution
system contains lead service lines shall draw 50 percent of the samples it
collects during each monitoring period from sites that contain lead pipes, or
copper pipes with lead solder, and 50 percent of the samples from sites served
by a lead service line. A water system that cannot identify a sufficient number
of sampling sites served by a lead service line shall collect first draw
samples from all of the sites identified as being served by such
lines.
(b) Sample
collection methods
(i) All tap samples for
lead and copper collected in accordance with this section, with the exception
of lead service line samples collected under R309-210-6(4)(c)(iii) and samples
collected under (b)(v) of this section, shall be first draw samples.
(ii) Each first-draw tap sample for lead and
copper shall be one liter in volume and have stood motionless in the plumbing
system of each sampling site for at least six hours. First draw samples from
residential housing shall be collected from the cold water kitchen tap or
bathroom sink tap. First-draw samples from a nonresidential building shall be
one liter in volume and shall be collected at an interior tap from which water
is typically drawn for consumption. Non-first-draw samples collected in lieu of
first-draw samples pursuant to paragraph (b)(v) of this section shall be one
liter in volume and shall be collected at an interior tap from which water is
typically drawn for consumption. First draw samples may be collected by the
system or the system may allow residents to collect first draw samples after
instructing the residents of the sampling procedures specified in this
paragraph. To avoid problems with residents handling nitric acid, acidification
of first draw samples may be done up to fourteen days after the sample is
collected. After acidification to resolubilize the metals, the sample must
stand in the original container for the time specified in
R309-200-4(3).
If a system allows residents to perform sampling, the system may not challenge,
based on alleged errors in sample collection, the accuracy of sampling
results.
(iii) Each service line
sample shall be one liter in volume and have stood motionless in the lead
service line for at least six hours. Lead service line samples shall be
collected in one of the following three ways:
(A) at the tap after flushing the volume of
water between the tap and the lead service line. The volume of water shall be
calculated based on the interior diameter and length of the pipe between the
tap and the lead service line;
(B)
tapping directly into the lead service line; or
(C) if the sampling site is a building
constructed as a single-family residence, allowing the water to run until there
is a significant change in temperature which would be indicative of water that
has been standing in the lead service line.
(iv) A water system shall collect each first
draw tap sample from the same sampling site from which it collected a previous
sample. If, for any reason, the water system cannot gain entry to a sampling
site in order to collect a follow-up tap sample, the system may collect the
follow-up tap sample from another sampling site in its sampling pool as long as
the new site meets the same targeting criteria, and is within reasonable
proximity of the original site.
(v)
A non-transient non-community water system, or a community water system that
meets the criteria for R309-210-6(7)(b)(vii), that does not have enough taps
that can supply first draw samples, as defined in R309-110, may apply to the
Director in writing to substitute non-first-draw samples. Such systems must
collect as many first draw samples from appropriate taps as possible and
identify sampling times and locations that would likely result in the longest
standing time for the remaining sites. The Director herein waives the
requirement for prior Director approval of non-first draw samples sites
selected by the system.
(c) Number of samples
Water systems shall collect at least one sample during each
monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(3)(d) from the number of sites listed
in the first column (standard monitoring) in Table 210-3. A system conducting
reduced monitoring under R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv) may collect one sample from the
number of sites specified in the second column (reduced monitoring) in Table
210-3 during each monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv). Such
reduced monitoring sites shall be representative of the sites required for
standard monitoring. A public water system that has fewer than five drinking
water taps, that can be used for human consumption meeting the sample site
criteria of R309-210-6(6)(a) to reach the required number of sample sites
listed in paragraph (c) of this section, must collect at least one sample from
each tap and then must collect additional samples from those taps on different
days during the monitoring period to meet the required number of sites.
Alternatively the Director may allow these public water systems to collect a
number of samples less than the number of sites specified in paragraph (c) of
this section, provided that 100 percent of all taps that can be used for human
consumption are sampled. The Director must approve this reduction of the
minimum number of samples in writing based on a request from the system or
onsite verification by the Director. The Director may specify sampling
locations when a system is conducting reduced monitoring to ensure that fewer
number of sampling sites are representative of the risk to public health as
outlined in R309-210-6(3)(a).
TABLE 210-3
NUMBER OF LEAD AND COPPER SAMPLING
SITES |
System Size
(# People Served) |
# of sites (Standard Monitoring) |
# of sites (Reduced Monitoring) |
Greater than 100,000 |
100 |
50 |
10,001 to 100,000 |
60 |
30 |
3,301 to 10,000 |
40 |
20 |
501 to 3,300 |
20 |
10 |
101 to 500 |
10 |
5 |
100 or less |
5 |
5 |
(d)
Timing of monitoring
(i) Initial tap sampling
The first six-month monitoring period for small, medium-size
and large systems shall begin on the following dates in Table 210-4:
TABLE 210-4
INITIAL LEAD AND COPPER MONITORING
PERIODS |
System Size
(# People Served) |
First six-month
Monitoring Period Begins On |
Greater than 50,000 |
January 1, 1992 |
3,301 to 50,000 |
July 1, 1992 |
3,300 or less |
July 1, 1993 |
(A) All large
systems shall monitor during two consecutive six-month periods.
(B) All small and medium-size systems shall
monitor during each six-month monitoring period until:
(I) the system exceeds the lead or copper
action level and is therefore required to implement the corrosion control
treatment requirements under R309-210-6(2), in which case the system shall
continue monitoring in accordance with R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii), or
(II) the system meets the lead and copper
action levels during two consecutive six-month monitoring periods, in which
case the system may reduce monitoring in accordance with
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv).
(ii) Monitoring after installation of
corrosion control and source water treatment
(A) Any large system which installs optimal
corrosion control treatment pursuant to R309-210-6(2)(d)(iv) shall monitor
during two consecutive six-month monitoring periods by the date specified in
R309-210-6(2)(d)(v).
(B) Any small
or medium-size system which installs optimal corrosion control treatment
pursuant to R309-210-6(2)(e)(v) shall monitor during two consecutive six-month
monitoring periods by the date specified in R309-210-6(2)(e)(vi).
(C) Any system which installs source water
treatment pursuant to R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)(C) shall monitor during two
consecutive six-month monitoring periods by the date specified in
R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)(D).
(iii) Monitoring after Director specifies
water quality parameter values for optimal corrosion control
After the Director specifies the values for water quality
control parameters under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi), the system shall monitor during
each subsequent six-month monitoring period, with the first monitoring period
to begin on the date the Director specifies the optimal values under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi).
(iv)
Reduced monitoring
(A) A small or medium-size
water system that meets the lead and copper action levels during each of two
consecutive six-month monitoring periods may reduce the number of samples in
accordance with R309-210-6(3)(c), Table 210-3, and reduce the frequency of
sampling to once per year. A small or medium water system collecting fewer than
five samples as specified in paragraph (c) of this section, that meets the lead
and copper action levels during each of two consecutive six-month monitoring
periods may reduce the frequency of sampling to once per year. In no case can
the system reduce the number of samples required below the minimum of one
sample per available tap. This sampling shall begin during the calendar year
immediately following the end of the second consecutive six-month monitoring
period.
(B) Any water system that
meets the lead action level and maintains the range of values for the water
quality control parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control treatment
specified by the Director under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi) during each of two
consecutive six-month monitoring periods may reduce the frequency of monitoring
to once per year and reduce the number of lead and copper samples in accordance
with paragraph (c) of this section if it receives written approval from the
Director. This sampling shall begin during the calendar year immediately
following the end of the second consecutive six-month monitoring period. The
Director shall review monitoring, treatment, and other relevant information
submitted by the water system in accordance with R309-210-6(8), and shall
notify the system in writing when it determines the system is eligible to
commence reduced monitoring pursuant to this paragraph. The Director shall
review, and where appropriate, revise its determination when the system submits
new monitoring or treatment data, or when other data relevant to the number and
frequency of tap sampling becomes available.
(C) A small or medium-size water system that
meets the lead and copper action levels during three consecutive years of
monitoring may reduce the frequency of monitoring for lead and copper from
annually to once every three years. Any water system that meets the lead action
level and maintains the range of values for the water quality control
parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control treatment specified by the
Director under R309-210-6(4)(f) during three consecutive years of monitoring
may reduce the frequency of monitoring from annually to once every three years
if it receives written approval from the Director. Samples collected once every
three years shall be collected no later than every third calendar year. The
Director shall review monitoring, treatment, and other relevant information
submitted by the water system in accordance with R309-210-6(8), and shall
notify the system in writing when it determines the system is eligible to
reduce the frequency of monitoring to once every three years. The Director
shall review, and where appropriate, revise its determination when the system
submits new monitoring or treatment data, or when other data relevant to the
number and frequency of tap sampling becomes available.
(D) A water system that reduces the number
and frequency of sampling shall collect these samples from representative sites
included in the pool of targeted sampling sites identified in R309-210-6(3)(a).
Systems sampling annually or less frequently shall conduct the lead and copper
tap sampling during the months of June, July, August or September unless the
Director has approved a different sampling period in accordance with paragraph
(d)(iv)(D)(I) of this section.
(I) The
Director, at its discretion, may approve a different period for conducting the
lead and copper tap sampling for systems collecting a reduced number of
samples. Such a period shall be no longer than four consecutive months and must
represent a time of normal operation where the highest levels of lead are most
likely to occur. For a non-transient non-community water system that does not
operate during the months of June through September, and for which the period
of normal operation where the highest levels of lead are most likely to occur
is not known, the Director shall designate a period that represents a time of
normal operation for the system. This sampling shall begin during the period
approved or designated by the State in the calendar year immediately following
the end of the second consecutive six- month monitoring period for systems
initiating annual monitoring and during the three-year period following the end
of the third consecutive calendar year of annual monitoring for systems
initiating triennial monitoring.
