Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
A. Duty to
apply. The following shall submit a complete application to the department in
accordance with this section. The requirements for concentrated animal feeding
operations are described in subdivisions C 1 and 2 of
9VAC25-31-130.
1. Any person who discharges or proposes to
discharge pollutants; and
2. Any
person who owns or operates a sludge-only facility whose biosolids use or
sewage sludge disposal practice is regulated by
9VAC25-31-420 through
9VAC25-31-720 and who does not have
an effective permit.
B.
Exceptions. The following are not required to submit a complete application to
the department in accordance with this section unless the department requires
otherwise:
1. Persons covered by general
permits;
2. Persons excluded from
the requirement for a permit by this chapter; or
3. A user of a privately owned treatment
works.
C. Who applies.
1. The owner of the facility or
operation.
2. When a facility or
activity is owned by one person but is operated by another person, it is the
operator's duty to obtain a permit.
3. Notwithstanding the requirements of
subdivision 2 of this subsection, biosolids land application by the operator
may be authorized by the owner's permit.
D. Time to apply.
1. Any person proposing a new discharge shall
submit an application at least 180 days before the date on which the discharge
is to commence, unless permission for a later date has been granted by the
department. Facilities proposing a new discharge of stormwater associated with
industrial activity shall submit an application 180 days before that facility
commences industrial activity that may result in a discharge of stormwater
associated with that industrial activity. Different submittal dates may be
required under the terms of applicable general permits. Persons proposing a new
discharge are encouraged to submit their applications well in advance of the
180-day requirement to avoid delay. New discharges composed entirely of
stormwater, other than those dischargers identified in
9VAC25-31-120 A 1, shall apply for
and obtain a permit according to the application requirements in
9VAC25-31-120 B.
2. All TWTDS whose biosolids use or sewage
sludge disposal practices are regulated by
9VAC25-31-420 through
9VAC25-31-720 must submit permit
applications according to the applicable schedule in subdivision 2 a or b of
this subsection.
a. A TWTDS with a currently
effective VPDES permit must submit a permit application at the time of its next
VPDES permit renewal application. Such information must be submitted in
accordance with subsection D of this section.
b. Any other TWTDS not addressed under
subdivision 2 a of this subsection must submit the information listed in
subdivisions 2 b (1) through (5) of this subsection to the department within
one year after publication of a standard applicable to its biosolids use or
sewage sludge disposal practice or practices, using a form provided by the
department. The department will determine when such TWTDS must submit a full
permit application.
(1) The TWTDS's name,
mailing address, location, and status as federal, state, private, public, or
other entity;
(2) The applicant's
name, address, telephone number, email address, and ownership status;
(3) A description of the biosolids use or
sewage sludge disposal practices. Unless the biosolids meets the requirements
of subdivision Q 9 d of this section, the description must include the name and
address of any facility where biosolids or sewage sludge is sent for treatment
or disposal and the location of any land application sites;
(4) Annual amount of sewage sludge generated,
treated, used or disposed (estimated dry weight basis); and
(5) The most recent data the TWTDS may have
on the quality of the biosolids or sewage sludge.
c. Notwithstanding subdivision 2 a or b of
this subsection, the department may require permit applications from any TWTDS
at any time if the department determines that a permit is necessary to protect
public health and the environment from any potential adverse effects that may
occur from toxic pollutants in sewage sludge.
d. Any TWTDS that commences operations after
promulgation of an applicable standard for biosolids use or sewage sludge
disposal shall submit an application to the department at least 180 days prior
to the date proposed for commencing operations.
E. Duty to reapply. All permittees with a
currently effective permit shall submit a new application at least 180 days
before the expiration date of the existing permit, unless permission for a
later date has been granted by the department. The department shall not grant
permission for applications to be submitted later than the expiration date of
the existing permit.
F.
Completeness.
1. The department shall not
issue a permit before receiving a complete application for a permit except for
VPDES general permits. An application for a permit is complete when the
department receives an application form and any supplemental information which
are completed to its satisfaction. The completeness of any application for a
permit shall be judged independently of the status of any other permit
application or permit for the same facility or activity.
2. No application for a VPDES permit to
discharge sewage into or adjacent to state waters from a privately owned
treatment works serving, or designed to serve, 50 or more residences shall be
considered complete unless the applicant has provided the department with
notification from the State Corporation Commission that the applicant is
incorporated in the Commonwealth and is in compliance with all regulations and
relevant orders of the State Corporation Commission.
3. No application for a new individual VPDES
permit authorizing a new discharge of sewage, industrial wastes, or other
wastes shall be considered complete unless it contains notification from the
county, city, or town in which the discharge is to take place that the location
and operation of the discharging facility are consistent with applicable
ordinances adopted pursuant to Chapter 22 (§
15.2-2200 et seq.) of Title 15.2
of the Code of Virginia. The county, city, or town shall inform in writing the
applicant and the department of the discharging facility's compliance or
noncompliance not more than 30 days from receipt by the chief administrative
officer, or his agent, of a request from the applicant. Should the county,
city, or town fail to provide such written notification within 30 days, the
requirement for such notification is waived. The provisions of this subsection
shall not apply to any discharge for which a valid VPDES permit had been issued
prior to March 10, 2000.
4. A
permit application shall not be considered complete if the department has
waived application requirements under subsection K or Q of this section and EPA
has disapproved the waiver application. If a waiver request has been submitted
to EPA more than 210 days prior to permit expiration and EPA has not
disapproved the waiver application 181 days prior to permit expiration, the
permit application lacking the information subject to the waiver application
shall be considered complete.
5.
Except as specified in subdivision 5 a of this subsection, a permit application
shall not be considered complete unless all required quantitative data are
collected in accordance with sufficiently sensitive analytical methods approved
under 40 CFR Part 136 or required under 40 CFR Chapter I, Subchapter N
(Effluent Guidelines and Standards) or O (Sewage Sludge).
a. For the purposes of this requirement, a
method approved under 40 CFR Part 136 or required under 40 CFR Chapter I,
Subchapter N or O is "sufficiently sensitive" when:
(1) The method minimum level (ML) is at or
below the level of the applicable water quality criterion for the measured
pollutant or pollutant parameter;
(2) The method ML is above the applicable
water quality criterion, but the amount of the pollutant or pollutant parameter
in a facility's discharge is high enough that the method detects and quantifies
the level of the pollutant or pollutant parameter in the discharge;
or
(3) The method has the lowest ML
of the analytical methods approved under 40 CFR Part 136 or required under 40
CFR Chapter I, Subchapter N or O for the measured pollutant or pollutant
parameter.
b. When there
is no analytical method that has been approved under 40 CFR 136, required under
40 CFR Chapter I, Subchapter N or O, and is not otherwise required by the
director, the applicant may use any suitable method but shall provide a
description of the method. When selecting a suitable method, other factors such
as a method's precision, accuracy, or resolution, may be considered when
assessing the performance of the method.
6. In accordance with §
62.1-44.19:3A
of the Code of Virginia, no application for a permit or variance to authorize
the storage of biosolids shall be complete unless it contains certification
from the governing body of the locality in which the biosolids is to be stored
that the storage site is consistent with all applicable ordinances. The
governing body shall confirm or deny consistency within 30 days of receiving a
request for certification. If the governing body does not so respond, the site
shall be deemed consistent.
7. No
application for a permit to land apply biosolids in accordance with Part VI
(9VAC25-31-420 et seq.) of this
chapter shall be complete unless it includes the written consent of the
landowner to apply biosolids on his property.
G. Information requirements. All applicants
for VPDES permits, other than POTWs and other TWTDS, shall provide the
following information to the department, using the application form provided by
the department (additional information required of applicants is set forth in
subsections H through L and Q through R of this section).
1. The activities conducted by the applicant
that require it to obtain a VPDES permit;
2. Name, mailing address, and location of the
facility for which the application is submitted;
3. Up to four SIC and NAICS codes that best
reflect the principal products or services provided by the facility;
4. The operator's name, address, telephone
number, email address, ownership status, and status as federal, state, private,
public, or other entity;
5. Whether
the facility is located on Indian lands;
6. A listing of all permits or construction
approvals received or applied for under any of the following programs:
a. Hazardous Waste Management program under
RCRA (42 USC §
6921);
b. UIC program under SDWA (42 USC §
300h);
c. VPDES program under the CWA and the
law;
d. Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) program under the Clean Air Act (42 USC §
4701 et
seq.);
e. Nonattainment program
under the Clean Air Act (42
USC §
4701 et seq.);
f. National Emission Standards for Hazardous
Pollutants (NESHAPS) preconstruction approval under the Clean Air Act
(42 USC §
4701 et seq.);
g. Ocean dumping permits under the Marine
Protection Research and Sanctuaries Act (33 USC § 14 et seq.);
h. Dredge or fill permits under § 404 of
the CWA; and
i. Other relevant
environmental permits, including state permits;
7. A topographic map (or other map if a
topographic map is unavailable) extending one mile beyond the property
boundaries of the source, depicting the facility and each of its intake and
discharge structures; each of its hazardous waste treatment, storage, or
disposal facilities; each well where fluids from the facility are injected
underground; and those wells, springs, other surface water bodies, and drinking
water wells listed in public records or otherwise known to the applicant in the
map area;
8. A brief description of
the nature of the business;
9. An
indication of whether the facility uses cooling water and the source of the
cooling water; and
10. An
indication of whether the facility is requesting any of the variances in
subsection M of this section, if known at the time of application.
H. Application requirements for
existing manufacturing, commercial, mining, and silvicultural dischargers.
Existing manufacturing, commercial mining, and silvicultural dischargers
applying for VPDES permits, except for those facilities subject to the
requirements of subsection I of this section, shall provide the following
information to the department, using application forms provided by the
department.
1. The latitude and longitude of
each outfall to the nearest 15 seconds and the name of the receiving
water.
2. A line drawing of the
water flow through the facility with a water balance, showing operations
contributing wastewater to the effluent and treatment units. Similar processes,
operations, or production areas may be indicated as a single unit, labeled to
correspond to the more detailed identification under subdivision 3 of this
subsection. The water balance must show approximate average flows at intake and
discharge points and between units, including treatment units. If a water
balance cannot be determined (for example, for certain mining activities), the
applicant may provide instead a pictorial description of the nature and amount
of any sources of water and any collection and treatment measures.
