Current through Register Vol. 41, No. 3, September 23, 2024
Governed by these precepts and in order to fulfill its
statutory responsibilities in the development of the Water Resources Policy,
the Department of Environmental Quality (department) will observe the following
specific policies in preparing Water Resource Management Plans, advising on the
adequacy and desirability of water resource projects, and authorizing specific
water resource projects or in commenting on projects which affect water
resources.
1. Natural water sources
(groundwater and surface water).
a. Community,
natural resource and transportation development should proceed in such a way
that the adverse effect on run-off (rates, quality and quantity) and ground
water recharge are minimized, that remedial structures (such as spreading
basins and flow retarding structures) are incorporated as permanent features of
developments and that adequate financial and legal provisions are made for the
maintenance of such structures.
b.
Total withdrawals from coastal zone aquifers should be limited to such a
quantity as to prevent the intrusion of salinity beyond the limit determined
acceptable for the beneficial uses of the aquifer.
c. Total withdrawals from a specific aquifer
shall not exceed estimated recharge except for short (one or two year) periods
of time: the divergence should not be so great as to affect unreasonably legal
rights to withdrawal or to affect the capability of the aquifer to be recharged
fully in the future.
d. Conjunctive
use of groundwater and surface water is encouraged.
2. Beneficial use and public benefit.
a. The natural values and natural processes
occurring in water resources in an undisturbed state constitute a substantial
social and economic benefit to the citizens of the Commonwealth, and protection
of these processes should be considered in any resource management
plan.
b. The public shall have full
access to future facilities paid for by general public funds to the extent that
such access is compatible with project purposes and to the extent that the
primary purpose of the facility is not defeated.
c. Once a project site has been approved by
the department it will be a policy of the department to encourage preservation
of the site by other state agencies.
d. Flow releases from reservoirs for the
purpose of maintaining minimum flows necessary for prevention of eutrophic
conditions and for protection of fish, wildlife and aesthetic values will be
considered as beneficial uses.
e.
Generation of electricity by hydropower, both in conventional and pumped
storage developments, is considered a beneficial use of water resources
provided that the system is so operated that neither maximum nor minimum flow
releases are unreasonable and so that the rate of flow does not change so
rapidly as to be hazardous.
f.
Water resource projects and sewerage systems shall be so designed, operated and
maintained that hazards to health, public safety and environmental values are
minimized.
g. The consideration of
water resources projects by the department shall include coordination with
other public agencies in order to ensure that all relevant public policy and
formal standards will have an appropriate bearing on the final
decision.
3.
Environmental protection.
a. The long-term
protection of the environment shall be the guiding criterion in decisions
relating to water and related land resources.
b. Channel management projects should be
designed, constructed and operated in such a way as to minimize, and preferable
to avoid, both short term and long term adverse environmental effects; the
capability of water resources to absorb change shall be a designed constraint
for such projects (e.g. erosion during construction).
c. Agricultural and urban channelization
projects in natural water courses should be limited in size to that essential
for the protection of property and should be developed and constructed in such
a way that fish and wildlife and aesthetic values are protected, that erosion
and flood hazards are not increased, and that groundwater is not adversely
affected.
d. Water resource
projects and sewerage system plans shall be accompanied by an adequate
environmental evaluation.
4. Pollution and wasteful use.
a. Industrial processes should be designed to
minimize system demand through reuse and process change and to minimize
discharge of wastes. As a goal the department favors the design of industrial
processes with minimum withdrawal.
b. Flow releases from reservoir systems to
dilute wastes are not to be considered as a substitute for adequate treatment
of waste from industry, agriculture or municipalities.
c. No water storage reservoir project will be
endorsed or approved unless accompanied by adequate plans and programs for
safeguarding reservoir storage from loss through sedimentation from upstream
erosion and shoreline erosion which may include the use of upstream
sedimentation basins and the control of pollutants from all sources. Any such
plan and project shall have adequate legal and financial support.
d. Plumbing and building codes should prevent
needless waste of water, without interfering with maintenance of health values.
Metering of municipal water deliveries to users is encouraged.
e. The discharge of pollutants into ground
water aquifers shall be contrary to department policy except that brine derived
from naturally saline aquifers may be returned to these aquifers and chemicals
and water may be used in connection with the exploration for and development of
water, brines, oil and natural gas to the extent that such uses do not result
in pollution of groundwater.
f.
Spoils produced from original dredging and channel maintenance projects should
not be disposed of in any manner that would in itself adversely modify
circulation in estuaries or wetlands. Installation and maintenance of drainage
ditches, including disposition of any spoils produced by them, or use of drain
tile is permissible in managing wet or soggy agricultural lands.
g. Fail-safe type mechanisms should be
provided for all facilities designed to store substances which might be
hazardous to stream environment or to ground water.
h. Fail-safe devices shall be incorporated in
the construction of wastewater treatment facilities to prevent discharges which
would create a potential hazard to downstream uses.