(II) Systems monitoring annually, that have
been collecting samples during the months of June through September and that
receive Director approval to alter their sample collection period under
paragraph (d)(iv)(D)(I) of this section, must collect their next round of
samples during a time period that ends no later than 21 months after the
previous round of sampling. Systems monitoring triennially that have been
collecting samples during the months of June through September, and receive
Director approval to alter the sampling collection period as per (d)(iv)(D)(I)
of this section, must collect their next round of samples during a time period
that ends no later than 45 months after the previous round of sampling.
Subsequent rounds of sampling must be collected annually or triennially, as
required by this section. Small systems with waivers, granted pursuant to
paragraph (g) of this section, that have been collecting samples during the
months of June through September and receive Director approval to alter their
sample collection period under paragraph (d)(iv)(D)(I) of this section must
collect their next round of samples before the end of the 9 year
period.
(E) Any water
system that demonstrates for two consecutive 6 month monitoring periods that
the tap water lead level computed under
R309-200-5(2)(c)
is less than or equal to 0.005 mg/L and the tap water copper level computed
under
R309-200-5(2)(c)
is less than or equal to 0.65 mg/L may reduce the number of samples in
accordance paragraph (c) of this section and reduce the frequency of sampling
to once every three calendar years.
(F)
(I) A
small or medium-size water system subject to reduced monitoring that exceeds
the lead or copper action level shall resume sampling in accordance
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iii) and collect the number of samples specified for standard
monitoring under R309-210-6(3)(c), Table 210-3. Such system shall also conduct
water quality parameter monitoring in accordance with R309-210-6(5)(b), (c) or
(d) (as appropriate) during the monitoring period in which it exceeded the
action level. Any such system may resume annual monitoring for lead and copper
at the tap at the reduced number of sites specified in paragraph (c) of this
section after it has completed two subsequent consecutive six month rounds of
monitoring that meet the criteria of paragraph (d)(iv)(A) of this section or
may resume triennial monitoring for lead and copper at the reduced number of
sites after it demonstrates through subsequent rounds of monitoring that it
meets the criteria of either paragraph (d)(vi)(C) or (d)(iv)(D) of this
section.
(II) Any water system
subject to the reduced monitoring frequency that fails to meet the lead action
level during any four-month monitoring period or that fails to operate at or
above the minimum value or within the range of values for the water quality
parameters specified by the Director under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi) for more than
nine days in any six-month period specified in R309-210-6(5)(d) shall conduct
tap water sampling for lead and copper at the frequency specified in paragraph
(d)(iii) of this section, collect the number of samples specified for standard
monitoring under paragraph (c) of this section, and shall resume monitoring for
water quality parameters within the distribution system in accordance with
R309-210-6(5)(d). This standard tap water sampling shall begin no later than
the six-month period beginning January 1 of the calendar year following the
lead action level exceedance or water quality parameter excursion. Such a
system may resume reduced monitoring for lead and copper at the tap and for
water quality parameters within the distribution system under the following
conditions:
(aa) The system may resume annual
monitoring for lead and copper at the tap at the reduced number of sites
specified in paragraph (c) of this section after it has completed two
subsequent six month rounds of monitoring that meet the criteria of paragraph
(d)(iv)(B) of this section and the system has received written approval from
the Director that it is appropriate to resume reduced monitoring on an annual
frequency. This sampling shall begin during the calendar year immediately
following the end of the second consecutive six-month monitoring
period.
(bb) The system may resume
triennial monitoring for lead and copper at the tap at the reduced number of
sites after it demonstrates through subsequent rounds of monitoring that it
meets the criteria of either paragraph (d)(iv)(C) or (d)(iv)(E) of this section
and the system has received written approval from the Director that it is
appropriate to resume triennial monitoring.
(cc) The system may reduce the number of
water quality parameter tap water samples required in accordance with
R309-210-6(5)(e)(i) and the frequency with which it collects such samples in
accordance with R309-210-6(5)(e)(ii). Such a system may not resume triennial
monitoring for water quality parameters at the tap until it demonstrates, in
accordance with the requirements of R309-210-6(5)(e)(ii), that it has
requalified for triennial monitoring.
(G) Any water system subject to a reduced
monitoring frequency under paragraph (d)(iv) of this section shall notify the
Director in writing in accordance with R309-210-6(8)(a)(iii) of any upcoming
long-term change in treatment or addition of a new source as described in that
section. The Director must review and approve the addition of a new source or
long-term change in water treatment before it is implemented by the water
system. The Director may require the system to resume sampling in accordance
with paragraph (d)(iii) of this section and collect the number of samples
specified for standard monitoring under paragraph (c) of this section or take
other appropriate steps such as increased water quality parameter monitoring or
re-evaluation of its corrosion control treatment given the potentially
different water quality considerations.
(e) Additional monitoring by systems
The results of any monitoring conducted in addition to the
minimum requirements of this section shall be considered by the system and the
Director in making any determinations (i.e., calculating the 90th percentile
lead or copper level).
(f)
Invalidation of lead or copper tap water samples. A sample invalidated under
this paragraph does not count toward determining lead or copper 90th percentile
levels under Sec. 141.80 (c) (3) or toward meeting the minimum monitoring
requirements of paragraph (c) of this section.
(i) The Director may invalidate a lead or
copper tap water sample at least if one of the following conditions is met.
(A) The laboratory establishes that improper
sample analysis caused erroneous results.
(B) The Director determines that the sample
was taken from a site that did not meet the site selection criteria of this
section.
(C) The sample container
was damaged in transit.
(D) There
is substantial reason to believe that the sample was subject to
tampering.
(ii) The
system must report the results of all samples to the Director and all
supporting documentation for samples the system believes should be
invalidated.
(iii) To invalidate a
sample under paragraph (f)(i) of this section, the decision and the rationale
for the decision must be documented in writing. The Director may not invalidate
a sample solely on the grounds that a follow-up sample result is higher or
lower than that of the original sample.
(iv) The water system must collect
replacement samples for any samples invalidated under this section if, after
the invalidation of one or more samples, the system has too few samples to meet
the minimum requirements of paragraph (c) of this section. Any such replacement
samples must be taken as soon as possible, but no later than 20 days after the
date the Director invalidates the sample or by the end of the applicable
monitoring period, whichever occurs later. Replacement samples taken after the
end of the applicable monitoring period shall not also be used to meet the
monitoring requirements of a subsequent monitoring period. The replacement
samples shall be taken at the same locations as the invalidated samples or, if
that is not possible, at locations other than those already used for sampling
during the monitoring period.
(g) Monitoring waivers for small systems. Any
small system that meets the criteria of this paragraph may apply to the
Director to reduce the frequency of monitoring for lead and copper under this
section to once every nine years (i.e., a full waiver) if it meets all of the
materials criteria specified in paragraph (g)(i) of this section and all of the
monitoring criteria specified in paragraph (g) (ii) of this section. Any small
system that meets the criteria in paragraphs (g) (i) and (ii) of this section
only for lead, or only for copper, may apply to the Director for a waiver to
reduce the frequency of tap water monitoring to once ever nine years for that
contaminant only (i.e., a partial waiver).
(i) Materials criteria. The system must
demonstrate that its distribution system and service lines and all drinking
water supply plumbing, including plumbing conveying drinking water within all
residences and buildings connected to the system, are free of lead-containing
materials and/or copper-containing materials, as those terms are defined in
this paragraph, as follows:
(A) Lead. To
qualify for a full waiver, or a waiver of the tap water monitoring requirements
for lead (i.e., a lead waiver), the water system must provide certification and
supporting documentation to the Director that the system is free of all
lead-containing materials, as follows:
(I) It
contains no plastic pipes which contain lead plasticizers, or plastic service
lines which contain lead plasticizers; and
(II) It is free of lead service lines, lead
pipes, lead soldered pipe joints, and leaded brass or bronze alloy fittings and
fixtures, unless such fittings and fixtures meet the specifications of any
standard established pursuant to
42 U.S.C.
300 g - 6(e) (SDWA section 1417
(e)).
(B) Copper. To
qualify for a full waiver, or waiver of the tap water monitoring requirements
for copper (i.e., a copper waiver), the water system must provide certification
and supporting documentation to the Director that the system contains no copper
pipes or copper service lines.
(ii) Monitoring criteria for waiver issuance.
The system must have completed at least one 6-month round of standard tap water
monitoring for lead and copper at sites approved by the Director and from the
number of sites required by paragraph (c) of this section and demonstrate that
the 90th percentile levels for any and all rounds of monitoring conducted since
the system became free of all lead-containing and/or copper-containing
materials, as appropriate, meet the following criteria.
(A) Lead levels. To qualify for a full
waiver, or a lead waiver, the system must demonstrate that the 90th percentile
lead level does not exceed 0.005 mg/L.
(B) Copper levels. To qualify for a full
waiver, or a copper waiver, the system must demonstrate that the 90th
percentile lead level does not exceed 0.65 mg/L.
(iii) Director approval of waiver
application. The Director shall notify the system of its waiver determination,
in writing, setting forth the basis of its decision and any condition of the
waiver. As a condition of the waiver, the Director may require the system to
perform specific activities (e.g., limited monitoring, periodic outreach to
customers to remind them to avoid installation of materials that might void the
waiver) to avoid the risk of lead or copper concentration of concern in tap
water. The small system must continue monitoring for lead and copper at the tap
as required by paragraphs (d) (i) through (d) (iv) of this section, as
appropriate, until it receives written notification from the Director the
waiver has been approved.
(iv)
Monitoring frequency for systems with waivers.
(A) A system with a full waiver must conduct
tap water monitoring for lead and copper in accordance with paragraph
(d)(iv)(D) of this section at the reduced number of sampling sites identified
in paragraph (c) of this section at least once every nine years and provide the
materials certification specified in paragraph (g)(i) of this section for both
lead and copper to the Director along with the monitoring results. Samples
collected every nine years shall be collected no later than every ninth
calendar year.