3. A narrative identification of each type of
process, operation, or production area that contributes wastewater to the
effluent for each outfall, including process wastewater, cooling water, and
stormwater run-off; the average flow that each process contributes; and a
description of the treatment the wastewater receives, including the ultimate
disposal of any solid or fluid wastes other than by discharge. Processes,
operations, or production areas may be described in general terms (for example,
dye-making reactor, distillation tower). For a privately owned treatment works,
this information shall include the identity of each user of the treatment
works. The average flow of point sources composed of stormwater may be
estimated. The basis for the rainfall event and the method of estimation must
be indicated.
4. If any of the
discharges described in subdivision 3 of this subsection are intermittent or
seasonal, a description of the frequency, duration and flow rate of each
discharge occurrence (except for stormwater run-off, spillage, or
leaks).
5. If an effluent guideline
promulgated under § 304 of the CWA applies to the applicant and is
expressed in terms of production (or other measure of operation), a reasonable
measure of the applicant's actual production reported in the units used in the
applicable effluent guideline. The reported measure must reflect the actual
production of the facility as required by
9VAC25-31-230 B 2.
6. If the applicant is subject to any present
requirements or compliance schedules for construction, upgrading or operation
of waste treatment equipment, an identification of the abatement requirement, a
description of the abatement project, and a listing of the required and
projected final compliance dates.
7. Information on the discharge of pollutants
specified in this subdivision (except information on stormwater discharges that
is to be provided as specified in
9VAC25-31-120).
a. When quantitative data for a pollutant are
required, the applicant must collect a sample of effluent and analyze it for
the pollutant in accordance with analytical methods approved under 40 CFR Part
136 unless use of another method is required under 40 CFR Subchapter N or O.
When no analytical method is approved, the applicant may use any suitable
method but must provide a description of the method. When an applicant has two
or more outfalls with substantially identical effluents, the department may
allow the applicant to test only one outfall and report that the quantitative
data also apply to the substantially identical outfalls. The requirements in
subdivisions 7 e and f of this subsection that an applicant must provide
quantitative data for certain pollutants known or believed to be present do not
apply to pollutants present in a discharge solely as the result of their
presence in intake water; however, an applicant must report such pollutants as
present. When this subdivision requires analysis of pH, temperature, cyanide,
total phenols, residual chlorine, oil and grease, fecal coliform (including E.
coli) and Enterococci (previously known as fecal streptococcus at
40 CFR
122.26 (d)(2)(iii)(A)(3)),
or volatile organics, grab samples must be collected for those pollutants. For
all other pollutants, a 24-hour composite sample, using a minimum of four grab
samples, must be used unless specified otherwise at 40 CFR 136. However, a
minimum of one grab sample may be taken for effluents from holding ponds or
other impoundments with a retention period greater than 24 hours. In addition,
for discharges other than stormwater discharges, the department may waive
composite sampling for any outfall for which the applicant demonstrates that
the use of an automatic sampler is infeasible and that the minimum of four grab
samples will be a representative sample of the effluent being discharged.
Results of analyses of individual grab samples for any parameter may be
averaged to obtain the daily average. Grab samples that are not required to be
analyzed immediately (see Table II at
40 CFR
136.3 (e)) may be composited
in the laboratory, provided that container, preservation, and holding time
requirements are met (see Table II at
40 CFR
136.3(e)) and that sample
integrity is not compromised by compositing.
b. For stormwater discharges, all samples
shall be collected from the discharge resulting from a storm event that is
greater than 0.1 inch and at least 72 hours from the previously measurable
(greater than 0.1 inch rainfall) storm event. Where feasible, the variance in
the duration of the event and the total rainfall of the event should not exceed
50% from the average or median rainfall event in that area. For all applicants,
a flow-weighted composite shall be taken for either the entire discharge or for
the first three hours of the discharge. The flow-weighted composite sample for
a stormwater discharge may be taken with a continuous sampler or as a
combination of a minimum of three sample aliquots taken in each hour of
discharge for the entire discharge or for the first three hours of the
discharge, with each aliquot being separated by a minimum period of 15 minutes
(applicants submitting permit applications for stormwater discharges under
9VAC25-31-120 C may collect
flow-weighted composite samples using different protocols with respect to the
time duration between the collection of sample aliquots, subject to the
approval of the department). However, a minimum of one grab sample may be taken
for stormwater discharges from holding ponds or other impoundments with a
retention period greater than 24 hours. For a flow-weighted composite sample,
only one analysis of the composite of aliquots is required. For stormwater
discharge samples taken from discharges associated with industrial activities,
quantitative data must be reported for the grab sample taken during the first
30 minutes (or as soon thereafter as practicable) of the discharge for all
pollutants specified in
9VAC25-31-120 B 1. For all
stormwater permit applicants taking flow-weighted composites, quantitative data
must be reported for all pollutants specified in
9VAC25-31-120 except pH,
temperature, cyanide, total phenols, residual chlorine, oil and grease, fecal
coliform, and fecal streptococcus. The department may allow or establish
appropriate site-specific sampling procedures or requirements, including
sampling locations, the season in which the sampling takes place, the minimum
duration between the previous measurable storm event and the storm event
sampled, the minimum or maximum level of precipitation required for an
appropriate storm event, the form of precipitation sampled (snow melt or rain
fall), protocols for collecting samples under 40 CFR Part 136, and additional
time for submitting data on a case-by-case basis. An applicant is expected to
know or have reason to believe that a pollutant is present in an effluent based
on an evaluation of the expected use, production, or storage of the pollutant,
or on any previous analyses for the pollutant. (For example, any pesticide
manufactured by a facility may be expected to be present in contaminated
stormwater run-off from the facility.)
c. Every applicant must report quantitative
data for every outfall for the following pollutants:
(1) Biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD5);
(2)
Chemical oxygen demand;
(3) Total
organic carbon;
(4) Total suspended
solids;
(5) Ammonia (as
N);
(6) Temperature (both winter
and summer); and
(7) pH.
d. The department may waive the
reporting requirements for individual point sources or for a particular
industry category for one or more of the pollutants listed in subdivision 7 c
of this subsection if the applicant has demonstrated that such a waiver is
appropriate because information adequate to support issuance of a permit can be
obtained with less stringent requirements.
e. Each applicant with processes in one or
more primary industry category (see 40 CFR Part 122 Appendix A) contributing to
a discharge must report quantitative data for the following pollutants in each
outfall containing process wastewater, except as indicated in subdivisions 7 e
(3), (4), and (5) of this subsection:
(1) The
organic toxic pollutants in the fractions designated in Table I of 40 CFR Part
122 Appendix D for the applicant's industrial category or categories unless the
applicant qualifies as a small business under subdivision 8 of this subsection.
Table II of 40 CFR Part 122 Appendix D lists the organic toxic pollutants in
each fraction. The fractions result from the sample preparation required by the
analytical procedure that uses gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. A
determination that an applicant falls within a particular industrial category
for the purposes of selecting fractions for testing is not conclusive as to the
applicant's inclusion in that category for any other purposes.
(2) The pollutants listed in Table III of 40
CFR Part 122 Appendix D (the toxic metals, cyanide, and total
phenols).
(3) Subdivision H 7 e (1)
of this section and the corresponding portions of the VPDES Application Form 2C
are suspended as they apply to coal mines.
(4) Subdivision H 7 e (1) of this section and
the corresponding portions of Item V-C of the VPDES Application Form 2C are
suspended as they apply to:
(a) Testing and
reporting for all four organic fractions in the Greige Mills Subcategory of the
Textile Mills industry (subpart C-Low water use processing of 40 CFR Part 410
), and testing and reporting for the pesticide fraction in all other
subcategories of this industrial category.
(b) Testing and reporting for the volatile,
base/neutral, and pesticide fractions in the Base and Precious Metals
Subcategory of the Ore Mining and Dressing industry ( 40 CFR Part 440, Subpart
B) and testing and reporting for all four fractions in all other subcategories
of this industrial category.
(c)
Testing and reporting for all four GC/MS fractions in the Porcelain Enameling
industry.
(5) Subdivision
H 7 e (1) of this section and the corresponding portions of Item V-C of the
VPDES Application Form 2C are suspended as they apply to:
(a) Testing and reporting for the pesticide
fraction in the Tall Oil Rosin Subcategory (subpart D) and Rosin-Based
Derivatives Subcategory (subpart F) of the Gum and Wood Chemicals industry ( 40
CFR Part 454), and testing and reporting for the pesticide and base-neutral
fractions in all other subcategories of this industrial category.
(b) Testing and reporting for the pesticide
fraction in the leather tanning and finishing, paint and ink formulation, and
photographic supplies industrial categories.
(c) Testing and reporting for the acid,
base/neutral, and pesticide fractions in the petroleum refining industrial
category.
(d) Testing and reporting
for the pesticide fraction in the Papergrade Sulfite Subcategories (subparts J
and U) of the Pulp and Paper industry (40 CFR Part 430); testing and reporting
for the base/neutral and pesticide fractions in the following subcategories:
Deink (subpart Q), Dissolving Kraft (subpart F), and Paperboard from Waste
Paper (subpart E); testing and reporting for the volatile, base/neutral, and
pesticide fractions in the following subcategories: BCT Bleached Kraft (subpart
H), Semi-Chemical (subparts B and C), and Nonintegrated-Fine Papers (subpart
R); and testing and reporting for the acid, base/neutral, and pesticide
fractions in the following subcategories: Fine Bleached Kraft (subpart I),
Dissolving Sulfite Pulp (subpart K), Groundwood-Fine Papers (subpart O), Market
Bleached Kraft (subpart G), Tissue from Wastepaper (subpart T), and
Nonintegrated-Tissue Papers (subpart S).