All sewer systems shall be so designed and operated that
bypassing occurs only under emergency conditions and that nearby residents and
official agencies are informed and alerted whenever such bypassing of raw
sewage occurs.
5.
Water supply and storage.
a. Municipal areas
should have adequate off-stream raw water storage. The amount of storage should
be governed by such factors as community size and demand, hydrographic
characteristics of the supply areas (including well fields) and susceptibility
to accidental contamination.
b.
Water systems should be interconnected whenever practicable in order that they
may mutually support or aid each other in emergency situations, and assure the
best possible uses of available surface and ground water resources. In order to
ensure reliability and safety the use or development of multiple or alternate
sources should be considered.
c.
The use of reclaimed water should be considered in water resources planning for
urban areas provided such uses are compatible with the public's health and
safety. Acceptable uses which should be considered are:
(1) Cooling waters;
(2) Agricultural;
(3) Irrigation;
(4) Industrial; and
(5) Recreational
The direct reuse of sewage effluents as a raw domestic water
source is not recommended.
d. The use of reservoirs for all compatible
uses including recreation, municipal and industrial water supply and
fish/wildlife management, and the use of reservoir shoreline for all purposes
shall be subject to community/project controls which will protect the reservoir
against pollution from runoff or discharges from point sources, and to zoning
controls which will preserve agreed-upon aesthetic values.
e. Subsurface storage and groundwater
recharge should be encouraged subject to the provisions that such practices do
not cause pollution of underground water resources.
f. Municipal sewage treatment plants shall,
whenever possible, be located to permit the beneficial reuse of effluents for
the purposes set forth in subparagraph c above.
g. Criteria for guidance in the withdrawal
and use of groundwater should be considered as follows:
(1) The relationships between groundwater and
surface water in the area.
(2)
Information relating to the planned use of the groundwater, considering use for
domestic drinking water as of greatest importance.
(3) The economic effects involved in both the
withdrawal and nonwithdrawal of groundwater on the area and the
Commonwealth.
(4) The urgency of
the need for ground water in a given area.
h. The department encourages provision of the
highest degree of protection for the capacity and quality of reservoirs and
storage through programs designed to assure reliable waste treatment systems,
effective erosion and run-off controls, and effective control of quality of
run-off in newly developed areas.
6. Flood plains and flood control.
a. Development of permanent, private or
public structures should be discouraged on the flood plains unless there are
overriding economic or social justifications for such development and
compatible facilities are designed to withstand inundation and provide for
safety of people and property.
b.
Communities and individuals should make optimum use of flood plain insurance
and the levels of participation will be considered by the department in
recommending protection measures.
Existing or authorized development of the flood plain should
be protected at a minimum from a flood with a recurrence interval of 100
years.
c. Flood control
measures approved or recommended for any community shall incorporate a
cost-effective mix of reservoirs, dry dams, protective levees, structure flood
proofing, flood plain zoning and other measures necessary for preservation of
environmental values including historic sites.
d. Any proposals for new construction of
water or sewerage systems in defined flood plains, with the exception of
limited park and recreational facilities or agricultural uses, should be
discouraged.
e. In the flood plain,
construction of facilities designed to store substances which might be
hazardous to the stream environment is discouraged.
f. In approving sewerage projects, the
department will consider the extent to which the proposed project will result
in increased erosion, changes in the rate and amount of surface run-off,
changes in the development-induced quality of run-off, and increased exposure
to flood damage.
7.
Financial consideration.
a. Project costs
(both nonrecurring and recurring), should be apportioned equitably among the
identifiable project beneficiaries.
b. No community or area of Virginia, in the
development or management of a water resource project, shall unduly place any
hardship on another community or area without just compensation. The department
in acting on a water resource project will consider the extent to which such
inequities may be present and the steps, financial and otherwise, necessary to
alleviate both short and long range consequences of such inequities.
Compensation of individuals disrupted by water resource projects necessarily
includes, to the extent reasonably possible, subjective as well as objective
valuation factors.
c. Beneficiaries
of water resource structures and projects shall be encouraged to adopt user
charges based upon the total recurring and nonrecurring costs of the structures
or projects.
8.
Wetlands. It is the policy of the department to preserve the wetland
ecosystems, both tidal and nontidal, and to protect them from
destruction.
Statutory Authority: §§ 62.1-44.15 and 62.1-44.38
of the Code of Virginia.