(B) A system with a
partial waiver must conduct tap water monitoring for the waived contaminant in
accordance with paragraph (d)(iv)(D) of this section at the reduced number of
sampling sites specified in paragraph (c) of this section at least once every
nine years and provide the materials certification specified in paragraph
(g)(i) of this section pertaining to the waived contaminant along with the
monitoring results. Such a system also must continue to monitor for the
non-waived contaminant in accordance with requirements of paragraph (d)(i)
through (d)(iv) of this section, as appropriate.
(C) Any water system with a full or partial
waiver shall notify the Director in writing in accordance with
R309-210-6(8)(a)(iii) of any upcoming long-term change in treatment or addition
of a new source, as described in that section. The Director must review and
approve the addition of a new source or long-term change in water treatment
before it is implemented by the water system. The Director has the authority to
require the system to add or modify waiver conditions (e.g., require
recertification that the system is free of lead-containing and/or
copper-containing materials, require additional round(s) of monitoring), if it
deems such modifications are necessary to address treatment or source water
changes at the system.
(D) If a
system with a full or partial waiver because aware that it is no longer free of
lead- containing or copper-containing materials, as appropriate, (e.g., as a
result of new construction or repairs), the system shall notify the Director in
writing no later than 60 days after becoming aware of such a change.
(v) Continued eligibility. If the
system continues to satisfy the requirements of paragraph (g) (iv) of this
section, the waiver will be renewed automatically, unless any of the conditions
listed in paragraph (g)(v)(A) through (g)(v)(C) of this section occurs. A
system whose waiver has been revoked may re-apply for a waiver at such time as
it again meets the appropriate materials and monitoring criteria of paragraphs
(g)(i) and (g)(ii) of this section.
(A) A
system with a full waiver or lead waiver no longer satisfies the materials
criteria of paragraph (g)(i)(A) of this section or has a 90th percentile lead
level greater than 0.005 mg/L.
(B)
A system with a full waiver or a copper waiver no longer satisfies the
materials criteria of paragraph (g)(i)(B) of this section or has a 90th
percentile copper level greater than 0.65 mg/L.
(C) The Director notifies the system, in
writing, that the waiver has been revoked, setting forth the basis of its
decision.
(vi)
Requirements following waiver revocation. A system whose full or partial waiver
has been revoked by the Director is subject to the corrosion control treatment
and lead and copper tap water monitoring requirements, as follows:
(A) If the system exceeds the lead and/or
copper action level, the system must implement corrosion control treatment in
accordance with the deadlines specified in R309-210-6(2)(e), and any other
applicable requirements of this subpart.
(B) If the system meets both the lead and the
copper action level, the system must monitor for lead and copper at the tap no
less frequently than once every three years using the reduced number of sample
sites specified in paragraph (c) of this section.
(vii) Pre-existing waivers. Small system
waivers approved by the Director in writing prior to April 11, 2000 shall
remain in effect under the following conditions:
(A) If the system has demonstrated that it is
both free of lead-containing and copper- containing materials, as required by
paragraph (g)(i) of this section and that its 90th percentile lead levels and
90th percentile copper levels meet the criteria of paragraph (g)(ii) of this
section, the waiver remains in effect so long as the system continues to meet
the waiver eligibility criteria of paragraph (g)(v) of this section. The first
round of tap water monitoring conducted pursuant to paragraph (g)(iv) of this
section shall be completed no later than nine years after the last time the
system has monitored for lead and copper at the tap.
(B) If the system has met the materials
criteria of paragraph (g)(i) of this section but has not met the monitoring
criteria of paragraph (g)(ii) of this section, the system shall conduct a round
of monitoring for lead and copper at the tap demonstrating that it meets the
criteria of paragraph (g)(ii) of this section no later than September 30, 2000.
Thereafter, the waiver shall remain in effect as long as the system meets the
continued eligibility criteria of paragraph (g)(v) of this section. The first
round of tap water monitoring conducted pursuant to paragraph (g)(iv) of this
section shall be completed no later than nine years after the round of
monitoring conducted pursuant to paragraph (g)(ii) of this section.
(4)
Corrosion Control for Control of Lead and Copper
(a) Description of corrosion control
treatment requirements.
Each system shall complete the corrosion control treatment
requirements described below which are applicable to such system under
R309-210-6(2).
(i) System
recommendation regarding corrosion control treatment
Based upon the results of lead and copper tap monitoring and
water quality parameter monitoring, small and medium-size water systems
exceeding the lead or copper action level shall recommend installation of one
or more of the corrosion control treatments listed in R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(A)
which the system believes constitutes optimal corrosion control for that
system. The Director may require the system to conduct additional water quality
parameter monitoring in accordance with R309-210-6(5)(b) to assist the Director
in reviewing the system's recommendation.
(ii) Studies of corrosion control treatment
required for small and medium-size systems.
The Director may require any small or medium-size system that
exceeds the lead or copper action level to perform corrosion control studies
under R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii) to identify optimal corrosion control treatment for
the system.
(iii)
Performance of corrosion control studies
(A)
Any public water system performing corrosion control studies shall evaluate the
effectiveness of each of the following treatments, and, if appropriate,
combinations of the following treatments to identify the optimal corrosion
control treatment for that system:
(I)
alkalinity and pH adjustment;
(II)
calcium hardness adjustment; and
(III) the addition of a phosphate or silicate
based corrosion inhibitor at a concentration sufficient to maintain an
effective residual concentration in all test tap samples.
(B) The water system shall evaluate each of
the corrosion control treatments using either pipe rig/loop tests, metal coupon
tests, partial-system tests, or analyses based on documented analogous
treatments with other systems of similar size, water chemistry and distribution
system configuration.
(C) The water
system shall measure the following water quality parameters in any tests
conducted under this paragraph before and after evaluating the corrosion
control treatments listed above:
(I)
lead;
(II) copper;
(III) pH;
(IV) alkalinity;
(V) calcium;
(VI) conductivity;
(VII) orthophosphate (when an inhibitor
containing a phosphate compound is used);
(VIII) silicate (when an inhibitor containing
a silicate compound is used);
(IX)
water temperature.
(D)
The water system shall identify all chemical or physical constraints that limit
or prohibit the use of a particular corrosion control treatment and document
such constraints with at least one of the following:
(I) data and documentation showing that a
particular corrosion control treatment has adversely affected other water
treatment processes when used by another water system with comparable water
quality characteristics; and/or
(II) data and documentation demonstrating
that the water system has previously attempted to evaluate a particular
corrosion control treatment and has found that the treatment is ineffective or
adversely affects other water quality treatment processes.
(E) The water system shall evaluate the
effect of the chemicals used for corrosion control treatment on other water
quality treatment processes.
(F) On
the basis of an analysis of the data generated during each evaluation, the
water system shall recommend to the Director in writing the treatment option
that the corrosion control studies indicate constitutes optimal corrosion
control treatment for that system. The water system shall provide a rationale
for its recommendation along with all supporting documentation specified in
R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(A) through R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(E).
(iv) Designation of optimal corrosion control
treatment
(A) Based upon consideration of
available information including, where applicable, studies performed under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii) and a system's recommended treatment alternative, the
Director shall either approve the corrosion control treatment option
recommended by the system, or designate alternative corrosion control
treatment(s) from among those listed in R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii)(A). When
designating optimal treatment the Director shall consider the effects that
additional corrosion control treatment will have on water quality parameters
and on other water quality treatment processes.
(B) The Director shall notify the system of
its decision on optimal corrosion control treatment in writing and explain the
basis for this determination. If the Director requests additional information
to aid its review, the water system shall provide the information.
(v) Installation of optimal
corrosion control
Each system shall properly install and operate throughout its
distribution system the optimal corrosion control treatment designated by the
Director under R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv).
(vi) Review of treatment and specification of
optimal water quality control parameters
The Director shall evaluate the results of all lead and
copper tap samples and water quality parameter samples submitted by the water
system and determine whether the system has properly installed and operated the
optimal corrosion control treatment designated by the Director in
R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv). Upon reviewing the results of tap water and water quality
parameter monitoring by the system, both before and after the system installs
optimal corrosion control treatment, the Director shall designate:
(A) A minimum value or a range of values for
pH measured at each entry point to the distribution system;
(B) A minimum pH value, measured in all tap
samples. Such value shall be equal to or greater than 7.0, unless the Director
determines that meeting a pH level of 7.0 is not technologically feasible or is
not necessary for the system to optimize corrosion control;
(C) If a corrosion inhibitor is used, a
minimum concentration or a range of concentrations for the inhibitor, measured
at each entry point to the distribution system and in all tap samples, that the
Director determines is necessary to form a passivating film on the interior
walls of the pipes of the distribution system;
(D) If alkalinity is adjusted as part of
optimal corrosion control treatment, a minimum concentration or a range of
concentrations for alkalinity, measured at each entry point to the distribution
system and in all tap samples;
(E)
If calcium carbonate stabilization is used as part of corrosion control, a
minimum concentration or a range of concentrations for calcium, measured in all
tap samples.
The values for the applicable water quality control
parameters listed above shall be those that the Director determines to reflect
optimal corrosion control treatment for the system. The Director may designate
values for additional water quality control parameters determined by the
Director to reflect optimal corrosion control for the system. The Director
shall notify the system in writing of these determinations and explain the
basis for the decisions.
(vii) Continued operation and monitoring. All
systems optimizing corrosion control shall continue to operate and maintain
optimal corrosion control treatment, including maintaining water quality
parameters at or above minimum values or within ranges designated by the
Director under paragraph (vi) of this section, in accordance with this
paragraph for all samples collected under R309-210-6(5)(d) through (f).