(e) Testing and reporting for the
base/neutral fraction in the Once-Through Cooling Water, Fly Ash and Bottom Ash
Transport Water process waste streams of the Steam Electric Power Plant
industrial category.
f. Each applicant must indicate whether it
knows or has reason to believe that any of the pollutants in Table IV of 40 CFR
Part 122 Appendix D (certain conventional and nonconventional pollutants) is
discharged from each outfall. If an applicable effluent limitations guideline
either directly limits the pollutant or, by its express terms, indirectly
limits the pollutant through limitations on an indicator, the applicant must
report quantitative data. For every pollutant discharged that is not so limited
in an effluent limitations guideline, the applicant must either report
quantitative data or briefly describe the reasons the pollutant is expected to
be discharged.
g. Each applicant
must indicate whether it knows or has reason to believe that any of the
pollutants listed in Table II or Table III of 40 CFR Part 122 Appendix D (the
toxic pollutants and total phenols) for which quantitative data are not
otherwise required under subdivision 7 e of this subsection, is discharged from
each outfall. For every pollutant expected to be discharged in concentrations
of 10 ppb or greater the applicant must report quantitative data. For acrolein,
acrylonitrile, 2,4 dinitrophenol, and 2-methyl-4,6 dinitrophenol, where any of
these four pollutants are expected to be discharged in concentrations of 100
ppb or greater the applicant must report quantitative data. For every pollutant
expected to be discharged in concentrations less than 10 ppb, or in the case of
acrolein, acrylonitrile, 2,4 dinitrophenol, and 2-methyl-4,6 dinitrophenol, in
concentrations less than 100 ppb, the applicant must either submit quantitative
data or briefly describe the reasons the pollutant is expected to be
discharged. An applicant qualifying as a small business under subdivision 8 of
this subsection is not required to analyze for pollutants listed in Table II of
40 CFR Part 122 Appendix D (the organic toxic pollutants).
h. Each applicant must indicate whether it
knows or has reason to believe that any of the pollutants in Table V of 40 CFR
Part 122 Appendix D (certain hazardous substances and asbestos) are discharged
from each outfall. For every pollutant expected to be discharged, the applicant
must briefly describe the reasons the pollutant is expected to be discharged,
and report any quantitative data it has for any pollutant.
i. Each applicant must report qualitative
data, generated using a screening procedure not calibrated with analytical
standards, for 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) if it:
(1) Uses or manufactures
2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy acetic acid (2,4,5,-T); 2-(2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy)
propanoic acid (Silvex, 2,4,5,-TP); 2-(2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy) ethyl,
2,2-dichloropropionate (Erbon); O,O-dimethyl O-(2,4,5-trichlorophenyl)
phosphorothioate (Ronnel); 2,4,5-trichlorophenol (TCP); or hexachlorophene
(HCP); or
(2) Knows or has reason
to believe that TCDD is or may be present in an effluent.
j. Where quantitative data are required in
subdivisions H 7 a through i of this section, existing data may be used, if
available, in lieu of sampling done solely for the purpose of the application,
provided that all data requirements are met; sampling was performed, collected,
and analyzed no more than four and one-half years prior to submission; all data
are representative of the discharge; and all available representative data are
considered in the values reported.
8. An applicant that qualifies as a small
business under one of the following criteria is exempt from the requirements in
subdivision 7 e (1) or 7 f of this subsection to submit quantitative data for
the pollutants listed in Table II of 40 CFR Part 122 Appendix D (the organic
toxic pollutants):
a. For coal mines, a
probable total annual production of less than 100,000 tons per year;
or
b. For all other applicants,
gross total annual sales averaging less than $100,000 per year (in second
quarter 1980 dollars).
9.
A listing of any toxic pollutant that the applicant currently uses or
manufactures as an intermediate or final product or byproduct. The department
may waive or modify this requirement for any applicant if the applicant
demonstrates that it would be unduly burdensome to identify each toxic
pollutant and the department has adequate information to issue the
permit.
10. Reserved.
11. An identification of any biological
toxicity tests that the applicant knows or has reason to believe have been made
within the last three years on any of the applicant's discharges or on a
receiving water in relation to a discharge.
12. If a contract laboratory or consulting
firm performed any of the analyses required by subdivision 7 of this
subsection, the identity of each laboratory or firm and the analyses
performed.
13. In addition to the
information reported on the application form, applicants shall provide to the
department, at its request, such other information, including pertinent plans,
specifications, maps and such other relevant information as may be required, in
scope and details satisfactory to the department, as the department may
reasonably require to assess the discharges of the facility and to determine
whether to issue a VPDES permit. The additional information may include
additional quantitative data and bioassays to assess the relative toxicity of
discharges to aquatic life and requirements to determine the cause of the
toxicity.
I. Application
requirements for manufacturing, commercial, mining and silvicultural facilities
that discharge only nonprocess wastewater. Except for stormwater discharges,
all manufacturing, commercial, mining, and silvicultural dischargers applying
for VPDES permits that discharge only nonprocess wastewater not regulated by an
effluent limitations guideline or new source performance standard shall provide
the following information to the department using application forms provided by
the department:
1. Outfall number, latitude
and longitude to the nearest 15 seconds, and the name of the receiving
water;
2. Date of expected
commencement of discharge;
3. An
identification of the general type of waste discharged, or expected to be
discharged upon commencement of operations, including sanitary wastes,
restaurant or cafeteria wastes, or noncontact cooling water. An identification
of cooling water additives (if any) that are used or expected to be used upon
commencement of operations, along with their composition if existing
composition is available;
4.
a. Quantitative data for the pollutants or
parameters listed below, unless testing is waived by the department. The
quantitative data may be data collected over the past 365 days, if they remain
representative of current operations, and must include maximum daily value,
average daily value, and number of measurements taken. The applicant must
collect and analyze samples in accordance with 40 CFR Part 136. When analysis
of pH, temperature, residual chlorine, oil and grease, or fecal coliform
(including E. coli), and Enterococci (previously known as fecal streptococcus)
and volatile organics is required in subdivisions I 4 a (1) through (11) of
this section, grab samples must be collected for those pollutants. For all
other pollutants, a 24-hour composite sample, using a minimum of four grab
samples, must be used unless specified otherwise at 40 CFR Part 136. For a
composite sample, only one analysis of the composite of aliquots is required.
New dischargers must include estimates for the pollutants or parameters listed
below instead of actual sampling data, along with the source of each estimate.
All levels must be reported or estimated as concentration and as total mass,
except for flow, pH, and temperature.
(1)
Biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5).
(2) Total suspended solids (TSS).
(3) Fecal coliform (if believed present or if
sanitary waste is or will be discharged).
(4) Total residual chlorine (if chlorine is
used).
(5) Oil and
grease.
(6) Chemical oxygen demand
(COD) (if noncontact cooling water is or will be discharged).
(7) Total organic carbon (TOC) (if noncontact
cooling water is or will be discharged).
(8) Ammonia (as N).
(9) Discharge flow.
(10) pH.
(11) Temperature (winter and
summer).
b. The
department may waive the testing and reporting requirements for any of the
pollutants or flow listed in subdivision 4 a of this subsection if the
applicant submits a request for such a waiver before or with his application
that demonstrates that information adequate to support issuance of a permit can
be obtained through less stringent requirements.
c. If the applicant is a new discharger, he
must submit the information required in subdivision 4 a of this subsection by
providing quantitative data in accordance with that section no later than two
years after commencement of discharge. However, the applicant need not submit
testing results that he has already performed and reported under the discharge
monitoring requirements of his VPDES permit.
d. The requirements of subdivisions 4 a and 4
c of this subsection that an applicant must provide quantitative data or
estimates of certain pollutants do not apply to pollutants present in a
discharge solely as a result of their presence in intake water. However, an
applicant must report such pollutants as present. Net credit may be provided
for the presence of pollutants in intake water if the requirements of
9VAC25-31-230 G are
met;
5. A description of
the frequency of flow and duration of any seasonal or intermittent discharge
(except for stormwater run-off, leaks, or spills);
6. A brief description of any treatment
system used or to be used;
7. Any
additional information the applicant wishes to be considered, such as influent
data for the purpose of obtaining net credits pursuant to
9VAC25-31-230 G;
8. Signature of certifying official under
9VAC25-31-110; and
9. Pertinent plans, specifications, maps and
such other relevant information as may be required, in scope and details
satisfactory to the department.
J. Application requirements for new and
existing concentrated animal feeding operations and aquatic animal production
facilities. New and existing concentrated animal feeding operations and
concentrated aquatic animal production facilities shall provide the following
information to the department, using the application form provided by the
department:
1. For concentrated animal feeding
operations:
a. The name of the owner or
operator;
b. The facility location
and mailing address;
c. Latitude
and longitude of the production area (entrance to the production
area);
d. A topographic map of the
geographic area in which the CAFO is located showing the specific location of
the production area, in lieu of the requirements of subdivision G 7 of this
section;
e. Specific information
about the number and type of animals, whether in open confinement or housed
under roof (beef cattle, broilers, layers, swine weighing 55 pounds or more,
swine weighing less than 55 pounds, mature dairy cows, dairy heifers, veal
calves, sheep and lambs, horses, ducks, turkeys, other);
f. The type of containment and storage
(anaerobic lagoon, roofed storage shed, storage ponds, underfloor pits, above
ground storage tanks, below ground storage tanks, concrete pad, impervious soil
pad, other) and total capacity for manure, litter, and process wastewater
storage (tons/gallons);
g. The
total number of acres under control of the applicant available for land
application of manure, litter, or process wastewater;
h. Estimated amounts of manure, litter, and
process wastewater generated per year (tons/gallons); and
i. For CAFOs required to seek coverage under
a permit after December 31, 2009, a nutrient management plan that at a minimum
satisfies the requirements specified in subsection E of
9VAC25-31-200 and subdivision C 5
of 9VAC25-31-130, including, for all
CAFOs subject to 40 CFR Part 412 Subpart C or Subpart D, the requirements of
40 CFR
412.4(c), as
applicable.
2. For
concentrated aquatic animal production facilities:
a. The maximum daily and average monthly flow
from each outfall;
b. The number of
ponds, raceways, and similar structures;
c. The name of the receiving water and the
source of intake water;
d. For each
species of aquatic animals, the total yearly and maximum harvestable
weight;
e. The calendar month of
maximum feeding and the total mass of food fed during that month; and
f. Pertinent plans, specifications, maps and
such other relevant information as may be required, in scope and details
satisfactory to the department.
K. Application requirements for new and
existing POTWs and treatment works treating domestic sewage. Unless otherwise
indicated, all POTWs and other dischargers designated by the department must
provide to the department, at a minimum, the information in this subsection
using an application form provided by the department. Permit applicants must
submit all information available at the time of permit application. The
information may be provided by referencing information previously submitted to
the department. The department may waive any requirement of this subsection if
it has access to substantially identical information. The department may also
waive any requirement of this subsection that is not of material concern for a
specific permit, if approved by the regional administrator. The waiver request
to the regional administrator must include the department's justification for
the waiver. A regional administrator's disapproval of the department's proposed
waiver does not constitute final agency action but does provide notice to the
department and permit applicant that EPA may object to any department-issued
permit issued in the absence of the required information.