Compliance with the requirements of this paragraph shall be determined every
six months, as specified under R309-210-6(5)(d). A water system is out of
compliance with the requirements of this paragraph for a six-month period of it
has excursions for any Director specified parameter on more than nine days
during the period. An excursion occurs whenever the daily value for one or more
of the water quality parameters measured at a sampling location is below the
minimum value or outside the range designated by the Director. Daily values are
calculated as follows. The Director has discretion to delete results of obvious
sampling errors from this calculation.
(A) On
days when more than one measurement for the water quality parameter is
collected at the sampling location, the daily value shall be the average of all
results collected during the day regardless of whether they are collected
through continuous monitoring, grab sampling, or combination of both.
(B) On days when only one measurement for the
water quality parameter is collected at the sampling location, the daily value
shall be the result of that measurement.
(C) On days when no measurement is collected
for the water quality parameter at the sampling location, the daily value shall
be the daily value calculated on the most recent day on which the water quality
parameter was measured at the sample site.
(viii) Modification of treatment decisions
Upon its own initiative or in response to a request by a
water system or other interested party, the Director may modify its
determination of the optimal corrosion control treatment under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv) or optimal water quality control parameters under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi). A request for modification by a system or other
interested party shall: be in writing, explain why the modification is
appropriate, and provide supporting documentation. The Director may modify its
determination where it concludes that such change is necessary to ensure that
the system continues to optimize corrosion control treatment. A revised
determination shall: be made in writing, set forth the new treatment
requirements, explain the basis for the Director's decision, and provide an
implementation schedule for completing the treatment modifications.
(b) Source water
treatment requirements.
Systems shall complete the applicable source water monitoring
and treatment requirements (described in the referenced portions of
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii), and in R309-210-6(3), and R309-210-6(6)) by the
following deadlines.
(i) Deadlines for
Completing Source Water Treatment Steps
(A)
Step 1: A system exceeding the lead or copper action level shall complete lead
and copper source water monitoring (R309-210-6(6)(b)) and make a treatment
recommendation to the Director (R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)) no later than 180 days
after the end of the monitoring period during which the lead or copper action
level was exceeded.
(B) Step 2: The
Director shall make a determination regarding source water treatment
(R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B)) within 6 months after submission of monitoring
results under step 1.
(C) Step 3:
If the Director requires installation of source water treatment, the system
shall install the treatment (R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(C)) within 24 months after
completion of step 2.
(D) Step 4:
The system shall complete follow-up tap water monitoring (R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii)) and source water monitoring (R309-210-6(6)(c)) within 36 months after
completion of step 2.
(E) Step 5:
The Director shall review the system's installation and operation of source
water treatment and specify maximum permissible source water levels
(R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D)) within 6 months after completion of step
4.
(F) Step 6: The system shall
operate in compliance with the Director specified maximum permissible lead and
copper source water levels (R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D)) and continue source water
monitoring (R309-210-6(6)(d)).
(ii) Description of Source Water Treatment
Requirements
(A) System treatment
recommendation
Any system which exceeds the lead or copper action level
shall recommend in writing to the Director the installation and operation of
one of the source water treatments listed in R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B). A system
may recommend that no treatment be installed based upon a demonstration that
source water treatment is not necessary to minimize lead and copper levels at
users' taps.
(B)
Determination regarding source water treatment
The Director shall complete an evaluation of the results of
all source water samples submitted by the water system to determine whether
source water treatment is necessary to minimize lead or copper levels in water
delivered to users' taps. If the Director determines that treatment is needed,
the Director shall either require installation and operation of the source
water treatment recommended by the system (if any) or require the installation
and operation of another source water treatment from among the following: ion
exchange, reverse osmosis, lime softening or coagulation/filtration. If the
Director requests additional information to aid in its review, the water system
shall provide the information by the date specified by the Director in its
request. The Director shall notify the system in writing of the determination
and set forth the basis for the decision.
(C) Installation of source water treatment
Each system shall properly install and operate the source
water treatment designated by the Director under
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B).
(D) Review of source water treatment and
specification of maximum permissible source water levels
The Director shall review the source water samples taken by
the water system both before and after the system installs source water
treatment, and determine whether the system has properly installed and operated
the source water treatment designated by the Director. Based upon its review,
the Director shall designate the maximum permissible lead and copper
concentrations for finished water entering the distribution system. Such levels
shall reflect the contaminant removal capability of the treatment properly
operated and maintained. The Director shall notify the system in writing and
explain the basis for the decision.
(E) Continued operation and maintenance
Each water system shall maintain lead and copper levels below
the maximum permissible concentrations designated by the Director at each
sampling point monitored in accordance with R309-210-6(6). The system is out of
compliance with this paragraph if the level of lead or copper at any sampling
point is greater than the maximum permissible concentration designated by the
Director.
(F) Modification
of treatment decisions
Upon its own initiative or in response to a request by a
water system or other interested party, the Director may modify its
determination of the source water treatment under R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B), or
maximum permissible lead and copper concentrations for finished water entering
the distribution system under R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D). A request for
modification by a system or other interested party shall: be in writing,
explain why the modification is appropriate, and provide supporting
documentation. The Director may modify the determination where it concludes
that such change is necessary to ensure that the system continues to minimize
lead and copper concentrations in source water. A revised determination shall:
be made in writing, set forth the new treatment requirements, explain the basis
for the decision, and provide an implementation schedule for completing the
treatment modifications.
(c) Lead service line replacement
requirements.
(i)
(A) Systems that fail to meet the lead action
level in tap samples taken pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii), after installing
corrosion control and/or source water treatment (whichever sampling occurs
later), shall replace lead service lines in accordance with the requirements of
this section. If a system is in violation of R309-210-6(2) or R309-210-6(4)(b)
for failure to install source water or corrosion control treatment, the
Director may require the system to commence lead service line replacement under
this section after the date by which the system was required to conduct
monitoring under R309-104-4.2.3.d.2. has passed. The first year of lead service
line replacement shall begin on the first day following the end of the
monitoring period in which the action level was exceeded under paragraph (a) of
this section. If monitoring is required annually or less frequently, the end of
the monitoring period is September 30 of the calendar year in which the
sampling occurs. If the Director has established an alternate monitoring
period, then the end of the monitoring period will be the last day of that
period.
(B) Any water system
resuming a lead service line replacement program after the cessation of its
lead service line replacement program as allowed by paragraph (f) of this
section shall update its inventory of lead service lines to include those sites
that were previously determined not to require replacement through the sampling
provision under paragraph (c) of this section. The system will then divide the
updated number of remaining lead service lines by the number of remaining years
in the program to determine the number of lines that must be replaced per year
(7 percent lead service line replacement is based on a 15-year replacement
program, so, for example, systems resuming lead service line replacement after
previously conducting two years of replacement would divide the updated
inventory by 13). For those systems that have completed a 15-year lead service
line replacement program, the Director will determine a schedule for replacing
or retesting lines that were previously tested out under the replacement
program when the system re-exceeds the action level.
(ii) A system shall replace annually at least
7 percent of the initial number of lead service lines in its distribution
system. The initial number of lead service lines is the number of lead lines in
place at the time the replacement program begins. The system shall identify the
initial number of lead service lines in its distribution system, including an
identification of the portion(s) owned by the system, based upon a materials
evaluation, including the evaluation required under R309-210-6(3)(a) and
relevant legal authorities (e.g., contracts, local ordinances) regarding the
portion owned by the system. The first year of lead service line replacement
shall begin on the date the action level was exceeded in tap sampling
referenced in R309-210-6(4)(c)(i).
(iii) A system is not required to replace an
individual lead service line if the lead concentration in all service line
samples from that line, taken pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(b)(iii), is less than
or equal to 0.015 mg/L.
(iv) A
water system shall replace that portion of the lead service line that it owns.
In cases where the system does not own the entire lead service line, the system
shall notify the owner of the line, or the owner's authorized agent, that the
system will replace the portion of the service line that it owns and shall
offer to replace the owner's portion of the line. A system is not required to
bear the cost of replacing the privately-owned portion of the line, nor is it
required to replace the privately-owned portion where the owner chooses not to
pay the cost of replacing the privately owned portion of the line, or where
replacing the privately-owned portion would be precluded by State, local or
common law. A water system that does not replace the entire length of the
service line also shall complete the following tasks.
(A) At least 45 days prior to commencing with
the partial replacement of a lead service line, the water system shall provide
notice to the resident(s) of all buildings served by the line explaining that
they may experience a temporary increase of lead levels in their drinking
water, along with guidance on measures consumers can take to minimize their
exposure to lead. The Director may allow the water system to provide notice
under the previous sentence less than 45 days prior to commencing partial lead
service line replacement where such replacement is in conjunction with
emergency repairs. In addition, the water system shall inform the resident(s)
served by the line that the system will, at the system's expense, collect a
sample from each partially-replaced lead service line that is representative of
the water in the service line for analysis of lead content, as prescribed under
R309-210-6(3)(b)(iii), within 72 hours after the completion of the partial
replacement of the service line. The system shall collect the sample and report
the results of the analysis to the owner and the resident(s) served by the line
within three business days of receiving the results. Mailed notices post-marked
within three business days of receiving the results shall be considered on
time.
(B) The water system shall
provide the information required by paragraph (c)(iv)(A) of this section to the
residents of individual dwellings by mail or by other methods approved by the
Director. In instances where multi- family dwellings are served by the line,
the water system shall have the option to post the information at a conspicuous
location.
(v) The
Director shall require a system to replace lead service lines on a shorter
schedule than that required by this section, taking into account the number of
lead service lines in the system, where such a shorter replacement schedule is
feasible. The Director shall make this determination in writing and notify the
system of its finding within 6 months after the system is triggered into lead
service line replacement based on monitoring referenced in
R309-210-6(4)(c)(i).
(vi) Any
system may cease replacing lead service lines whenever first draw samples
collected pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(b)(ii) meet the lead action level during
each of two consecutive monitoring periods and the system submits the results
to the Director. If first draw tap samples collected in any such water system
thereafter exceeds the lead action level, the system shall recommence replacing
lead service lines, pursuant to R309-210-6(4)(c)(ii)(B).
(vii) To demonstrate compliance with
R309-210-6(4)(c)(i) through R309-210-6(4)(c)(iv), a system shall report to the
Director the information specified in R309-210-6(8)(e).
(5) Monitoring requirements for
water quality parameters.
All large water systems and all small and medium-size systems
that exceed the lead or copper action level shall monitor water quality
parameters in addition to lead and copper in accordance with this
section.
(a) General Requirements
(i) Sample collection methods
(A) Tap samples shall be representative of
water quality throughout the distribution system taking into account the number
of persons served, the different sources of water, the different treatment
methods employed by the system, and seasonal variability. Tap sampling under
this section is not required to be conducted at taps targeted for lead and
copper sampling under R309-210-6(3)(a).
(B) Samples collected at the entry point(s)
to the distribution system shall be from locations representative of each
source after treatment. If a system draws water from more than one source and
the sources are combined before distribution, the system must sample at an
entry point to the distribution system during periods of normal operating
conditions (i.e., when water is representative of all sources being
used).
(ii) Number of
samples
(A) Systems shall collect two tap
samples for applicable water quality parameters during each monitoring period
specified under R309-210-6(5)(b) through R309-210-6(5)(e) from the following
number of sites in Table 210- 5.
TABLE 210-5
NUMBER OF WATER QUALITY PARAMETER
SAMPLE SITES |
System Size
(# People Served) |
# of Sites For
Water Quality Parameters |
Greater than 100,000 |
25 |
10,001 to 100,000 |
10 |
3,301 to 10,000 |
3 |
501 to 3,300 |
2 |
101 to 500 |
1 |
100 or less |
1 |
(B)
Except as provided in paragraph (c)(iii) of this section, Systems shall collect
two samples for each applicable water quality parameter at each entry point to
the distribution system during each monitoring period specified in
R309-210-6(5)(b). Systems shall collect one sample for each applicable water
quality parameter at each entry point to the distribution system during each
monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(5)(c) through
R309-210-6(5)(e).
(b) Initial Sampling
All large water systems shall measure the applicable water
quality parameters as specified below at taps and at each entry point to the
distribution system during each six-month monitoring period specified in
R309-210-6(3)(d)(i). All small and medium-size systems shall measure the
applicable water quality parameters at the locations specified below during
each six-month monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(3)(d)(i) during which
the system exceeds the lead or copper action level.
(i) At taps:
(A) pH;
(B) alkalinity;
(C) orthophosphate, when an inhibitor
containing a phosphate compound is used;
(D) silica, when an inhibitor containing a
silicate compound is used;
(E)
calcium;
(F) conductivity;
and
(G) water
temperature.
(ii) At
each entry point to the distribution system: all of the applicable parameters
listed in R309-210-6(5)(b)(i).
(c) Monitoring after installation of
corrosion control
Any large system which installs optimal corrosion control
treatment pursuant to R309-210-6(2)(d)(iv) shall measure the water quality
parameters at the locations and frequencies specified below during each
six-month monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii)(A). Any small or
medium-size system which installs optimal corrosion control treatment shall
conduct such monitoring during each six-month monitoring period specified in
R309-210-6(3)(d)(ii)(B) in which the system exceeds the lead or copper action
level.
(i) At taps, two samples for:
(A) pH;
(B) alkalinity;
(C) orthophosphate, when an inhibitor
containing a phosphate compound is used;
(D) silica, when an inhibitor containing a
silicate compound is used;
(E)
calcium, when calcium carbonate stabilization is used as part of corrosion
control.
(ii) Except as
provided in Paragraph (c)(iii) of this section, at each entry point to the
distribution system, at least on sample no less frequently than every two weeks
(bi-weekly) for:
(A) pH;
(B) when alkalinity is adjusted as part of
optimal corrosion control, a reading of the dosage rate of the chemical used to
adjust alkalinity, and the alkalinity concentration; and
(C) when a corrosion inhibitor is used as
part of optimal corrosion control, a reading of the dosage rate of the
inhibitor used, and the concentration of orthophosphate or silica (whichever is
applicable).
(iii) Any
ground water system can limit entry point sampling described in paragraph
(c)(ii) of this section to those entry points that are representative of water
quality and treatment conditions throughout the system. If water from untreated
ground water sources mixes with water from treated ground water sources, the
system must monitor for water quality parameters both at representative entry
points receiving treatment and representative entry points receiving no
treatment. Prior to the start of any monitoring under this paragraph, the
system shall provide to the Director written information identifying the
selected entry points and documentation, including information on seasonal
variability, sufficient to demonstrate that the sites are representative of
water quality and treatment conditions throughout the system.
(d) Monitoring after Director
specifies water quality parameter values for optimal corrosion control.
After the Director specifies the values for applicable water
quality control parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control treatment under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi), all large systems shall measure the applicable water
quality parameters in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section and
determine compliance with the requirements of R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii) every six
months with the first six-month period to begin on either January 1 or July 1,
whichever comes first, after the Director specifies the optimal values under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi). Any small or medium-size system shall conduct such
monitoring during each six-month period specified in this paragraph in which
the system exceeds the lead or copper action level. For any such small and
medium-size system that is subject to a reduced monitoring frequency pursuant
to R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv) at the time of the action level exceedance, the start
of the applicable six-month monitoring period under this paragraph shall
coincide with the start of the applicable monitoring period under
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv). Compliance with Director-designated optimal water quality
parameter values shall be determined as specified under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii).
(e)
Reduced monitoring
(i) Any water system that
maintains the range of values for the water quality parameters reflecting
optimal corrosion control treatment specified by the Director under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi) during three consecutive years of monitoring may reduce
the frequency with which it collects the number of tap samples for applicable
water quality parameters specified in this paragraph (e)(i) of this section
from every six months to annually. This sampling begins during the calendar
year immediately following the end of the monitoring period in which the third
consecutive year of six-month monitoring occurs. Any water system that
maintains the range of values for the water quality parameters reflecting
optimal corrosion control treatment specified by the Director under
R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi), during three consecutive years of annual monitoring under
this paragraph may reduce the frequency with which it collects the number of
tap samples for applicable water quality parameters specified in paragraph
(e)(i) of this section from annually to every three years. This sampling begins
no later than the third calendar year following the end of the monitoring
period in which the third consecutive year of monitoring occurs.
TABLE 210-6
REDUCED NUMBER OF WATER QUALITY
PARAMETER SAMPLE SITES |
System Size
(# People Served) |
Reduced # of Sites for Water Quality
Parameters |
Greater than 100,000 |
10 |
10,001 to 100,000 |
7 |
3,301 to 10,000 |
3 |
501 to 3,300 |
2 |
101 to 500 |
1 |
100 or less |
1 |
(ii)
(A) Any water system that maintains the range
of values for the water quality parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control
treatment specified by the State under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi) during three
consecutive years of monitoring may reduce the frequency with which it collects
the number of tap samples for applicable water quality parameters specified in
this paragraph (e)(i) of this section from every six months to annually. This
sampling begins during the calendar year immediately following the end of the
monitoring period in which the third consecutive year of six- month monitoring
occurs. Any water system that maintains the range of values for the water
quality parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control treatment specified by
the State under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi), during three consecutive years of annual
monitoring under this paragraph may reduce the frequency with which it collects
the number of tap samples for applicable water quality parameters specified in
paragraph (e)(i) of this section from annually to every three years. This
sampling begins no later than the third calendar year following the end of the
monitoring period in which the third consecutive year of monitoring
occurs.
(B) A water system may
reduce the frequency with which it collects tap samples for applicable water
quality parameters specified in paragraph (e)(i) of this section to every three
years if it demonstrates during two consecutive monitoring periods that its tap
water lead level at the 90th percentile is less than or equal to the PQL for
lead specified in
R309-200-4(3),
that its tap water copper level at the 90th percentile is less than or equal to
0.65 mg/L for copper in
R309-200-5(2)(c),
and that it also has maintained the range of values for the water quality
parameters reflecting optimal corrosion control treatment specified by the
Director under R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi). Monitoring conducted every three years
shall be done no later than every third calendar year.
(iii) A water system that conducts sampling
annually shall collect these samples evenly throughout the year so as to
reflect seasonal variability.
(iv)
Any water system subject to the reduced monitoring frequency that fails to
operate at or above the minimum value or within the range of values for the
water quality parameters specified by the Director in R309-210-6(4)(a)(vi) for
more than 9 days in any six month period specified in R309-210-6(4)(a)(vii)
shall resume distribution system tap water sampling in accordance with the
number and frequency requirements in paragraph (d) of this section. Such a
system may resume annual monitoring for water quality parameters at the tap at
the reduced number of sites specified in paragraph (e)(i) of this section after
it has completed two subsequent consecutive six month rounds of monitoring that
meet the criteria of that paragraph or may resume triennial monitoring for
water quality parameters at the tap at the reduced number os sites after it
demonstrates through subsequent rounds of monitoring that it meets the criteria
of either paragraph (e)(ii)(A) or (e)(ii)(B) of this section.
(f) Additional monitoring by
systems
The results of any monitoring conducted in addition to the
minimum requirements of this section shall be considered by the system and the
Director in making any determinations (i.e., determining concentrations of
water quality parameters) under this section or R309-210-6(4)(a).
(g) The Director has the authority
to allow the use of previously collected monitoring data for purposes of
monitoring, if the data were collected in accordance with this section and
analyzed in accordance with R309-104-8.
(6) Monitoring requirements for lead and
copper in source water.