1. All applicants must provide the following
information:
a. Name, mailing address, and
location of the facility for which the application is submitted;
b. Name, mailing address, telephone number,
and email address of the applicant and indication as to whether the applicant
is the facility's owner, operator, or both;
c. Identification of all environmental
permits or construction approvals received or applied for (including dates)
under any of the following programs:
(1)
Hazardous Waste Management program under the Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act (RCRA), Subpart C;
(2)
Underground Injection Control program under the Safe Drinking Water Act
(SDWA);
(3) NPDES program under the
Clean Water Act (CWA);
(4)
Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) program under the Clean Air
Act;
(5) Nonattainment program
under the Clean Air Act;
(6)
National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAPS)
preconstruction approval under the Clean Air Act;
(7) Ocean dumping permits under the Marine
Protection Research and Sanctuaries Act;
(8) Dredge or fill permits under § 404
of the CWA; and
(9) Other relevant
environmental permits, including state permits;
d. The name and population of each municipal
entity served by the facility, including unincorporated connector districts.
Indicate whether each municipal entity owns or maintains the collection system
and whether the collection system is separate sanitary or combined storm and
sanitary, if known;
e. Information
concerning whether the facility is located in Indian country and whether the
facility discharges to a receiving stream that flows through Indian
country;
f. The facility's design
flow rate (the wastewater flow rate the plant was built to handle), annual
average daily flow rate, and maximum daily flow rate for each of the previous
three years;
g. Identification of
types of collection systems used by the treatment works (i.e., separate
sanitary sewers or combined storm and sanitary sewers) and an estimate of the
percent of sewer line that each type comprises;
h. The following information for outfalls to
surface waters and other discharge or disposal methods:
(1) For effluent discharges to surface
waters, the total number and types of outfalls (e.g., treated effluent,
combined sewer overflows, bypasses, constructed emergency overflows);
(2) For wastewater discharged to surface
impoundments:
(a) The location of each surface
impoundment;
(b) The average daily
volume discharged to each surface impoundment; and
(c) Whether the discharge is continuous or
intermittent;
(3) For
wastewater applied to the land:
(a) The
location of each land application site;
(b) The size of each land application site,
in acres;
(c) The average daily
volume applied to each land application site, in gallons per day; and
(d) Whether land application is continuous or
intermittent;
(4) For
effluent sent to another facility for treatment prior to discharge:
(a) The means by which the effluent is
transported;
(b) The name, mailing
address, contact person, phone number, and email address of the organization
transporting the discharge, if the transport is provided by a party other than
the applicant;
(c) The name,
mailing address, contact person, phone number, email address, and VPDES permit
number (if any) of the receiving facility; and
(d) The average daily flow rate from this
facility into the receiving facility, in millions of gallons per day;
and
(5) For wastewater
disposed of in a manner not included in subdivisions 1 h (1) through (4) of
this subsection (e.g., underground percolation, underground injection):
(a) A description of the disposal method,
including the location and size of each disposal site, if applicable;
(b) The annual average daily volume disposed
of by this method, in gallons per day; and
(c) Whether disposal through this method is
continuous or intermittent; and
i. An indication of whether applicant is
operating under or requesting to operate under a variance as specified in
subsection N of this section, if known at the time of application.
2. All applicants with a design
flow greater than or equal to 0.1 mgd must provide the following information:
a. The current average daily volume of inflow
and infiltration, in gallons per day, and steps the facility is taking to
minimize inflow and infiltration;
b. A topographic map (or other map if a
topographic map is unavailable) extending at least one mile beyond property
boundaries of the treatment plant, including all unit processes, and showing:
(1) Treatment plant area and unit
processes;
(2) The major pipes or
other structures through which wastewater enters the treatment plant and the
pipes or other structures through which treated wastewater is discharged from
the treatment plant. Include outfalls from bypass piping, if
applicable;
(3) Each well where
fluids from the treatment plant are injected underground;
(4) Wells, springs, and other surface water
bodies listed in public records or otherwise known to the applicant within 1/4
mile of the treatment works' property boundaries;
(5) Sewage sludge management facilities
(including on-site treatment, storage, and disposal sites); and
(6) Location at which waste classified as
hazardous under RCRA enters the treatment plant by truck, rail, or dedicated
pipe;
c. Process flow
diagram or schematic:
(1) A diagram showing
the processes of the treatment plant, including all bypass piping and all
backup power sources or redundancy in the system. This includes a water balance
showing all treatment units, including disinfection, and showing daily average
flow rates at influent and discharge points, and approximate daily flow rates
between treatment units; and
(2) A
narrative description of the diagram; and
d. The following information regarding
scheduled improvements:
(1) The outfall number
of each outfall affected;
(2) A
narrative description of each required improvement;
(3) Scheduled or actual dates of completion
for the following:
(a) Commencement of
construction;
(b) Completion of
construction;
(c) Commencement of
discharge; and
(d) Attainment of
operational level; and
(4) A description of permits and clearances
concerning other federal or state requirements.
3. Each applicant must provide the following
information for each outfall, including bypass points, through which effluent
is discharged, as applicable:
a. The following
information about each outfall:
(1) Outfall
number;
(2) State, county, and city
or town in which outfall is located;
(3) Latitude and longitude, to the nearest
second;
(4) Distance from shore and
depth below surface;
(5) Average
daily flow rate, in million gallons per day;
(6) The following information for each
outfall with a seasonal or periodic discharge:
(a) Number of times per year the discharge
occurs;
(b) Duration of each
discharge;
(c) Flow of each
discharge; and
(d) Months in which
discharge occurs; and
(7)
Whether the outfall is equipped with a diffuser and the type (e.g., high-rate)
of diffuser used.
b. The
following information, if known, for each outfall through which effluent is
discharged to surface waters:
(1) Name of
receiving water;
(2) Name of
watershed/river/stream system and United States Soil Conservation Service
14-digit watershed code;
(3) Name
of State Management/River Basin and United States Geological Survey 8-digit
hydrologic cataloging unit code; and
(4) Critical flow of receiving stream and
total hardness of receiving stream at critical low flow (if
applicable).
c. The
following information describing the treatment provided for discharges from
each outfall to surface waters:
(1) The
highest level of treatment (e.g., primary, equivalent to secondary, secondary,
advanced, other) that is provided for the discharge for each outfall and:
(a) Design biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD5 or CBOD5) removal
(percent);
(b) Design suspended
solids (SS) removal (percent); and, where applicable;
(c) Design phosphorus (P) removal
(percent);
(d) Design nitrogen (N)
removal (percent); and
(e) Any
other removals that an advanced treatment system is designed to
achieve.
(2) A
description of the type of disinfection used, and whether the treatment plant
dechlorinates (if disinfection is accomplished through chlorination).
4. Effluent monitoring
for specific parameters.
a. As provided in
subdivisions 4 b through 4 k of this subsection, all applicants must submit to
the department effluent monitoring information for samples taken from each
outfall through which effluent is discharged to surface waters, except for
CSOs. The department may allow applicants to submit sampling data for only one
outfall on a case-by-case basis, where the applicant has two or more outfalls
with substantially identical effluent. The department may also allow applicants
to composite samples from one or more outfalls that discharge into the same
mixing zone. For POTWs applying prior to commencement of discharge, data shall
be submitted no later than 24 months after the commencement of
discharge;
b. All applicants must
sample and analyze for the following pollutants:
(1) Biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD5 or CBOD5);
(2) Fecal coliform;
(3) Design flow rate;
(4) pH;
(5) Temperature; and
(6) Total suspended solids.
c. All applicants with a design
flow greater than or equal to 0.1 mgd must sample and analyze for the following
pollutants:
(1) Ammonia (as N);
(2) Chlorine (total residual, TRC);
(3) Dissolved oxygen;
(4) Nitrate/Nitrite;
(5) Kjeldahl nitrogen;
(6) Oil and grease;
(7) Phosphorus; and
(8) Total dissolved solids.
d. Facilities that do not use
chlorine for disinfection, do not use chlorine elsewhere in the treatment
process, and have no reasonable potential to discharge chlorine in their
effluent may delete chlorine.
e.
All POTWs with a design flow rate equal to or greater than one million gallons
per day, all POTWs with approved pretreatment programs or POTWs required to
develop a pretreatment program, and other POTWs, as required by the department
must sample and analyze for the pollutants listed in Table 2 of 40 CFR Part 122
Appendix J, and for any other pollutants for which the department or EPA have
established water quality standards applicable to the receiving
waters.
f. The department may
require sampling for additional pollutants, as appropriate, on a case-by-case
basis.
g. Applicants must provide
data from a minimum of three samples taken within 4-1/2 years prior to the date
of the permit application. Samples must be representative of the seasonal
variation in the discharge from each outfall. Existing data may be used, if
available, in lieu of sampling done solely for the purpose of this application.
The department may require additional samples, as appropriate, on a
case-by-case basis.
h. All existing
data for pollutants specified in subdivisions 4 b through 4 f of this
subsection that is collected within 4-1/2 years of the application must be
included in the pollutant data summary submitted by the applicant. If, however,
the applicant samples for a specific pollutant on a monthly or more frequent
basis, it is only necessary, for such pollutant, to summarize all data
collected within one year of the application.
i. Applicants must collect samples of
effluent and analyze such samples for pollutants in accordance with analytical
methods approved under 40 CFR Part 136 unless an alternative is specified in
the existing VPDES permit. When analysis of pH, temperature, cyanide, total
phenols, residual chlorine, oil and grease, fecal coliform (including E. coli),
or volatile organics is required in subdivisions K 4 b, c, and e of this
section, grab samples must be collected for those pollutants. For all other
pollutants, 24-hour composite samples must be used. For a composite sample,
only one analysis of the composite of aliquots is required.
j. The effluent monitoring data provided must
include at least the following information for each parameter:
(1) Maximum daily discharge, expressed as
concentration or mass, based upon actual sample values;
(2) Average daily discharge for all samples,
expressed as concentration or mass, and the number of samples used to obtain
this value;
(3) The analytical
method used; and
(4) The threshold
level (i.e., method detection limit, minimum level, or other designated method
endpoints) for the analytical method used.
k. Unless otherwise required by the
department, metals must be reported as total recoverable.
5. Effluent monitoring for whole effluent
toxicity.
a. All applicants must provide an
identification of any whole effluent toxicity tests conducted during the 4-1/2
years prior to the date of the application on any of the applicant's discharges
or on any receiving water near the discharge. For POTWs applying prior to
commencement of discharge, data shall be submitted no later than 24 months
after the commencement of discharge.
b. As provided in subdivisions 5 c through i
of this subsection, the following applicants must submit to the department the
results of valid whole effluent toxicity tests for acute or chronic toxicity
for samples taken from each outfall through which effluent is discharged to
surface waters, except for combined sewer overflows:
(1) All POTWs with design flow rates greater
than or equal to one million gallons per day;
(2) All POTWs with approved pretreatment
programs or POTWs required to develop a pretreatment program;
(3) Other POTWs, as required by the
department, based on consideration of the following factors:
(a) The variability of the pollutants or
pollutant parameters in the POTW effluent (based on chemical-specific
information, the type of treatment plant, and types of industrial
contributors);
(b) The ratio of
effluent flow to receiving stream flow;
(c) Existing controls on point or nonpoint
sources, including total maximum daily load calculations for the receiving
stream segment and the relative contribution of the POTW;
(d) Receiving stream characteristics,
including possible or known water quality impairment, and whether the POTW
discharges to a coastal water, or a water designated as an outstanding natural
resource water; or
(e) Other
considerations (including the history of toxic impacts and compliance problems
at the POTW) that the department determines could cause or contribute to
adverse water quality impacts.
c. Where the POTW has two or more outfalls
with substantially identical effluent discharging to the same receiving stream
segment, the department may allow applicants to submit whole effluent toxicity
data for only one outfall on a case-by-case basis. The department may also
allow applicants to composite samples from one or more outfalls that discharge
into the same mixing zone.
d. Each
applicant required to perform whole effluent toxicity testing pursuant to
subdivision 5 b of this subsection must provide:
(1) Results of a minimum of four quarterly
tests for a year, from the year preceding the permit application; or
(2) Results from four tests performed at
least annually in the 4-1/2 year period prior to the application, provided the
results show no appreciable toxicity using a safety factor determined by the
department.
e. Applicants
must conduct tests with multiple species (no less than two species, e.g., fish,
invertebrate, plant) and test for acute or chronic toxicity, depending on the
range of receiving water dilution. The department recommends that applicants
conduct acute or chronic testing based on the following dilutions:
(i) acute toxicity testing if the dilution of
the effluent is greater than 100:1 at the edge of the mixing zone or
(ii) chronic toxicity testing if the dilution
of the effluent is less than or equal to 100:1 at the edge of the mixing
zone.
f. Each applicant
required to perform whole effluent toxicity testing pursuant to subdivision 5 b
of this subsection must provide the number of chronic or acute whole effluent
toxicity tests that have been conducted since the last permit
reissuance.
g. Applicants must
provide the results using the form provided by the department, or test
summaries if available and comprehensive, for each whole effluent toxicity test
conducted pursuant to subdivision 5 b of this subsection for which such
information has not been reported previously to the department.
h. Whole effluent toxicity testing conducted
pursuant to subdivision 5 b of this subsection must be conducted using methods
approved under 40 CFR Part 136, as directed by the department.
i. For whole effluent toxicity data submitted
to the department within 4-1/2 years prior to the date of the application,
applicants must provide the dates on which the data were submitted and a
summary of the results.
j. Each
POTW required to perform whole effluent toxicity testing pursuant to
subdivision 5 b of this subsection must provide any information on the cause of
toxicity and written details of any toxicity reduction evaluation conducted, if
any whole effluent toxicity test conducted within the past 4-1/2 years revealed
toxicity.
6. Applicants
must submit the following information about industrial discharges to the POTW:
a. Number of significant industrial users
(SIUs) and nonsignificant categorical industrial users (NSCIUs), including SIUs
and NSCIUs that truck or haul waste, discharging to the POTW; and
b. POTWs with one or more SIUs shall provide
the following information for each SIU, as defined in
9VAC25-31-10, that discharges to
the POTW:
(1) Name and mailing
address;
(2) Description of all
industrial processes that affect or contribute to the SIU's
discharge;
(3) Principal products
and raw materials of the SIU that affect or contribute to the SIU's
discharge;
(4) Average daily volume
of wastewater discharged, indicating the amount attributable to process flow
and nonprocess flow;
(5) Whether
the SIU is subject to local limits;
(6) Whether the SIU is subject to categorical
standards and, if so, under which category and subcategory; and
(7) Whether any problems at the POTW (e.g.,
upsets, pass through, interference) have been attributed to the SIU in the past
4-1/2 years.
c. The
information required in subdivisions 6 a and b of this subsection may be waived
by the department for POTWs with pretreatment programs if the applicant has
submitted either of the following that contain information substantially
identical to that required in subdivisions 6 a and b of this subsection:
(1) An annual report submitted within one
year of the application; or
(2) A
pretreatment program.
7. Discharges from hazardous waste generators
and from waste cleanup or remediation sites. POTWs receiving Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), Comprehensive Environmental Response,
Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), or RCRA Corrective Action wastes or
wastes generated at another type of cleanup or remediation site must provide
the following information:
a. If the POTW
receives, or has been notified that it will receive, by truck, rail, or
dedicated pipe any wastes that are regulated as RCRA hazardous wastes pursuant
to 40 CFR Part 261, the applicant must report the following:
(1) The method by which the waste is received
(i.e., whether by truck, rail, or dedicated pipe); and
(2) The hazardous waste number and amount
received annually of each hazardous waste.
b. If the POTW receives, or has been notified
that it will receive, wastewaters that originate from remedial activities,
including those undertaken pursuant to CERCLA and § 3004(u) or 3008(h) of
RCRA, the applicant must report the following:
(1) The identity and description of the site
or facility at which the wastewater originates;
(2) The identities of the wastewater's
hazardous constituents, as listed in Appendix VIII of 40 CFR Part 261, if
known; and
(3) The extent of
treatment, if any, the wastewater receives or will receive before entering the
POTW.
c. Applicants are
exempt from the requirements of subdivision 7 b of this subsection if they
receive no more than 15 kilograms per month of hazardous wastes, unless the
wastes are acute hazardous wastes as specified in
40 CFR
261.30(d) and
261.33(e).
8. Each applicant with combined sewer systems
must provide the following information:
a.
The following information regarding the combined sewer system:
(1) A map indicating the location of the
following:
(a) All CSO discharge
points;
(b) Sensitive use areas
potentially affected by CSOs (e.g., beaches, drinking water supplies, shellfish
beds, sensitive aquatic ecosystems, and outstanding national resource waters);
and
(c) Waters supporting
threatened and endangered species potentially affected by CSOs; and
(2) A diagram of the combined
sewer collection system that includes the following information:
(a) The location of major sewer trunk lines,
both combined and separate sanitary;
(b) The locations of points where separate
sanitary sewers feed into the combined sewer system;
(c) In-line and off-line storage
structures;
(d) The locations of
flow-regulating devices; and
(e)
The locations of pump stations.
b. The following information for each CSO
discharge point covered by the permit application:
(1) The following information on each
outfall:
(a) Outfall number;
(b) State, county, and city or town in which
outfall is located;
(c) Latitude
and longitude, to the nearest second;
(d) Distance from shore and depth below
surface;
(e) Whether the applicant
monitored any of the following in the past year for this CSO:
(i) rainfall,
(ii) CSO flow volume,
(iii) CSO pollutant concentrations,
(iv) receiving water quality, or
(v) CSO frequency; and
(f) The number of storm events
monitored in the past year;
(2) The following information about CSO
overflows from each outfall:
(a) The number of
events in the past year;
(b) The
average duration per event, if available;
(c) The average volume per CSO event, if
available; and
(d) The minimum
rainfall that caused a CSO event, if available, in the last year;
(3) The following information
about receiving waters:
(a) Name of receiving
water;
(b) Name of watershed/stream
system and the United States Soil Conservation Service watershed (14-digit)
code, if known; and
(c) Name of
State Management/River Basin and the United States Geological Survey hydrologic
cataloging unit (8-digit) code, if known; and
(4) A description of any known water quality
impacts on the receiving water caused by the CSO (e.g., permanent or
intermittent beach closings, permanent or intermittent shellfish bed closings,
fish kills, fish advisories, other recreational loss, or exceedance of any
applicable state water quality standard).
9. All applicants must provide the name,
mailing address, telephone number, email address, and responsibilities of all
contractors responsible for any operational or maintenance aspects of the
facility.
10. All applications must
be signed by a certifying official in compliance with
9VAC25-31-110.
11. Pertinent plans, specifications, maps and
such other relevant information as may be required, in scope and details
satisfactory to the department.
L. Application requirements for new sources
and new discharges. New manufacturing, commercial, mining and silvicultural
dischargers applying for VPDES permits (except for new discharges of facilities
subject to the requirements of subsection I of this section or new discharges
of stormwater associated with industrial activity that are subject to the
requirements of
9VAC25-31-120 B 1 and this
subsection) shall provide the following information to the department, using
the application forms provided by the department:
1. The expected outfall location in latitude
and longitude to the nearest 15 seconds and the name of the receiving
water;
2. The expected date of
commencement of discharge;
3.
a. Description of the treatment that the
wastewater will receive, along with all operations contributing wastewater to
the effluent, average flow contributed by each operation, and the ultimate
disposal of any solid or liquid wastes not discharged;
b. A line drawing of the water flow through
the facility with a water balance as described in subdivision H 2;
c. If any of the expected discharges will be
intermittent or seasonal, a description of the frequency, duration and maximum
daily flow rate of each discharge occurrence (except for stormwater run-off,
spillage, or leaks);
4.
If a new source performance standard promulgated under § 306 of the CWA or
an effluent limitation guideline applies to the applicant and is expressed in
terms of production (or other measure of operation), a reasonable measure of
the applicant's expected actual production reported in the units used in the
applicable effluent guideline or new source performance standard for each of
the first three years. Alternative estimates may also be submitted if
production is likely to vary;
5.
The requirements in subdivisions I 4 a, b, and c of this section that an
applicant must provide estimates of certain pollutants expected to be present
do not apply to pollutants present in a discharge solely as a result of their
presence in intake water; however, an applicant must report such pollutants as
present. Net credits may be provided for the presence of pollutants in intake
water if the requirements of
9VAC25-31-230 G are met. All levels
(except for discharge flow, temperature, and pH) must be estimated as
concentration and as total mass.
a. Each
applicant must report estimated daily maximum, daily average, and source of
information for each outfall for the following pollutants or parameters. The
department may waive the reporting requirements for any of these pollutants and
parameters if the applicant submits a request for such a waiver before or with
his application that demonstrates that information adequate to support issuance
of the permit can be obtained through less stringent reporting requirements:
(1) Biochemical oxygen demand
(BOD).
(2) Chemical oxygen demand
(COD).
(3) Total organic carbon
(TOC).
(4) Total suspended solids
(TSS).