(a) Sample location,
collection methods, and number of samples
(i)
A water system that fails to meet the lead or copper action level on the basis
of tap samples collected in accordance with R309-210-6(3) shall collect lead
and copper source water samples in accordance with the following requirements
regarding sample location, number of samples, and collection methods:
(A) Groundwater systems shall take a minimum
of one sample at every entry point to the distribution system which is
representative of each well after treatment (hereafter called a sampling
point). The system shall take one sample at the same sampling point unless
conditions make another sampling point more representative of each source or
treatment plant.
(B) Surface water
systems shall take a minimum of one sample at every entry point to the
distribution system after any application of treatment or in the distribution
system at a point which is representative of each source after treatment
(hereafter called a sampling point). The system shall take each sample at the
same sampling point unless conditions make another sampling point more
representative of each source or treatment plant. For purposes of this
paragraph, surface water systems include systems with a combination of surface
and ground sources.
(C) If a system
draws water from more than one source and the sources are combined before
distribution, the system must sample at an entry point to the distribution
system during periods of normal operating conditions (i.e., when water is
representative of all sources being used).
(D) The Director may reduce the total number
of samples which must be analyzed by allowing the use of compositing.
Compositing of samples must be done by certified laboratory personnel.
Composite samples from a maximum of five samples are allowed, provided that if
the lead concentration in the composite sample is greater than or equal to
0.001 mg/L or the copper concentration is greater than or equal to 0.160 mg/L,
then either:
(I) A follow up sample shall be
taken and analyzed within 14 days at each sampling point included in the
composite; or
(II) If duplicates of
or sufficient quantities from the original samples from each sampling point
used in the composite are available, the system may use these instead of
resampling.
(ii) Where the results of sampling indicate
an exceedance of maximum permissible source water levels established under
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D), the Director may require that one additional sample be
collected as soon as possible after the initial sample was taken (but not to
exceed two weeks) at the same sampling point. If a confirmation sample is taken
for lead or copper, then the results of the initial and confirmation sample
shall be averaged in determining compliance with the specified maximum
permissible levels. Any sample value below the detection limit shall be
considered to be zero. Any value above the detection limit but below the PQL
shall either be considered as the measured value or be considered one-half the
PQL.
(b) Monitoring
frequency after system exceeds tap water action level.
Any system which exceeds the lead or copper action level at
the tap shall collect one source water sample from each entry point to the
distribution system no later than six months after the end of the monitoring
period during which the lead or copper action level was exceeded. For
monitoring periods that are annual or less frequent, the end of the monitoring
period is September 30 of the calendar year in which the sampling occurs, or if
the Director has established an alternate monitoring period, the last day of
that period.
(c) Monitoring
frequency after installation of source water treatment.
Any system which installs source water treatment pursuant to
R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)(C) shall collect an additional source water sample from
each entry point to the distribution system during two consecutive six-month
monitoring periods by the deadline specified in R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)(D).
(d) Monitoring frequency after
Director specifies maximum permissible source water levels or determines that
source water treatment is not needed
(i) A
system shall monitor at the frequency specified below in cases where the
Director specifies maximum permissible source water levels under
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D) or determines that the system is not required to
install source water treatment under R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B).
(A) A water system using only groundwater
shall collect samples once during the three-year compliance period in effect
when the applicable determination under R309-210-6(6)(d)(i) is made. Such
systems shall collect samples once during each subsequent compliance period.
Triennial samples shall be collected every third calendar year.
(B) A water system using surface water (or a
combination of surface and ground water) shall collect samples once during each
calendar year, the first annual monitoring period to begin during the year in
which the applicable Director determination is made under paragraph (d)(i) of
this section.
(ii) A
system is not required to conduct source water sampling for lead and/or copper
if the system meets the action level for the specific contaminant in tap water
samples during the entire source water sampling period applicable to the system
under R309-210-6(6)(d)(i)(A) or (B).
(e) Reduced monitoring frequency
(i) A water system using only ground water
may reduce the monitoring frequency for lead and copper in source water to once
during each nine-year compliance cycle (as that term is defined in
R309-110-4) provided
that the samples are collected no later than every ninth calendar year and if
the system meets one of the following criteria:
(A) The system demonstrates that finished
drinking water entering the distribution system has been maintained below the
maximum permissible lead and copper concentrations specified by the Director in
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D) during at least three consecutive compliance periods
under paragraph (d)(i) of this section; or
(B) The Director has determined that source
water treatment is not needed and the system demonstrates that, during at least
three consecutive compliance periods in which sampling was conducted under
paragraph (d)(i) of this section, the concentration of lead in source water was
less than or equal to 0.005 mg/L and the concentration of copper in source
water was less than or equal to 0.65 mg/L.
(ii) A water system using surface water (or a
combination of surface water and ground water) may reduce the monitoring
frequency in paragraph (d)(i) of this section to once during each nine-year
compliance cycle (as that term is defined in
R309-110-4) provided
that the samples are collected no later than every ninth calendar year and if
the system meets one of the following criteria:
(A) The system demonstrates that finished
drinking water entering the distribution system has been maintained below the
maximum permissible lead and copper concentrations specified by the Director in
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(D) for at least three consecutive years; or
(B) The Director has determined that source
water treatment is not needed and the system demonstrates that, during at least
three consecutive years, the concentration of lead in source water was less
than or equal to 0.005 mg/L and the concentration of copper in source water was
less than or equal to 0.65 mg/L.
(iii) A water system that uses a new source
of water is not eligible for reduced monitoring for lead and/or copper until
concentrations in samples collected from the new source during three
consecutive monitoring periods are below the maximum permissible lead and
copper concentrations specified by the Director in
R309-210-6(4)(b)(i)(E).
(iv) The
Director has the authority to allow the use of previously collected monitoring
data for purposes of monitoring, if the data were collected in accordance with
this section and analyzed in accordance with R309-104-8.
(7) Public education and
supplemental monitoring requirements.
All water systems must deliver a consumer notice of lead tap
water monitoring results to persons served by the water system at sites that
are tested, as specified in paragraph (d) of this section. A water system that
exceeds the lead action level based on tap water samples collected in
accordance with R309-210-6(3) shall deliver the public education materials
contained in paragraph (a) of this section in accordance with the requirements
in paragraph (b) of this section. Water systems that exceed the lead action
level must sample the tap water of any customer who requests it in accordance
with paragraph (c) of this section.
(a) Content of written public education
materials.
(i) Community water systems and
Non-transient non-community water systems. Water systems must include the
following elements in printed materials (e.g., brochures and pamphlets) in the
same order as listed below. In addition, paragraphs (a)(i)(A) through (B) and
(a)(i)(F) must be included in the materials, exactly as written, except for the
text in brackets in these paragraphs for which the water system must include
system-specific information. Any additional information presented by a water
system must be consistent with the information below and be in plain language
that can be understood by the general public. Water systems must submit all
written public education materials to the Director prior to delivery. The
Director may require the system to obtain approval of the content of written
public materials prior to delivery.
(A)
IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT LEAD IN YOUR DRINKING WATER. (INSERT NAME OF WATER
SYSTEM) found elevated levels of lead in drinking water in some
homes/buildings. Lead can cause serious health problems, especially for
pregnant women and young children. Please read this information closely to see
what you can do to reduce lead in your drinking water.
(B) Health effects of lead. Lead can cause
serious health problems if too much enters your body from drinking water or
other sources. It can cause damage to the brain and kidneys, and can interfere
with the production of red blood cells that carry oxygen to all parts of your
body. The greatest risk of lead exposure is to infants, young children, and
pregnant women. Scientists have linked the effects of lead on the brain with
lowered IQ in children. Adults with kidney problems and high blood pressure can
be affected by low levels of lead more than healthy adults. Lead is stored in
the bones, and it can be released later in life. During pregnancy, the child
receives lead from the mother's bones, which may affect brain
development.
(C) Sources of Lead.
(I) Explain what lead is.
(II) Explain possible sources of lead in
drinking water and how lead enters drinking water. Include information on
home/building plumbing materials and service lines that may contain
lead.
(III) Discuss other important
sources of lead exposure in addition to drinking water (e.g., paint).
(D) Discuss the steps the consumer
can take to reduce their exposure to lead in drinking water.
(I) Encourage running the water to flush out
the lead.
(II) Explain concerns
with using hot water from the tap and specifically caution against the use of
hot water for preparing baby formula.
(III) Explain that boiling water does not
reduce lead levels.
(IV) Discuss
other options consumers can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water,
such as alternative sources or treatment of water.
(V) Suggest that parents have their child's
blood tested for lead.
(E) Explain why there are elevated levels of
lead in the system's drinking water (if known) and what the water system is
doing to reduce the lead levels in homes/buildings in this area.
(F) For more information, call us at (INSERT
YOUR NUMBER) ((IF APPLICABLE), or visit our Web site at (INSERT YOUR WEB SITE
HERE)). For more information on reducing lead exposure around your
home/building and the health effects of lead, visit EPA's Web site at "
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/leaving.cgi?from=leavingFR.html&log=linklog&to=http://www.epa.gov/lead"
or contact your health care provider.
(ii) Community water systems. In addition to
including the elements specified in paragraph (a)(i) of this section, community
water systems must:
(A) Tell consumers how to
get their water tested.
(B) Discuss
lead in plumbing components and the difference between low lead and lead
free.
(b)
Delivery of public education materials.
(i)
For public water systems serving a large proportion of non-English speaking
consumers, as determined by the Director, the public education materials must
contain information in the appropriate language(s) regarding the importance of
the notice or contain a telephone number or address where persons served may
contact the water system to obtain a translated copy of the public education
materials or to request assistance in the appropriate language.