(5) Flow.
(6) Ammonia (as N).
(7) Temperature (winter and
summer).
(8) pH.
b. Each applicant must report
estimated daily maximum, daily average, and source of information for each
outfall for the following pollutants, if the applicant knows or has reason to
believe they will be present or if they are limited by an effluent limitation
guideline or new source performance standard either directly or indirectly
through limitations on an indicator pollutant: all pollutants in Table IV of 40
CFR Part 122 Appendix D (certain conventional and nonconventional
pollutants).
c. Each applicant must
report estimated daily maximum, daily average, and source of information for
the following pollutants if he knows or has reason to believe that they will be
present in the discharges from any outfall:
(1) The pollutants listed in Table III of 40
CFR Part 122 Appendix D (the toxic metals, in the discharge from any outfall,
Total cyanide, and total phenols);
(2) The organic toxic pollutants in Table II
of 40 CFR Part 122 Appendix D (except bis (chloromethyl) ether,
dichlorofluoromethane and trichlorofluoromethane). This requirement is waived
for applicants with expected gross sales of less than $100,000 per year for the
next three years, and for coal mines with expected average production of less
than 100,000 tons of coal per year.
d. The applicant is required to report that
2,3,7,8 Tetrachlorodibenzo-P-Dioxin (TCDD) may be discharged if he uses or
manufactures one of the following compounds, or if he knows or has reason to
believe that TCDD will or may be present in an effluent:
(1) 2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy acetic acid
(2,4,5-T) (CAS #93-76-5);
(2)
2-(2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy) propanoic acid (Silvex, 2,4,5-TP) (CAS
#93-72-1);
(3)
2-(2,4,5-trichlorophenoxy) ethyl 2,2-dichloropropionate (Erbon) (CAS
#136-25-4);
(4) 0,0-dimethyl
0-(2,4,5-trichlorophenyl) phosphorothioate (Ronnel) (CAS #299-84-3);
(5) 2,4,5-trichlorophenol (TCP) (CAS
#95-95-4); or
(6) Hexachlorophene
(HCP) (CAS #70-30-4);
e.
Each applicant must report any pollutants listed in Table V of 40 CFR Part 122
Appendix D (certain hazardous substances) if he believes they will be present
in any outfall (no quantitative estimates are required unless they are already
available).
f. No later than 24
months after the commencement of discharge from the proposed facility, the
applicant is required to submit the information required in subsection H of
this section. However, the applicant need not complete those portions of
subsection H of this section requiring tests that have already been performed
and reported under the discharge monitoring requirements of the VPDES
permit;
6. Each applicant
must report the existence of any technical evaluation concerning his wastewater
treatment, along with the name and location of similar plants of which he has
knowledge;
7. Any optional
information the permittee wishes to have considered;
8. Signature of certifying official under
9VAC25-31-110; and
9. Pertinent plans, specifications, maps, and
such other relevant information as may be required, in scope and details
satisfactory to the department.
M. Variance requests by non-POTWs. A
discharger that is not a publicly owned treatment works (POTW) may request a
variance from otherwise applicable effluent limitations under any of the
following statutory or regulatory provisions within the times specified in this
subsection:
1. Fundamentally different
factors.
a. A request for a variance based on
the presence of fundamentally different factors from those on which the
effluent limitations guideline was based shall be filed as follows:
(1) For a request from best practicable
control technology currently available (BPT), by the close of the public
comment period for the draft permit; or
(2) For a request from best available
technology economically achievable (BAT) or best conventional pollutant control
technology (BCT), by no later than:
(a) July
3, 1989, for a request based on an effluent limitation guideline promulgated
before February 4, 1987, to the extent July 3, 1989, is not later than that
provided under previously promulgated regulations; or
(b) 180 days after the date on which an
effluent limitation guideline is published in the Federal Register for a
request based on an effluent limitation guideline promulgated on or after
February 4, 1987.
b. The request shall explain how the
requirements of the applicable regulatory or statutory criteria have been
met.
2. A request for a
variance from the BAT requirements for CWA § 301(b)(2)(F) pollutants
(commonly called nonconventional pollutants) pursuant to § 301(c) of the
CWA because of the economic capability of the owner or operator, or pursuant to
§ 301(g) of the CWA (provided however that a § 301(g) variance may
only be requested for ammonia; chlorine; color; iron; total phenols (when
determined by the administrator to be a pollutant covered by §
301(b)(2)(F) of the CWA) and any other pollutant that the administrator lists
under § 301(g)(4) of the CWA) must be made as follows:
a. For those requests for a variance from an
effluent limitation based upon an effluent limitation guideline by:
(1) Submitting an initial request to the
regional administrator, as well as to the department, stating the name of the
discharger, the permit number, the outfall number, the applicable effluent
guideline, and whether the discharger is requesting a § 301(c) or 301(g)
of the CWA modification, or both. This request must have been filed not later
than 270 days after promulgation of an applicable effluent limitation
guideline; and
(2) Submitting a
completed request no later than the close of the public comment period for the
draft permit demonstrating that:
(i) all
reasonable ascertainable issues have been raised and all reasonably available
arguments and materials supporting their position have been submitted; and
(ii) that the applicable
requirements of 40 CFR Part 125 have been met. Notwithstanding this provision,
the complete application for a request under § 301(g) of the CWA shall be
filed 180 days before EPA must make a decision (unless the Regional Division
Director establishes a shorter or longer period); or
b. For those requests for a
variance from effluent limitations not based on effluent limitation guidelines,
the request need only comply with subdivision 2 a (2) of this subsection and
need not be preceded by an initial request under subdivision 2 a (1) of this
subsection.
3. A
modification under § 302(b)(2) of the CWA of requirements under §
302(a) of the CWA for achieving water quality related effluent limitations may
be requested no later than the close of the public comment period for the draft
permit on the permit from which the modification is sought.
4. A variance for alternate effluent
limitations for the thermal component of any discharge must be filed with a
timely application for a permit under this section, except that if thermal
effluent limitations are established on a case-by-case basis or are based on
water quality standards the request for a variance may be filed by the close of
the public comment period for the draft permit. A copy of the request shall be
sent simultaneously to the department.
N. Variance requests by POTWs. A discharger
that is a publicly owned treatment works (POTW) may request a variance from
otherwise applicable effluent limitations under any of the following statutory
provisions as specified in this paragraph:
1.
A request for a modification under § 301(h) of the CWA of requirements of
§ 301(b)(1)(B) of the CWA for discharges into marine waters must be filed
in accordance with the requirements of 40 CFR Part 125, Subpart G.
2. A modification under § 302(b)(2) of
the CWA of the requirements under § 302(a) of the CWA for achieving water
quality based effluent limitations shall be requested no later than the close
of the public comment period for the draft permit on the permit from which the
modification is sought.
O. Expedited variance procedures and time
extensions.
1. Notwithstanding the time
requirements in subsections M and N of this section, the department may notify
a permit applicant before a draft permit is issued that the draft permit will
likely contain limitations that are eligible for variances. In the notice the
department may require the applicant as a condition of consideration of any
potential variance request to submit a request explaining how the requirements
of 40 CFR Part 125 applicable to the variance have been met and may require its
submission within a specified reasonable time after receipt of the notice. The
notice may be sent before the permit application has been submitted. The draft
or final permit may contain the alternative limitations that may become
effective upon final grant of the variance.
2. A discharger who cannot file a timely
complete request required under subdivision M 2 a (2) or M 2 b of this section
may request an extension. The extension may be granted or denied at the
discretion of the department. Extensions shall be no more than six months in
duration.
P.
Recordkeeping. Except for information required by subdivision D 2 of this
section, which shall be retained for a period of at least five years from the
date the application is signed (or longer as required by Part VI (9VAC25-31-420 et seq.) of this
chapter), applicants shall keep records of all data used to complete permit
applications and any supplemental information submitted under this section for
a period of at least three years from the date the application is
signed.
Q. Sewage sludge
management. All TWTDS subject to subdivision D 2 a of this section must provide
the information in this subsection to the department using an application form
approved by the department. New applicants must submit all information
available at the time of permit application. The information may be provided by
referencing information previously submitted to the department. The department
may waive any requirement of this subsection if it has access to substantially
identical information. The department may also waive any requirement of this
subsection that is not of material concern for a specific permit, if approved
by the regional administrator. The waiver request to the regional administrator
must include the department's justification for the waiver. A regional
administrator's disapproval of the department's proposed waiver does not
constitute final agency action, but does provide notice to the department and
the permit applicant that EPA may object to any department issued permit issued
in the absence of the required information.
1.
All applicants must submit the following information:
a. The name, mailing address, and location of
the TWTDS for which the application is submitted;
b. Whether the facility is a Class I Sludge
Management Facility;
c. The design
flow rate (in million gallons per day);
d. The total population served;
e. The TWTDS's status as federal, state,
private, public, or other entity;
f. The name, mailing address, telephone
number, and email address of the applicant; and
g. Indication whether the applicant is the
owner, operator, or both.
2. All applicants must submit the facility's
VPDES permit number, if applicable, and a listing of all other federal, state,
and local permits or construction approvals received or applied for under any
of the following programs:
a. Hazardous Waste
Management program under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act
(RCRA);
b. UIC program under the
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA);
c.
NPDES program under the Clean Water Act (CWA);
d. Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) program under the Clean Air Act;
e. Nonattainment program under the Clean Air
Act;
f. National Emission Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAPS) preconstruction approval under the Clean
Air Act;
g. Dredge or fill permits
under § 404 of the CWA;
h.
Other relevant environmental permits, including state or local
permits.
3. All
applicants must identify any generation, treatment, storage, land application
of biosolids, or disposal of sewage sludge that occurs in Indian
country.
4. All applicants must
submit a topographic map (or other map if a topographic map is unavailable)
extending one mile beyond property boundaries of the facility and showing the
following information:
a. All sewage sludge
management facilities, including on-site treatment, storage, and disposal
sites; and
b. Wells, springs, and
other surface water bodies that are within 1/4 mile of the property boundaries
and listed in public records or otherwise known to the applicant.
5. All applicants must submit a
line drawing or a narrative description that identifies all sewage sludge
management practices employed during the term of the permit, including all
units used for collecting, dewatering, storing, or treating sewage sludge; the
destination of all liquids and solids leaving each such unit; and all processes
used for pathogen reduction and vector attraction reduction.
6. All applicants must submit an odor control
plan that contains at minimum:
a. Methods used
to minimize odor in producing biosolids;
b. Methods used to identify malodorous
biosolids before land application (at the generating facility);
c. Methods used to identify and abate
malodorous biosolids that have been delivered to the field, prior to land
application; and
d. Methods used to
abate malodor from biosolids if land applied.
7. The applicant must submit biosolids
monitoring data for the pollutants for which limits in biosolids have been
established in Part VI (9VAC25-31-420 et seq.)
of this chapter for the applicant's use or disposal practices on the date of
permit application with the following conditions:
a. When applying for authorization to land
apply a biosolids source not previously included in a VPDES or Virginia
Pollution Abatement Permit, the biosolids shall be sampled and analyzed for
PCBs. The sample results shall be submitted with the permit application or
request to add the source.
b. The
department may require sampling for additional pollutants, as appropriate, on a
case-by-case basis.
c. Applicants
must provide data from a minimum of three samples taken within 4-1/2 years
prior to the date of the permit application. Samples must be representative of
the biosolids and should be taken at least one month apart. Existing data may
be used in lieu of sampling done solely for the purpose of this
application.
d. Applicants must
collect and analyze samples in accordance with analytical methods specified in
9VAC25-31-490, 40 CFR Part 503, and
40 CFR Part 136.
e. The monitoring
data provided must include at least the following information for each
parameter:
(1) Average monthly concentration
for all samples (mg/kg dry weight), based upon actual sample values;
(2) The analytical method used; and
(3) The method detection level.
8. If the applicant is a
person who prepares biosolids or sewage sludge, as defined in
9VAC25-31-500, the applicant must
provide the following information:
a. If the
applicant's facility generates biosolids or sewage sludge, the total dry metric
tons per 365-day period generated at the facility.
b. If the applicant's facility receives
biosolids or sewage sludge from another facility, the following information for
each facility from which biosolids or sewage sludge is received:
(1) The name, mailing address, and location
of the other facility;
(2) The
total dry metric tons per 365-day period received from the other facility;
and
(3) A description of any
treatment processes occurring at the other facility, including blending
activities and treatment to reduce pathogens or vector attraction
characteristics.
c. If
the applicant's facility changes the quality of biosolids or sewage sludge
through blending, treatment, or other activities, the following information:
(1) Whether the Class A pathogen reduction
requirements in
9VAC25-31-710 A or the Class B
pathogen reduction requirements in
9VAC25-31-710 B are met, and a
description of any treatment processes used to reduce pathogens in sewage
sludge;
(2) Whether any of the
vector attraction reduction options of
9VAC25-31-720 B 1 through 8 are
met, and a description of any treatment processes used to reduce vector
attraction properties in sewage sludge; and
(3) A description of any other blending,
treatment, or other activities that change the quality of sewage
sludge.
d. If biosolids
from the applicant's facility meets the ceiling concentrations in
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 1, the
pollutant concentrations in
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 3, the Class
A pathogen requirements in
9VAC25-31-710 A, and one of the
vector attraction reduction requirements in
9VAC25-31-720 B 1 through 8, and if
the biosolids is applied to the land, the applicant must provide the total dry
metric tons per 365-day period of sewage sludge subject to this subsection that
is applied to the land.
e. If
biosolids from the applicant's facility is sold or given away in a bag or other
container for application to the land, and the biosolids is not subject to
subdivision 8 d of this subsection, the applicant must provide the following
information:
(1) The total dry metric tons
per 365-day period of biosolids subject to this subsection that is sold or
given away in a bag or other container for application to the land;
and
(2) A copy of all labels or
notices that accompany the biosolids being sold or given
away.
f. If biosolids or
sewage sludge from the applicant's facility is provided to another person who
prepares biosolids, as defined in
9VAC25-31-500, and the biosolids is
not subject to subdivision 8 d of this subsection, the applicant must provide
the following information for each facility receiving the biosolids or sewage
sludge:
(1) The name, mailing address, and
email address of the receiving facility;
(2) The total dry metric tons per 365-day
period of biosolids or sewage sludge subject to this subsection that the
applicant provides to the receiving facility;
(3) A description of any treatment processes
occurring at the receiving facility, including blending activities and
treatment to reduce pathogens or vector attraction characteristic;
(4) A copy of the notice and necessary
information that the applicant is required to provide the receiving facility
under 9VAC25-31-530 G; and
(5) If the receiving facility places
biosolids in bags or containers for sale or give-away for application to the
land, a copy of any labels or notices that accompany the
biosolids.
9.
If biosolids from the applicant's facility is applied to the land in bulk form
and is not subject to subdivision 8 d, e, or f of this subsection, the
applicant must provide the following information:
a. Written permission of landowners on the
most current form approved by the department.
b. The total dry metric tons per 365-day
period of biosolids subject to this subsection that is applied to the
land.
c. If any land application
sites are located in states other than the state where the biosolids is
prepared, a description of how the applicant will notify the permitting
authority for the state where the land application sites are located.
d. The following information for each land
application site that has been identified at the time of permit application:
(1) The DEQ control number, if previously
assigned, identifying the land application field or site. If a DEQ control
number has not been assigned, provide the site identification code used by the
permit applicant to report activities and the site's location;
(2) The site's latitude and longitude in
decimal degrees to three decimal places and method of determination;
(3) A legible topographic map and aerial
photograph, including legend, of proposed application areas to scale as needed
to depict the following features:
(a) Property
boundaries;
(b) Surface water
courses;
(c) Water supply wells and
springs;
(d) Roadways;
(e) Rock outcrops;
(f) Slopes;
(g) Frequently flooded areas (National
Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) designation);
(h) Occupied dwellings within 400 feet of the
property boundaries and all existing extended dwelling and property line
setback distances;
(i) Publicly
accessible properties and occupied buildings within 400 feet of the property
boundaries and the associated extended setback distances; and
(j) The gross acreage of the fields where
biosolids will be applied;
(4) County map or other map of sufficient
detail to show general location of the site and proposed transport vehicle haul
routes to be utilized from the treatment plant;
(5) County tax maps labeled with Tax Parcel
ID or IDs for each farm to be included in the permit, which may include
multiple fields, to depict properties within 400 feet of the field
boundaries;
(6) A USDA soil survey
map, if available, of proposed sites for land application of
biosolids;
(7) The name, mailing
address, telephone number, and email address of each site owner, if different
from the applicant;
(8) The name,
mailing address, telephone number, and email address of the person who applies
biosolids to the site, if different from the applicant;
(9) Whether the site is agricultural land,
forest, a public contact site, or a reclamation site, as such site types are
defined in 9VAC25-31-500;
(10) Description of agricultural practices
including a list of proposed crops to be grown;
(11) Whether either of the vector attraction
reduction options of
9VAC25-31-720 B 9 or 10 is met at
the site, and a description of any procedures employed at the time of use to
reduce vector attraction properties in biosolids;
(12) Pertinent calculations justifying
storage and land area requirements for biosolids application including an
annual biosolids balance incorporating such factors as precipitation,
evapotranspiration, soil percolation rates, wastewater loading, and monthly
storage (input and drawdown); and
(13) Other information that describes how the
site will be managed, as specified by the department.
e. The following information for each land
application site that has been identified at the time of permit application, if
the applicant intends to apply bulk biosolids subject to the cumulative
pollutant loading rates in
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 2 to the
site:
(1) Whether the applicant has contacted
the permitting authority in the state where the bulk biosolids subject to
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 2 will be
applied, to ascertain whether bulk biosolids subject to
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 2 has been
applied to the site on or since July 20, 1993, and if so, the name of the
permitting authority and the name, phone number, and email address, if
available, of a contact person at the permitting authority; and
(2) Identification of facilities other than
the applicant's facility that have sent, or are sending, biosolids subject to
the cumulative pollutant loading rates in
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 2 to the site
since July 20, 1993, if, based on the inquiry in subdivision 9 e (1) of this
subsection, bulk biosolids subject to cumulative pollutant loading rates in
9VAC25-31-540 B Table 2 has been
applied to the site since July 20, 1993.
10. Biosolids storage facilities not located
at the site of the wastewater treatment plant. Plans and specifications for
biosolids storage facilities not located at the site of the wastewater
treatment plant generating the biosolids, including routine and on-site
storage, shall be submitted for issuance of a certificate to construct and a
certificate to operate in accordance with the Sewage Collection and Treatment
Regulations (9VAC25-790) and shall depict the following information:
a. Site layout on a recent 7.5 minute
topographic quadrangle or other appropriate scaled map;
b. Location of any required soil, geologic,
and hydrologic test holes or borings;
c. Location of the following field features
within 0.25 miles of the site boundary (indicate on map) with the approximate
distances from the site boundary:
(1) Water
wells (operating or abandoned);
(2)
Surface waters;
(3)
Springs;
(4) Public water
supplies;
(5) Sinkholes;
(6) Underground and surface mines;
(7) Mine pool (or other) surface water
discharge points;
(8) Mining spoil
piles and mine dumps;
(9)
Quarries;
(10) Sand and gravel
pits;
(11) Gas and oil
wells;
(12) Diversion
ditches;
(13) Occupied dwellings,
including industrial and commercial establishments;
(14) Landfills and dumps;
(15) Other unlined impoundments;
(16) Septic tanks and drainfields;
and
(17) Injection wells;
d. Topographic map (10-foot
contour preferred) of sufficient detail to clearly show the following
information:
(1) Maximum and minimum percent
slopes;
(2) Depressions on the site
that may collect water;
(3)
Drainage ways that may attribute to rainfall run-on to or run-off from this
site; and
(4) Portions of the site,
if any, that are located within the 100-year floodplain;
e. Data and specifications for the liner
proposed for seepage control;
f.
Scaled plan view and cross-sectional view of the facilities showing inside and
outside slopes of all embankments and details of all appurtenances;
g. Calculations justifying impoundment
capacity; and
h. Groundwater
monitoring plans for the facilities if required by the department. The
groundwater monitoring plan shall include pertinent geohydrological data to
justify upgradient and downgradient well location and depth.
11. Staging. Generic plans are
required for staging of biosolids.