(ii) A community water system that exceeds
the lead action level on the basis of tap water samples collected in accordance
with R309-210-6(3), and that is not already conducting public education tasks
under this section, must conduct the public education tasks under this section
within 60 days after the end of the monitoring period in which the exceedance
occurred:
(A) Deliver printed materials
meeting the content requirements of paragraph (a) of this section to all bill
paying customers.
(B)
(I) Contact customers who are most at risk by
delivering education materials that meet the content requirements of paragraph
(a) of this section to local public health agencies even if they are not
located within the water system's service area, along with an informational
notice that encourages distribution to all the organization's potentially
affected customers or community water system's users. The water system must
contact the local public health agencies directly by phone or in person. The
local public health agencies may provide a specific list of additional
community based organizations serving target populations, which may include
organizations outside the service area of the water system. If such lists are
provided, systems must deliver education materials that meet the content
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section to all organizations on the
provided lists.
(II) Contact
customers who are most at risk by delivering materials that meet the content
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section to the following organizations
listed in aa through ff that are located within the water system's service
area, along with an informational notice that encourages distribution to all
the organization's potentially affected customers or community water system's
users:
(aa) Public and private schools or
school boards.
(bb) Women Infants
and Children (WIC) and Head Start programs.
(cc) Public and private hospitals and medical
clinics.
(dd)
Pediatricians.
(ee) Family planning
clinics.
(ff) Local welfare
agencies.
(III) Make a
good faith effort to locate the following organizations within the service area
and deliver materials that meet the content requirements of paragraph (a) of
this section to them, along with an informational notice that encourages
distribution to all potentially affected customers or users. The good faith
effort to contact at- risk customers may include requesting a specific contact
list of these organizations from the local public health agencies, even if the
agencies are not located within the water system's service area:
(aa) Licensed childcare centers.
(bb) Public and private preschools.
(cc) Obstetricians-Gynecologists and
Midwives.
(C)
No less often than quarterly, provide information on or in each water bill as
long as the system exceeds the action level for lead. The message on the water
bill must include the following statement exactly as written except for the
text in brackets for which the water system must include system-specific
information: (INSERT NAME OF WATER SYSTEM) found high levels of lead in
drinking water in some homes. Lead can cause serious health problems. For more
information please call (INSERT NAME OF WATER SYSTEM) (or visit (INSERT YOUR
WEB SITE HERE)). The message or delivery mechanism can be modified in
consultation with the Director; specifically, the Director may allow a separate
mailing of public education materials to customers if the water system cannot
place the information on water bills.
(D) Post material meeting the content
requirements of paragraph (a) of this section on the water system's Web site if
the system serves a population greater than 100,000.
(E) Submit a press release to newspaper,
television and radio stations.
(F)
In addition to paragraphs (b)(ii)(A) through (E) of this section, systems must
implement at least three activities from one or more categories listed below.
The educational content and selection of these activities must be determined in
consultation with the Director.
(I) Public
Service Announcements.
(II) Paid
advertisements.
(III) Public Area
Information Displays.
(IV) Emails
to customers.
(V) Public
Meetings.
(VI) Household
Deliveries.
(VII) Targeted
Individual Customer Contact.
(VIII)
Direct material distribution to all multi-family homes and
institutions.
(VIIII) Other methods
approved by the Director.
(G) For systems that are required to conduct
monitoring annually or less frequently, the end of the monitoring period is
September 30 of the calendar year in which the sampling occurs, or, if the
Director has established an alternate monitoring period, the last day of that
period.
(iii) As long as
a community water system exceeds the action level, it must repeat the
activities pursuant to paragraph (b)(ii) of this section as described in
paragraphs (b)(iii)(A) through (D) of this section.
(A) A community water system shall repeat the
tasks contained in paragraphs (b)(ii)(A), (B) and (F) of this section every 12
months.
(B) A community water
system shall repeat tasks contained in paragraph (b)(ii)(C) of this section
with each billing cycle.
(C) A
community water system serving a population greater than 100,000 shall post and
retain material on a publicly accessible Web site pursuant to paragraph
(b)(ii)(D) of this section.
(D) The
community water system shall repeat the task in paragraph (b)(ii)(E) of this
section twice every 12 months on a schedule agreed upon with the Director. The
Director can allow activities in paragraph (b)(ii) of this section to extend
beyond the 60-day requirement if needed for implementation purposes on a
case-by-case basis; however, this extension must be approved in writing by the
Director in advance of the 60-day deadline.
(iv) Within 60 days after the end of the
monitoring period in which the exceedance occurred (unless it already is
repeating public education tasks pursuant to paragraph (b)(v) of this section),
a non-transient non-community water system shall deliver the public education
materials specified by paragraph (a) of this section as follows:
(A) Post informational posters on lead in
drinking water in a public place or common area in each of the buildings served
by the system; and
(B) Distribute
informational pamphlets and/or brochures on lead in drinking water to each
person served by the non-transient non-community water system. The Director may
allow the system to utilize electronic transmission in lieu of or combined with
printed materials as long as it achieves at least the same coverage.
(C) For systems that are required to conduct
monitoring annually or less frequently, the end of the monitoring period is
September 30 of the calendar year in which the sampling occurs, or, if the
Director has established an alternate monitoring period, the last day of that
period.
(v) A
non-transient non-community water system shall repeat the tasks contained in
paragraph (b)(iv) of this section at least once during each calendar year in
which the system exceeds the lead action level. The Director can allow
activities in (b)(iv) of this section to extend beyond the 60-day requirement
if needed for implementation purposes on a case-by-case basis; however, this
extension must be approved in writing by the Director in advance of the 60- day
deadline.
(vi) A water system may
discontinue delivery of public education materials if the system has met the
lead action level during the most recent six-month monitoring period conducted
pursuant to R309-210-6(3). Such a system shall recommence public education in
accordance with this section if it subsequently exceeds the lead action level
during any monitoring period.
(vii)
A community water system may apply to the Director, in writing, (unless the
Director has waived the requirement for prior Director approval) to use only
the text specified in paragraph (a)(i) of this section in lieu of the text in
paragraphs (a)(i) and (a)(ii) of this section and to perform the tasks listed
in paragraphs (b)(iv) and (b)(v) of this section in lieu of the tasks in
paragraphs (b)(ii) and (b)(iii) of this section if:
(A) The system is a facility, such as a
prison or a hospital, where the population served is not capable of or is
prevented from making improvements to plumbing or installing point of use
treatment devices; and
(B) The
system provides water as part of the cost of services provided and does not
separately charge for water consumption.
(viii) A community water system serving 3,300
or fewer people may limit certain aspects of their public education programs as
follows:
(A) With respect to the requirements
of paragraph (b)(ii)(F) of this section, a system serving 3,300 or fewer must
implement at least one of the activities listed in that paragraph.
(B) With respect to the requirements of
paragraph (b)(ii)(B) of this section, a system serving 3,300 or fewer people
may limit the distribution of the public education materials required under
that paragraph to facilities and organizations served by the system that are
most likely to be visited regularly by pregnant women and children.
(C) With respect to the requirements of
paragraph (b)(ii)(E) of this section, the Director may waive this requirement
for systems serving 3,300 or fewer persons as long as system distributes
notices to every household served by the system.
(c) Supplemental monitoring and
notification of results. A water system that fails to meet the lead action
level on the basis of tap samples collected in accordance with R309-210-6(3)
shall offer to sample the tap water of any customer who requests it. The system
is not required to pay for collecting or analyzing the sample, nor is the
system required to collect and analyze the sample itself.
(d) Notification of results.
(i) Reporting requirement. All water systems
must provide a notice of the individual tap results from lead tap water
monitoring carried out under the requirements of R309-210-6(3) to the persons
served by the water system at the specific sampling site from which the sample
was taken (e.g., the occupants of the residence where the tap was
tested).
(ii) Timing of
notification. A water system must provide the consumer notice as soon as
practical, but no later than 30 days after the system learns of the tap
monitoring results.
(iii) Content.
The consumer notice must include the results of lead tap water monitoring for
the tap that was tested, an explanation of the health effects of lead, list
steps consumers can take to reduce exposure to lead in drinking water and
contact information for the water utility. The notice must also provide the
maximum contaminant level goal and the action level for lead and the
definitions for these two terms from
R309-225-5(3).
(iv) Delivery. The consumer notice must be
provided to persons served at the tap that was tested, either by mail or by
another method approved by the Director. For example, upon approval by the
Director, a non-transient non-community water system could post the results on
a bulletin board in the facility to allow users to review the information. The
system must provide the notice to customers at sample taps tested, including
consumers who do not receive water bills.
(8) Reporting requirements.
All water systems shall report all of the following
information to the Director in accordance with this section.
(a) Reporting requirements for tap water
monitoring for lead and copper and for water quality parameter monitoring
(i) Except as provided in paragraph (a)(i)(H)
of this section, a water system shall report the information specified below
for all tap water samples specified in R309-210-6(3) and for all water quality
parameter samples specified in R309-210-6(5) within the first 10 days following
the end of each applicable monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(3) and (5)
(i.e., every six months, annually, every 3 years, or every 9 years). For
monitoring periods with a duration less than six months, the end of the
monitoring period is the last date samples can be collected during that period
as specified in R309-210-6(3) and R309-210-6(5).
(A) the results of all tap samples for lead
and copper including the location of each site and the criteria under
R309-210-6(3)(a)(iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and (vii) under which the site was
selected for the system's sampling pool;
(B) Documentation for each tap water lead or
copper sample for which the water system request invalidation pursuant to
R309-210-6(3)(f)(ii);
(D) the 90th
percentile lead and copper concentrations measured from among all lead and
copper tap water samples collected during each monitoring period, (calculated
in accordance with
R309-200-5(2)(c))unless the Director calculates the system's 90th percentile lead and copper
levels under paragraph (h) of this section;
(E) with the exception of initial tap
sampling conducted pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(d)(i), the system shall designate
any site which was not sampled during previous monitoring periods, and include
an explanation of why sampling sites have changed;
(F) the results of all tap samples for pH,
and where applicable, alkalinity, calcium, conductivity, temperature, and
orthophosphate or silica collected under R309-210-6(5)(b) through
(e);
(G) the results of all samples
collected at the entry point(s) to the distribution system for applicable water
quality parameters under R309-210-6(5)(b) through (e).