12. A biosolids management plan shall be
provided that includes the following minimum site specific information at the
time of permit application:
a. A
comprehensive, general description of the operation shall be provided,
including biosolids source or sources, quantities, flow diagram illustrating
treatment works biosolids flows and solids handling units, site description,
methodology of biosolids handling for application periods, including storage
and nonapplication period storage, and alternative management methods when
storage is not provided.
b. A
nutrient management plan approved by the Department of Conservation and
Recreation as required for application sites prior to department authorization
under the following conditions:
(1) Sites
operated by an owner or lessee of a confined animal feeding operation, as
defined in subsection A of §
62.1-44.17:1 of the Code of
Virginia, or confined poultry feeding operation, as defined in subsection A of
§
62.1-44.17:1.1 of the Code of
Virginia;
(2) Sites where land
application is proposed more frequently than once every three years at greater
than 50% of the annual agronomic rate;
(3) Mined or disturbed land sites where land
application is proposed at greater than agronomic rates; or
(4) Other sites based on site-specific
conditions that increase the risk that land application may adversely impact
state waters.
13. Biosolids transport.
a. General description of transport vehicles
to be used;
b. Procedures for
biosolids offloading at the biosolids facilities and the land application site
together with spill prevention, cleanup (including vehicle cleaning), field
reclamation, and emergency spill notification and cleanup measures;
and
c. Voucher system used for
documentation and recordkeeping.
14. Field operations.
a. Storage.
(1) Routine storage at facilities not located
at the site of the wastewater treatment plant - supernatant handling and
disposal, biosolids handling, and loading of transport vehicles, equipment
cleaning, freeboard maintenance, and inspections for structural
integrity;
(2) On-site storage -
procedures for department approval and implementation;
(3) Staging - procedures to be followed
including either designated site locations provided in the "Design Information"
or the specific site criteria for such locations including the liner/cover
requirements and the time limit assigned to such use; and
(4) Field reestablishment of offloading
(staging) areas.
b.
Application methodology.
(1) Description and
specifications on spreader vehicles;
(2) Procedures for calibrating equipment for
various biosolids contents to ensure uniform distribution and appropriate
loading rates on a day-to-day basis; and
(3) Procedures used to ensure that operations
address the following constraints: application of biosolids to frozen ground,
pasture/hay fields, crops for direct human consumption and saturated or
ice-covered or snow-covered ground; establishment of setback distances, slopes,
prohibited access for beef and dairy animals, and soil pH requirements; and
proper site specific biosolids loading rates on a field-by-field
basis.
15. An
applicant for a permit authorizing the land application of biosolids shall
provide to the department, and to each locality in which the applicant proposes
to land apply biosolids, written evidence of financial responsibility. Evidence
of financial responsibility shall be provided in accordance with requirements
specified in Article 6 (9VAC25-32-770 et seq.)
of Part IX (9VAC25-32-303 et seq.) of the
Virginia Pollution Abatement (VPA) Permit Regulation.
16. If sewage sludge from the applicant's
facility is placed on a surface disposal site, the applicant must provide the
following information:
a. The total dry metric
tons of sewage sludge from the applicant's facility that is placed on surface
disposal sites per 365-day period.
b. The following information for each surface
disposal site receiving sewage sludge from the applicant's facility that the
applicant does not own or operate:
(1) The
site name or number, contact person, mailing address, telephone number, and
email address for the surface disposal site; and
(2) The total dry metric tons from the
applicant's facility per 365-day period placed on the surface disposal
site.
c. The following
information for each active sewage sludge unit at each surface disposal site
that the applicant owns or operates:
(1) The
name or number and the location of the active sewage sludge unit;
(2) The unit's latitude and longitude to the
nearest second, and method of determination;
(3) If not already provided, a topographic
map (or other map if a topographic map is unavailable) that shows the unit's
location;
(4) The total dry metric
tons placed on the active sewage sludge unit per 365-day period;
(5) The total dry metric tons placed on the
active sewage sludge unit over the life of the unit;
(6) A description of any liner for the active
sewage sludge unit, including whether it has a maximum permeability of 1 X
10-7cm/sec;
(7) A description of any leachate collection
system for the active sewage sludge unit, including the method used for
leachate disposal, and any federal, state, and local permit number for leachate
disposal;
(8) If the active sewage
sludge unit is less than 150 meters from the property line of the surface
disposal site, the actual distance from the unit boundary to the site property
line;
(9) The remaining capacity
(dry metric tons) for the active sewage sludge unit;
(10) The date on which the active sewage
sludge unit is expected to close, if such a date has been identified;
(11) The following information for any other
facility that sends sewage sludge to the active sewage sludge unit:
(a) The name, contact person, mailing
address, and email address of the facility; and
(b) Available information regarding the
quality of the sewage sludge received from the facility, including any
treatment at the facility to reduce pathogens or vector attraction
characteristics;
(12)
Whether any of the vector attraction reduction options of
9VAC25-31-720 B 9 through 11 is met
at the active sewage sludge unit, and a description of any procedures employed
at the time of disposal to reduce vector attraction properties in sewage
sludge;
(13) The following
information, as applicable to any groundwater monitoring occurring at the
active sewage sludge unit:
(a) A description
of any groundwater monitoring occurring at the active sewage sludge
unit;
(b) Any available groundwater
monitoring data, with a description of the well locations and approximate depth
to groundwater;
(c) A copy of any
groundwater monitoring plan that has been prepared for the active sewage sludge
unit;
(d) A copy of any
certification that has been obtained from a qualified groundwater scientist
that the aquifer has not been contaminated; and
(14) If site-specific pollutant limits are
being sought for the sewage sludge placed on this active sewage sludge unit,
information to support such a request.
17. If sewage sludge from the applicant's
facility is fired in a sewage sludge incinerator, the applicant must provide
the following information:
a. The total dry
metric tons of sewage sludge from the applicant's facility that is fired in
sewage sludge incinerators per 365-day period.
b. The following information for each sewage
sludge incinerator firing the applicant's sewage sludge that the applicant does
not own or operate:
(1) The name or number,
contact person, mailing address, telephone number, and email address of the
sewage sludge incinerator; and
(2)
The total dry metric tons from the applicant's facility per 365-day period
fired in the sewage sludge incinerator.
18. If sewage sludge from the applicant's
facility is sent to a municipal solid waste landfill (MSWLF), the applicant
must provide the following information for each MSWLF to which sewage sludge is
sent:
a. The name, contact person, mailing
address, email address, location, and all applicable permit numbers of the
MSWLF;
b. The total dry metric tons
per 365-day period sent from this facility to the MSWLF;
c. A determination of whether the sewage
sludge meets applicable requirements for disposal of sewage sludge in a MSWLF,
including the results of the paint filter liquids test and any additional
requirements that apply on a site-specific basis; and
d. Information, if known, indicating whether
the MSWLF complies with criteria set forth in the Solid Waste Management
Regulations, 9VAC20-81.
19. All applicants must provide the name,
mailing address, telephone number, email address, and responsibilities of all
contractors responsible for any operational or maintenance aspects of the
facility related to biosolids or sewage sludge generation, treatment, use, or
disposal.
20. At the request of the
department, the applicant must provide any other information necessary to
determine the appropriate standards for permitting under Part VI (9VAC25-31-420 et seq.) of this
chapter, and must provide any other information necessary to assess the
biosolids use and sewage sludge disposal practices, determine whether to issue
a permit, or identify appropriate permit requirements; and pertinent plans,
specifications, maps, and such other relevant information as may be required,
in scope and details satisfactory to the department.
21. All applications must be signed by a
certifying official in compliance with
9VAC25-31-110.
R. Applications for facilities with cooling
water intake structures.
1. Application
requirements. New facilities with new or modified cooling water intake
structures. New facilities with cooling water intake structures as defined in
9VAC25-31-165 must report the
information required under subdivisions 2, 3, and 4 of this subsection and
under 9VAC25-31-165. Requests for
alternative requirements under
9VAC25-31-165 must be submitted
with the permit application.
2.
Source water physical data. These include:
a.
A narrative description and scaled drawings showing the physical configuration
of all source water bodies used by the facility, including area dimensions,
depths, salinity and temperature regimes, and other documentation that supports
the determination of the water body type where each cooling water intake
structure is located;
b.
Identification and characterization of the source water body's hydrological and
geomorphologic features, as well as the methods used to conduct any physical
studies to determine the intake's area of influence within the water body and
the results of such studies; and
c.
Location maps.
3. Cooling
water intake structure data. These include:
a.
A narrative description of the configuration of each cooling water intake
structure and where it is located in the water body and in the water
column;
b. Latitude and longitude
in degrees, minutes, and seconds for each cooling water intake
structure;
c. A narrative
description of the operation of each cooling water intake structure, including
design intake flow, daily hours of operation, number of days of the year in
operation, and seasonal changes, if applicable;
d. A flow distribution and water balance
diagram that includes all sources of water to the facility, recirculation
flows, and discharges; and
e.
Engineering drawings of the cooling water intake structure.
4. Source water baseline
biological characterization data. This information is required to characterize
the biological community in the vicinity of the cooling water intake structure
and to characterize the operation of the cooling water intake structures. The
department may also use this information in subsequent permit renewal
proceedings to determine if the design and construction technology plan as
required in
9VAC25-31-165 should be revised.
This supporting information must include existing data if available. Existing
data may be supplemented with data from newly conducted field studies. The
information must include:
a. A list of the
data in subdivisions 4 b through 4 f of this subsection that is not available
and efforts made to identify sources of the data;
b. A list of species (or relevant taxa) for
all life stages and their relative abundance in the vicinity of the cooling
water intake structure;
c.
Identification of the species and life stages that would be most susceptible to
impingement and entrainment. Species evaluated should include the forage base
as well as those most important in terms of significance to commercial and
recreational fisheries;
d.
Identification and evaluation of the primary period of reproduction, larval
recruitment, and period of peak abundance for relevant taxa;
e. Data representative of the seasonal and
daily activities (e.g., feeding and water column migration) of biological
organisms in the vicinity of the cooling water intake structure;
f. Identification of all threatened,
endangered, and other protected species that might be susceptible to
impingement and entrainment at the cooling water intake structures;
g. Documentation of any public participation
or consultation with federal or state agencies undertaken in development of the
plan; and
h. If information
requested in this subdivision 4 is supplemented with data collected using field
studies, supporting documentation for the source water baseline biological
characterization must include a description of all methods and quality
assurance procedures for sampling, and data analysis including a description of
the study area; taxonomic identification of sampled and evaluated biological
assemblages (including all life stages of fish and shellfish); and sampling and
data analysis methods. The sampling and data analysis methods used must be
appropriate for a quantitative survey and based on consideration of methods
used in other biological studies performed within the same source water body.
The study area should include, at a minimum, the area of influence of the
cooling water intake structure.
Statutory Authority: §
62.1-44.15 of the Code of
Virginia; § 402 of the Clean Water Act; 40 CFR Parts 122, 123, 124, 403,
and 503.