(H) A water system shall report the results
of all water quality parameter samples collected under R309-210-6(5)(c) through
(f) during each six month monitoring period specified in R309-210-6(5)(d)
within the first 10 days following the end of the monitoring period unless the
Director has specified a more frequent reporting requirement.
(ii) For a non-transient
non-community water system, or a community water system meeting the criteria of
R309-210-6(7)(b)(vii), that does not have enough taps that can provide first
draw samples, the system must identify, in writing, each site that did not meet
the six hour minimum standing time and the length of standing time for that
particular substitute sample collected pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(b)(v) and
include this information with the lead and copper tap sample results required
to be submitted pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)(A) of this section. The Director
has waived prior Director approval of non-first-draw samples sites selected by
the system pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(b)(v).
(iii) At a time specified by the Director, or
if no specific time is designated by the Director, then as early as possible
prior to the addition of a new source or any long-term change in water
treatment, a water system deemed to have optimized corrosion control under
R309-210-6(2)(b)(iii), a water system subject to reduced monitoring pursuant to
R309-210-6(3)(d)(iv), or a water system subject to a monitoring waiver pursuant
to R309-210-6(3)(g), shall submit written documentation to the Director
describing the change or addition. The Director must review and approve the
addition of a new source or long-term change in treatment before it is
implemented by the water system. Examples of long-term treatment changes
include the addition of a new treatment process or modification of an existing
treatment process. Examples of modifications include switching secondary
disinfectants, switching coagulants (e.g., alum to ferric chloride), and
switching corrosion inhibitor products (e.g., orthophosphate to blended
phosphate). Long-term changes can include dose changes to existing chemicals if
the system is planning long-term changes to its finished water pH or residual
inhibitor concentration. Long-term treatment changes would not include chemical
dose fluctuations associated with daily raw water quality changes.
(iv) Any small system applying for a
monitoring waiver under R309-210-6(3)(g), or subject to a waiver granted
pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(g)(iii), shall provide the following information to
the Director in writing by the specified deadline:
(A) By the start of the first applicable
monitoring period in R309-210-6(3), any small system applying for a monitoring
waiver shall provide the documentation required to demonstrate that it meets
the waiver criteria of R309-210-6(3)(g)(i) and (ii).
(B) No later than nine years after the
monitoring previously conducted pursuant to R309-210-6(3)(g)(ii) or (g)(iv)(A),
each small system desiring to maintain its monitoring waiver shall provide the
information required by R309-210-6(3)(g)(iv)(A) and (B).
(C) No later than 60 days after it becomes
aware that it is no longer free of lead-containing or copper containing
material, as appropriate, each small system with a monitoring waiver shall
provide written notification to the Director, setting forth the circumstances
resulting in the lead containing or copper containing materials being
introduced into the system and what corrective action, if any, the system plans
to remove these materials
(D) By
October 10, 2000, any small system with a waiver granted prior to April 11,
2000 and that has not previously met the requirements of R309-210-6(3)(g)(ii)
shall provide the information required by that paragraph.
(v) Each ground water system that limits
water quality parameter monitoring to a subset of entry points under
R309-210-6(5)(c)(iii) shall provide, by the commencement of such monitoring,
written correspondence to the Director that identifies the selected entry
points and includes information sufficient to demonstrate that the sites are
representative of water quality and treatment conditions throughout the
system.
(b) Source water
monitoring reporting requirements
(i) A water
system shall report the sampling results for all source water samples collected
in accordance with R309-210-6(6) within the first 10 days following the end of
each source water monitoring period (i.e., annually, per compliance period, per
compliance cycle) specified in R309-210-6(6).
(ii) With the exception of the first round of
source water sampling conducted pursuant to R309-210-6(6)(b), the system shall
specify any site which was not sampled during previous monitoring periods, and
include an explanation of why the sampling point has changed.
(c) Corrosion control treatment
reporting requirements
By the applicable dates under R309-210-6(2), systems shall
report the following information:
(i)
for systems demonstrating that they have already optimized corrosion control,
information required in R309-210-6(2)(b)(ii) or
R309-210-6(2)(b)(iii).
(ii) for
systems required to optimize corrosion control, their recommendation regarding
optimal corrosion control treatment under R309-210-6(4)(a)(i).
(iii) for systems required to evaluate the
effectiveness of corrosion control treatments under R309-210-6(4)(a)(iii), the
information required by that paragraph.
(iv) for systems required to install optimal
corrosion control designated by the Director under R309-210-6(4)(a)(iv), a
letter certifying that the system has completed installing that
treatment.
(d) Source
water treatment reporting requirements
By the applicable dates in R309-210-6(4)(b), systems shall
provide the following information to the Director :
(i) if required under
R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(A), their recommendation regarding source water
treatment;
(ii) for systems
required to install source water treatment under R309-210-6(4)(b)(ii)(B), a
letter certifying that the system has completed installing the treatment
designated by the Director within 24 months after the Director designated the
treatment.
(e) Lead
service line replacement reporting requirements
Systems shall report the following information to the
Director to demonstrate compliance with the requirements of
R309-210-6(4)(c):
(i) No later than 12
months after the end of a monitoring period in which a system exceeds the lead
action level in sampling referred to in R309-210-6(4)(c)(i), the system must
submit written documentation to the Director of the material evaluation
conducted as required in R309-210-6(3)(a), identify the initial number of lead
service lines in its distribution system at the time the system exceeds the
lead action level, and provide the system's schedule for annually replacing at
least 7 percent of the initial number of lead service lines in its distribution
system.
(ii) No later than 12
months after the end of a monitoring period in which a system exceeds the lead
action level in sampling referred to in R309-210-6(4)(c)(i), and every 12
months thereafter, the system shall demonstrate to the Director in writing that
the system has either:
(A) replaced in the
previous 12 months at least 7 percent of the initial lead service lines (or a
greater number of lines specified by the Director under R309-210-6(4)(c)(v))
in its distribution system, or
(B)
conducted sampling which demonstrates that the lead concentration in all
service line samples from an individual line(s), taken pursuant to
R309-210-6(3)(b)(iii), is less than or equal to 0.015 mg/L. In such cases, the
total number of lines replaced and/or which meet the criteria in
R309-210-6(4)(c)(iii) shall equal at least 7 percent of the initial number of
lead lines identified under paragraph (e)(i) of this section (or the percentage
specified by the Director under R309-210-6(4)(c)(v)).
(iii) The annual letter submitted to the
Director under R309-210-6(8)(e)(ii) shall contain the following information:
(A) the number of lead service lines
scheduled to be replaced during the previous year of the system's replacement
schedule;
(B) the number and
location of each lead service line replaced during the previous year of the
system's replacement schedule;
(C)
if measured, the water lead concentration and location of each lead service
line sampled, the sampling method, and the date of sampling.
(iv) Systems shall also report any
additional information as specified by the Director, and in a time and manner
prescribed by the Director, to verify that all partial lead service line
replacement activities have taken place.
(f) Public education program reporting
requirements
(i) Any water system that is
subject to the public education requirements in R309-210-6(7) shall, within ten
days after the end of each period in which the system is required to perform
public education in accordance with R309-210-6(7)(b), send written
documentation to the Director that contains:
(A) A demonstration that the system has
delivered the public education materials that meet the content requirements in
R309-210-6(7)(a) and the delivery requirements in R309-210-6(7)(b);
and
(B) A list of all the
newspapers, radio stations, television stations, and facilities and
organizations to which the system delivered public education materials during
the period in which the system was required to perform public education
tasks.
(ii) Unless
required by the Director, a system that previously has submitted the
information required by paragraph (f)(i)(B) of this section, as long as there
have been no changes in the distribution list and the system certifies that the
public education materials were distributed to the same list submitted
previously.
(iii) No later than 3
months following the end of the monitoring period, each system must mail a
sample copy of the consumer notification of tap results to the Director along
with a certification that the notification has been distributed in a manner
consistent with the requirements of R309-210-6(7)(d).
(g) Reporting of additional monitoring data
Any system which collects sampling data in addition to that
required by this subpart shall report the results to the Director within the
first ten day following the end of the applicable monitoring period under
R309-210-6(3), R309-210-6(5) and R309-210-6(6) during which the samples are
collected.
(h) Reporting of
90th percentile lead and copper concentrations where the Director calculates a
system's 90th percentile concentrations. A water system is not required to
report the 90th percentile lead and copper concentrations measured from among
all lead and copper tap water samples during each monitoring period, as
required by paragraph (a)(i)(D) of this section if:
(i) The Director has previously notified the
water system that it will calculate the water system's 90th percentile lead and
copper concentrations, based on the lead and copper tap results submitted
pursuant to paragraph (h)(ii)(A) of this section, and has specified a date
before the end of the applicable monitoring period by which the system must
provide the results of lead and copper tap water samples;
(ii) The system has provided the following
information to the Director by the date specified in paragraph (h)(i) of this
section:
(A) The results of all tap samples
for lead and copper including the location of each site and the criteria under
R309-210-6(3)(a)(iii), (iv), (v), (vi), and/or (vii) under which the site was
selected for the system's sampling pool, pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)(A) of
this section; and
(B) An
identification of sampling sites utilized during the current monitoring period
that were not sampled during previous monitoring periods, and an explanation
why sampling sites have changed; and
(iii) The Director has provided the results
of the 90th percentile lead and copper calculations, in writing, to the water
system before the end of the monitoring period.